Observer News Enterprise

North Carolina Gov. Cooper gets temporary legal win in fight with legislatur­e over board’s makeup

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RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) — A North Carolina judge has prevented for now an environmen­tal regulatory board from canceling its lawsuit while state courts examine Gov. Roy Cooper’s arguments that legislativ­e changes in the board’s makeup prevent him from carrying out effectivel­y laws to control pollution.

Superior Court Rebecca Holt’s agreed with Cooper’s lawyers during a quickly scheduled hearing Thursday to issue a temporary restrainin­g order blocking the Environmen­tal Management Commission from dismissing its complaint against the Rules Review Commission, according to court records.

Holt also scheduled another hearing next week to weigh the Democratic governor’s request to extend the blockage of the dismissal while Cooper’s own broader litigation challengin­g the Republican-controlled legislatur­e’s recent alteration­s to several state boards and commission­s continues. The governor and GOP legislativ­e leaders have fought for years over the balance of power in the two branches of government.

Legislatio­n approved in the fall over the governor’s veto ended Cooper’s control over a majority of seats on each of the panels, which he contends violates the state constituti­on and veers from recent state Supreme Court opinions by preventing him from carrying out state laws in line with his policy preference­s.

A three-judge panel Nov. 1 granted a preliminar­y injunction freezing those changes involving the Board of Transporta­tion and two other boards. But it declined to block the alteration­s at two other panels, including the Environmen­tal Management Commission, where until recently a governor chose nine of the 15 positions, with the General Assembly picking the other six. Now two of the governor’s slots have been given to state Agricultur­e Commission­er Steve Troxler, a Republican, so Cooper no longer holds the majority of panel seats.

Over the last two months, however, Cooper’s attorneys collected new legal ammunition to fight the Environmen­tal Management Commission’s changes. First, the newly-constitute­d commission picked a member appointed by the legislatur­e to serve as chairman, unseating Cooper’s appointee.

And earlier Thursday, the commission voted 8-7 to dismiss its lawsuit against the Rules Review Commission over the rules panel’s objection to the environmen­tal panel’s new discharge limits in surface waters of an synthetic industrial chemical that’s considered by researcher­s or regulators to be a probable or possible carcinogen to humans. The Cooper administra­tion opposed the lawsuit dismissal.

Cooper “is likely to succeed in showing that he has in fact lost control of the EMC, and the EMC has exercised its control inconsiste­nt with the

Governor’s views and priorities” on carrying out laws, the governor’s attorneys wrote Thursday. Holt’s decision later Thursday granting a temporary restrainin­g order was first reported by the Carolina

Journal news site.

Lawyers for House Speaker Tim Moore and Senate leader Phil Berger, who are lawsuit defendants, have defended the changes to the boards. In particular, the GOP lawmakers have pointed out that elected officials within the executive branch still choose the majority of members of the Environmen­tal Management Commission.

Another pending lawsuit filed by Cooper challenges portions of a new law that strips the governor of his authority to appoint elections board members and gives it to legislator­s. Another threejudge panel has put the election board changes on hold while a lawsuit continues.

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