Title: Regulation of Wetlands Under the Clean Water Act
1Regulation of Wetlands Under the Clean Water Act
- Where weve been,
- Where we are,
- Where are we going?
- W. Marshall Taylor, Jr.
- McNair Law Firm, P.A.
- Post Office Box 11390
- Columbia, South Carolina 29211
- (803) 799-9800
2Governing Laws and Regulations
- Clean Water Act
- Section 402 (NPDES)
- Section 404 (Permits for dredged or fill
material) - Section 401 (Certification)
3Governing Laws and Regulations
- EPA Regulation
- Army Corps of Engineers Regulations
- State Regulations
4CWA, Section 402
- The discharge of a pollutant is illegal without
a permit.
5Section 404 Permit Requirement
- Section 404 of CWA Requires landowners to
obtain permits from the Corps before discharging
fill material into wetlands adjacent to navigable
bodies of water and their tributaries.
6Discharge of a pollutant means
- any addition of any pollutant to navigable waters
from any point source, - any addition of any pollutant to the waters of
the contiguous zone or the ocean from any point
source other than a vessel or other floating
craft.
7Pollutant means
- dredged spoil, solid waste, incinerator residue,
sewage, garbage, sewage sludge, munitions,
chemical wastes, biological materials,
radioactive materials, heat, wrecked or discarded
equipment, rock, sand, cellar dirt and
industrial, municipal, and agricultural waste
discharged into water.
8Navigable Waters
- Waters of the United States, including the
territorial seas
9Navigable Waters
- More than navigable in fact waters because of
the Commerce Clause - Does not extend to all waters
10What Constitutes a Navigable Water?
- The cost of permitting is big so the definition
is really important. - 1.7B spent each year by private and public
sectors obtaining wetlands permits
11- Average Applicant for an individual permit
- 788 days
- 271,596
- Average Applicant for a nationwide permit
- 313 days
- 28,915
12The United States Supreme Court Decisions Span
Over Two Decades
- United States v. Riverside Bayview Homes, Inc.
- 474 U.S. 121 (1985)
- Solid Waste Agency of Northern Cook County
(SWANCC) v. Army Corps of Engineers, - 531 U.S. 159 (2001)
- Raponos v. United States, 547 U.S. _____ (2006)
13Riverside Bayview Homes
- Corps sought to enjoin property owner of land
near the shores of Lake St. Clair (MI) from
filling without a permit
14Riverside Bayview Homes
- Corps asserted the CWA covered all freshwater
wetlands that are adjacent to covered waters
15Riverside Bayview Homes
- Wetlands those areas that are inundated or
saturated by surface or groundwater at a
frequency and duration sufficient to support, and
that under normal circumstances do support, a
prevalence of vegetation typically adopted for
life in saturated soil conditions
16Riverside Bayview Homes
- District Court held the property was wetland
subject to the Corps permit authority - Sixth Circuit reversed adjacent wetlands that
are not subject to flooding by the adjacent
navigable waters not covered by the CWA - Supreme Court reversed unanimously adjacent
wetlands are covered
17SWANCC
- Migrating Bird Rule
- Section 404 extends to intrastate waters that
provide habitat for migrating birds
18SWANCC The Supremes Do Not Agree
- In a majority opinion (Rehnquist, OConnor,
Scalia, Kennedy, Thomas) - CWA does not reach an abandoned sand and gravel
pit such as the one at issue - Dissent (Stevens, Souter, Ginsburg, Breyer)
- CWA includes isolated wetland coverage
- Commerce clause included the power to preserve
the natural resources which generate commerce
19So how far up the river does CWA jurisdiction
extend?
- Until 2006, a long way up . . .
20A long, long, long way up . . .
- Storm drains
- Roadside ditches
- Ripples of sand in the desert that may contain
water once a year - Lands covered by floodwaters once every 100 years
- Any parcel of land containing a channel or
conduit whether man-made or natural, broad or
narrow, permanent or ephemeral
21Raponos v. United States
- Consolidated two Sixth Circuit Cases
- Carabell v. United States Army Corps of
Engineers, 391 F.3d 704 (6th Cir. 2004) - United States v. Rapanos, 376 F.3d 629 (6th Cir.
