Current:Home > MySupreme Court Sharply Limits the EPA’s Ability to Protect Wetlands -Visionary Growth Labs
Supreme Court Sharply Limits the EPA’s Ability to Protect Wetlands
View
Date:2025-04-18 07:47:24
The Supreme Court ruled on Thursday that the Environmental Protection Agency’s ability to protect wetlands applied only to those that are indistinguishable from, and have a “continuous surface connection” to, larger lakes, oceans, streams and rivers.
Environmentalists said the decision sharply limited the EPA’s ability to protect possibly more than half of the nation’s wetlands—amounting to millions of acres—from pollution under the Clean Water Act.
The decision is a win for small property owners who don’t have teams of lawyers and consultants to navigate federal regulatory requirements, said Jonathan Adler, a professor of environmental, administrative and constitutional law at Case Western Reserve University. But it will also roll back important regulatory barriers for the real estate and construction industries, he said.
“Depending how state and local governments respond, this could have a big effect on wetland conservation in particular, and upon the ecosystem services that wetlands provide,” Adler said.
Environmental groups described the decision as a catastrophic limitation on clean water protections that undercuts the core purpose of the Clean Water Act. Enacted in 1972, the law provides the EPA and the Army Corps of Engineers with authority to protect “waters of the U.S.” and maintain their chemical, physical and biological integrity.
“The Supreme Court ripped the heart out of the law we depend on to protect American waters and wetlands,” Manish Bapna, president and CEO of the Natural Resources Defense Council, said in a statement. “The majority chose to protect polluters at the expense of healthy wetlands and waterways. This decision will cause incalculable harm. Communities across the country will pay the price.”
The case, Sackett v. Environmental Protection Agency, centers on property owned by Chantell and Michael Sackett near Priest Lake, Idaho. After obtaining permits and beginning construction on their home in 2007, they were informed by the EPA that their property contained wetlands and they needed federal permits to continue work.
Construction of the home has been on hold ever since while the Sacketts appealed an EPA compliance order threatening tens of thousands of dollars in fines through the courts.
On Thursday, all nine of the court’s justices were unanimous in the decision that the Clean Water Act does not apply to the Sackett’s property and that the previous interpretation of “waters of the U.S.” was unworkable. The justices differed, however, in defining a new test.
According to the conservative majority opinion, written by Justice Samuel Alito and joined by Chief Justice John Roberts and Justices Clarence Thomas, Neil Gorsuch and Amy Coney Barrett, a wetland should only be covered by the law if it has a “continuous surface water connection” that makes it “indistinguishable” from a stream, ocean, river, or lake.
This means that wetlands set back from a larger, navigable body of water would not be subject to federal protection, even if they are located along important floodplains or flood prone areas.
This test “narrows the Clean Water Act’s coverage of “adjacent” wetlands to mean only “adjoining” wetlands”, Justice Brett Kavanaugh wrote in a concurring opinion joined by Justices Sonia Sotomayor, Elena Kagan and Ketanji Brown Jackson. “By narrowing the Act’s coverage of wetlands to only adjoining wetlands, the Court’s new test will leave some long-regulated adjacent wetlands no longer covered by the Clean Water Act, with significant repercussions for water quality and flood control throughout the United States,” he warned.
Further, the test is sufficiently novel and vague that it could perpetuate regulatory uncertainty, he wrote.
The proper interpretation of “waters of the U.S.” has caused uncertainty for decades, with the Supreme Court’s previous test, outlined in the 2006 case, Rapanos v. United States, proving vague and largely unworkable. This interpretation extended federal protections to “relatively permanent” waters.
An Obama-era rule attempted to restore federal oversight to 60 percent of the nation’s waters in 2015, but this was struck down in nearly 30 states and later rescinded by former President Trump’s Navigable Waters Protection Rule.
Thursday’s decision comes just five months after the EPA and the Army Corps finalized an updated definition based on scientific and technical recommendations.
But today’s ruling will send the EPA “back to the drawing board to revise their definition in light of what the court ruled,” Adler said. It appears stricter than the Rapanos decision, with which there was at least some talk of eligibility for so-called Chevron deference, he noted. This is a doctrine of judicial deference that requires a federal court to defer to the relevant agency’s reasonable interpretation of an ambiguous statute. “But I don’t see that kind of wiggle room in [Justice] Alito’s decision.”
No matter the uncertainty, this is a loss for the environment, the environmental law organization Earthjustice said in a statement. “All water is connected. Pollution that goes into wetlands can easily spread to lakes, rivers, and other drinking water sources,” it added.
The ruling is a second significant blow to environmentalists, after the Supreme Court severely curtailed the EPA’s powers to regulate climate change under the Clean Air Act last year. In response to this ruling, Congress largely turned to fiscal tools to limit greenhouse gas emissions.
“There are already a range of small environmental programs that are universal across species as a means of protecting wetlands,” Adler said. “I’ll be curious to see whether or not we see a similar shift in strategy at the federal level, because it would certainly be easier for Congress to increase spending and the funding for those sorts of programs than it would be for Congress to revise the Clean Water Act’s regulatory authority.”
veryGood! (2919)
Related
- From family road trips to travel woes: Americans are navigating skyrocketing holiday costs
- Christina Hall, Rachel Bilson and More Stars Who’ve Shared Their Co-Parenting Journeys
- Parties in lawsuits seeking damages for Maui fires reach $4B global settlement, court filings say
- Cameron McEvoy is the world's fastest swimmer, wins 50 free
- In ‘Nickel Boys,’ striving for a new way to see
- Hormonal acne doesn't mean you have a hormonal imbalance. Here's what it does mean.
- When does Simone Biles compete next? Olympics gymnastics schedule for vault final
- Vermont suffered millions in damage from this week’s flooding and will ask for federal help
- Why Sean "Diddy" Combs Is Being Given a Laptop in Jail Amid Witness Intimidation Fears
- Stock market today: Dow drops 600 on weak jobs data as a global sell-off whips back to Wall Street
Ranking
- Sarah J. Maas books explained: How to read 'ACOTAR,' 'Throne of Glass' in order.
- Inside Gymnast Olivia Dunne and MLB Star Paul Skenes’ Winning Romance
- Iran says a short-range projectile killed Hamas’ Haniyeh and reiterates vows of retaliation
- Is Sha'Carri Richardson running today? Olympics track and field schedule, times for Aug. 3
- Trump invites nearly all federal workers to quit now, get paid through September
- Megan Thee Stallion hits back at Kamala Harris rally performance critics: 'Fake Mad'
- TikTok sued by Justice Department over alleged child privacy violations impacting millions
- That's not my cat... but, maybe I want it to be? Inside the cat distribution system
Recommendation
Pressure on a veteran and senator shows what’s next for those who oppose Trump
Tropical Glaciers in the Andes Are the Smallest They’ve Been in 11,700 Years
As recruiting rebounds, the Army will expand basic training to rebuild the force for modern warfare
A humpback whale in Washington state is missing its tail. One expert calls the sight ‘heartbreaking’
Google unveils a quantum chip. Could it help unlock the universe's deepest secrets?
3 dead including white supremacist gang leader, 9 others injured in Nevada prison brawl
Olympic women's soccer bracket: Standings and how to watch Paris Olympics quarterfinals
Unhinged controversy around Olympic boxer Imane Khelif should never happen again.