The Supreme Court Case That Could Upend the Clean Water Act
If SCOTUS finds in favor of a small-town Idaho couple in Sackett v. EPA, it could end the federal government's jurisdiction over millions of acres of land.
HD DownloadEveryone wants clean water, and America's public waterways haven't always been very clean.
In 1969, the Cuyahoga River in Ohio was so polluted by Cleveland's manufacturing industry that it caught on fire, which inspired a Time magazine feature describing a river that "oozes rather than flows."
In 1970, President Richard Nixon signed the National Environmental Policy Act, and later that year he established the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to "make a coordinated attack on the pollutants which debase the air we breathe, the water we drink, and the land that grows our food."
But in fighting to reduce the pollution of air, land, and water, the EPA has dictated to Americans what they can do on their property even when it has no clear environmental benefit or exceeds the agency's authority.
Now the agency's broad mandate, for the first time since its creation, is facing a serious court challenge. It's a case that started 15 years ago with a couple living in a small town in Idaho.
"When I was in high school, I was up there camping and fell in love with Priest Lake and just had to try and figure out how to live there," Mike Sackett told Reason in 2012.
Mike and his wife Chantell Sackett purchased a tract of land abutting an easement, which guaranteed them a prime view of Priest Lake. They planned to leverage their background in construction to build the lakefront home of their dreams. A few days into construction, the Sacketts received a surprise visit from the EPA and Army Corps of Engineers.
"They walked on to the property and said, 'you need to stop work immediately,'" says Chantell Sackett.
The government accused the Sacketts of filling in "wetlands." But the Sacketts didn't understand how a residential lot in an established subdivision with a full sewer hookup 100 yards from the lake and a county title with no indication of wetland status would qualify.
A nearby ditch drained into a stream that connected to the lake. It was separated from the lot by 30 feet of paved road. The proximity of the Sacketts' land to the ditch—in addition to the existence of a subterranean water flow discovered beneath their lot as they began construction—meant that their residential lot was a federally protected wetland, according to the EPA.
Although the Sacketts faced a fine of up to $75,000 a day for violation of the Clean Water Act and the compliance order, the EPA argued they had no right to challenge them in court until the agency actually took action to impose and collect the fine, which it could do retroactively at any time.
With this threat looming over them, the Sacketts paused construction. The EPA also wanted the Sacketts to remove the gravel they'd poured, fence in the lot, and plant foliage, but the couple refused.
"[The EPA told us], 'we want you to fence it. And then when we want you to plant these wetlands plants, and then we want you to watch it for three to five years and make notes, and we'll be able to come look at that.' And I go, 'are you kidding me?'" says Chantell Sackett. "Why would we do that? I mean, it's a lot in a subdivision…[Does the EPA] want to create a wetland?"
That was in 2012. The Sacketts' case went all the way to the Supreme Court, which ruled unanimously that the EPA's compliance orders were indeed subject to judicial review, meaning the agency couldn't retroactively fine the Sacketts for being in violation of the order as the court challenge was adjudicated.
Ten years later, the Supreme Court is taking up the next part of that case: a challenge to how the agency defines a "wetland."
"The first [Supreme Court] decision got us the right to get into court, and now we hope to finally secure that victory," says Damien Schiff, an attorney with the Pacific Legal Foundation, the nonprofit law firm that is arguing the case before the Supreme Court for a second time. He says that a favorable ruling could finally constrain a federal agency that routinely bullies land owners.
"The big picture is a dispute that's roiled the property rights and environmental law communities for half a decade. And that is the scope of the Clean Water Act," says Schiff.
The EPA and the Army Corps, which are the agencies that administer this law, have over the last several decades used their regulatory authority to radically expand what qualifies as "navigable waters" of the United States.
The Clean Water Act allows the EPA to regulate all of the country's "navigable waters," from rivers to lakes to streams to oceanic channels. But the definition of "navigable water" has steadily expanded since the act's passage in 1972. Farmers like Curtis Martin weren't allowed to add a manmade lake that increased the biodiversity of his land because the EPA said it violated the act. John Duarte almost lost his farm in California's Central Valley after the EPA fined him more than $30 million in restoration fees. Reason covered Duarte's story back in 2017.
