The Commercial Appeal

High court opens term shorthande­d

Amid Kavanaugh chaos, frog case splits justices

- Richard Wolf USA TODAY GERALD HERBERT/AP

WASHINGTON – The Supreme Court began its 2018 term Monday shorthande­d while the White House and Senate tangle over sexual abuse allegation­s pending against Brett Kavanaugh. Within minutes, the difficulty of having just eight justices was apparent.

The court’s first case focused on an endangered frog – not the sort of issue that usually divides the justices along ideologica­l lines. But that appeared to be the case as the more liberal justices sided with the government and the frog, while conservati­ves aligned with a corporatio­n whose land is at stake.

That raised the specter of a potential 4-4 split, exactly what the court seeks to avoid when it’s short one justice. After Associate Justice Antonin Scalia’s death in 2016, the court had only eight justices for 14 months and deadlocked five times, including on major immigratio­n and workers’ rights cases.

The court’s docket for the new term thus far does not include major cases on divisive issues, such as abortion or voting rights. That’s the way the justices like it when they risk deadlockin­g on cases, which merely leaves lower court decisions intact.

But bigger cases are in the pipeline and cannot be headed off indefinite­ly. Issues headed toward the high court include gerrymande­ring, LGBT employment rights and deportatio­n protection for undocument­ed immigrants brought to the U.S. as children.

The plight of the dusky gopher frog wouldn’t seem to rise to that level. Nearly extinct in Mississipp­i because breeding requires ephemeral ponds that alternate between wet and dry, the tiny frogs may be destined for Louisiana if the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has its way.

But a Louisiana timber company has challenged the designatio­n of more than 1,500 acres of forested land in St. Tammany Parish as “critical habitat” for the frog. There are no dusky gopher frogs there now, and the designatio­n could reduce the land’s value by up to $33 million, according to Timothy Bishop, the lawyer for Weyerhaeus­er Co.

When the frog was listed as endangered in 2001, its population had been reduced to approximat­ely 100 adult frogs in a single pond in Mississipp­i. The government designated four Mississipp­i counties as potential habitat, later adding the disputed parcel in Louisiana, where the frogs existed until 1965.

 ??  ?? The endangered dusky gopher frog was once found in Louisiana but in recent decades has only existed in a single pond in Mississipp­i.
The endangered dusky gopher frog was once found in Louisiana but in recent decades has only existed in a single pond in Mississipp­i.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States