Environmental quality
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Environmental quality is a set of properties and characteristics of the environment, either generalized or local, as they impinge on human beings and other organisms.
Environmental quality is a general term which can refer to varied characteristics such as air and water purity or pollution, noise and the potential effects which such characteristics may have on physical and mental health caused by human activities.[1]
In the US the term is applied with a body of federal and state standards and regulations that are monitored by regulatory agencies. All states in the U.S. have some form of a department or commission[1] that is responsible for a variety of activities such as monitoring quality, responding to citizen complaints, and enforcing environmental regulations. The agency with the lead implementation responsibility for most major federal environmental laws (e.g. Clean Air Act, Clean Water Act) is the US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). Other federal agencies with significant oversight roles include the Council on Environmental Quality, Department of the Interior and the Army Corps of Engineers.
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[edit] External Links
- US Army Corps of Engineers - Civil Works/Regulatory Program
- US Council on Environmental Quality
- US Department of the Interior
- US EPA