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Florida's incoming governor and other newly elected Republicans on Friday joined a chorus of politicians and others who have been urging the Environmental Protection Agency to delay new
water pollution rules. A lawyer for environmental groups, though, said they've been "brainwashed" by state officials who concocted wildly inflated figures of what it's
going to cost to comply with the new rules. Gov.-elect Rick Scott, Agriculture Commissioner-elect Adam Putnam, Attorney General-elect Pam Bondi and five incoming congressmen sent a letter to
EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson asking her to postpone action. The EPA is set to announce the standards Monday. They are required by the settlement of a federal lawsuit that environmental
groups had filed against the agency. The rules are designed to abate pollution, including discharges from inefficient sewage treatment plants and septic tanks and runoff from farms and urban
areas, that's choking lakes, rivers and other interior Florida waters with algae blooms. Politicians, agriculture and business interests and some state and local government officials
say the rules will be too costly and set back Florida's economic recovery. Friday's letter also makes that argument. "According to the Florida Department of Environmental
Protection, the EPA mandates set to be finalized this November 14 will impose capital costs of over $4 billion on municipal wastewater treatment utilities and over $17 billion on municipal
storm water utilities," the letter says. The state agency's figures are based on reverse-osmosis, the most costly form of wastewater treatment, rather than cheaper systems actually
used and required, said David Guest of Earthjustice, an environmental legal group. "The cost exceeds by from 30 to 50 times the real costs," Guest said. "These are scare
tactics." Earthjustice represents the Florida Wildlife Federation, Sierra Club, Conservancy of Southwest Florida, Environmental Confederation of Southwest Florida and St. Johns
Riverkeeper in the lawsuit. It accused EPA of failing to enforce the federal Clean Water Act, which was pass passed in 1972 "to restore and maintain the chemical, physical and
biological integrity of the nation's waters." An EPA spokesman had no immediate comment. The Florida rules will be the first of their kind in the nation and may set a precedent for
other states. EPA already has delayed the rules by a month following similar objections from other Florida politicians and it's postponed similar rules affecting downstream and coastal
waters until next year. The congressional newcomers who signed the letter are Representatives-elect Richard Nugent of Spring Hill, David Rivera of Miami, Dennis Ross of Lakeland, Steve
Southerland of Panama City and Daniel Webster of Winter Garden.