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WEST VIRGINIA RECORD

Thursday, March 28, 2024

WEST VIRGINIA ATTORNEY GENERAL: Attorney General Morrisey Praises Repeal of Unlawful, Obama-Era Water Rule

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West Virginia Attorney General issued the following announcement on Sept. 12.

West Virginia Attorney General Patrick Morrisey praised the Trump administration’s decision to repeal the unlawful Waters of the United States rule, which the Attorney General has previously characterized as a power grab from the Obama era.

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and U.S. Army Corps of Engineers announced Thursday their agencies would repeal the Obama-era rule as step one of a two-step process, meant to give renewed certainty to farmers and landowners by restoring the once longstanding, predictable and reasonable lines between waters subject to federal and state regulation.

“The Obama-era water rules did not give us better, cleaner water, which everyone wants,” Attorney General Morrisey said. “Instead, it gave unelected bureaucrats unprecedented power to change rules and regulations on a whim. The Trump administration is working to protect the quality of our water, in addition to restoring the balance and certainty farmers and businesses need for our nation to prosper.”

Thursday’s repeal sets the stage for step two – finalization of a new Waters of the United States rule, announced last December and supported in April by Attorney General Morrisey and his leading of a 17-state coalition.

The coalition’s public comment supported step two arguing it shows respect for the primary responsibility and right of states to regulate their own water resources and will correct flaws within the Obama-era regulation, which extended authority of the EPA and the Corps of Engineers far beyond what Congress intended and the Constitution permits.

Attorney General Morrisey has been a national leader in fighting against the Obama-era regulation since its issuance in June 2015.

The 2015 rule, if implemented, would have taken jurisdiction over natural resources from states and asserted federal authority over almost any body of water, including roadside ditches, short-lived streams and many other areas where water may flow once every 100 years.

For instance, if a property owner wanted to use sand to fill a ditch that has not carried water in decades, the Obama-era rule could have subjected that person to fines and penalties for violation of the federal Clean Water Act.

Attorney General Morrisey has repeatedly led lawsuits challenging the Obama-era rule and related efforts by environmentalists to implement their radical agenda. His persistence helped win a stay that blocked enforcement of the rule in October 2015 – as well as related victories in 2018 and most recently in August 2019. West Virginia continues to benefit from these court rulings, as they proved crucial in providing time for a new administration and reconsideration of the rule.

In February 2017, the Attorney General attended a White House ceremony, during which President Trump directed EPA and the Corps of Engineers to review the Obama rule, begin efforts to rescind the regulation and take appropriate steps in litigation.

Original source can be found here.

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