Friday, September 3, 2021 CapitalPress.com 5 Court strikes down Navigable Waters Protection Rule By CAROL RYAN DUMAS Capital Press A federal judge in Arizona on Monday vacated the Navi- gable Waters Protection Rule put in a place by the Trump administration in 2020. The rule reined in the Obama administration’s 2015 Waters of the U.S. rule, which greatly expanded fed- eral jurisdiction under the Clean Water Act. The Environmental Pro- tection Agency and Army Corps of Engineers withdrew the 2015 WOTUS rule in 2019 and reinstated the pre- 2015 regulations. In 2020, the agencies redefi ned the term “navigable waters” with the Navigable Waters Pro- tection Rule, categorically excluding certain features from the defi nition includ- ing “ephemeral streams,” or those that have fl owing water only after a storm. Plaintiff s representing Native American Tribes challenged the Navigable Waters Protection Rule and requested that it be vacated. Plaintiff s including the Pascua Yaqui Tribe, Quinault Indian Nation, Fond du Lac Band of Lake Supe- rior Chippewa, Menominee Indian Tribe of Wisconsin, Tohono O’odham Nation, and Bad River Band of Lake Superior Chippewa moved for summary judgment on May 11. In lieu of fi ling a response Washington to cull Togo wolf pack in Ferry County By DON JENKINS Capital Press The Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife said Aug. 26 it will try to kill one or two wolves in the Togo wolf pack, which has been attacking cattle on public and private land in Ferry County. Fish and Wildlife Director Kelly Susewind authorized lethal removal because non-lethal deter- rents used by three dif- ferent ranchers have not stopped the pack from attacking cattle, according to the department. Even if more non-le- thal measures are added, the attacks are likely to continue, according to the department. The Togo pack has a his- tory of attacking livestock. Susewind has authorized lethal removal fi ve times in the past four years. The department has removed one wolf. The pack has fi ve adults and four pups and again crossed the threshold this month for the department to consider lethal removal. The department has doc- umented four attacks on calves since June 24, includ- ing three within the past 30 days. One calf was eutha- nized because of its injuries. Ranchers have revised their operations to prevent the attacks, a prerequisite to the department resort- ing to lethal control. Non-lethal measures include having more peo- ple around the grazing cattle and delaying the release of cattle onto sum- to the plaintiff s’ motion for summary judgment, EPA and the Corps sought to vol- untarily remand the Naviga- ble Waters Protection Rule while they worked to revise or replace it and redefi ne waters of the U.S. U.S. District Judge Rose- mary Marquez granted the agencies’ motion for volun- tary remand but also granted plaintiff s’ motion to vacate the rule. “Remanding without vacatur would risk seri- ous environmental harm,” she said, noting the agen- cies have identifi ed indica- tors of a substantial reduc- tion in waters covered under the rule compared to previ- ous rules and practices. American Farm Bureau Federation said it is “extremely” disappointed in the ruling. “Farmers fi nally had environmentally responsi- ble regulations that brought clarity to clean water eff orts,” said Zippy Duvall, Farm Bureau president. “This ruling casts uncer- tainty over farmers and ranchers across the country and threatens the progress they’ve made to responsi- bly manage water and natu- ral resources,” he said. Three courts previously refused to dismantle the Navigable Waters Protec- tion Rule, including last month when a federal court in South Carolina refused a similar request from a group of plaintiff s, he said. “Unfortunately, this Ari- zona court simply accepted the plaintiff s’ assertions as true and did something that no other court has done in vacating the NWPR,” he said. Farm Bureau is review- ing the ruling to determine its next course of action, he said. “Farmers and ranchers deserve consistency and a rule that is fair and doesn’t require a team of attorneys to interpret,” he said. The National Cattlemen’s Beef Association said the Navigable Waters Protection Rule corrected the disastrous 2015 Waters of the U.S. rule and provided key protections to farmers and ranchers. The rule limited federal overreach and provided reg- ulatory certainty to cattle producers, said Scott Yager, NCBA chief environmental counsel. “The NWPR was a solu- tion to the far overreaching 2015 WOTUS rule, but yes- terday’s court decision adds further confusion to an issue that has been complicated by decades of activist-driven lit- igation,” he said. “NCBA is disappointed in this decision and will con- tinue advocating for regula- tions that protect the ability of cattle producers to invest in their land and care for their cattle,” he said. Wyden defends River Democracy Act in hour-long virtual town hall By GEORGE PLAVEN Capital Press WDFW A wolf in the Togo pack in Ferry County in north- east Washington. mer grazing lands. Livestock graze throughout much of the pack’s territory, and the wolves have learned to attack them, factors in the department conclud- ing the depredations will continue. The department said it does not expect that removing one or more wolves in the Togo pack will harm overall wolf recovery in Washington, another prerequisite of lethal removal. The department has documented three wolf deaths this year. In past years, 12 to 21 wolves have died, and the pop- ulation continues to rise, according to the department. The department has a self-imposed deadline of Sept. 26 for remov- ing wolves. The dead- line could be extended if there are more attacks on livestock. HERMISTON, Ore. — Legislation that would add nearly 4,700 miles of wild and scenic rivers across Oregon would have no impact on private land or exist- ing property rights, according to the bill’s chief architect, Sen. Ron Wyden. Wyden, an Oregon Democrat, introduced the River Democracy Act in