The Supreme Court weighed in on the EPA's expansive authority to regulate land in a 2006 case, in which the agency had tried to stop a Michigan developer named John Rapanos from turning part of his 54-acre property into a shopping mall, even though it was more than 11 miles from the nearest navigable water. Because the land became swampy in the spring as the snow melted, it argued that Rapanos' development plan would destroy protected wetlands.
He sued, and a 5–4 majority vacated the ruling against Rapanos. But Justice Anthony Kennedy declined to join Justice Antonin Scalia's plurality opinion that would've further limited the EPA and Army Corps of Engineers' regulatory authority. Scalia wrote that the standards the government sought gave the EPA and Army Corps of Engineers jurisdiction over between "270 to 300 million acres of swampy lands —including half of Alaska and an area the size of California in the lower 48 States" and that landowners spent more than $1.7 billion a year obtaining wetlands permits.
Kennedy rejected Scalia's reasoning and devised the "significant nexus" standard, which gave the government the authority to regulate the land if pollution would "significantly affect the chemical, physical, and biological integrity" of nearby navigable water. Kennedy's standard carried the day in the lower courts, but Schiff says it's far too ambiguous to hold any longer.
"A small ambiguity does not mean carte blanche to regulate anything," says Schiff, who acknowledges there's not always a clear boundary between water at the shoreline. The Sacketts' property, however, is nowhere near that boundary. "[The EPA doesn't] really see any need to have any sort of boundary-drawing problem. They think wetlands on their own, even wetlands that are de facto isolated from other waters, could still be regulated."
The EPA argues that it needs the power to regulate properties like the Sacketts' because human activity on nearby lands can have a detrimental effect on protected waters, like Priest Lake. They point to the Clean Water Act's authorization to regulate land "adjacent" to protected water. But how far does "adjacency" extend? That question was raised by Justice Neil Gorsuch in oral arguments when he asked the EPA's attorney whether a property three miles away from a navigable water could be considered "adjacent":
Gorsuch: So [the adjacent property] couldn't be three miles [away]?
Brian H. Fletcher [EPA Attorney]: I don't think it could, Justice Gorsuch.
Gorsuch: Could it be two miles?
Fletcher: That, again, when we start to talk about miles, that sounds too far to be adjacent—to reasonably be proximate to.
Gorsuch: One mile?
Fletcher: Again, I see where this is headed. (Laughter.) But, again, I think—
Gorsuch: So, if the federal government doesn't know, how is a person subject to criminal time in federal prison supposed to know?
Fletcher: So the agencies, in recognition of this problem, make available free of charge jurisdictional determinations as to any property….
Gorsuch: Their manuals, though, don't tell us the answer.
Schiff says that wetland conservation is an important aspect of protecting water quality but Congress simply didn't authorize the federal government to regulate them, as evidenced by the lack of the term "wetland" in the text of the Clean Water Act.
"Just because the feds don't regulate doesn't mean that state and local governments can't regulate," says Schiff, who points out that when the courts limited the scope of the act in the past, some states expanded their own water quality regulations.
Images of burning rivers can serve as dramatic reminders of the costs of uncontrolled pollution, but that doesn't mean that the federal government is the best entity to protect natural resources. In Florida, the Army Corps of Engineers has for years overridden local authorities to divert sludge from the state's largest lake into lagoons and estuaries, introducing toxic algae blooms that have wreaked havoc on the local ecosystem and introduced serious health hazards, ironically in possible violation of the Clean Water Act it's supposed to help enforce.
"A big, broad federal law is oftentimes not the best way to resolve environmental problems," says Schiff, "not just because it crowds out state and local efforts, but, perhaps more importantly, it crowds out private party efforts when you have the federal government threatening significant fines for any sort of activity that may affect waters and also making it much more difficult to do anything in terms of private conservation."
Schiff says he expects a ruling in early 2023. The more than decadelong ordeal has taken its toll on the Sacketts, who never completed work on the home. But if their case prevails for a second time in the Supreme Court, they'll not only have established the clear right for citizens to challenge powerful executive agencies in court, they'll have also established the right of property owners to improve their lands without exorbitant compliance costs and legal threats from the federal government.
"Most private property rights violations nowadays are because of environmentally motivated laws or environmentally motivated lawsuits," says Schiff. "And to fight back against that, you have to go straight to the statutes themselves."
