By: Associated Press
The Supreme Court has sided with an Idaho couple in a property rights case, ruling they can go to court to challenge an Environmental Protection Agency order that blocked construction of their new home and threatened fines of more than $30,000 a day.
Wednesday's
decision is a victory for Mike and Chantell Sackett, whose property
near a scenic lake has sat undisturbed since the EPA ordered a halt in
work in 2007. The agency said part of the property was a wetlands that
could not disturbed without a permit.
In
an opinion by Justice Antonin Scalia, the court rejected EPA's argument
that allowing property owners quick access to courts to contest orders
like the one issued to the Sacketts would compromise the agency's
ability to deal with water pollution.
"Compliance
orders will remain an effective means of securing prompt voluntary
compliance in those many cases where there is no substantial basis to
question their validity," Scalia said.
In
this case, the couple objected to the determination that their small
lot contained wetlands that are regulated by the Clean Water Act, and
they complained there was no reasonable way to challenge the order
without risking fines that can mount quickly.
The
EPA issues nearly 3,000 administrative compliance orders a year that
call on alleged violators of environmental laws to stop what they're
doing and repair the harm they've caused. Major business groups,
homebuilders, road builders and agricultural interests all have joined
the Sacketts in urging the court to make it easier to contest EPA
compliance orders issued under several environmental laws.
Justice
Ruth Bader Ginsburg said in a separate opinion that the only issue
decided by the court Wednesday is the Sacketts' ability to contest the
EPA finding that their property is subject to the Clean Water Act. The court did not decide larger issues, Ginsburg said.
"On that understanding, I join the court's opinion," she said.
In
another separate opinion, Justice Samuel Alito called on Congress to
clear up confusion over the reach of the Clean Water Act. Alito said
that federal regulators could assert authority over any property that is
wet for even part of the year, not just rivers and streams.
The
court's opinion "is better than nothing, but only clarification of the
reach of the Clean Water Act can rectify the underlying problem," Alito
said.
In 2005, the
Sacketts paid $23,000 for a .63-acre lot near scenic Priest Lake. They
decided to start building a modest, three-bedroom home early in 2007.
They
had filled part of the property with rocks and soil, in preparation for
construction, when federal officials showed up and ordered a halt in
the work.
In a statement, the Sacketts praised the court for "affirming that we have rights, and that the EPA is not a law unto itself."
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