http://canadafreepress.com/article/epa-disregard-for-wotus-prior-converted-cropland-exclusion-kills-ag-jobs-an
Revisiting CWA Agricultural Wetlands Protection
EPA Disregard for
"WOTUS" Prior Converted Cropland Exclusion Kills
Ag Jobs and Contributes to National Security
Risk
It's time to ditch the rule
The Federal government has incrementally
extended its control over agricultural lands
during the past forty years,1 by
expanding the definition of “waters of the
US” (WOTUS) under the Clean Water Act (CWA)
and asserting broad legal jurisdiction over
WOTUS-adjacent “wetlands.” Such activities
have triggered Congressional investigations2 and
significant public litigation. They also
have facilitated the CWA’s growth into a
“regulatory hydra” and caused a “reversal of
terms [in our unique relationship with
government] that is worthy of Alice
in Wonderland.”3
During this past February,
President Trump issued Executive Order 137784 in
an initial effort to curtail this government
juggernaut which disregards constitutionally
protected private property rights in
furtherance of wetlands protection. The EO
directs the heads of the U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency (“EPA”) and the Army Corps
of Engineers (“the Corps”) to review for
substantial revision or rescission their
jointly issued 2015 CWA regulation which
expands the “WOTUS” rule and narrows its
“normal farming activities” exemption.5 Presumably,
EPA’s review of this regulation will be
undertaken while the October 9, 2015 federal
court-issued stay of its implementation
remains in place.6
The Obama administration
regulation inter
alia treats
all “wetlands” adjacent to WOTUS as
“jurisdictional waters” for purposes of
enforcing CWA’s controversial Section 404
(dredge and fill permitting requirements).
It does so by dispensing with the
traditional case-by-case evaluations used to
determine if jurisdiction applies to
specific delineated wetlands.7 Although
this regulation also states that the
longstanding “prior converted cropland” (“PCC”)
exclusion from WOTUS jurisdiction will be
upheld,8 this
result is not certain, and can be assured
only through active ongoing White House
oversight.
Recalling FSA Agricultural Wetlands
Protection
In addition to CWA Section 404, Congress
also enacted the Food Security Act of 1985
(“FSA”)9 to
provide greater protection of our nation’s
wetlands.10 The
FSA’s Title XII “Swampbuster” provision11 helped
wetland conservation efforts by limiting and
eventually denying U.S. Department of
Agriculture Soil Conservation Service
(“USDA-SCS”) funding to those who commenced
conversion of wetlands to croplands after
December 23, 1985. PCCs, which are defined
by reference to the USDA-SCS’s 1988 National
Food Security Act Manual (“NFSAM”), however,
are exempt from and not subject to the FSA’s
Swampbuster provision.12
PCCs are wetlands that had, prior
to December
23, 1985, commenced being drained, dredged,
filled, leveled, or otherwise manipulated
for the purpose or effect of making the
production of an agricultural commodity
possible, where such production would not
have been possible but for such action, and
before such action such land was wetland and
neither highly erodible land nor highly
erodible cropland.13 The
NFSAM added three conditions to secure PCC
status. First, the agricultural commodity
must have been planted at least once prior
to December 23, 1985. Second, the area must
not have been “abandoned.”14 The
NFSAM defined abandonment as “the cessation
of cropping, management, or maintenance
operations on prior converted croplands,”
including “repair
of drainage system” (emphasis added).15 It
considered a PCC abandoned “if wetland
criteria are present and”
the PCC “has not been used, managed or
maintained for
cropping purposes for 5 successive years, and was
not enrolled in a USDA [...] program of
conserving use or wetland
restoration” (emphasis added).16 Third,
the NFSAM deemed a wetland conversion
“commenced” if “any of the construction
activities including flood water reductions
that would convert [a] wetland were actually
started,” or substantial funds had been
expended or legally committed for the direct
purpose of converting the wetland.17 As
long as the USDA Farm Services Agency had
issued a commenced conversion determination
by September 19, 1988 designating that
“commenced” activities had begun before
December 23, 1985, the NFSAM and subsequent
USDA regulations provided that conversion
activities could be completed up until
January 1, 199518 without
compromising PCC status.