Produced by Zach Weissmueller; edited by Danielle Thompson; additional graphics by Isaac Reese; sound mixing by Ian Keyser
Music credits: "Turning Tides" by Letra via Artlist; "Several" by Melancholicks via Artlist; "Grey Shadow" by ANBR via Artlist; "The Other Side" by ANBR via Artlist; "Dark Hollows 7" by G-Yerro via Artlist; "Dark Hollows 11" by G-Yerro via Artlist; "Campfire" by Aleksey Chistilin via Artlist; "Solace - Instrumental Version" by Roniit via Artlist; "Internal Joy (Reprise)" by Bennett Sullivan via Artlist
Photo credits: Pacific Legal Foundation; Eric Lee - Pool via CNP/CNP / Polaris/Newscom; Graeme Sloan/Sipa USA/Newscom; SIPAUSA POOL/SIPA/Newscom; Chuck Kennedy/KRT/Newscom; Charles Trainor Jr./TNS/Newscom; Greg Lovett/ZUMA Press/Newscom; CNP/AdMedi/SIPA/Newscom
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Is the subdivision named Priest Homes? Would be great if all the houses had a full backyard.
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The Cuyahoga River caught fire many many times. It was not just in 1969, which was pretty minor compared to some previous fires.
And the scary headline about upending the Clean Water Act is pathetic. This case only threatens to rein in regulatory overreach in defining navigable waters as including proximity to a ditch which drains into a lake.
ETA that your stupid scary headline annoys me more and more. Why not "... promises to restore property rights" or "may roll back federal bureaucracy"?
Pathetic. Whatever happened to libertarianism?
re: the Cuyahoga River catching fire
So did almost every other river flowing through every industrial city ever. The Cuyahoga River got its notoriety for catching fire after fairly considerable efforts to clean it up had already begun. Environmentalism as an effective movement preceded the existence of the EPA.
In other words, the Cuyahoga River was notable because it was one of the last rivers to catch fire.
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"This case only threatens to rein in regulatory overreach in defining navigable waters as including proximity to a ditch which drains into a lake."
Yep. The EPA's "mission creep" is patently obvious.
Why does the headline annoy you? Are you assuming that Reason thinks that's a bad thing? This reads to me like it's a good thing, not a complaint. Reason, for their many flaws, has been pretty consistently good on overreaching federal regulation like this.
Got to nuke, something.
The court conversation shows the law can be whatever someone decides it is.
As it has been since the dawn of bureaucracy. Or language. Or probably before that.
Yeah, before that. There are many animal vocalizations that could be translated as "fuck you that's why".
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This would make more sense if the EPA had challenged the residential zoning and plotting at the time it occurred.
Yes, but that would have been a positive action that could have been challenged in court. This way, they get to leave court actions hanging over everybody's heads as a threat without having to actually show their cards. Bluff beats certainty in bureaucrats' minds.
A development company might have better resources to fight an EPA order than a mere homeowner. Plus the towns might not like being told they can't zone an area residential (afterward however, they get their property taxes no matter what the EPA says)
They don't get much property tax if the land can't be improved.
In my local jurisdiction land zoned residential gets taxed at a much higher rate than land zoned agricultural improved or not.
WTF..Colorado builds multimillion dollar high density homes on wetlands- see Breckenridge. I guess it depends on how much cash is kicked back towards whoever is in power.
And the party affiliations of the buyers with big money.
Look, this ain't all that hard.
If the EPA can't show up in a boat, it ain't navigable.
Period.
And they have to get there from DC
Yeah, extending it to small streams and ponds is ridiculous enough. Ditches and seasonal wet spots is beyond a stretch. There is no reason wetland regulation (which I think there is some place for as it does affect water resources that everyone relies on) can't be done by states. Hopefully in a more reasonable manner.
I wouldn't mind extending it if it were really about keeping the water clean. No dumping oil on the ground, because that can drain into water somewhere. That's makes sense. No changing the course of watercourses? That's not keeping it clean.
Extending it to land that gets wet means they can regulate every bit of land even if most of the wet land dries through evaporation and not flowing to a stream.
+100000000 Exactly...
"Navigable Waters: Waters that provide a channel for commerce and transportation of people and goods. "
https://legal-dictionary.thefreedictionary.com/Navigable+Waters
When definitions use to mean something.
