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Can EPA block lawsuits against its WOTUS land grab?

Landowners would have just six months to file their challenges and all cases would be concentrated in a single appellate court.

Can EPA block lawsuits against its WOTUS land grab?

U.S. Supreme Court to decide whether
the EPA can evade judicial review

Can EPA block lawsuits against its
‘Waters of the United States’ land grab?

Washington, D.C.; October 5, 2017: Can federal bureaucrats insulate their regulations from review by arbitrarily restricting their victims’ ability to sue? Can they distort statutory guidelines in a way that limits the public’s access to justice?

These questions will be before the Supreme Court on Wednesday, October 11, when it hears National Association of Manufacturers v. U.S. Department of Defense.

The case deals with the Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA) attempt to curtail review of its “Waters of the United States” (WOTUS) regulation—the sweeping rule that would vastly expand the reach of the Clean Water Act, threatening millions of property owners with unjustified federal oversight.

Pacific Legal Foundation represents a number of farmers, ranchers, and other landowners from across the country who have challenged the WOTUS rule—and who, in this litigation, seek to stop the EPA from unlawfully limiting their right to do so.

“We are asking the justices to reject the EPA’s contortion of the law to shield its land grab from judicial scrutiny,” said PLF Senior Attorney M. Reed Hopper.

Under the terms of the Clean Water Act, people who are harmed by EPA rules like the WOTUS regulation can sue in any federal district court, within six years of the rule’s issuance. But the EPA is trying to require that lawsuits only be filed in federal courts of appeal. Landowners would have just six months to file their challenges and all cases would be concentrated in a single appellate court.

“The EPA cannot be allowed to rewrite the law to limit access to the courts,” said Hopper. “Americans who are affected by overzealous bureaucrats must have full freedom to seek the protection of the judiciary.

“Although the WOTUS rule is being revised by the Trump Administration, the outcome of this case is still an urgent matter,” he continued. “Who knows whether revisions will go far enough? Moreover, if the EPA succeeds in blocking lawsuits over the WOTUS rule, other government agencies could use the same ploy to shield their regulations from judicial review.”

“Pacific Legal Foundation fights to defend individual liberty against overreach by the administrative state,” said PLF President and CEO Steven D. Anderson. “As shown by this case, keeping unelected bureaucracies in check requires keeping courts open to their victims.”

More information can be found at: pacificlegal.org/WOTUSvenue.

 

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