EPA & Corps Vie for Control Over
Agricultural Wetlands
During the late 1980s and the early 1990s,
the EPA and the Corps disagreed over whether
PCCs the USDA-SCS deemed as exempt from and
not covered by the FSA were also to be excluded from
WOTUS and CWA Section 404 jurisdictional
coverage. The Corps issued regulatory
guidance (RG-90-07) granting PCCs an
exclusion from CWA Section 404
jurisdictional coverage in September 1990,19 having
determined that PCCs were sufficiently
physically transformed from former wetlands
into drylands capable of and supporting
continued actual agricultural use for crop
production and/or pasturing (forage) such
that they no longer satisfied the
three-factor definition of “wetlands” found
in the Corps’ 1987 Wetlands Delineation
Manual.20 EPA,
meanwhile, took several years longer to move
in that direction, having embraced a more
expansive definition of “wetlands” contained
in its 1988 wetland Identification and
Delineation Manual,21 thereafter
incorporated into the controversial 1989
interagency “Federal Manual for Identifying
and Delineating Jurisdictional Wetlands”22 which
no longer is officially followed.23
During this period of
regulatory confusion and uncertainty, EPA
continued to aggressively impose its CWA
Section 404 jurisdiction over agricultural
wetlands, irrespective of whether the Corps
had treated PCCs as excluded from WOTUS and
CWA 404 coverage.24 Consequently,
many small and medium-sized farms and
ranches, including my clients’ Erie,
Pennsylvania family farm, were rendered
unprofitable and/or driven out of business.
Indeed, EPA had refused to recognize the
Brace farm’s 1988 PCC status and
exclusion from CWA Section 404 jurisdiction.
EPA also had effectively compelled my
clients to prove (unsuccessfully) in a
federal lawsuit25 that
their farming operations qualified under the
“normal farming activities” exemption of CWA
Section 404(f)(1) (which EPA construed very
narrowly),26 and
escaped “recapture” under CWA Section
404(f)(2) (which EPA construed very
broadly).27EPA
first recognized PCCs as excluded from WOTUS
and CWA Section 404 jurisdictional coverage
in nonbinding 1992 agency fact sheets.28 However,
it finally accepted this interpretation
following the White House Office on
Environmental Policy’s August 1993 release
of the Clinton administration’s
wetlands policy.29 The
Clinton wetlands policy acknowledged the
regulatory burdens the inconsistent and
conflicting CWA and FSA wetlands protection
programs had placed on American farmers. To
relieve such burdens, it ensured that EPA
and the Corps would soon thereafter jointly
issue a regulation treating PCCs excluded
from coverage under FSA’s Swampbuster provision
as also excluded from the definition of
WOTUS and CWA Section 404 regulatory
jurisdiction.30 The
August 1993 joint EPA-Corps regulation
effectively codified the Corps’ then-current
regulatory policy (RG-90-07) that PCCs, as
defined by the NFSAM, were not WOTUS covered
under CWA Section 404, thereby amending the
definition of WOTUS.31
Ongoing White House Oversight Needed to
Curtail EPA and Corps Wetlands
Overenforcement
If the history of the EPA’s prior disregard
for the PCC exclusion and its exploitation
of the normal farming activities exemption
at farmers’ expense is any judge, the Trump
administration’s goal of revising the Obama
WOTUS rule will not be easily realized. For
example, the 2008 Transition
to Green report
issued by the who’s who of environmental
activist groups prior to the inauguration of
former President Obama,32 recommended
that EPA, together with the Corps and the
U.S. Department of Justice’s Environment and
Natural Resources Division (“USDOJ-ENRD”),
doggedly “pursue wetlands enforcement
litigation to
the maximum extent permitted
by Supreme Court precedent,” to “revitalize
enforcement of clean water laws with
a focus on wetlands protection and
restoration,” and to establish a
toll-free anonymous tip line to
report Swampbuster [...] violations (emphasis
added).33 In
addition, the 2016 report of the Senate
Committee on Environment and Public Works,
which confirms these recommendations became
agency practice, reveals that “the
assurances given by EPA and the Corps
regarding the scope of the WOTUS rule and its
exemptions to the positions taken by these
agencies in jurisdictional determinations
and in litigation are[/were] factually
false” (emphasis added).34
Furthermore, the Corps as
well as EPA must be carefully monitored.