Look out, Mama,
there's a white boat
comin' up the river
With a big red beacon,
and a flag,
and a man on the rail
EPA would say hold my beer, and redefine boat to mean any vehicle the EPA travels in.
They're just using the Wickard reading of the Constitution.
Any time anyone does anything, what they do or don't do might possibly have an effect of interstate commerce. Thus anything anyone does is subject to federal regulation. Similarly all water everywhere is going to end up in navigable waters at some point. That give the EPA the power to regulate it. You just have to look at it like someone with a law degree from an Ivy League institution.
My rain gutters drain into a ditch that runs across the back of my property and thence into a swampy area that drains into a small creek about a quarter-mile away. I'm afraid to install a rain barrel to capture the rain water for my garden for fear the EPA is going to show up and try to fine the shit out of me for interfering with the navigable waters of the United States. Then I'll have to start shooting the fuckers and get killed by the cops and all the headlines are going to say "Crazy Old Man Flips Out For No Reason, Slays Numerous Humble Public Servants, Town Mourns Senseless Tragedy".
Can you afford a backhoe or even a woodchipper?
To be honest, you couldn't pay me enough to own a backhoe. The majority of water pollution fines occur from polluting with dirt. However, the fines are designed to make multinational energy companies hesitate.
Lewiston Maine taxes rain. They call it a storm drain fee. They tax the water that runs off of your property. I didn't look to see if you can get taxed less if you collect the water.
https://www.lewistonmaine.gov/DocumentCenter/View/4063/Storm-Water-Utility-Brochure?bidId=
That's a deliberately absurdist interpretation.
They collect taxes for storm drains proportionally to the burden on the storm drains rather than the value of the property. And this yielded a net reduction in residential property taxes.
That seems like a good thing from a libertarian perspective.
You might have had a point of view that I hadn’t looked at it from, but your starting off with an insult (deliberate) resulted in my mind instinctively shutting you off. If you weren’t such a dick we might have had a conversation.
In fairness, he still has a point. You just don't like how he classified your interpretation. The two are mutually exclusive.
Isn't your roof already interfering with the course of waters?
Yes, and in most places, your building permit will depend on showing that roofing part of the property will not affect the amount of run-off leaving the property.
Dr. Peter Venkman knows how best to handle the EPA.
"Yes, your honor, this man has no dick."
My personal "wetlands" story.
I went to pull a county permit (I live unincorporated) to build a shop on my property. They pulled a sat image of my property and informed me there was a freshwater pond in the middle of my driveway. Of course, the pond does not exist, it is an obvious mistake. I had to pay for a 'silt barrier" to avoid any construction run-off getting into the "pond". There's 700 feet between the "pond" and the construction site. This silt barrier was a forced purchase, or my permit would be denied.
When the inspector arrived, my first order of business was to contest the "pond".
His response: "Maybe they misjudged the location". There's no fucking pond on any of my property.
Me: There was no wetlands/pond disclosed when I bought the property.
Him: Maybe it was a drone or Google car that captured standing water and it was declared a pond.
Me: A drone or Google car can determine if I have pond or wetlands on my property?
Him: yes
Me: Seriously?
Me: How do I protest this?
Him: Shrugs.
Me: Until I get a ruling, what are my limitations?
Him: No blades (digging, tilling, post holes, etc) on the area.
Me: I plow snow on my driveway every winter.
Him: I see where you are going with this.
Anyway, three years later, the wetlands designation was removed. Not because of any court process, but because I knew someone who came out, took a look, and removed the note from my county plat.
This illustrates how backwards it is.
There should be a process for designating the wetlands that requires a burden of proof.
Instead it's a safe harbor designation to avoid trouble with the EPA.
That hits the problem about right. There needs to be a default in favor of the property owner, just as we have a default in favor of criminal innocence.
These people are control freaks who hate seeing anyone do anything without having to bow and scrape for permission, just because it makes them feel good.
It's not about wetlands or the environment, it's about power trips.
^ This. absolutely. And same goes for every bureaucrat administering any federal agency's regulations.
How much would it cost to bribe every single one of them in the world enough to stay bribed? I think it might be worth it.
After about an hour on my Blue Press I could permanently bribe as many bureaucrats personally pestering me at an initial cost of about .05 each.
