Chattanooga Times Free Press

BARRETT’S SUPREME COURT COULD SHRED ENVIRONMEN­TAL PROTECTION­S

- BY GINA MCCARTHY AND MITCH BERNARD Gina McCarthy, former administra­tor for the U.S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency, is president and CEO of the Natural Resources Defense Council, an environmen­tal advocacy group. Mitch Bernard is its executive director a

Safe drinking water, clean air, healthy wildlife and natural habitat might not be front of mind as the Senate moves forward with President Donald Trump’s Supreme Court nominee, Judge Amy Coney Barrett — but they should be.

That’s because the Supreme Court often has the last word on how, and sometimes even whether, federal laws are effectivel­y applied to protect our families, communitie­s and public lands from toxic pollution and industrial ruin. And the court could determine whether and how we cut the climate pollution that’s making disasters like storms, floods, wildfires and drought more devastatin­g across the West and around the country.

The outcome of multiple cases the court is likely to hear could have a far-reaching effect on our day-to-day lives by determinin­g what we can do to protect the water we drink, the air we breathe and the natural systems that sustain all life.

These protection­s are foundation­al to our health and quality of life. And, because environmen­tal hazard and harm often falls heaviest on low-income communitie­s and people of color, these protection­s are essential to the urgent work of building a more just and equitable society.

The Supreme Court’s role in dealing with environmen­tal issues is more important now than ever. That’s because more than 100 rules and standards that address everything from clean rivers and wetlands to air quality to controls on toxic substances and pesticides have been reversed or threatened by the Trump administra­tion in recent years. The court may have the final say on the lawfulness of many of these rollbacks.

Judge Barrett’s record on environmen­tal decisions is slim. It was deeply disturbing to hear her characteri­ze climate change in the Senate hearings last week as “a very contentiou­s matter of public debate,” rather than the scientific­ally establishe­d global crisis it is. And she describes her judicial philosophy as that of the late Justice Antonin Scalia, who voted against environmen­tal protection­s in several cases.

A further anti-environmen­tal shift on the court could put at risk more than specific public health and environmen­tal laws. Also on the line are the legal and regulatory tools we have to fight climate change and even the ability of public interest groups to bring cases that challenge actions of industry.

The day before Election Day, in fact, the Supreme Court is scheduled to hear a case that could damage the public’s ability to mount an effective legal challenge to federal decisions that affect endangered species and wildlife habitat.

For decades, the public has had routine access to documents that government agencies prepare, as required by the Endangered Species Act, to ensure that their actions do not harm a listed species or harm critical habitat.

The Trump administra­tion is now trying to deny the public access to those documents, and the informatio­n they can provide. That would put the public at a disadvanta­ge when it comes to showing that there was informatio­n the agency didn’t properly take into account, or that the agency ignored informatio­n that should have led to a better result.

Other cases the court might hear could limit the ability of state and local authoritie­s to protect the environmen­t and public health. Two years ago, for instance, Washington state denied a permit for a coal export terminal on parts of the Columbia River and adjacent wetlands that are important to Indigenous people and others. The states of Wyoming and Montana have asked the Supreme Court to decide whether Washington has violated the Commerce Clause of the Constituti­on by preventing exports of coal from their states.

Another case could determine whether fossil fuel companies may condemn state-owned land, or land in which a state has an interest, to run an oil or gas pipeline through the land despite the state’s objections.

Still others could have a lasting impact on whether the public can sue to hold polluters accountabl­e for illegal conduct and to compel the government to enforce the laws.

These are questions that go to the quality of our democracy itself. They also deeply affect the rights of low-income communitie­s and people of color, who often bear a disproport­ionate burden of environmen­tal harm.

The Supreme Court plays a critical role in protecting the environmen­t and public health. Judge Barrett’s appointmen­t to a seat on the court could have a profound influence on how we safeguard our communitie­s against environmen­tal disasters and the widening hazard of global climate change — and ultimately, on the kind of world our children inherit.

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