In its ruling, the 9th Circuit Court declared for the first time that rainwater control systems on forest roads must have CWA permits similar to those required for factories and wastewater treatment facilities. The Supreme Court briefs seek to restore more than three decades of EPA policy and law regulating rainwater runoff from forest roads through best management practices (BMPs) developed and implemented by individual states.
David P. Tenny, president and CEO of the National Alliance of Forest Owners (NAFO), Washington, D.C., USA, said that "we are pleased but not surprised by the broad, bipartisan opposition to the 9th Circuit's unfortunate decision. With the stroke of a pen, the Court has rewritten one of the EPA's best Clean Water Act success stories. By requiring industrial discharger permits for working forests, the Court is replacing flexible and highly effective BMPs with onerous permit requirements that will create unnecessary red tape for forest owners and managers and expose them to private lawsuits filed by individuals opposed to timber harvest. The resulting costs and uncertainty will make sustainable forest management much less affordable, reduce access to forests for hunting and recreation, hasten job loss at a time of unprecedented economic hardship, and force more private forests into non-forest uses. The Court's decision is both bad law and bad policy."
NAFO supports EPA's current policy of regulating rainwater runoff at the state level using broadly supported BMPs. "Forestry has never been a major contributor to water pollution, and has been successfully regulated by the states," Tenny said. "We support EPA's current system of oversight that has a proven track record of maintaining clean water, high quality jobs, and continued access to forests and wildlife across the nation. The strength and diversity of the briefs filed today lay a good foundation upon which the Administration can build a powerful argument in favor of their existing rules."
NAFO was joined on its brief by the American Farm Bureau Federation and 11 forestry organizations from around the country. Other organizations filing briefs include Pacific Legal Foundation, representing 19 forestry organizations concerned with effects of the 9th Circuit ruling on private lands, and the American Forest Resource Council, representing seven organizations concerned with effects on public lands. The briefs and full listing of states represented by the attorneys general is available online.
TAPPI
http://www.tappi.org/