Under the Clean Water Act, Congress explicitly directed the Agencies to protect “navigable waters.” Under the Clean Water Act, “the discharge of any pollutant by any person shall be unlawful.” 33 U. S. C. § 1311(a). “The discharge of a pollutant” is defined broadly to include “any addition of any pollutant to navigable waters from any point source.” 33 U.S.C. § 1362(12).
The Clean Water Act (CWA) of 1972 made it a crime to discharge pollutants from
any point source into the "navigable waters of the United States."
However, the U.S. EPA has continually tried to expanded what constitutes a
"pollutant" or "navigable water" over the years as the
understanding of how connected all waters are. Especially in this century, the
U.S. EPA attempted to manage new problems by expanding the reach of old laws
utilizing regulation rather than new laws.
Wetlands are important green infrastructure; among other
functions, they are essential to clean water because they remove sediments and
pollutants, including chemicals and excess nutrients from fertilizers, sewage
discharges, and other sources. Wetlands provide habitat for migratory birds and
food and essential habitat for many species of fish, shellfish, shorebirds,
waterfowl, and furry creatures. Wetlands need to be protected but stretching
the Clean Water Act may not be the way to do it.
In 2006 the Supreme Court split a ruling in which justices
could not agree on the vague definitions within the act. Their decision added
to the confusion when the opinion was split. A plurality of justices, in an
opinion written by Justice Antonin Scalia, found that a “continuous surface
connection” was the test to define a wetland to find protection under the Clean
Water Act. But a separate opinion, by Justice Anthony Kennedy, found there
needed to be a “significant nexus” to navigable waters, which means that
if there wasn’t an obvious surface connection, research was needed to show that
the wetlands played a role in assuring the integrity of the larger body of
water, for wildlife habitat or for other ecological value.
Neither opinion held a majority. This lack of clarity has
meant the protection of U.S. wetlands has been uneven. Those with a direct
connection to navigable waters have largely been protected by the EPA and the
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers or had their development somehow mitigated by
other regulations like Virginia’s Chesapeake Bay Protection Act. Wetlands
without a direct connection to navigable waters have been protected in some
places and not in others.
In 2015 President Obama’s administration tried to administratively
broaden the definition of navigable waters of the United States. This rule
contained the definition of “waters of the United States” to include streams
and wetlands and any body of water that the EPA previously needed to determine
to be a “significant Nexus” to the “navigable waters of the United States” on a
case by case basis. According to that version of the waters of the United
States definition included navigable waterways and their tributaries, streams,
regardless of their size of frequency of flow, wetlands and open waters in
riparian areas and the 100 year floodplains.
The 2015 version of the Water of the United States rule unleashed a torrent of
Federal litigation. Thirty-one states, many local governments, and private
industry filed suite asserting that the rule unconstitutionally expanded the
Clean Water Act’s reach and misapplied several Supreme Court decisions and long
standing practice. Various Courts of Appeal challenges were consolidated before
the Sixth Circuit in Cincinnati, which granted a nationwide wide stay in
November 2015.
With that stay still in place the Trump administration
withdrew the rule. On January 23, 2020, the U.S. EPA and the Department of the
Army (Army) released their Navigable
Waters Protection Rule to define “waters of the United States”
(WOTUS). Restored what could be regulated under the law to point source
pollution discharge into rivers, lakes, streams and adjacent wetlands.
Last fall the Supreme Court agreed to hear the Sackett case(Part 2). The upcoming Supreme Court decision could finally
settle that ambiguity and bring major changes to how wetlands are managed in
the U.S. Concerned that this case could significantly reduce the number of
wetlands that would be protected under the Clean Water Act, the EPA release a
new definition of Waters of the United States that sits somewhat between what
the EPA tried to achieve under President Obama and what the agency tried under
President Trump. You can read the details here. Revised
Definition of "Waters of the United States" (epa.gov)
The Supreme Court decision in the Sackett case is expected
next spring or early summer. I am not convinced that this issue falls along
conservative or progressive lines so we could be surprised. However, whatever the
outcome there needs to be a reasonable, obvious and consistent standard for
navigable waters of the United States to protect them from industrial and waste
water discharge, but wetlands, too, need to be protected.
The proper way to protect the wetlands and seasonal streams
that we now understand are so essential to a balanced ecology and healthy
rivers and streams may be regulations for the application of fill material,
land use, non-point source pollution and other local issues. These are not
issues addressed under the Clean Water Act. These issues need to be consistently
and properly addressed on the state and local level. Something that is often
hard to do. The Clean Water Act may be the wrong tool for a good cause. Congress
may need to act to create the basic framework for laws to protect the
sustainability of our water resources for our future. It is not the court’s job
nor the agency’s job to create law.
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