A student-run environmental group operating out of a 150-square-foot office at Lewis and Clark Law School in Portland, Oregon has an important lesson to teach congressional Republicans.
In 2004, the Northwest Environmental Defense Center – a small group with an annual budget of a few thousand dollars and a single staff member – secured more fines for violations of pollution control laws than the collective efforts of 110 enforcement personnel at the State of Oregon’s Department of Environmental Quality. NEDC student volunteers investigate illegal polluters – as well as actions by state and federal agencies that violate environmental laws – and turn over worthwhile cases to local attorneys who work for the group on a pro bono basis. The attorneys recruited by NEDC, many of whom are recent law school grads still paying off their own student loans, are able to spend the long hours necessary to press the group’s enforcement cases because the volunteer lawyers can recover their fees if they ultimately prevail – which they often do.
It is a perfect example of the polluter pays principle. Polluters and government agencies which themselves ignore environmental regulations are forced to foot the bill for enforcement of the laws they’ve flouted. And Oregonians come out ahead by getting cleaner air and water at no cost to state taxpayers.
Similar scenarios play out across the country. Many of the most significant federal environmental enforcement actions are brought by citizen groups and their volunteer attorneys. Many law school environmental law clinics, which provide both hands-on experience to law students and no-cost representation to public interest groups, also rely on fee recoveries to fund their enforcement work (such as at the Pacific Environmental Advocacy Center, a clinic that I work with at Lewis and Clark). Now, however, Republicans in Congress are trying to severely limit citizen enforcement of environmental laws.
Last week, Senator David Vitter and Representative Rob Bishop, along with a host of conservative co-sponsors, introduced legislation that would prevent plaintiffs from recovering attorneys fees from the federal government if they win a lawsuit that stops or slows energy production, irrigation, fishing, grazing, or logging; if a successful lawsuit diminishes the value of private property; or if a suit eliminates or prevents one or more jobs. If passed, the bill would cripple citizen enforcement of environmental laws against federal agencies (the bill also features a number of other anti-environmental actions).
Most organizations working to protect the environment cannot afford to hire attorneys. And lawyers generally can’t afford to work for free; without the possibility to recover fees if they win, most attorneys will be unable to take on government agencies no matter how egregious those agencies’ conduct. Even most non-profit organizations that can afford staff attorneys rely heavily on fee awards garnered by their attorneys to be able to afford a legal staff.
Proponents of the legislation to eliminate fee awards portray environmental groups and their attorneys as obstructionists getting rich on taxpayer dollars while dragging down the economy and standing in the way of federal agencies doing their jobs. But reality reveals a very different picture. Most attorneys working for public interest groups, or on staff at non-profit organizations, get by on a small fraction of the salaries of their downtown law firm counterparts. More importantly, however, attorney fee awards to environmental plaintiffs do not reward obstructionist tactics – courts by law may grant such fees only when they determine that the federal government has violated the law and its actions were not “substantially justified.”
This fact reveals the true intent behind the proposed legislation – to allow drilling for oil, cutting down trees, spewing toxics and other pollution, and paving over natural areas and habitat without worrying too much about complying with the legal safeguards Congress established protect the environment and the health of the American public. In other words, the proposal to eliminate fee awards to those who enforce environmental regulations represents a willingness to selectively wink at the rule of law in American society. Though they’re willing to lock up criminals, Republicans in Congress are driving to take away the most effective tools for holding the government – and those it allows to pollute and develop – accountable for meeting the environmental standards set out under federal law.
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Dan Rohlf | April 8, 2011
A student-run environmental group operating out of a 150-square-foot office at Lewis and Clark Law School in Portland, Oregon has an important lesson to teach congressional Republicans. In 2004, the Northwest Environmental Defense Center – a small group with an annual budget of a few thousand dollars and a single staff member – secured more […]
Matthew Freeman | April 7, 2011
This afternoon at 1:00 p.m., the House Energy and Commerce Committee’s Subcommittee on Energy and Power will check one more box in the House GOP’s ongoing effort to demonstrate its appreciation to the corporate interests that helped elect them, by holding a hearing on a proposal disingenuously called the Transparency in Regulatory Analysis of Impacts […]
Ben Somberg | April 6, 2011
When the U.S. Small Business Administration issued a study last September claiming regulations cost the U.S. economy $1.75 Trillion in a single year, the agency trumpeted that the "report was peer reviewed consistent with the Office of Advocacy’s data quality guidelines." But the peer review file included with the study was embarrassingly meager — comments […]
Holly Doremus | April 5, 2011
Cross-posted from Legal Planet. EPA has announced that it will delay finalizing its guidance memorandum on Clean Water Act permitting for mountaintop removal mining projects pending review by the White House Office of Management and Budget. The announcement is bad news for Appalachian streams, and worse news for environmental interests hoping the Obama administration won’t […]
Daniel Farber | April 4, 2011
Cross-posted from Legal Planet. I’m beginning to wonder whether we need an “Endangered People Act” to ensure that the most vulnerable get the protection they need from climate change impacts. Climate change will disproportionately affect vulnerable individuals and poorer regions and countries, as I discuss in a recent paper comparing adaptation efforts in China, England, […]
Holly Doremus | April 1, 2011
Cross-posted from Legal Planet. As Rick noted earlier, the Ninth Circuit is now the fifth federal circuit court of appeals to reject a Commerce Clause challenge to the ESA. In San Luis & Delta-Mendota Water Authority v. Salazar, a Ninth Circuit panel upheld protection of the Delta smelt. I agree with Rick’s analysis of the […]
Sidney A. Shapiro | March 30, 2011
Last week, the White House’s Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs (OIRA) approved a survey to be conducted for the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) as part of the agency's efforts to develop an Injury and Illness Prevention Program (I2P2) standard. Surveys, like this one, have to be approved by OIRA according to the Paperwork […]
Ben Somberg | March 29, 2011
CPR Member Scholar Robert Glicksman testifies at a hearing this afternoon on “Raising the Agencies’ Grades – Protecting the Economy, Assuring Regulatory Quality and Improving Assessments of Regulatory Need.” The hearing will be held by the Courts, Commercial and Administrate Law subcommittee of the House Judiciary Committee. The hearing will feature two witnesses from the […]
Amy Sinden | March 29, 2011
Around 6pm ET last night, after most reporters had wrapped up, EPA issued its long-awaited proposed cooling water rule. Under the Clean Water Act, this rule is supposed to protect the billions of fish and other aquatic organisms that are killed each day when they are squashed against intake screens or sucked up into cooling water […]