EPA's repealing the Waters of the United States (WOTUS) rule heads to the courts.
Violating administrative law? Courts will tell us.
St. Johns County Commission supports this outrage, and did so without good science, without public comment under the Reign of Error of this woeful witch, PRISCILLA "RACHAEL" BENNETT (R-HUTSON COMPANIES), our former County Commission Chair, who in 2016 quit, mid-race in disgrace.
Locally, citizens were prohibited from comment on WOTUS when St. Johns County Commissioners joined up with the chorus of manufactures' and polluters' manufactured anger at the rule, which expanded permitting authority over tributaries of navigable waters.
St,. Johns County Commission Chair PRISCILLA "RACHAEL" BENNETT led the fight here, shutting off public comment on her "discussion item," illegally authorizing County opposition to WOTUS.
You might call her the Wicked Witch of the Woeful Countenance (WWWC): BENNETT is a paid agent of St. Johns County's State Senator TRAVIS HUTSON (R-HUTSON COMPANIES) and his family development firm.
BENNETT is most noted for her cult-like catering to developers like HUTSON. Other than mouthing support for libraries, PRISCILLA BENNETT will always be remembered for Rubber-stamping the $24 million "developer debt forgiveness program."
http://cleanupcityofstaugustine.blogspot.com/2017/08/two-fraud-waste-and-abuse-complaints-re.html
PRISCILLA BENNETT is now a lobbyist again, whining successfully against a lobbying registration ordinance here in St. Johns County, enlisting chauvinistic Commissioner JAY MORRIS (R-RPM INTERNATIONAL).
It's bad enough that PRISCILLA BENNETT was elected in an illegally closed Universal Primary.
When she was Commission Chair, PRISCILLA BENNETT was arbitrary, capricious and vengeful. She sought ethics waivers after she withdrew from running for re-election in 2016 for "purely personal reasons" after an ethics charge was dismissed, denying any FBI investigation,
Why does WWWC's censorship matter to WOTUS: During a discussion of WOTUS, I walked to the front of the Commission's auditorium to speak on WOTUS. But this tedious termagant had the temerity to chill, coerce, and restrain my public comment on. WOTUS. She shut up and shut out public comment during the Commission's WOTUS discussion. That's how it was during piggy PRISCILLA BENNETT's Reign of Error.
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From The New York Times:
Trump Administration Rolls Back Clean Water Protections
Lisa FriedmanCoral Davenport
By Lisa Friedman and Coral Davenport
Sept. 12, 2019
WASHINGTON — The Trump administration on Thursday announced the repeal of a major Obama-era clean water regulation that had placed limits on polluting chemicals that could be used near streams, wetlands and other bodies of water.
The rollback of the 2015 measure, known as the Waters of the United States rule, adds to a lengthy list of environmental rules that the administration has worked to weaken or undo over the past two and a half years.
Those efforts have focused heavily on eliminating restrictions on fossil fuel pollution, including coal-fired power plants, automobile tailpipes and methane emissions, but have also touched on asbestos and chemical hazards like pesticides.
An immediate effect of the clean water repeal is that polluters will no longer need a permit to discharge potentially harmful substances into many streams and wetlands. But the measure, which is expected to take effect in a matter of weeks, has implications far beyond the pollution that will now be allowed to flow freely into waterways.
The Obama administration implemented the rule in response to a Supreme Court decision that opened the door to a more expansive legal definition of “waters of the United States” under the 1972 Clean Water Act. With Thursday’s announcement, the Environmental Protection Agency is aiming to drastically narrow that definition, a move that critics fear could be difficult for future administrations to undo because the ideological balance of the Supreme Court has shifted to the right.
Patrick Parenteau, a professor of environmental law at the Vermont Law School, said that, for conservative states and leaders who hold the view that the Clean Water Act has been burdensome for farmers and industry, “this is an opportunity to really drive a stake through the heart of federal water protection.”
Overhauling the rule had been a central campaign pledge for President Trump, who characterized it as federal overreach that impinged on the rights of farmers, rural landowners and real estate developers to use their properties as they see fit. Mr. Trump signed an executive order in the early days of his administration directing federal agencies to begin the work of repealing and replacing it.
“Today’s final rule puts an end to an egregious power-grab,” Andrew Wheeler, the administrator of the E.P.A., said Thursday in a news conference.
Mr. Wheeler said the rollback would mean “farmers, property owners and businesses will spend less time and money determining whether they need a federal permit and more time building infrastructure.”