It's the future costs of the expanding and ongoing counter-reaction that are the killer.
I know of a facility that accidentally created “wetlands” at the bottom of a drainage ditch because it didn’t drain well and couldn’t be mown. Literally, a 10×5 foot wetland that permitting wanted protected between two railroads in the middle of a factory.
What was the problem with maintaining it in that state, mosquitoes?
Mosquitoes aren't a problem to sneeze at. And requiring it to be left in that state means you can't fix the stupid drain so it would drain properly!
Bingo Epsilon. The problem was that we wanted to fix the drainage and make some changes to the tracks.
It also illustrates how crooked the land management system is. Even when money or favors do not change hands, the fact that a single bureaucrat can wield imperial power is just wrong.
So why doesn't everyone — literally every adult in the world — become a bureaucrat, i.e. an emperor? Give up everything else we were doing and instead wield imperial power?
Because most of us just want to live our lives -- we don't particularly want to become lords over others.
Best supreme court of my lifetime, hands down.
Keep going.
Gorsuch: So, if the federal government doesn't know, how is a person subject to criminal time in federal prison supposed to know?
A VERY important question that applies to so much more than just EPA bullshit alone.
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Just add a catapult and a net.
I'm picturing a launcher and an oversized orange plastic hotwheels track. Couple of high banks and a loop, the end goes through the third story window.
Given how uncoordinated most computer science students are, anything that's not wheelchair accessible is going to be considered a trip hazard.
At least the Federal EPA makes a claim that it has to be navigable. Massachusetts claims anything larger than 400 sq feet of "wetland soil", even if there is never standing water, as a "wetland". For the mathematically challenged, that's an area 20 feet on a side, smaller than the drip zone of a good sized oak tree (which, btw, will not grow in "wetland soil", according to the EPA).
Well, the state doesn't have to specify navigable because there is no constitutional limitation of its jurisdiction only to navigable waters. If they didn't need that to pretend it's constitutional, I'm sure they would have claimed jurisdiction over all waters. We can debate the wisdom of such regulation by states, but it's at least plausibly a legitimate power of a state.
It is ridiculous how far it goes though. Draining all the swamps and putting rivers in canals has real bad consequences. That doesn't mean every wet spot needs to be super regulated.
Isn't there such a statutory limitation?
Where? In Mass. or federal law?
I was once asked to write grant to construct a raised wooden walkway over a “wetlands” area. When I inspected the project, it wasn’t a “wetlands” at all — it was a very small, gently sloping hill which, when it rained, would drain into a man-made lake.
There were literally a couple of miles of such hills surrounding the reservoir. It did, however, shorten how far the employees had to walk (by a few meters) to get to a small office building rather than taking the paved pathway.
The cost to the taxpayers for this “environmental project” (it was on federal land) to build a 100-ft walkway was (in today’s $$$) over $60,000.
save attorneys' fees. grease the proper wheels
Grease the wheels on the woodchipper.
At some point there's probably a stable equilibrium between bribery and murder.
Like the prohibition years 1920-33?
But what to do to discourage bureaucratic over-reach? Do you think it matters when a few cases, small or large, get ruled in favor of the land owner? How about if the government types had to put some skin in the game? Perhaps the game could include wood chippers.
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EPA can’t define adjacent but they know it when they see it.
Correction: it would restore the meaning of the Clean Water Act to what Congress intended.
Civil Engineering Designer with a decade of experience here.
Wetland delineation is mostly total bulls***, no more rigorous than Water Dowsing with a stick. Whether your property has wetlands and where the limits of those wetlands fall, depends entirely upon the mood of the bureaucrat you get assigned for site inspection. Literally most of it is just ‘eyeballing’ and guessing based on vague open-ended criteria like vegetation density.
We had one Army Core guy walk our site with us and set the wetland limits well far away from our site development limits, no problem no issue go right ahead. Then that guy quit and not a month later the new Army Core guy demands to do the inspection over again his way, the right way. Now this time suddenly our entire commercial development is wetlands and the entire project grinds to a halt. Hundreds of thousands of dollars wasted.
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SCHIFF???
REALLY??
Jesus titty-f*cking Christ what's next.
You gonna start quoting Pee Wee Herman?