February based on more than 15,000 public nominations from all corners of the state. On Aug. 31, Wyden Sen. Ron defended the bill during Wyden an hour-long virtual town hall. The legislation has faced oppo- sition from rural counties over whether it would add new restrictions on grazing, timber harvest and recreational access. Speaking from Hermiston in northeast Oregon, Wyden pledged the bill would not go forward without “loophole-free, airtight” protections for private property. Rather, he said it applies only to fed- eral lands and was written specifi cally not to interfere with existing property, grazing and water rights. “Protecting existing rights was part of our eff ort to strike a balance,” Wyden said. If passed, the River Democracy Act would roughly triple the number of wild and scenic rivers in Oregon. The National Wild and Scenic Rivers System was established in 1968 to preserve riv- ers with outstanding natural, cultural and recreational values. The bill also widens protective buff ers from a quarter-mile to half-mile on both sides of designated streams, adding up to 3 million acres of protected land. Earlier this year, the American Forest Resource Council, a regional timber trade association, conducted its own analysis of waterways nominated for inclusion in the bill. The group found that just 15% were actually labeled as “rivers,” with Nick Smith/AFRC Bear Gulch in Southern Oregon was nominated as a Wild and Scenic River under the River Democracy Act introduced by Sens. Ron Wyden and Jeff Merkley. Eastern Oregon counties oppose the bill. most being identifi ed as streams, gulches, draws or unnamed tributaries. The AFRC and other opponents have argued this is a misuse of the Wild and Scenic Rivers System — though Wyden countered that intermittent streams are not only valid for protection under the law, but necessary for watersheds. “I’ve come to think that there’s almost a transportation analogy here that’s appropriate,” Wyden said. “You don’t manage traffi c just by building highways. You need connecting streets, alleyways and sidewalks. The same, in fact, applies to most river systems.” Approximately 2 million Oregonians, or nearly half the state’s total population, depend on intermittent streams for clean drinking water, Wyden added. The bill also requires the U.S. For- est Service and Bureau of Land Man- agement to assess wildfi re risks in each wild and scenic river corridor. The agen- cies would then have up to six years to develop mitigation plans, working with local, state and tribal governments. The bill would create a $30 million per year fund to restore and rehabilitate riparian areas that do burn in a wildfi re, Wyden said. Supporters of the bill did speak during the virtual town hall, including represen- tatives of the Nez Perce Tribe and Con- federated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation. Kat Brigham, CTUIR chair, said she is pleased with the River Democracy Act, and that it reinforces stream restoration already undertaken by the tribes. “It moves us closer to what we are working toward — building, protecting and enhancing cold, clean water, not only for our fi rst foods, but for ourselves,” Brigham said. Others, however, say their questions remain unanswered. In a memo released shortly after the meeting, the AFRC pushed back against the bill, arguing wild and scenic designa- tions would impose restrictions on forest management and actually increase wild- fi re risk in the protected stream corridors. The bill would also “dramatically increase management costs and com- plexity on-the-ground, create confl icts between user groups, and distract and overload federal agencies already over- whelmed by catastrophic wildfi re man- agement and response,” the memo states. Oregon Court of Appeals upholds denial of landfi ll expansion However, LUBA found the local government’s rea- soning to be “more than adequate.” Waste Management announced it would stop accepting public garbage and recycling this summer, even before the appellate court’s decision. However, the facility will still bring in contaminated soil and solid waste to prepare its slopes for fi nal cover. The landfi ll opened about four decades ago but the owners approached the county about expanding it in 2009. The local government’s approval of the proposal was subject to prolonged litigation, with the state’s Supreme Court issuing a landmark decision in 2019 overturning the county’s permit. The ruling estab- lished the legal prece- dent that adverse agri- cultural impacts must be reviewed “practice by practice and farm by farm” and cannot sim- ply be compensated with cash. S258354-1 The Oregon Court of Appeals has upheld Yam- hill County’s decision to deny a controversial land- fi ll expansion that neigh- boring farmers claimed would disrupt local agriculture. The county refused to allow the Riverbend Land- fi ll to increase its footprint by 29 acres last year, citing concerns about litter, pests and water quality impacts on surrounding growers. A legal challenge by Waste Management, the landfi ll’s owner, has now been rejected by the appel- late court, which agreed with the state’s Land Use Board of Appeals that the county followed the law in denying the application. The issue before the Court of Appeals was nar- row: Whether the county should have explained in detail why it rejected a fl oodplain development permit along with its denial of the overall site design. When the county rejected the overall proj- ect, “further consideration” of the fl oodplain develop- ment permit “was rendered unnecessary,” the Court of Appeals said. The earlier decision by LUBA more broadly deter- mined that Yamhill County had suffi ciently explained why the landfi ll’s farm impacts could not be “mit- igated to an insignifi cant level” by the operator. For example, Waste Management argued the county should have bet- ter explained why small amounts of plastic litter would force impermissi- ble changes to nearby hay production. S253066-1 By MATEUSZ PERKOWSKI Capital Press