NWF and NRDC asked the Supreme Court to reject a Trump administration effort to delay the Clean Water Rule implementation
The National Wildlife Federation and the Natural Resources Defense Council today asked the Supreme Court to reject a Trump administration effort to indefinitely delay the implementation of the Clean Water Rule while it moves to kill that rule. The groups were joined in this effort by the South Carolina Coastal Conservation League and One Hundred Miles, represented by the Southern Environmental Law Center.
The administration’s bid, if successful, would enable it to prevent the rule’s safeguards from taking effect for the foreseeable future, without having to explain in ongoing litigation why it is abandoning the science and the law supporting the rule. Such a delay would effectively enable the administration’s plan to undo the rule’s protections, which President Trump kicked off in a February 28 executive order instructing Environmental Protection Agency and the Army Corps of Engineers to reconsider the rule.
“The Clean Water Rule deserves to be reviewed by an independent court on the basis of law and science,” said Jan Goldman-Carter, NWF’s water resources counsel. “This is a rule developed over many years, based on robust scientific analysis and more than one million public comments.”
“The Trump administration is trying to avoid having to explain itself in court," said Jon Devine, senior attorney with the Water program at NRDC. “The EPA and the Corps can’t support their current plan with science. Instead, the administration wants to stall a court decision as long as possible, while it works to protect polluters. Rolling back the rule’s safeguards endangers critical bodies of water – including the streams that feed the drinking water supplies of more than 117 million Americans.”
BACKGROUND
The Clean Water Rule, a long-awaited update to the Clean Water Act regulations, was issued in 2015 by the EPA and the Army Corps of Engineers.
The Trump administration recently asked the Supreme Court to indefinitely delay the litigation while it considers a possible new rule.
An appeals court is also reviewing the rule, but has postponed its own review while the Supreme Court considers a procedural issue. If the high court delays the litigation, the consolidated appeals court case and the rule itself could be on hold long into the future.
The parties’ brief is available here.
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