Although the NFSAM, the 1993 EPA-Corps joint
regulations, and the 1996 USDA regulations
consistently defining PCC status (including
with respect to “abandonment”) had been
widely interpreted as saying “once a [PCC]
always a [PCC],”35 the
Corps, in 2009, surreptitiously endeavored
to change this policy. It did so by
following the position taken in an Army
Corps Field Office Issue Paper, later
affirmed in a Regional Corps Commander’s
Memorandum (collectively referred to as the
“Stockton Rules”), which concluded that a
switch in land use from agricultural to
nonagricultural use triggered “abandonment”
of agricultural activity and loss of PCC
status. While a Florida Federal District
Court, in 2013, found the Stockton Rules to
constitute final agency action, it held the national implementation
of such rules invalid because the Corps had
failed to utilize “appropriate
notice-and-comment” procedures required by
the Administrative Procedure Act.36
Moreover, the persistent
harassment of my clients by EPA and the
Corps, since 2009, provides even more
evidence of agency wetlands recidivism. In
fact, on January 9, 2017, only 11 days prior
to President Trump’s inauguration, EPA filed
two new lawsuits against the Brace family
farm. They allege CWA Section 404 permitting
violations for activities undertaken on two
contiguous and adjacent farm
fields/properties otherwise qualifying for
the PCC exclusion from WOTUS and CWA 404
jurisdiction. The aim of one suit is to
enforce alleged violations of an ambiguous
21-year-old wetlands consent decree covering
one such parcel, while the likely objective
of the other suit is to secure and enforce a
more defined and restrictive wetlands
consent dec37ree to cover the second, and
perhaps, a third contiguous parcel.
Conclusion: Family Farms, U.S. Trade Surplus
and National Security Hang in the Balance
In sum, if the Trump administration is truly
serious about substantially rewriting the
Obama WOTUS rule and bringing a rogue EPA
(and Army Corps) bureaucracy to heel,
ongoing White House oversight and
supervision of EPA wetlands-related
rulemaking and enforcement will be
indispensable.38
However, aggressive EPA
rulemaking and overenforcement is not the
only major threat posed to the livelihood of
small and medium-sized American family
farms. Based on this author’s experience,
U.S. agricultural production is also placed
at risk by misguided environmental and
wildlife activist-led39 Interior
Department fish-first (i.e.,
Endangered Species Act (“ESA”)40 and
tribal trust policy-based41)
water reallocation schemes. Negotiated with
the federal government as a fiduciary party
in interest, and implemented on either a
regional, interstate or intrastate basis,
these schemes bypass state-recognized prior
appropriated water rights42 to
severely reduce access to available
irrigation water,43 resulting
in diminished crop harvests, thinned cattle
herds, and decreased farmer/rancher profits.44 Together,
these overzealous federal agency rulemaking
and enforcement practices help to shrink the
U.S. agriculture labor pool45 and
trade surplus,46which
only further compromises U.S. national food
security and raises the likelihood that
Americans will increasingly depend on unsafe
and unsecure third world food imports47 to
make up the difference.
It would appear from President Trump’s most
recently issued Executive Order “Promoting
Agriculture and Rural Prosperity in
America,”48 the
goals of which inter
alia include
regulatory revision, promoting rural
economic prosperity and preserving family
farms,49 that
he gets the point quite clearly. This E.O.
mandates an interagency regulatory review
process which is to be coordinated with the
agency regulatory reviews mandated by E.O.
13778 discussed above50 and
E.O. 13771.51 If
this effort creates the necessary synergies
that can actually secure reductions in the
costs and burdens associated with both agricultural
and environmental regulations,52 then
perhaps the President’s campaign pledge to
protect agricultural sector jobs and
national security may be realized. Since
E.O. 13771 does not apply to EPA, which is
an independent regulatory agency,53 while
E.O. 13778 does,54 it
remains questionable how much progress can
truly be achieved.
Presumably, the White House will embark upon
this endeavor prior to commencing an
agricultural trade war with our neighbor to
the north. Washington lobbyists representing
large U.S. dairy producers the exports of
which are being undercut by lower cost
protectionist-inspired Canadian protein
processing rules, have called upon the
President to act immediately.55 No
doubt, there is an urgent need to curtail
foreign disguised regulatory trade barriers
that harm U.S. agricultural exports.56 Nevertheless,
U.S. domestic agriculture, wildlife and
environmental regulations have, since 2009,
steadily incorporated unscientific
international law standards57 contributing
significantly to the economic pain now being
experienced by dairy and other farmers. Were
the President to first successfully address
U.S. federal agency regulatory and
enforcement impositions—of the type
discussed above—on Americans’ economic
freedom58,
he would surely initiate his success as the
leader of the free world.