85 Environmental Rules Being Rolled Back Under TrumpJune 2, 2019
Agricultural groups, an important political constituency for Mr. Trump, praised the repeal. Zippy Duvall, president of the American Farm Bureau Federation, said the water rule had prompted outrage from thousands of farmers and ranchers across the country and led to the largest effort to reverse a regulation in his organization’s history.
“When you take private property rights from a man who’s worked all his life,” Mr. Duvall said, “that is very intrusive to him and it’s something he just can’t stand for.”
But environmentalists warned of the repercussions. “With many of our cities and towns living with unsafe drinking water, now is not the time to cut back on clean water enforcement,” said Laura Rubin, director of the Healing Our Waters-Great Lakes Coalition.
The Obama rule was designed to limit pollution in about 60 percent of the nation’s bodies of water, protecting sources of drinking water for about one-third of the United States. It extended existing federal authority, which limited pollution in large bodies of water like the Chesapeake Bay and Puget Sound, to smaller bodies that drain into them, such as tributaries, streams and wetlands.
Under the rule, farmers using land near streams and wetlands were restricted from doing certain kinds of plowing and from planting certain crops, and would have been required to obtain E.P.A. permits in order to use chemical pesticides and fertilizers that could have run off into those bodies of water. Those restrictions will now be lifted.
A wide range of environmental protections are similarly being eliminated. The administration is rushing to clear the way for oil exploration in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, for instance, and weakening protections for endangered species in an effort to help drillers. And, in December 2017, Mr. Trump embarked on the biggest land protection rollback in United States history when he reduced two national monuments in Utah by some two million acres.
The Environmental Protection Agency and the Army Corps of Engineers, which worked together to write the original Obama water rule, are expected to issue a new, looser replacement regulation by the end of this year. It is expected that the new measure, still being developed, will retain federal protections for larger bodies of water, the rivers that drain into them and wetlands that are directly adjacent to those bodies of water.
But it will quite likely strip away protections for streams that run only during or after rainfalls, and for wetlands that are not adjacent to major bodies of water or connected to them by a surface channel. Those changes would represent a victory for farmers and rural landowners who aggressively lobbied the Trump administration.
Lawyers said the interim period between the repeal of the Obama rule and the implementation of the new Trump rule this year could lead to regulatory confusion for farmers and landowners.
“The Obama clean water rule had very clear lines defining which waters are protected by the Clean Water Act, versus which waters are not, while repealing the rule means replacing those lines with case-by-case calls,” said Blan Holman, an expert on water regulations with the Southern Environmental Law Center.
Mr. Holman said the administration was replacing “clear, bright-line rules” with a case-by-case system. “This will be very unpredictable,” he said.
Legal experts also predicted a barrage of lawsuits across the country.
Under the provisions of the Clean Water Act, legal challenges must be heard in Federal District Court, which is based at the state level, rather than federal appeals court. Richard J. Lazarus, a professor of environmental law at Harvard Law School, said that meant that opponents of the Trump administration would focus their challenges in states they perceived as friendly.
“It’s going to be chaos,” Mr. Lazarus said. “We’re going to see suits brought all over the country.”
Correction: Sept. 12, 2019
An earlier version of this article gave the wrong university affiliation for Patrick Parenteau, a professor of environmental law. He teaches at Vermont Law School, not the University of Vermont.
Coral Davenport covers energy and environmental policy, with a focus on climate change, from the Washington bureau. She joined The Times in 2013 and previously worked at Congressional Quarterly, Politico and National Journal. @CoralMDavenport • Facebook
Lisa Friedman reports on climate and environmental policy in Washington. A former editor at Climatewire, she has covered nine international climate talks. @LFFriedman
A version of this article appears in print on Sept. 13, 2019, Section A, Page 1 of the New York edition with the headline: Trump Repeals Obama-Era Rule On Clean Water. Order Reprints | Today’s Paper | Subscribe
In Des Moines Register, EPA Administrator and Assistant Secretary of the Army for Civil Works write:
WASHINGTON — The Trump administration on Thursday announced the repeal of a major Obama-era clean water regulationthat had placed limits on polluting chemicals that could be used near streams, wetlands and other bodies of water.
The rollback of the 2015 measure, known as the Waters of the United States rule, adds to a lengthy list of environmental rulesthat the administration has worked to weaken or undo over the past two and a half years.
