ARTICLE
3 August 2021

EPA And The Corps Of Engineers Are Heading Down The Waters Of The United States Regulatory Road This Summer. Will They Ever Reach Their Destination?

M
Mintz

Contributor

Mintz is a general practice, full-service Am Law 100 law firm with more than 600 attorneys. We are headquartered in Boston and have additional US offices in Los Angeles, Miami, New York City, San Diego, San Francisco, and Washington, DC, as well as an office in Toronto, Canada.
Friday EPA and the Army Corps of Engineers announced that between now and Labor Day they will be listening to stakeholders as they kick off what will be the eighth attempt to resolve by regulation the reach of the Federal Clean Water Act.
United States Environment

Friday EPA and the Army Corps of Engineers announced that between now and Labor Day they will be listening to stakeholders as they kick off what will be the eighth attempt to resolve by regulation the reach of the Federal Clean Water Act.   

We learned that EPA and the Corps plan not one but two sets of regulations. The first will be a "foundational rule" to restore the regulatory definition of Waters of the United States to what it was prior to the Obama Administration EPA rule with "updates" to reflect what EPA and the Corps think the Supreme Court has resolved in the meantime. Needless to say, there is likely to be considerable controversy about what, if anything, that might be.

The second set of regulations would "refine this regulatory foundation and establish an updated and durable" definition of Waters of the United States. 

One has to admire EPA's and the Corps' optimism but one also has to wonder how anyone could possibly think that not one but two rulemakings could be completed between now and January, 2024, even if one ignores the effect of the certain multi-district litigation over the first "foundational rule".

In the meantime, Inside EPA reports  a few Republican Senators are already complaining about the EPA and Corps rule making that hasn't even begun yet. They've filed legislation that would make the Trump Administration EPA rule the law of the land that is certain not to go anywhere in a Democrat-controlled Congress. 

Though most think I'm hopelessly naïve for suggesting it, perhaps bipartisan infrastructure legislation might pave the way for comprehensive Clean Water Act legislation in time for its 50th anniversary next year, or at least sooner than the eighth, or ninth, regulatory attempt to develop a "reasonable, effective, and durable definition" of the reach of the Clean Water Act.

The longest running controversy in environmental law continues.

 

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