BOISE, Idaho — Idaho hopes to take control of water pollution permits from the federal Environmental Protection Agency, which operates only three other state programs in the nation.

The permits limit the amount and type of pollutants that can be dumped into Idaho’s waterways.

The state will have to take several steps before the federal agency agrees to the hand-over, including passing laws, setting fees and penalties, and showing that it has the funding, staffing and capability to operate the program, the Spokesman-Review reported Sunday.

The change comes under a law that quietly cleared the Legislature earlier this year and means hiring about 25 employees to the Idaho Department of Environmental Quality over the next eight years, a twist in a GOP-dominated state where lawmakers frequently talk about shrinking government, the newspaper reported. At the end of the eight-year process, the new state program will cost up to $3 million a year.

“I have to suck it up and say yes, it’s worth it,” said former Idaho Sen. Jim Hammond, R-Post Falls, who pushed persistently for the move during his three terms in the Senate. “I think it really does make more sense than letting the feds do it for us. It’s a better way to control our own destiny.”