Continued below...
Footnotes:
* Lawrence A. Kogan is Managing Principal of
The Kogan Law Group, P.C. New York, New York
and President of the Princeton, NJ-based
nonprofit Institute for Trade, Standards and
Sustainable Development. Mr. Kogan
currently serves as defense counsel
representing the Brace family in
EPA-re-initiated litigation, and as counsel
to the Siskiyou County Water Users
Association. He recently served on the Trump
Agency Landing Team for the Office of United
States Trade Representative, and
formerly served as the legal representative
of the Klamath Irrigation District, the
County of Siskiyou, California, and a small
group of farmers operating in the Flathead
Irrigation Project located on the Flathead
Indian Reservation in northwestern Montana.
-
See Clean
Water Act of 1977, P.L.
95-217, 91 Stat. 1566 (Dec.
27, 1977) (amending numerous provisions
of the Federal Water Pollution Control
Act, including Section 208, to require a
National Wetlands Inventory.)
-
See United
States Senate Committee on Environment
and Public Works, From
Preventing Pollution of Navigable and
Interstate Waters to Regulating Farm
Fields, Puddles and Dry Land: A Senate
Report on the Expansion of Jurisdiction
Claimed by the Army Corps of Engineers
and the U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency under the Clean Water Act (hereinafter
“Senate EPW Report” (114th Cong.,
2 Sess. Sept. 20, 2016), available at: EPW.senate.gov. See
also U.S.
House of Representatives, Committee on
Oversight and Government Reform, 114th Cong., Politicization
of the Waters of the United States
Rulemaking, Majority Staff
Report (Oct. 27, 2016)
-
See United
States v. Mills, 817 F. Supp.
1546 (N.D. Fla. 1993), (referring to
“the disturbing implications of the
expansive jurisdiction which has been
assumed by the United States Army Corps
of Engineers under the Clean Water Act,”
and to the CWA as a “regulatory
hydra.”).
-
See The
President, Executive
Order 13778 - Restoring the Rule of Law,
Federalism and Economic Growth by
Reviewing the ‘Waters of the United
States’ Rule, 82 FR 12497 (Feb.
28, 2017).
-
See U.S.
Department of Defense Department of the
Army, Corps of Engineers and
Environmental Protection Agency, Clean
Water Rule: Definition of ‘Waters of the
United States’—Final Rule (June
29, 2015), 80 FR 37054.
-
See State
of Ohio, et al. v. U.S. Army Corps of
Eng’rs, et al., Civil Case Nos.
15-3799/3822/3853/3887 (6th Circ.
Oct. 9, 2015).
-
Id.
at 37057.
-
See 80
FR at 37059.
-
See Food
Security Act of 1985, P.L.
99-198, 99 Sta. 1354 (Dec.
23, 1985).
-
See United
States Environmental Protection Agency, Section
404 of the Clean Water Act - Section 404
and Swampbuster: Wetlands on
Agricultural Lands.
-
See Food
Security Act of 1985, P.L. 99-198, supra at
Title VII, Subtitle C, Sec. 1221,
codified at 16 U.S.C. 3821.
-
See United
States Department of Agriculture Soil
Conservation Service, National
Food Security Act Manual, Title 180
Second Edition (Aug. 1988), at Sec.
512.31.
-
See Food
Security Act of 1985, P.L. 99-198, supra at
Secs. 1201(a)(7)(A), 1201(a)(11)(A),
1201(a)(27) and 1222(b)(1)(A), codified
at 16 U.S.C. 3801(a)(7)(A),
3801(a)(11)(A) and 3801(a)(27), and 16
U.S.C. 3822(b)(1)(A).
-
See United
States Department of Agriculture Soil
Conservation Service, National
Food Security Act Manual, Title 180
Second Edition (Aug. 1988), supra at
Sec. 512.15 (a).
-
Id., at
Sec. 512.16(a).
-
Id.,
at Sec. 512.16(b).
-
Id.,
at Sec. 512.22(b)(1).
