An obscure forestry lawsuit has developed into a major legal battle to be
played out in the Supreme Court next Wednesday, which could have major
repercussions for the future shape of US environmental legislation and the
regulatory risks faced by businesses.
The
US
Government will try to persuade judges that regulations cannot be legally
overruled. Federal attorneys will argue that "facial" challenges, in which a
government regulation is overturned on a nationwide basis, are invalid, and
should instead only be overturned in individual cases.
Green groups are concerned that this could mean that public interest bodies
wanting to challenge a regulation would have to repeatedly sue the Government
each time it was applied, draining their funds.
The case stems from a 2005 court judgement against the US Forestry Service.
That judgement dismissed regulations introduced in 2003 that prohibited public
review and appeal of decisions relating to forest management. These decisions
included the sale of up to 250 acres of timber salvaged from national forests.
Environmental groups and federal government representatives challenged nine
regulations and got five of them overruled by the court in a "facial challenge"
, meaning that the regulations can no longer be applied anywhere in the US. The
appeals court then
upheld
the decision.
But now the Government is asking the Supreme Court to rule that the facial
ruling on the regulations were invalid, and should be applied only to the
particular cases in question.
Rolf Skar, senior forest campaigner for
Greenpeace,
argued against the sale of timber from old growth national forests on ecological
and economic grounds. "It's important to realise that the whole timber industry
isn't banging on the door asking for national forest access," he said. "There's
a segment that wants that, and they haven't adapted to new economic and social
realities, and simply expect a national subsidy for their industry."
Old growth forests need preserving, he added, arguing that their makeup helps
to mitigate wildfires and more effectively sequesters carbon.
Matt Kenna, the attorney for the
Western
Environmental Law Center, who will argue the case on Tuesday, was also
concerned over the broader ramifications for future legal challenges.
"If the Government wins as fully as it's arguing, it will restrict the
public's ability to sue over any illegal regulations," he said.
Public interest groups opposed to timber sales from national forests would
have to sue the Government over each sale, rather than have a single ruling used
as a precedent, but that could just as easily apply to regulations on everything
from water management through to air pollution and Medicare. "The Government is
swinging for the fences with this one. They're trying to push the envelope," he
warned.
The current administration has aggressively imposed regulations, which are
essentially orders for federal agencies to interpret legislation, which are
applied without consulting Congress.
"This case represents another attempt by the Bush Administration to change
agency regulations in an attempt to decrease substantive protections and reduce
public oversight for projects on our public lands, instead of more openly
seeking these important changes through Congress," said Marc Fink, a senior
attorney for the
Center
for Biological Diversity, which is one of the plaintiffs in the suit.
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