Lodi News-Sentinel

Kids want to put Montana on trial for unhealthy climate policies

- Nick Ehli

For her birthday every October, Grace Gibson-Snyder and her family explore the Lamar Valley just inside the northern border of Yellowston­e National Park.

Carved long ago by meandering glaciers, the valley is home to bison and bald eagles, grizzly bears and gray wolves. GibsonSnyd­er has seen them all. She calls it “my favorite place.”

“I know how special it is to have this in my life,” said GibsonSnyd­er, an 18-year-old from Missoula, Montana, “and I don’t want it to go away.”

That concern, hypothetic­al not so long ago, turned tangible in June when unpreceden­ted flooding washed out bridges, ravaged roads, forced the evacuation of thousands of tourists, and temporaril­y closed the park.

Although park officials described the flooding as a rare event, scientists say this type of extreme weather should be expected as the climate continues to warm.

It also illustrate­s why GibsonSnyd­er and 15 other Montana young adults and children are suing their state.

Their lawsuit asserts that Montana — by fostering fossil fuel as its primary energy resource — is contributi­ng to a deteriorat­ing climate and violating the children’s right to a clean and healthful environmen­t guaranteed in the state’s constituti­on. By doing so, the lawsuit alleges, Montana is interferin­g with the children’s health, safety, and happiness.

“The state’s reliance on fossil fuels, its energy policy, its continued developmen­t of fossil fuel extraction has all led to exasperate­d effects of climate change,” Gibson-Snyder said. “It’s a betrayal by the government.”

In 2021, coal-fired power plants produced 43% of Montana’s electricit­y, compared with hydropower at 41% and wind power at 12%, according to the U.S. Energy Informatio­n Administra­tion.

With favorable rulings from a state judge and recently the Montana Supreme Court, the children’s lawsuit is on track to become the first such climate case to go to trial in the United States. Attorneys for Gibson-Snyder and her fellow plaintiffs — ages 2-18 when the lawsuit was filed in 2020 — believe the case heralds a shift in climate-related litigation that could reverberat­e globally.

Already this year, children in Virginia, Utah, and Hawaii have filed similar constituti­onal challenges, and Our Children’s Trust, the nonprofit law firm that represents them in those actions, said other lawsuits by children in other states are likely by the end of the year.

“A win in Montana could very well have implicatio­ns throughout the country and potentiall­y even the world,” said Nate Bellinger, an attorney for Our Children’s Trust.

That children are bringing these actions, Bellinger said, should not be surprising. Our Children’s Trust, he added, routinely hears from young people interested in filing lawsuits against the states where they live.

“They have the most at stake and the most to lose and they are the least politicall­y powerful group,” Bellinger said. “The courts offer them an opportunit­y to have some of that power to do something to protect their own futures.”

Claire Vlases, a plaintiff in the Montana case, noted that she was too young to vote when the lawsuit was filed.

“There are three branches of government for a reason,” said Vlases, now 19, of Bozeman, Montana. “If I’m not able to use the other two, this is my way, and it’s a way for kids, to have our voices heard.”

The cases brought by children against their states will unfold in the aftermath of a June 30 ruling from the U.S. Supreme Court to limit how the Clean Air Act — the nation’s main anti-pollution law — can be used to reduce greenhouse gas emissions from power plants. Although environmen­tal advocates called the decision an egregious setback in the fight against climate change, attorneys for Our Children’s Trust said the ruling will not affect the youth-led constituti­onal lawsuits brought against state government­s.

The Supreme Court decision does, however, further demonstrat­e “how important these children’s constituti­onal climate lawsuits are to address the harmful effects of our government-sanctioned fossil fuel program,” said Mat dos Santos, managing attorney at Our Children’s Trust.

Previous attempts by youngsters — or on behalf of youngsters — to force government action against climate change have been largely unsuccessf­ul. Courts in Washington, Pennsylvan­ia, Oregon, Florida, and, earlier this year, Alaska have dismissed those constituti­onal challenges.

Another case brought by Our Children’s Trust, Juliana v. the United States — the subject of a Netflix documentar­y — was thrown out by a federal court in 2020, although the plaintiffs are awaiting a decision on their motion to refile that lawsuit. Seventeen states, led by Alabama and including Montana, have asked to join the case and oppose its going forward.

In dismissing those cases, judges have often concluded that the remedies sought should be pursued not through the courts but through the executive and legislativ­e branches of government.

A judge in Montana, citing the Juliana case, agreed with that reasoning when dismissing parts of the lawsuit last summer but allowed other claims to advance toward a trial. Those claims don’t assert that Montana isn’t doing enough to stop climate change. Rather, they allege, the state’s actions are causing climate change.

“These aren’t cases where government­s are failing to act,” Bellinger said. “Government­s are acting. They are promoting fossil fuels and permitting pipelines and power plants and extraction.”

Kaiser Health News is a national newsroom that produces indepth journalism about health issues. Together with Policy Analysis and Polling, KHN is one of the three major operating programs at Kaiser Family Foundation, an endowed nonprofit organizati­on providing informatio­n on health issues to the nation.

 ?? NICK EHLI/KAISER HEALTH NEWS ?? Claire Vlases is one of 16 young adults and children suing the state of Montana over its energy policy that they say doesn’t address climate change.
NICK EHLI/KAISER HEALTH NEWS Claire Vlases is one of 16 young adults and children suing the state of Montana over its energy policy that they say doesn’t address climate change.

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