President Trump on Tuesday will instruct the Environmental Protection Agency and Army Corps of Engineers to "review and reconsider" a 2015 rule known as the Waters of the United States rule, according to a senior official, a move that could ultimately make it easier for agricultural and development interests to drain wetlands and small streams.
The official, who asked for anonymity because the executive order had not yet been signed, said the directive aimed to address the concerns of roughly 30 states and an array of business interests who have criticized the previous administration for overreaching. The final outcome of Trump’s order could have tremendous implications for the agricultural, real estate, gravel, sand and ranching sectors, as well as a critical habitat for aquatic species and migratory birds.
Still, it could take well over a year for the directive to be carried out. It will likely trigger a fresh round of rulemaking, but could also lead to extensive litigation as the agencies seek to redefine federal restrictions on what accounts for 60 percent of the nation’s water bodies.
The push to unravel the rule marks yet another shift in a decades-long debate over to what extent the federal government can dictate activities affecting the wetlands, rivers and streams that feed into major water bodies. The controversy has spurred two separate Supreme Court decisions, as well as a more recent federal appellate court ruling, as the two previous administrations sought to resolve the matter through executive actions.
Two Supreme Court decisions that came down during the George W. Bush administration, in 2001 and 2006, fostered uncertainty over exactly what falls under the federal jurisdiction under the Clean Water Act. In the 2006 Rapanos v. the United States decision, for example, the court’s four most conservative justices at the time offered a very constrained view that only "navigable waters" met this test. But Justice Anthony Kennedy, who refused to join either the conservatives or the liberals, suggested the government could intervene when there was a "significant nexus" between large water bodies and smaller, as well as intermittent, ones.
Records show EPA’s Pruitt used private email, despite denial at confirmation hearing Michael Biesecker, Sean Murphy
Environmental Protection Agency administrator Scott Pruitt occasionally used private email to communicate with staff while serving as Oklahoma’s attorney general, despite telling Congress that he had always used a state email account for government business.A review of Pruitt emails obtained by…
Environmental Protection Agency administrator Scott Pruitt occasionally used private email to communicate with staff while serving as Oklahoma’s attorney general, despite telling Congress that he had always used a state email account for government business.A review of Pruitt emails obtained by…
(Michael Biesecker, Sean Murphy)
Speaking to reporters Monday, the senior administration official said the regulation issued in 2015 "vastly expands federal jurisdictions over state waters, and we think . . . it could potentially violate previous Supreme Court decisions."
While acknowledging that past court decisions have been "confusing," the officials said administration officials think "the Supreme Court has tried to make it clear that the federal agencies that oversee this issue, the Army Corps of Engineers and the EPA, should be shrinking" their say over smaller water bodies across the country.
Outdoor recreation and environmental groups, however, said the new federal protections were essential in order to safeguard both public drinking water supplies as well as the terrain that sustained an array of waterfowl, fish and other species.
"Without the Clean Water Rule’s critical protections, innumerable small streams and wetlands that are essential for drinking water supplies, flood protection, and fish and wildlife habitat will be vulnerable to unregulated pollution, dredging and filling," said Bob Irvin, president of American Rivers.
Emails detail new EPA chief Scott Pruitt’s close ties to fossil fuel industry Brady Dennis, Steven Mufson
In his previous role as Oklahoma’s attorney general, the Environmental Protection Agency’s new administrator regularly huddled with fossil fuel firms and electric utilities about how to combat federal environmental regulations and spoke to conservative political groups about what they call government”…
In his previous role as Oklahoma’s attorney general, the Environmental Protection Agency’s new administrator regularly huddled with fossil fuel firms and electric utilities about how to combat federal environmental regulations and spoke to conservative political groups about what they call government”…
(Brady Dennis, Steven Mufson)
And Backcountry Hunters & Anglers conservation director John Gale, who noted that the previous administration had weighed 1 million comments when crafting its rule, said these smaller streams and water bodies create "healthy riparian areas critical to more than 80 percent of our wildlife, including numerous species of big game. Sportsmen will not stand for shortsighted, irresponsible attacks on fundamental conservation laws like the Clean Water Act."
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the 6th Circuit put a nationwide stay on the Obama-era rule last year, and the official said Trump’s executive order will instruct the attorney general to go back to that court and "take appropriate steps to hold that case in abeyance while the evaluation occurs at the Army Corps and the EPA."
In addition, the official added, the directive will tell the two agencies to "consider thinking about" the late Justice Antonin Scalia’s decision in the 2006 that suggested dramatically curtailing federal jurisdiction over smaller water bodies.
Mace Thornton, a spokesman for the American Farm Bureau Federation, said in an email that as his group has fought against the current policy, "our constant message has been that regulators need to go back to the drawing board to get this rule done right."
"We welcome this action, but realize a lot of work lies ahead to secure a policy that works in a fair and transparent manner," Thornton added.
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