Community Corner
Federal Judge Temporarily Blocks New Biden WOTUS Rule In Two Dozen States
Federal judge blocked in 24 states Biden administration's newly effective definition of waters that can be regulated under Clean Water Act.
April 12, 2023
A federal judge in North Dakota on Wednesday blocked in 24 states the Biden administrationβs newly effective definition of waters that can be regulated under the Clean Water Act.
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U.S. District Judge Daniel Hovland, a George W. Bush appointee on retired status in the North Dakota District, issued a preliminary injunction in a case two dozen Republican state attorneys general brought against the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and the Army Corps of Engineers.
The ruling for now blocks enforcement of a rule to expand what the EPA could consider βwaters of the United States,β or WOTUS, under the Clean Water Act in Alabama, Alaska, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Louisiana, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, New Hampshire, North Dakota, Ohio, South Dakota, Tennessee, Virginia, Mississippi, Oklahoma, South Carolina, Utah, West Virginia, and Wyoming.
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The rule took effect March 20, despite bipartisan objections from Congress.
The Clean Water Act was meant to apply to βnavigable waters,β Hovland said.
But the Biden administration definition ignored that standard, removing any limit on federal regulation of any waterway that crosses a state boundary. That went beyond the statutory meaning of the Clean Water Act and raised βserious federalism questions and concerns,β Hovland said.
βThe exercise of jurisdiction over all rivers, lakes, and other waters that flow across state boundaries, no matter how small or isolated and regardless of navigability is constitutionally troublesome,β he wrote. βThere is nothing in the text of the Clean Water Act that supports making every wetland, stream, or other water crossing a border subject to federal jurisdiction.β
"As the EPA and Army Corps review their options, they are enforcing the pre-2015 definition of waters of the United States in the 24 states," an EPA spokesperson said in a written statement Wednesday.
βThe agencies continue to believe the rule, which is informed by the text of the relevant provisions of the Clean Water Act and the statute as a whole, as well as the scientific record, relevant Supreme Court case law, input from public comment, and the agenciesβ experience and technical expertise after more than 45 years of implementing the longstanding pre-2015 regulations defining waters of the United States, is the best interpretation of the Clean Water Act,β the spokesperson wrote.
βThe agencies remain committed to establishing and implementing a durable definition of βwaters of the United Statesβ informed by diverse perspectives,β the spokesperson added. βOur goal is to protect public health, the environment, and downstream communities while supporting economic opportunity, agriculture, and industries that depend on clean water.β
βNothing but confusionβ
The legal definition of waters of the United States has been the subject of fierce debate for years.
Describing the long procedural and legal history of the rule, Hovland said the shifting definitions of the rule βhave created nothing but confusion, uncertainty, unpredictability, and endless litigation throughout this country.β
After years of litigation and a 2006 U.S. Supreme Court case that defined waters subject to federal enforcement as having βa significant nexusβ to navigable waters, the EPA under President Barack Obama in 2015 issued a rule seeking to clarify what that meant. Many in agricultural and construction industries that rely on federal permitting said that definition expanded what the federal government could regulate.
"There is nothing in the text of the Clean Water Act that supports making every wetland, stream, or other water crossing a border subject to federal jurisdiction."
β U.S. District Judge Daniel Hovland
Under President Donald Trump, the EPA narrowed the definition to βtraditional navigable waters.β
President Joe Bidenβs rule once again widened the definition to be closer to the Obama administrationβs version.
Congress sought to overturn enforcement of the rule, with majorities in both chambers voting in March to adopt a resolution blocking the rule.
Biden vetoed that resolution on April 6.
Supreme Court case pending
The Biden rule has been deeply unpopular with farmers and ranchers, many of whom view it as federal overreach onto private lands.
In statements praising the decision, some of the attorneys general in the case echoed that sentiment.
βThis is a huge win for Iowan farmers, builders, and landowners,β Iowa Attorney General Brenna Bird said in a statement. βAnd weβre not going to stop here. Weβre continuing to fight back against the Biden Administrationβs aggressive federal overreach and will turn this into a permanent win.β
The U.S. Supreme Court is expected to rule this term on another WOTUS case. That challenge to the rule was brought by an Idaho couple, Michael and Chantell Sackett, who said wetlands on their property should not be considered βwater of the United States.β
U.S. Rep. Mike Simpson, an Idaho Republican who chairs the U.S. House Appropriations subcommittee that oversees EPA funding, said the agency should not have issued the rule while a Supreme Court decision was pending.
βThe Biden Administration should not have issued their expansive and overreaching rule on WOTUS while a case is currently before the Supreme Court,β Simpson tweeted. βIβm glad to see the rule blocked.β
Hovland said the pending ruling in that case was one reason to block the Biden rule from taking effect.
"Because the Supreme Court ruling will likely have a major impact on the central issues of the case, the status quo should remain in place until the Supreme Court rules," he said.
βHopefully, the Supreme Court decision in Sackett will provide some clarity,β Hovland wrote. βThe outcome of the Sackett case may have significant implications for the EPAβs authority to determine jurisdictional waters under the Clean Water Act. It may also determine the EPAβs ability to enforce the 2023 WOTUS Rule. Until then, every state will continue to swim in waters of uncertainty, ambiguity, and chaos.β
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