Judge Rules Iowa Can Join States Fighting WOTUS

Judge Rules Iowa Can Join States Fighting WOTUS

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP)  A federal judge in North Dakota has handed Iowa Gov. Kim Reynolds a victory in temporarily halting enforcement of a Barack Obama administration clean water rule in the state.

The Waters of the United States rule is disliked by groups including the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and the American Farm Bureau Federation which claim it’s classic government overregulation.

It was challenged in court in June 2015 by a dozen states seeking to halt its implementation.

According to a news release from the governor’s office, the rule went back into effect in Iowa in August 2018 when a federal court in South Carolina ruled the EPA could not suspend the WOTUS Rule. The court reinstated the rule in any state (like Iowa) where it had not yet been preliminarily enjoined.
The rule, supported by environmental groups, provides a definition for which rivers, lakes and other water bodies may be regulated by federal agencies including the Environmental Protection Agency.
Iowa was not one of the original states in the lawsuit, but Reynolds had asked the court to allow the state to join in. That would mean Iowa also could halt enforcement of the clean water rule until the issue is fully litigated in the courts.  
On Tuesday Judge Daniel Hovland granted Reynolds’ request.The WOTUS Rule is now on hold in 28 states.
Reynolds says in a statement that “Iowa farmers and small business owners will not be burdened by this federal overreach while we continue fighting to permanently end the WOTUS Rule.”

 

Copyright 2018, Associated Press

Wes Mills
Wed, 09/19/2018 – 09:42

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Hogs (General)
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Dairy (General)
Governmental Regulations
EPA

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(File photo) A federal judge in North Dakota has handed Iowa Gov. Kim Reynolds a victory in temporarily halting enforcement of a Barack Obama administration clean water rule in the state.

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Farm Journal
Source: Dairy Herd