The EPA’s Lawless Land Grab
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by Rupert Darwall February 11, 2016 4:00 AM
Obama’s power-mad agency claims jurisdiction over land and water use
almost everywhere in the United States.
In his final book, economist Mancur Olson wrote of the profound and
crucial connection between representative government and the property
and contract rights important for economic progress. Olson quoted James
Madison: “Just as a man may be said to have a right to his property, so
he has a property in his rights.” The rule of law is therefore essential
for the preservation of constitutional government and for economic
growth. In no country have the economic fruits of the rule of law been
more plentiful than the United States.
Today there is no greater threat to the rule of law and the right to the
peaceful enjoyment of property than the Environmental Protection Agency
(EPA), in the course of prosecuting its ostensible mission to clean the
air and the water. Under the guise of the Clean Air Act, the agency’s
Clean Power Plan will take control of America’s electrical-power
infrastructure.
Yet Congress did not envisage that the 1970 legislation would be used to
regulate greenhouse-gas emissions. To get around the inconveniently
precise wording Congress provided in the statute, EPA resorted to
rewriting the provision of the Clean Air Act that didn’t fit with its
regulatory plans — a gambit that has had ups and downs in the Supreme
Court, which will soon address the legality of the Clean Power Plan.
Until Monday, the timetable was well advanced, with states being
required to submit compliance plans this summer. Then, on Tuesday, the
Supreme Court in a 5–4 decision agreed to freeze its implementation,
showing that the plan’s opponents have a reasonable prospect of
persuading the courts to throw out the plan.
RELATED: The EPA’s Troubled Waters
Later this month, the Supreme Court will decide whether to hear a case,
American Farm Bureau Federation v. EPA, under the Clean Water Act, a
statute Congress passed two years after its clean-air sibling. As with
EPA’s regulation of greenhouse-gas emissions, the case involves a
massive extension of EPA authority. Without Supreme Court scrutiny, EPA
would acquire powers that it had first sought, but had been partially
checked, in what has become known as the Waters of the U.S. (WOTUS).
WOTUS derives from wording in the 1972 Clean Water Act that states that
the federal government has jurisdiction over navigable waters, which are
further defined as the “waters of the United States, including the
territorial seas.” Over many years, EPA rule-making expanded its
definition of WOTUS far beyond anything a riverboat could navigate, to
rivulets, ditches, and potholes. Supreme Court rulings in 2001 and 2006
drew limits on the Clean Water Act’s WOTUS.
RELATED: How the EPA Wants to Use River Regulations to Regulate Farmers
In the 2006 decision, Justice Kennedy had introduced a “significant
nexus” test to assess whether specific wetlands should be defined as
part of WOTUS if they were linked ecologically or in some other
significant way to a stretch of navigable water. Where Justice Kennedy
offered a gap an inch wide, EPA widened it by a mile. It took the
significant-nexus test and used it to reach wet patches anywhere, in a
revised rule that has prompted multiple legal and political challenges.
Just last month, President Obama vetoed a congressional joint resolution
(S.J.Res. 22) disapproving of the rule.
But, to borrow President Obama’s phrase after he’d given up on getting
Congress to pass cap-and-trade, there is more than one way to skin a
cat. Whatever the legal and legislative fate of the Clean Water WOTUS
rule, EPA has also developed a toolkit to regulate the land over which
and through which water flows into WOTUS. Less than four months after
taking office, President Obama issued an executive order instructing EPA
“to make full use of its powers” to regulate the Chesapeake Bay
watershed in a manner that “can be replicated through the nation.” The
aim of these watershed-based frameworks, the executive order states, is
to “assign pollution reduction responsibilities to pollution sources.”
It’s not hard to see how from this source springs a highly intrusive and
granular form of federal regulation.
At the end of 2010, EPA produced a blueprint for regulating the
Chesapeake Bay watershed. The Chesapeake Bay TMDL (Total Maximum Daily
Load) document asserts federal authority not just over the Bay but also
over its tributaries upstream all the way to drainage ditches and — most
expansively — all land from which rainfall runoff might find its way
downstream. A petition concerning this plan is the subject of the case
that the Supreme Court is now considering. A suit was originally filed
in January 2011, decided in favor of EPA in September 2013, and
subsequently upheld by the Third Circuit last July.
“EPA could control — and potentially debilitate — an area where more
than half the goods and services consumed by United States citizens are
produced.”
According to petitioners and the 22 states that filed a
friend-of-the-court brief, the Chesapeake TMDL, which encompasses six
states and the District of Columbia, will cost “tens of billions of
dollars” to implement. A feature of the plan is EPA’s lack of regard to
efficiency. A 2012 report by the Maryland School of Public Policy
estimated total implementation costs across all jurisdictions in the
range of $50 billion between 2010 and 2025 — but going perhaps as high
as $80 billion. A 2013 study for the U.S. Department of Agriculture
found that alternative ways of achieving the same water quality — which
anyway has already improved by 40 percent since the early 1980s — would
cost Delaware, Maryland, New York, and West Virginia 82 to 86 percent
less than the EPA price tag.
Chesapeake is only the beginning; an EPA appetizer, so to speak. The
64,000-square-mile Chesapeake Bay watershed is equivalent to little more
than 5 percent of the 1,245,000 square miles of the Mississippi River
Basin, spanning 31 states and producing 92 percent of America’s
agricultural exports. As the petitioners note, with the powers asserted
in the Bay blueprint, “EPA could control — and potentially debilitate —
an area where more than half the goods and services consumed by United
States citizens are produced.”