-
Id.,
at Sec. 512.31(a). The January 1, 1995
completion date was set forth in a final
USDA regulation implementing the FSA
issued on and deemed effective as of
September 17, 1987 (amending the prior
interim rule of June 27, 1986), and
reaffirmed in a later interim final USDA
regulation. See 52
FR 35194, 35197 (Sept. 17, 1987),
available at: cdn.loc.gov;
61 FR 47019, 47024 (Sept. 6, 1996),
available at: gpo.gov.
-
See U.S.
Department of Defense Army Corps of
Engineers, Regulatory
Guidance Letter 90-07—Subject:
Clarification of the Phrase ‘Normal
Circumstances’ as it Pertains to Cropped
Wetlands (Sept.
26, 1990), at Sec. 5.d, (expired, Dec.
21, 1993).
-
See US
Army Corps of Engineers Waterways
Experiment Station, Corps
of Engineers Wetlands Delineation Manual (Jan.
1987).
-
See U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency, EPA
Wetland Identification Delineation
Manual (W.S.
Sipple, ed., Wash., D.C. 1988),
discussed in Wetlands
Characteristics and Boundaries,
Committee on Characterization of
Wetlands, National Research Council
(1995), at p. 71, (“EPA stated, as had
USACE, that it was following the
‘three-parameter’ definition of wetlands
found in USACE and EPA regulations and
based on hydrology, soils, and
vegetation. The 1988 EPA manual,
however, allows delineators to rely on
vegetation alone for routine
delineations and when obligate wetland
or upland species are dominant.”).
-
See U.S.
Army Corps of Engineers, U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency, U.S.
Fish and Wildlife Service and USDA Soil
Conservation Service, Federal
Manual for Identifying and Delineating
Jurisdictional Wetlands—An Interagency
Cooperative Publication (Jan.
10, 1989).
-
See Energy
and Water Development Appropriations Act,
1992, P.L. 102-104, 105 Stat. 510, 518
(prohibiting the Corps from using funds
to identify jurisdictional waters using
the Federal Manual); Energy and Water
Development Appropriations Act, 1993,
P.L. 102-377, 106 Stat. 1315, 1324-25
(mandating that the Corps use the 1987
Manual until a new manual was published
after public notice and comment). See
also 58
FR at 45032.
-
See Environmental
Law Institute, Wetlands
Protection Workbook Prepared for the
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (March
13, 1991), at pp. 11-12.
-
See United
States v. Brace, 41 F.3d 117 (3rd Cir.
1994), cert. denied, 515 U.S. 1158
(1995); United States Department of
Justice Environment and Natural
Resources Division, Environment Defense
Section, Notice
of Lodging of Consent Decree Pursuant to
Clean Water Act, 61 FR 42055
(Aug. 13, 1996).
-
See United
States Environmental Protection Agency, Wetland
Fact Sheet #20: Clean Water Act §404(f)
Exemptions, EPA843-F-93-001
(March 1993).
-
See United
States Environmental Protection Agency
and United States Department of the
Army, Memorandum:
Clean Water Act Section 404 Regulatory
Program and Agricultural Activities (May
3, 1990).
-
See United
States Environmental Protection Agency
Office of Water, Agriculture
& Wetlands: A Compilation of Fact Sheets,
EPA503/9-92-003 (Aug. 1992), at pp. 2,
7, 11-12.
-
See White
House Office on Environmental Policy, Protecting
America’s Wetlands: A Fair, Flexible,
and Effective Approach (Aug.
24, 1993).
-
Id.,
at Section V.C, pp. 9-10.
-
See
also U.S.
Department of Defense Department of the
Army Corps of Engineers and U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency, Clean
Water Act Regulatory Programs—Final Rule,
58 FR 45008, 45031-45035 (Aug. 25,
1993), (amending 33 CFR 328.3(a) by
adding new paragraph (a)(8); amending 40
CFR 110.1, 40 CFR 230.3, 40 CFR 232.3).
-
See Transition
to Green: Leading the Way to a Healthy
Environment, A Green Economy and a
Sustainable Future,
ENVIRONMENTAL TRANSITION RECOMMENDATIONS
FOR THE OBAMA ADMINISTRATION (NOV.
2008).
-
Id.,
at pp. 10-6, 10-7.
