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Tennessee Clean
Water Network

123A S. Gay St.
Knoxville, TN 37902

Office: 865.522.7007
Fax: 865.525.4988

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Join us and discover what is possible when we join together to claim our right to clean water.

2009

Defeated 14 bad water bills
TCWN along with members and other environmental groups worked together to defeat 14 potentially bad water bills in the Tennessee State Legislature. Though one passed, it was very watered down. However, Tennessee's legislative session is two years. Many of these bills will come back. To learn more, click here.

Commenting on damaging permits
TCWN submitted comments against a permit that would allow the Nestlé water bottling plant in Macon County to increase water withdrawal from Bennett Hill Spring and a tributary to Salt Lick Creek. Our comments were instrumental in Nestlé's decision to extract its request to withdraw more water, which would have had a devastating impact on aquatic life and habitat, not to mention the permanent loss of the water to the watershed and surrounding communities. 

2008

Continuing to monitor and comment on irresponsible permit applications
So far this year, TCWN has commented on 24 irresponsible permit applications that would have increased the amount of pollution in our waters.

Working to defeat a bill that would remove protection from more than 30,000 miles of streams in Tennessee, including waters that feed our drinking supply
The Limited Resource Waters Bill (HB4185/SB4119) would have removed protections from an estimated 30,000 miles of streams statewide, resulting in the potential to pipe, cut-off or pollute streams, and therefore destroy water quality with no repercussionsor negative consequences. TCWN, with support from hundreds of members and concerned citizens, fought this bill and won.

2007

Creating an opportunity to protect our most precious waters through legal action
TCWN worked with attorneys to reach a settlement with TDEC that will allow for better criteria to protect our most precious waters, like the Hatchie River.

Granting public access to enforcement actions
TCWN unanimously passed legislation giving the public access to water pollution enforcement actions.

To see enforcement actions visit http://state.tn.us/environment/wpc/enforcement/

 

2006

Protecting our most precious waters
In the 2006 triennial review, TCWN was influential in the creation of a new definition for Tier II waters that includes some place-based parks and federal requirements, but requires only an alternatives analysis for waters that are better than the water quality criteria set as the minimum.

 

2005

Protecting your right to participate
Third party permit appeal right was granted to Tennesseans due to legislation TCWN created and worked to get passed. This is a right granted to us in the Clean Water Act that the state had denied to Tennessean for 30 years.

Mobilizing Tennesseans
Launched our Build the River Movement program with a focus on community organizing that has assisted over a dozen communities facing threats to our clean water.

 

2004

Preserving our natural resources
In coalition with other groups, TCWN reached an agreement with Alcoa Power Generating Inc. to preserve 10,000 acres of land adjacent to Great Smoky Mountains National Park. The agreement puts water back into two previously dry stretches of river, and provides more than $12 million for conservation projects and enhanced recreational facilities.

Stopping sewage pollution
In December 2004, we settled a consent decree with the Knoxville Utility Board for sanitary sewer overflows (SSOs). This settlement is the most progressive clean-up schedule in the nation.

 

2003

Keeping water clean
TCWN led a statewide organizing effort around Tennessee’s 2003 triennial review of water quality standards. Our most important success was the adoption of new antidegradation rules. Antidegradation rules are used to clean waters that are polluted and protect those that are pristine. The 2003 rules include: opportunities for public notification and involvement; an “appeal” process for antidegradation determination decisions; and “stay” provisions to halt a proposed activity during the appeal process.

 

2001

Limiting industrial pollution
TCWN and the Southern Environmental Law Center successfully worked with the US EPA to establish a 10-year schedule for the state’s Total Maximum Daily Load (TMDL) program limiting industrial pollution to state waterways. TCWN held a workshop to encourage local community groups to participate in the TMDL process.