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The Irony of the Sixth Circuit’s Clean Water Rule Stay

Last week, the United States Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit issued a nationwide stay of implementation of the new Army Corps/EPA Clean Water Rule.  This sounds like a very big deal, and the state plaintiffs who won the stay will no doubt describe this as a major victory.  Those proclamations will conceal, however, a few layers of complexity and irony.

The legal basis for the ruling is an administrative law principle known as the logical outgrowth rule.  Under this principle, a final rule can be different from a proposed rule, but it still must be a logical outgrowth of that proposed rule; it cannot be something completely new.  That principle flows from the basic Administrative Procedure Act requirement for notice and an opportunity to comment.  Neither is present when an agency’s final rule does something no one reasonably could have expected, and upon which no one would have thought to comment.

According to the plaintiffs—and, now, the Sixth Circuit—EPA and the Army Corps violated that principle when they included distance-based jurisdictional criteria in the final rule.  Under the new regulations, wetlands that are more than 4,000 feet from a categorically jurisdictional water feature are categorically non-jurisdictional.  Under the proposed rule, those wetlands would have been subject to case-by-case jurisdictional determinations.  The final rule also includes specific numeric distance limitations on the definition of “adjacent” waters, which also are categorically jurisdictional.  These distance limitations, the court concluded, were not logical outgrowths of the proposed rule, and it therefore stayed implementation of the rule in its entirety.

The irony here is that, in the long term, the states may have shot themselves in the foot.  Or, at best, they’ve just achieved a little bit of largely inconsequential delay.  The state plaintiffs brought their claims for fundamentally anti-regulatory reasons: they wanted less federal jurisdiction, and they wanted more predictable limits upon that jurisdiction.  And the numeric distance limitations did just what the states wanted (though not as much as they wanted): they established boundaries on federal jurisdiction, and they did so on the basis of distance, which is typically more transparent and predictable than a complex science-based determination about hydrologic and ecological connectivity. 

Indeed, that move from science-based, site specific analysis to more blunt and categorical exclusions is precisely why environmental groups are upset about the distance limitations.  Those groups generally favor the new rule, but they have brought suits specifically focused on the very distance limitations that gave the states their “victory” today.  And if the ultimate result of this victory is that the distance limitations come out of the rule, the states will have succeeded in making the rule—from their anti-regulatory perspective—worse than it is at present.  The environmental groups, meanwhile, may just have achieved a key step toward excising the part of the rule that they particularly dislike.

Of course, all of this may turn out to be a tempest in a teapot.  As I’ve argued previously (and as EPA itself has repeatedly pointed out), the new rules don’t mark much of departure from previous practices.  In the field, this court decision won’t change much.  And the decision itself may not last.  As dissenting Judge Keith pointed out, the Sixth Circuit still has to decide whether it actually has jurisdiction to issue this stay.  If it finds that it lacked jurisdiction, the matter will revert to the district courts.  And if the issue does remain with the Sixth Circuit, this is just a preliminary stay.  I think there is some credible basis for these logical outgrowth arguments, but there also are some very credible responses.  With another round of briefing and argument, and a bit more time to think, the Sixth Circuit could come to a different outcome—which, then, may well be reviewed by the United States Supreme Court.

So stay tuned, and remember that in this dispute, things are not always as they seem.

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Dave Owen | October 14, 2015

The Irony of the Sixth Circuit’s Clean Water Rule Stay

Last week, the United States Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit issued a nationwide stay of implementation of the new Army Corps/EPA Clean Water Rule.  This sounds like a very big deal, and the state plaintiffs who won the stay will no doubt describe this as a major victory.  Those proclamations will conceal, however, a few […]

Matthew Freeman | October 9, 2015

The Media Is Missing the Most Important Part of the VW Scandal

Courtesy of the New York Times, here’s a bit of reporting that is emblematic of the way the press has covered the Volkswagen emissions-cheating scandal: Volkswagen said on Tuesday that the scandal would cut deeply into this year’s profit. And the company’s shares plunged again, ending the day 35 percent below the closing price on […]

Mollie Rosenzweig | October 8, 2015

Gag Clauses Chill Consumer Rights

Modern-day snake oil peddlers may have found a way to keep consumers quiet about their ineffective products: non-disparagement clauses, also known as gag clauses. These clauses, slipped into the fine print of form contracts, can restrict a consumer’s ability to post negative reviews of a product online. Non-disparagement clauses, which can vary in scope, generally […]

Robin Kundis Craig | October 7, 2015

New National Ambient Air Quality Standards for Ozone: A Primer

Last week, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) finalized new National Ambient Air Quality Standards (NAAQS) for ozone pursuant to the federal Clean Air Act. See 42 U.S.C. § 7409. The new regulation reduces both the primary and secondary NAAQS for ozone from 0.075 to 0.070 parts per million (ppm) (or from 75 to 70 […]

Sidney A. Shapiro | October 6, 2015

John Boehner, Volkswagen, and the Role of Government

The resignation of House Speaker John Boehner and the VW diesel car scandal — two rather extraordinary events — might not initially appear to be related, but there is a connection. The most conservative members of the Republican caucus celebrated Representative Boehner’s resignation because they felt he did not fight hard enough to shrink the […]

James Goodwin | October 5, 2015

Ten Things I Hate About Jeb’s Antiregulatory Regulatory Reform Plan

Consistent with his ongoing efforts to distinguish himself among the Republican presidential candidates as a serious “policy wonk,” Jeb Bush, “rolled out” his “regulatory reform” plan last week.  The sad truth, though, is that the plan contains little of what might be considered sober or intellectually rigorous.   Rather, it is simply a mishmash of warmed […]

Thomas McGarity | October 1, 2015

CPR’s McGarity Responds to EPA’s New Ozone Standard

The new primary ozone standard of 70 parts per billion (ppb) is definitely a step in the right direction, but it has taken EPA far too long to make this much-needed change. We should not forget, however, that EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson sent a proposed standard of 65 ppb to the White House in August […]

Joseph Tomain | October 1, 2015

Nudging Utilities Into the Future

Two of the most important aspects of the Clean Power Plan (CPP) are the flexibility afforded states as they design compliance strategies and the plan’s openness to all energy resources. A state can satisfy its emission-reduction targets through the use of cleaner or more efficient coal-fired generation, natural gas or nuclear power as well as […]

Katie Tracy | September 28, 2015

A Day’s Work: Safety Training for Temp Workers Would Prevent Many Injuries and Deaths

Lawrence Daquan “Day” Davis, 21, died tragically on his first day of work at his first job, as a “temp worker” at a Bacardi bottling facility in Jacksonville, Florida. He began his shift within 15 minutes of arriving at the facility, after completing some paperwork and watching a very brief safety video. Although working in […]