SCOTUS weakens EPA power to enforce
CLEAN WATER ACT
BY
The
At issue was the reach of the landmark, 51-year-old Clean Water Act and how courts should determine what count as "waters of
But Justice
"We hold that the CWA extends to only those wetlands with a continuous surface connection to bodies that are 'waters of
Justice
"The vice in both instances is the same: the Court's appointment of itself as the national decision-maker on environmental policy," she wrote, joined by Justice
Justice
The justices were reviewing for a second time the case of an
FROM PAGE 1
wetlands on the couple's 0.63-acre lot, which makes it subject to the Clean Water Act and allows the government to require permits and impose penalties for violations.
Environmental advocates asked the court to retain the government's authority to protect and regulate waterways that significantly affect downstream water quality and warned that developers would take advantage of weaker regulations. Under the Sacketts' proposed definition of the law, they said, about half of all wetlands and roughly 60 percent of streams would no longer be federally protected.
The ruling is the second major environmental decision by the court in about a year. Last term, the court's conservative majority restricted the
The Sacketts, backed by the conservative
The
The Biden administration and environmental groups have argued for preserving broader federal authority over such matters. Narrowing the reach of the law would undermine the government's ability to protect wetlands that, for instance, are separated from a river by a small dune but still affect that river's chemical, physical and biological integrity.
Four presidential administrations have now been mired in the fight over what constitutes a wetland. The George W. Bush administration first issued guidance limiting the reach of the Clean Water Act in 2003 and 2008, after earlier
In 2015 the Obama administration widened the scope of the law to cover even ephemeral streams and ponds.
The Biden administration has tried to strike a balance by undoing the Trump-era rule and redefining
Attorney
A court decision against the
"I don't see how they get away from that," Petersen said. "The Biden administration is really boxed into the corner."
The case is Sackett v.



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