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EPA’s plan to become, in effect, America’s land-planning czar is part of
a pattern of aggressive overreach going to the outer limits of the law
and beyond into lawlessness. Only two months ago, the General
Accountability Office found that EPA had violated federal law by
engaging in covert propaganda supporting its own proposed rules. In a
separate incident, despite strenuous denials, EPA covertly conspired
with three environmental pressure groups to bring about the regulation
of power-station emissions, in a contrived sue-and-settle suit designed
to make decarbonizing electricity generation a done deal before the end
of President Obama’s first term. Writing for the Court in the 2014 Clean
Air Act case, Utility Air Regulatory Group v. EPA, Justice Scalia
declared EPA’s interpretation unreasonable because it would bring about
an enormous and transformative expansion in EPA’s regulatory authority
without clear congressional authorization. “We expect Congress to speak
clearly if it wishes to assign to an agency decisions of vast ‘economic
and political significance,’” he wrote.
EPA’s plan to become, in effect, America’s land-planning czar is
part of a pattern of aggressive overreach going to the outer limits of
the law and beyond into lawlessness.
In that case, to keep annual permit applications from jumping from 800
to nearly 82,000, EPA decided to override the stipulations for the
quantity of greenhouse gases that could be emitted from a stationary
source, permitting quantities that were orders of magnitude greater than
the threshold quantity of air pollutants specified in the act. Because
of the ubiquity of carbon dioxide emissions, the number of businesses
requiring burdensome permitting would have exploded way beyond EPA’s
target of electric utilities. EPA’s concern about the effects of
widening its net is noteworthy by its absence in its policing of the
Clean Water Act. In 2012, the Supreme Court unanimously upheld the right
of an Idaho couple to sue EPA after the agency claimed they had
violated the Clean Water Act by building a house on wetlands that EPA
asserted were part of WOTUS and threatened them with fines of up to
$75,000 a day for non-compliance.
Land-use and development decisions would fall ever farther under the
suzerainty of EPA if the Supreme Court declined to hear American Farm
Bureau Federation v. EPA. With respect to land use, it would turn the
U.S. from a republic of laws into a permit state, an EPA fiefdom in
which opaque blueprints emanate from computer models and unaccountable
bureaucrats, with little or no regard to their impact on economic
activity and none at all for the rights of property. There is a
precedent for the deleterious economic impact of shackling an economy in
regulation. For its first 50 years after independence, the private
sector in India was subjected to the licensing requirements of the
Permit Raj and the economy experienced what became known as a Hindu rate
of growth.
RELATED: Obama’s Environmental Agency Protects Itself More than the
Environment
In Federalist 17, Publius (in this instance, Alexander Hamilton) argued
that there was little danger that the supervision of agriculture “and of
other concerns of a similar nature” would be usurped by the federal
government because
the attempt to exercise those powers would be as troublesome as it
would be nugatory; and the possession of them, for that reason, would
contribute nothing to the importance, or to the splendor of the national
government.
Clearly such arguments fail in the face of a predatory regulator like
EPA. Instead, states must rely on the protection afforded by the Tenth
Amendment and the intention of Congress expressed in the relevant
statute. Here the Clean Water Act is categorical. “It is the policy of
the Congress to recognize, preserve, and protect the primary
responsibilities and rights of States to prevent, reduce, and eliminate
pollution,” the Act states (1251(b)). And if that isn’t clear enough,
Congress instructs federal agencies to “co-operate with State and local
agencies to develop comprehensive solutions to prevent, reduce, and
eliminate pollution” (1251(g)). In other words, EPA should be a
facilitator, not an instructor. The Chesapeake TMDL turns this around:
States are required to cooperate with EPA in developing Watershed
Implementation Plans. The executive summary speaks of provision for
federal backstops, enhanced oversight, and “contingency actions to
ensure progress.”
RELATED: Fixing the EPA
Only the courts — in this instance, the Supreme Court — have the
capacity to act to protect the rule of law, for the expansion of the
powers of the administrative state shrinks the domain of the rule of
law. In Taming the Prince, Harvey Mansfield suggests that modern
totalitarian regimes show executive formalism and informality at their
worst:
The formalism is in a numbing, careless bureaucracy, which might at
first seem rule-bound for no reason and no discernible end, in a way
reminiscent of Kafka — but which after some experience proves to be
oppression in the interest of a very obvious ruling party.
This risk is especially elevated in EPA. The agency was a product not of
statute but of the executive branch under the terms of the Nixon
administration’s Reorganization Plan No. 3. The nature of the “numbing,
careless bureaucracy” was on display last August in EPA’s culpability in
discharging three million gallons of mine waste into Colorado’s Animas
River, which EPA administrator Gina McCarthy said was mainly due to the
cautious nature of the government’s efforts. So the final question:
Which is the “very obvious ruling party?” The most powerful ideology in
America today: Environmentalism. Let’s hope the Supreme Court does not
fall under the sway of this party but instead confines EPA within the
rule of law.
— Rupert Darwall is the author of The Age of Global Warming: A History.
Read more at: http://www.nationalreview.com/article/431134/epa-waters-us-rule
Read more at: http://www.nationalreview.com/article/431134/epa-waters-us-rule
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