-
See United
States Senate Committee on Environment
and Public Works, From
Preventing Pollution of Navigable and
Interstate Waters to Regulating Farm
Fields, Puddles and Dry Land: A Senate
Report on the Expansion of Jurisdiction
Claimed by the Army Corps of Engineers
and the U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency under the Clean Water Act (hereinafter
“Senate EPW Report” (114th Cong.,
2 Sess. Sept. 20, 2016), supra at
pp. 2, 17-18.
-
The joint
EPA-Corps regulations indicated that PCC
status would be lost if the land was
“abandoned” because they reverted to
wetlands. See 58
FR at 45033. PCC status would not be
lost even if the land use changed to
nonagricultural use. See United
States v. Hallmark Construction Co.,
30 F. Supp. 2d 1033, 1040 (N.D. Ill.
1998). See
also Kristine
A. Tidgren, Prior
Converted Cropland: a 2015 Review (Aug.
27, 2015).
-
See New
Hope Power Co. v. U.S. Army Corps of
Eng’rs, 746 F. Supp. 2d 1272,
1284 (S.D. Fl. 2010).
-
See The
Kogan Law Group, P.C., United
States v. Brace, Summary of Facts &
Findings of 30-Year “WOTUS” Case.
-
Based on
this author’s experience, the EPA and
USDOJ-ENRD bureaucracies have kept
critical information regarding ongoing
litigation and legacy policies from the
previous Obama administration from, and
stymied new initiatives of, Trump
cabinet members and their chosen
appointees (e.g., EPA Administrator
Pruitt, Attorney General Sessions and
ENRD’s Acting Assistant Attorney General
Jeff Woods). These phenomena also have
been reported by the media. See Michael
Bastasch, ‘I
Will Name Names’: Infighting At EPA
Drives Top Official To Resign,
Daily Caller (March 19, 2017); Timothy
Cama, Trump
Appointee Steps Down at EPA, The
Hill (March 16, 2017); Kevin Bogardus, Questions
Trail Agency Critic’s Exit,
Greenwire (March 16, 2017); Andrew
Restuccia, Marianne Levine and Nahal
Toosi, Federal
Workers Turn to Encryption to Thwart
Trump, Politico (Feb. 2, 2017),
(discussing how federal career employees
at EPA and the Departments of State and
Labor, “worried that President Donald
Trump will gut their agencies, are
creating new email addresses, signing up
for encrypted messaging apps and looking
for other, protected ways to push back
against the new administration’s
agenda.”). See
also John
Siciliano, Judicial
Watch Sues EPA Over Use of Software to
Undermine Trump, Washington
Examiner (April 12, 2017), (“discussing
how nonprofit Judicial Watch filed a
FOIA request in federal district court
“seeking all ‘communications sent or
received by EPA officials who may have
used the cell phone encryption
application ‘Signal’ to thwart
government oversight and transparency’”
required by FOIA.); Ralph R. Smith, Another
FOIA Lawsuit for the EPA,
FedSmith.com (April 17, 2017)
(discussing how a similar FOIA lawsuit
had previously been filed by the group
Cause of Action against EPA in
February).
-
See,
e.g. National
Wildlife Fed’n v. Marsh, No. 82-3632
(D.D.C. filed Dec. 22, 1982) (compelling
USACE regulatory changes to acknowledge
EPA’s CWA 404(b) guidelines as mandatory
rather than voluntary); Avoyelles
Sportsmen’s League v. Marsh, 715
F.2d 897 (5th Cir. 1983) (compelling
further USACE regulatory changes
extending CWA 404 regulatory coverage
over agricultural clearing, drainage,
and channeling of wetlands). These
cases, which triggered regulatory
changes, evidence how EPA and Corps
officials worked alongside green
activists seeking higher wetlands
protection standards to focus on the
uneasy relationship between an
FSA-sanctioned USDA-SCS prior converted
cropland determination and the threshold
CWA jurisdictional determination on
“waters of the United States” status.
-
See
Endangered Species Act, P.L.
93-205, 87 Stat. 884 (Dec.
28, 1973).
-
See Lawrence
A. Kogan, A
UN and Tribal Takeover?, Canada
Free Press (Sept. 17, 2016); The Kogan
Law Group, P.C., Summary
of Write-Ups for Western States
Constitutional Rights, LLC (Oct.
