The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Ohio family sues to stop Lake Erie legal rights

- The Associated Press

A farm family filed a lawsuit challengin­g a measure approved by voters giving legal rights to Lake Erie.

TOLEDO >> An unusual ballot measure approved by voters in Ohio’s fourthlarg­est city to give legal rights to Lake Erie is being challenged by farmers in a federal lawsuit that was filed Wednesday.

The lawsuit names the city of Toledo, where voters overwhelmi­ng approved the Lake Erie Bill of Rights during a special election on Tuesday. The measure seeks to add new protection­s for Lake Erie by allowing people to file lawsuits on its behalf.

The plaintiffs, members of a fifth-generation farm family in Wood County, call the measure an assault on the fundamenta­l rights of farmers in the Lake Erie region.

Toledo Law Director Dale Emch said the city is reviewing the lawsuit

A coalition of environmen­tal groups has given their support to the Bill of Rights because of their concerns about how toxic algae blooms in the lake’s western basin have become a persistent threat to drinking water and the lake’s overall health. Much of the pollution feeding the algae is runoff from fertilizer that flows into the lake through tributarie­s.

Farmers are concerned the measure opens the door for lawsuits that would force them to make costly changes to the way they farm. The lawsuit claims it violates farmers’ constituti­onal rights and is unenforcea­ble because it is too vague. It also seeks to immediatel­y stop the new law from being enforced.

Legal experts have raised doubts about whether the law can survive a court challenge.

Case Western Reserve University law professor Jonathan Adler told cleveland.com the law oversteps the city’s jurisdicti­on because Lake Erie extends far beyond Toledo.

“The people of one city don’t get to declare how a given resource could be used or protected when that resource is shared with lots of other jurisdicti­ons,” Adler said.

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