2004)
22Carabell v. United States Army Corps of
Engineers, 391 F.3d 704 (6th Cir. 2004)
- Also considered Riverside Bayview and SWANCC
- Found wetlands were adjacent even though
separated from tributaries by a manmade berm and
a ditch
23United States v. Rapanos, 376 F.3d 629 (6th Cir.
2004)
- Considered Riverside Bayview, 474 U.S. 121 (1985)
CWA covers adjacent wetlands - Considered Solid Waste Agency of Northern Cook
County (SWANCC), 531 U.S. 159 (2001)
(Migratory Bird Rule not supported by CWA) - No direct abutment requirement to invoke CWA
jurisdiction - Non-navigable waters must have a hydrological
connection or some other significant nexus to
traditional navigable waters to invoke CWA
jurisdiction
24Raponos v. United StatesThe Supremes divide
further
- Plurality 4 - 4 split with Kennedy breaking the
tie (i.e., no clear answer) - Scalia, Roberts, Thomas, Alito strict rule (39
pages) - Kennedy nexus test (30 pages)
- Stevens, Souter, Ginsburg, Breyer dissented
the Corps regulations are tried and true - (26 pages)
25Strict Rule
- The waters of the United States include only
those relatively permanent, standing or
continuously flowing bodies of water forming
geological features that are described in
ordinary parlance as streams, oceans, rivers,
and lakes.
26Strict Rule
- Does not include channels through which water
flows intermittently or ephemerally, or channels
that periodically provide drainage for rainfall.
27Strict Rule
- A wetland may not be considered adjacent to
remote waters of the United States based on mere
hydrologic connection. - Only those wetlands with a continuous surface
connection to bodies that are waters of the US
in their own right, so that there is no clear
demarcation between the two are adjacent to
such waters and covered by the Act.
28The Swing Vote
- A wetland constitutes navigable waters under
the Act if it poses a significant nexus to
waters that are navigable in fact or that could
reasonably be so made. - Justice Kennedy does not, however, consider all
the factors necessary to determine that the lands
in question had, or did not have, the requisite
nexus.
29The Swing Vote
- Must be assessed in terms of the CWAs goals
restore and maintain the physical, and
biological integrity of the Nations waters. - Wetlands possess the requisite nexus if they
significantly affect the chemical, physical,
biological integrity of other covered waters
understood as navigable in the traditional sense.
30The Dissenting Opinion
- In 1977, Congress approved the Corps regulations
- Plurality opinion not in accordance with
precedent - Wetlands adjacent to tributaries should be covered
31 So what does the Corps do with the Rapanos
Opinion?
- - After a year, issue joint guidance with EPA
32Summary of Key Points
- The agencies will assert jurisdiction over the
following waters - Traditional navigable waters
- Wetlands adjacent to traditional navigable waters
- Non-navigable tributaries of traditional
navigable waters that are relatively permanent
where the tributaries typically flow year-round
or have continuous flow at least seasonally
(e.g., typically three months) - Wetlands that directly abut such tributaries
33Summary of Key Points
- The agencies will decide jurisdiction over the
following waters based on a fact-specific
analysis to determine whether they have a
significant nexus with a traditional navigable
water - Non-navigable tributaries that are not relatively
permanent - Wetlands adjacent to non-navigable tributaries
that are not relatively permanent - Wetlands adjacent to but that do not directly
abut a relatively permanent non-navigable
tributary
34Summary of Key Points
- The agencies generally will not assert
jurisdiction over the following features - Swales or erosional features (e.g., gullies,
small washes characterized by low volume,
infrequent, or short duration flow) - Ditches (including roadside ditches) excavated
wholly in and draining only uplands and that do
not carry a relatively permanent flow of water
35Summary of Key Points
- The agencies will apply the significant nexus
standard as follows - A significant nexus analysis will assess the flow
characteristics and functions of the tributary
itself and the functions performed by all
wetlands adjacent to the tributary to determine
if they significantly affect the chemical,
physical and biological integrity of downstream
traditional navigable waters - Significant nexus includes consideration of
hydrologic and ecologic factors
36Conclusion
- If possible,
- Avoid case-by-case wetlands
- Start early
- More to come