Those efforts have focused heavily on eliminating restrictions onfossil fuel pollution, including coal-fired power plants, automobile tailpipes and methane emissions, but have also touched onasbestos and chemical hazards like pesticides.
An immediate effect of the clean water repeal is that polluters will no longer need a permit to discharge potentially harmful substances into many streams and wetlands. But the measure, which is expected to take effect in a matter of weeks, has implications far beyond the pollution that will now be allowed to flow freely into waterways.
Correction:
An earlier version of this article gave the wrong university affiliation for Patrick Parenteau, a professor of environmental law. He teaches at Vermont Law School, not the University of Vermont.
Coral Davenport covers energy and environmental policy, with a focus on climate change, from the Washington bureau. She joined The Times in 2013 and previously worked at Congressional Quarterly, Politico and National Journal. @CoralMDavenport • Facebook
Lisa Friedman reports on climate and environmental policy in Washington. A former editor at Climatewire, she has covered nine international climate talks. @LFFriedman
A version of this article appears in print on , Section A, Page 1 of the New York edition with the headline: Trump Repeals Obama-Era Rule On Clean Water. Order Reprints | Today’s Paper | Subscribe
Environmental Protection Agency Acting Administrator Andrew Wheeler talks about his time visiting Iowans at the Iowa State Fair. Kelsey Kremer, kkremer@dmreg.com
Today, EPA and the Department of the Army will finalize a rule to repeal the previous administration’s overreach in the federal regulation of waters and wetlands. This action officially ends an egregious power grab and sets the stage for a new rule that will provide much-needed regulatory certainty for farmers, home builders, and property owners nationwide.
The Clean Water Act gives the federal government jurisdiction over “navigable waters,” which are defined as “waters of the United States” (WOTUS). Over time, the scope of jurisdiction has expanded from truly navigable waters and their major tributaries to eventually capture isolated ponds and channels that flow only after it rains. As the definition expanded, so too has Washington’s power over private property and the states’ traditional authority to regulate their land and water resources.
In 2015, the Obama administration put forward a WOTUS definition that expanded Washington’s influence over the landscape, including categorical jurisdiction over ephemeral tributaries and potential jurisdiction over isolated wetlands and ponds three-quarters of a mile from a remote tributary. The definition was so far-reaching that they needed to clarify in regulatory text that puddles were excluded. The Iowa Farm Bureau, for example, estimated that waters and wetlands within 97% of the land mass in Iowa could fall under federal purview according to the 2015 definition.
The 2015 rule meant that more businesses and landowners across the U.S. would need to obtain a federal permit to exercise control over their own property, a process that can cost tens of thousands of dollars and take months or even years to complete.
Many Americans balked at this idea, reflected by the fact that the 2015 rule has been mired in litigation since it was signed. Thirty-one states and 53 non-state parties, including groups representing farming, mining, forestry, and other interests, filed complaints and petitions for review in multiple federal district and appellate courts. The rule was enjoined in much of the country as courts began to recognize the potential regulatory overreach. In fact, the 2015 rule is currently in effect only in 22 states, the District of Columbia, and the U.S. territories, while the previous regulations, issued in the 1980s, are in effect in the balance of the country. And just last month, the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Georgia found the 2015 rule unlawfully extended the agencies’ authority beyond the limits of the Clean Water Act and violated federal Administrative Procedure Act requirements.
This patchwork of two different Clean Water Act jurisdictional regulations is unsustainable. There should be one standard that can advance economic development and environmental protection.
Fishermen cast lines in a farm pond outside Williamsburg, Iowa, in this file photo from July 2014. New rules issued by the EPA and Department of the Army are aimed at clarifying federal jurisdiction over bodies of water. (Photo: Charlie Litchfield/The Register)
Shortly after he took office, President Trump issued an executive order directing EPA and the Army to review and replace, as appropriate, the 2015 definition with one that restores the rule of law and the role of states and landowners in managing their land and water resources while at the same time promoting economic growth.
Today’s action is “Step 1” of our response to the president’s executive order. Step 1 repeals the 2015 rule and recodifies the longstanding and familiar regulatory text that existed previously. It also sets the stage for “Step 2” – our new proposed “waters of the United States” definition.
In December 2018, EPA and the Army issued a new proposed definition that would clearly define where federal jurisdiction begins and ends in accordance with the Clean Water Act and Supreme Court precedent. In the proposal, we are clearly defining the difference between federally regulated waterways and those waters left solely to state authority.
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