By Rick Manning
In July, Representative Lynn
Westmoreland (R-Ga.) took on the little known radical environmentalist scam
known as “sue and settle” where a green group acting in cahoots with the EPA or
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service sues the Agency demanding that they apply the
law in a new, expanded way that increases the agency’s jurisdiction.
The agency, rather than defending
the law, enters into a consent decree with the party who filed the original
lawsuit. A judge signs the consent decree without review, since the two
“disputing” parties are in agreement. Suddenly, the agency has new, expansive
powers to wield against job creators. And then for the kicker, taxpayers have
to foot the legal bills of the attorneys who filed the suit.
The
Westmoreland defund amendment to the Interior Department appropriation bill would have rolled back this abuse of taxpayer funds by
denying the payment of attorney fees in ‘sue and settle’ cases. This action is
needed to stop this Obama Administration orchestrated expansion of executive
power.
The amendment read: “None of the
funds made available by this Act may be used to pay legal fees pursuant to a
settlement in any case, in which the Federal Government is a party, that arises
under — (1) the Clean Air Act (42 U.S.C. 7401 et seq.); (2) the Federal Water
Pollution Control Act (33 U.S.C. 1251 et seq.); or (3) the Endangered Species
Act of 1973 (16 U.S.C. 1531 et seq.).”
As
Westmoreland noted in his July 7 floor speech,
“Between 2009 and 2012, the EPA chose not to defend itself in over 60 of these
lawsuits from special interest advocacy groups. Those 60 lawsuits resulted in
settlement agreements and in the EPA’s publishing more than 100 new
regulations.”
Westmoreland added, “Also included
in these legally binding settlements are requirements that U.S. taxpayers must
pay for the attorneys of the organization that initiated the action. According
to a 2011 GAO report, between 1995 and 2010, three large environmental activist
groups, like the Sierra Club, received almost $6 million in attorneys’ fees
alone.”
A
2013 letter from Sen. David Vitter (R-La.) and Sen. Jeff Sessions (R-Ala.) to
EPA administrator Gina McCarthy
highlights such an example of sue and settle on a start-up, shutdown, and
malfunction rule: “In November 2011, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
and the Sierra Club negotiated a settlement whereby EPA unilaterally agreed to
respond to a petition filed by Sierra Club seeking the elimination of a
longstanding Clean Air Act exemption for excess emissions during periods of
startup, shutdown, and malfunction. The EPA went out of its way further to deny
the participation of the States, and other affected parties. Oddly, it appears
that, instead of defending EPA’s own regulations and the SSM provisions in the
EPA-approved air programs of 39 states, EPA simply agreed to include an
obligation to respond to the petition in the settlement of an entirely separate
lawsuit. In other words, EPA went out of its way to resolve the startup,
shutdown, and malfunction petition in a coordinated settlement with the Sierra
Club.”
As a result, Vitter and Sessions
wrote, “Notwithstanding 40 years of precedent to the contrary, EPA has now
decided that the state implementation plans of 36 states are legally inadequate
because of their startup, shutdown, and malfunction provisions.”
In
a February 2015 statement preceding his introduction of legislation to combat
this abusive practice, Senator Charles Grassley further emphasized the problems
with sue and settle: “Sue and settle litigation allows
federal agencies to short-circuit the controls that Congress has set in place
to ensure transparency in the rulemaking process. These tactics result in
new federal regulations imposed on American businesses and ultimately, on American
families, all without an adequate opportunity for the public to weigh in. Sue
and settle litigation makes a mockery of the public accountability and
transparency protections required by the Administrative Procedures Act.
It also limits the ability of the executive branch to engage in principled
decision making.”
The abuse of the sue and settle
provisions by the Obama Administration are just one of many examples of this
Administration establishing law using backdoor channels without the consent of
Congress or even the use of the normal Administrative Procedures Act that
governs the regulatory process.
Ironically, the Westmoreland
amendment never came up for a vote after the appropriations process ground to a
halt as House Democrats created a phony Confederate flag dispute stopping this
and other amendments from passing that would have road blocked Obama’s flouting
of the law.
The upcoming Omnibus spending bill
will set and prioritize spending for ten of the last thirteen months of the
Obama Administration. It will either prevent Obama from cementing his legacy by
using tactics like sue and settle to go around Congress to expand the size and
scope of government or it won’t. Congress has one chance to get it right,
and they need to rein in Obama’s abuse of the sue and settle system or else the
next Administration will spend much of its time trying to fight environmental
lawsuits opposing changes to the Obama-made law. It is time to shut the door on
Obama’s sue and settle loophole.
Rick
Manning is the President of Americans for Limited Government.
http://netrightdaily.com/2015/11/time-for-congress-to-defund-sue-and-settle/
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