Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Water rules return to court

- MARY HIGHTOWER

A federal court has halted implementa­tion of the Environmen­tal Protection Agency’s new rule defining waters of the United States, and two more injunction requests are pending in cases involving 25 states, including Arkansas, said Brigit Rollins, National Agricultur­al Law Center staff attorney.

The new rule went into effect on March 20. The U.S. District Court in the Southern District of Texas issued the injunction March 19 in Texas vs. EPA. The case halts implementa­tion of the new EPA rule in both Texas and Idaho.

There are two other cases pending — Kentucky Chamber of Commerce vs. EPA, which involves only Kentucky, and State of West Virginia vs. EPA, which involves 24 states, including Arkansas. Following the Texas action, attorneys in the two other cases filed additional briefs Sunday noting the injunction.

The injunction is “not the end of the road. That’s just sort of the first step in the lawsuit,” Rollins said. “The arguments and the claims are still lingering” and need to be heard.

“Should the judges in those other two lawsuits issue injunction­s, there are a couple of things that are going to happen right away: Once the judge issues the injunction, the current WOTUS rule will no longer be in legal effect,” Rollins said. “What that means is that EPA is going to be applying the previous WOTUS rule that was in place.”

At issue in all three cases is how EPA defines “waters of the U.S.,” known as WOTUS. That definition is critical to enforcemen­t of the Clean Water Act.

MUDDYING THE WATERS

The legal vortex surroundin­g WOTUS means the waters may get muddier before clarity is achieved. Rollins said the situation harkens back to EPA’s 2015 rule redefining WOTUS and the resulting lawsuits.

“What ultimately ended up happening was that

more than 50 percent of the states had an injunction on that 2015 rule,” she said. “What it meant for those states is that they were applying a different WOTUS rule than in the states that had not joined the suits.

“It’s not impossible that we could see that again,” Rollins said.

“It creates confusion for landowners, members of agricultur­al communitie­s, and members of industrial communitie­s. I would imagine it would be particular­ly challengin­g for anyone who is operating in multiple states,” she said. “You might be subject to different requiremen­ts in different states.

“There is the potential for issues to arise with pending Clean Water Act permits that are sort of stuck between those different rules,” Rollins said. “And at the moment it’s going to be hard to say what that means for those permits.”

The National Agricultur­al Law Center has a page dedicated to WOTUS updates.

For updates on WOTUS and other agricultur­al law developmen­ts, subscribe free to The Feed, the NALC’s twice-monthly newsletter highlighti­ng recent legal developmen­ts facing agricultur­e.

For informatio­n about the National Agricultur­al Law Center, visit nationalag­lawcenter.org or follow @Nataglaw on Twitter. The National Agricultur­al Law Center is also on Facebook and LinkedIn.

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