Chattanooga Times Free Press

President orders review of Obama rule protecting small streams

- BY JILL COLVIN

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump signed an executive order mandating a review of an Obamaera rule aimed at protecting small streams and wetlands from developmen­t and pollution, fulfilling a campaign promise while earning the ire of environmen­tal groups.

The order, signed Tuesday at the White House, instructs the Environmen­tal Protection Agency and Army Corps of Engineers to review a rule that redefined “waters of the United States” protected under the Clean Water Act to include smaller creeks and wetlands.

The order asks the heads of the agencies to publish a proposed rule rescinding or revising the waters rule for notice and comment — the first step in what is likely to be a yearslong administra­tive review process many expect to end up at the Supreme Court.

At a White House signing ceremony, the president called the rule, which has never been implemente­d because of a series of lawsuits, “one of the worst examples of federal regulation” that he said “has truly run amok.”

“It’s been a disaster,” he went on, claiming the EPA had decided it could regulate “nearly every puddle or every ditch on a farmer’s land or any place else that they decide.”

Trump had railed against the water rule during his campaign, slamming it as an example of federal overreach. Farmers and landowners have criticized the rule, saying there are already too many government regulation­s that affect their businesses, and Republican­s have been working to thwart it since its inception.

But Democrats have argued it safeguards drinking water for millions of Americans and clarifies confusion about which streams, tributarie­s and wetlands should be protected in the wake of decades-long uncertaint­y despite two Supreme Court rulings.

The president has promised to dramatical­ly scale back regulation­s he says are holding back businesses, and has signed several orders aimed at that goal.

Despite the outcry over the rule, it has never taken effect because of lawsuits filed by Republican attorneys general and large agricultur­e companies. Environmen­tal groups such as the Sierra Club have said they will sue to fight any attempt by the Trump administra­tion to roll back the rule.

Thaddeus Lightfoot, a partner at the internatio­nal law firm Dorsey & Whitney who has been practicing environmen­tal law for almost 30 years, likened the order to a “paper tweet” that on a practical level will have no immediate impact.

“The only way to unwind it or roll it back or rescind it or modify it,” he said, is to go through the lengthy federal rulemaking process laid out in the federal Administra­tive Procedure Act. He said the process will likely take months or years, and will likely include further legal action. He expects the Supreme Court to weigh in on the issue during the current session.

Trump was welcomed to the signing ceremony by applause from a group of farmers, home builders, county commission­ers and lawmakers he’d invited to the White House for the occasion. He was also joined by newly confirmed EPA chief, Scott Pruitt.

Pruitt, the former attorney general of Oklahoma, joined with more than two dozen other states in suing EPA over the water rule. The case is still pending and Pruitt declined to answer questions about whether he would recuse himself during his confirmati­on hearing, despite protests from Democrats.

Craig Uden, the president of the National Cattlemen’s Beef Associatio­n, applauded the president’s action in a statement, saying the rule represents one of the “largest federal land grabs and private-property infringeme­nts in American history.”

It “should be taken out behind the barn and put out of its misery,” he said.

 ??  ?? President Donald Trump speaks as he signs the Waters of the United States executive order Tuesday in the White House.
President Donald Trump speaks as he signs the Waters of the United States executive order Tuesday in the White House.

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