U.S. Supreme Court erodes WOTUS rule

5a022c7945f82 imageAnything that was water was considered a ‘wetland’. That’s completely bogus. 

And the Constitution only grants the Federal Government decisions over state rivers that never cross into another state (like in Alaska and Hawaii) — and therefore are of no business to the feds. 

(The Center Square) – The U.S. Supreme Court said the Biden Administration’s Waters of the United States rule under the Clean Water Act extends to “only those wetlands that are as a practical matter indistinguishable from waters of the United States. 

The issued Thursday erodes the rule, also known as the “WOTUS” rule, that would have brought all of the nation’s streams and wetlands under the authority of the Environmental Protection Agency, a rule that U.S. Sen. Kevin Cramer, R-N.D., compared to “regulating puddles.” 

“The Court was right to rein in the EPA’s quest to regulate to the raindrop,” Cramer said in the statement.

The case goes back to 2004. Michael and Chantell Sackett of Idaho were building a home when they were told they could not backfill a lot with dirt because the property was on wetlands adjacent to a tributary. They could face fines of up to $40,000 a day if they did not comply, the Sacketts said they were told. The couple sued. The U.S. Court of Appeals ruled against the Sacketts, who then appealed to the Supreme Court.

Justice Samuel Alito wrote the Court’s opinion and said the term “WOTUS” has always been uncertain.

“Does the term encompass any backyard that is soggy enough for some minimum period of time? Does it reach ‘mudflats, sandflats, wetlands, sloughs, prairie potholes, wet meadows, [or] playa lakes?’ How about ditches, swimming pools, and puddles?” Alito wrote in the opinion.

The 5-4 decision drew praise from members of Congress and governors from around the country, who, like Cramer, have said the rule was unclear. Alaska has more than three million lakes and nearly a million miles of rivers, and the state had a big stake in the case, Alaska Gov. Mike Dunleavy said.

Alaska Department of Environmental Conservation Commissioner Jason Brune said the opinion would force the EPA to return to the drawing board.

“Of late, federal agencies have exploited the ambiguous WOTUS definition to expand their jurisdictional reach to cover wetlands in Alaska with only a remote connection to traditionally navigable waters,” Brune said. “Not any longer.”

https://www.thecentersquare.com/national/article_278e53de-fb14-11ed-9a6b-273a12a3d68e.html

Right-Mind