Rancher Fined $50,000 For Constructing Illegal Dam

Aerial view of unauthorized dam.
Aerial view of unauthorized dam.
(EPA)

A rancher in Washington state has settled a complaint against him from the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) by agreeing to pay a $50,000 penalty and remove an illegal dam he built on a tributary to the Pend Oreille River.

According to a report in the Spokane Spokesman-Review, Brock Maslonka built the earthen dam in September 2015 on his 158-acre property a few miles north of Cusick, Wash. The dam is about 100 feet wide and 200 feet long, and continues to block Perkins Slough, which feeds into the river.

In a new release, the EPA said the unauthorized dam significantly degraded the ecosystem of Perkins Slough by reducing water quality, increasing turbidity and disrupting the life cycles of important aquatic organisms. The dam caused backed-up water to flood the highway in early 2016, according to a civil complaint filed by the U.S. Department of Justice.

In a responding court filing, Maslonka said that he built the dam for irrigation and to protect his property from being inundated by the Pend Oreille River.

In 2017, the EPA received complaints about the dam and discovered that Maslonka had failed to apply for a Clean Water Act permit from the Army Corps of Engineers. After it was unable to reach an agreement with Maslonka, the EPA referred the matter to the Department of Justice, which filed the case in the Eastern District of Washington in 2020.

In July, the parties entered into an agreement, called a consent decree, in which Maslonka agreed to pay the $50,000 penalty, remove the fill material used to build the dam, restore the site and preserve the habitat through deed restrictions.

All dam removal and restoration work must be completed by June 15, 2024. Maslonka must then monitor the work and ensure that it is successful.

 

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