27, 2016), (identifying ways in which
federal agencies promote the so-called
tribal trust obligation in protection of
aboriginal Indian reserved water
rights).
-
See Lawrence
A. Kogan, Who
Owns the Water in the West? An Overview
of the Challenges Facing Private Prior
Appropriation & Federal Reserved Water
Rights, presented at Kentucky
Journal of Equine, Agriculture, &
Natural Resources Law 2nd Symposium
Energy & the Environment: The Interplay
of Regulations and Natural Resources Law
& Policy, (Lexington, KY, March 2,
2016); nebula.wsimg.com (KJEANRL
program); law.uky.edu (speaker
bios).
-
See The
Kogan Law Group, P.C., Summary
of Write-Ups for Western States
Constitutional Rights, LLC, (Oct.
27, 2016), supra (identifying
the various ways in which Congress and
the Interior Department reallocate water
away from Montana and other western
irrigators to Native American tribes);
Lawrence A. Kogan, White
House as Originator and Promoter of
Klamath Basin Agreements, Canada
Free Press (Sept. 8, 2016); Theodora
Johnson, More
Troubled Waters on the Klamath,
Western Livestock Journal (April 29,
2016).
-
See Todd
Fitchette, Will
Westside Farmers Receive Full Water
Allocation?, Western FarmPress
(March 1, 2017); Carolyn Lochhead, Low
Water Allocation Angers California
Farmers, SFGate (April 4, 2016),
available; Marcel Aillery, Noel
Gollehon, Glenn Schaible, Michael
Roberts and William Quinby, Policy
Directions to Mitigate Water-Supply Risk
in Irrigated Agriculture: A Federal
Perspective, presented at 2004
American Agricultural Economics
Association annual meeting, Denver, CO
(Aug.2004) at pp. 4-5, (discussing inter
alia how
“[a] A 20-percent reduction in
Reclamation deliveries westwide, for
example, would affect up to 15.4 percent
of total irrigated acres in the 17
Western states, resulting in an
estimated decline in farm revenue of up
to $1.26 billion, or 2.7 percent of
total returns to irrigated crop
production,” and how, “n
general, states in the Pacific and
Mountain region have the largest share
of Reclamation-supplied areas, and are
most significantly affected by
restrictions on Reclamation water.”).
-
See Legislation
Supports Young People in Ag, Feedstuffs
(March 29, 2017); Jim Dayton, As
Farmers Age, Agriculture Industry Tries
to Recruit, Retain Young Farmers,
GazetteXtra (March 27, 2017), Sophia
Saliby, Young
People Joining Agriculture Industry Face
Tough Conditions, Indiana Public
Media (Jan. 6, 2017); Taylor McCormick, Why
Younger Generations Hesitate to Choose
Farming Careers, Southeast Farm
Press (Oct. 28, 2014); Mark Koba, Shortage
of Farmers Creates ‘Dangerous Situation’
for U.S., NBC News (April 15, 2014);
Joseph Cress, Future
of Farming: Fewer Youth Getting Involved,
The Sentinel (Jan. 11, 2014); Jesse
McDougall, The
Agricultural Cliff: Farmers Are Aging,
and Young People Have to Step In,
The Daily Good (Dec. 12, 2012); Jason
Fearneyhough, The
Importance of Agriculture Cannot be
Undersold, Wyoming Department of
Agriculture (2012), .
-
See United
States Department of Agriculture
Economic Research Service, Agricultural
Trade, (“U.S. [agricultural] trade
surplus smallest since 2007”).
-
See Lawrence
Kogan and Bruce J. Moran, National
Security: Protecting Private Property
and the U.S. Food Supply Against Federal
Government Abuse of Wildlife and Tribal
Policies, Information Memorandum to
Donald J. Trump for President (July 12,
2016).
-
See The
White House, Presidential
Executive Order Promoting Agriculture
and Rural Prosperity in America (April
25, 2017).
-
Id.,
at Secs. 4(a)(i) and (viii) and 4(b).
-
See 82
FR 12497 (Feb. 28, 2017), supra.
-
See The
White House, Presidential
Executive Order 13771—Reducing
Regulation and Controlling Regulatory
Costs (Jan.
30, 2017). See
also The
White House, Memorandum:
Implementing Executive Order 13771,
Titled “Reducing Regulation and
Controlling Regulatory Costs,” Office
of Management and Budget Office of
Information and Regulatory Affairs
(April 5, 2017).
-
See The
White House, Presidential
Executive Order Promoting Agriculture
and Rural Prosperity in America (April
25, 2017), supra at
Sec. 4(c).
-
The
White House, Memorandum:
Implementing Executive Order 13771,
Titled “Reducing Regulation and
Controlling Regulatory Costs,” Office
of Management and Budget Office of
Information and Regulatory Affairs
(April 5, 2017), supra at
Sec. III.Q.1. See
also National
Archives and Records Administration, Independent
Federal Agencies.
-
See The
White House, Presidential
Executive Order Promoting Agriculture
and Rural Prosperity in America (April
25, 2017), supra at
Sec. 4(c). See
also 82
FR 12497, supra at
Sec. 2.
-
See Sean
Kilpatrick, A
Guide to Understanding the Dairy Dispute
Between the U.S. and Canada, The
Globe and Mail (April 25, 2017); Adam
Behsudi, Why
Trump is Starting a Trade War With
Canada, Politico (April 25, 2017);
Mike Blanchfield, Fact
check: Do Canada’s Efforts to Help Dairy
Farmers Hurt U.S. Counterparts?, CTV
News (April 20, 2017); Caitlin Dewey, Canada-U.S.
dairy Trade War Escalates Amid Fears
Some American Farmers May ‘Have to Sell
the Cows’, Financial Post (April 18,
2017); Reuters, Trump
Vows to ‘Stand Up for Our Dairy Farmers’
in ‘One-Sided Deal’ with Canada,
Fortune (April 18, 2017).
-
See,
e.g., Lawrence
A. Kogan, The
European Strategy to Become the New
Global Standards-Setter: A Compendium/i>,
Institute for Trade, Standards and
Sustainable Development, presented at
U.S. Agricultural Export Development
Council FY 2011 Annual Workshop, Session
II - “The
EU: World’s New Standard-Setter”
Baltimore, Maryland (Nov. 17, 2010);
Lawrence A. Kogan, Hong
Kong’s Draft Infant Formula &
Complementary Foods Marketing Code
Violates WTO Law (Part 1 of 3),
LexisNexis Emerging Issues 7046 (2013);
Lawrence A. Kogan, Discerning
the Forest From the Trees: How
Governments Use Ostensibly Private and
Voluntary Standards to Avoid WTO
Culpability, Global Trade and
Customs Journal, Vol. 2, Issue 9 (2007);
Lawrence A. Kogan, World
Trade Organization Biotech Decision
Clarifies Central Role of Science in
Evaluating Health and Environmental
Risks for Regulation Purposes,
Global Trade and Customs Journal, Vol.
2, Issue 3 (March 2007); Lawrence A.
Kogan, REACH
Revisited: A Framework for Evaluating
Whether a Non-Tariff Measure Has Matured
into an Actionable Non-Tariff Barrier to
Trade, 28 American University
International Law Review 489 (2013).
-
See Lucas
Bergkamp and Lawrence A. Kogan, Trade,
the Precautionary Principle, and
Post-Modern Regulatory Process:
Regulatory Convergence in the
Transatlantic Trade and Investment
Partnership, European Journal of
Risk Regulation, Vol. 4, Issue 4 (2013);
Lawrence A. Kogan, Revised
U.S. Deep Seabed Mining Policy Reflects
UNCLOS and Other International
Environmental Law Obligations,
LexisNexis Emerging Issues 6893 (2013);
Lawrence A. Kogan, What
Goes Around Comes Around: How UNCLOS
Ratification Will Herald Europe’s
Precautionary Principle as U.S. Law,
7 Santa Clara J. Int’l L. 23 (2009).
-
See Heritage
Foundation, 2017
Index of Economic Freedom,
(revealing that Canada, with a score of
78.5 and a ranking of 7, now places
higher on the index of economic freedom
than does the United States, with a
score of 75.1 and a ranking of 17.)
Lawrence Kogan * -- Bio and Archives |
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Comment
Lawrence Kogan recently served as special
counsel to the Klamath Irrigation District where
he was tasked, in part, with generally
addressing Klamath Basin Agreement matters. Mr.
Kogan also recently served as special counsel to
Siskiyou County addressing Amended KHSA
matters. He is managing principal of the Kogan
Law Group, P.C. of New York, NY
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