U.S. Supreme Court Refuses to Reconsider Decision on EPA Regulations

Last June, Michigan Attorney General Bill Schuette won a U.S. Supreme Court challenge to federal regulations on coal- and oil-fired power plants. Not so this year.

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By Todd Spangler

Last June, Michigan Attorney General Bill Schuette won a U.S. Supreme Court challenge to federal regulations on coal- and oil-fired power plants. Not so this year.

Without comment, the court on Monday declined to take up Schuette's challenge to the District of Columbia Circuit Court of Appeals' decision to let those regulations stand while the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency addressed the Supreme Court's concerns about them.

The 8-member court -- still down a member since the death of Justice Antonin Scalia -- considered the state's request for a hearing at its conference last week. The court typically issues its decision not to hear cases without comment.

"The United States Supreme Court correctly awarded Michigan a victory last year in this case of unconstitutional federal overreach. The EPA blatantly refused to follow that ruling, requiring us to return to the (Supreme Court). We are very disappointed in the post-Scalia Court's decision this year to not enforce Michigan's victory," said Andrea Bitely, Schuette's press secretary.

Last June, as the court was winding down its term, it ruled in favor of the Schuette-led challenge to the EPA's new regulations regarding mercury and other emissions from power plants. Schuette and representatives from 22 other states argued that the EPA was required to take the costs of implementing and enforcing such regulations into account before finalizing them but hadn't.

In its 5-4 decision, however, the Supreme Court did not toss out those regulations but referred them back to the D.C. Circuit for further action.

That lower court left the regulations in place after EPA maintained it was determining whether the costs involved would be prohibitive, prompting Schuette's challenge. Filing with the Supreme Court in March, Schuette and his team argued that the regulations should have been thrown out entirely.

"The central point of this court's decision in Michigan v. EPA was that EPA exceeded its statutory authority by deciding it was appropriate to regulate power plants without considering the costs of such Regulation," Schuette's team wrote. It added, "EPA had no authority to impose the Mercury Rule as a regulation on power plants."

But the EPA -- which finalized its rule in April by saying it had considered the costs and found the regulations were still "appropriate and necessary" -- noted that the Supreme Court decision had not dictated how it should consider those costs.

"The court made clear ... that EPA retained discretion as to the precise way in which it would take account of costs in its 'appropriate and necessary' analysis," the EPA's lawyers wrote to the court.

Many power plants across Michigan and the U.S. had already started to implement the changes required by the regulation at the time of the Supreme Court's decision last June and did not reverse course. Meanwhile, more than 50 Michigan scientists last week asked Schuette to drop his opposition to the new federal standards.

(c)2016 the Detroit Free Press

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Caroline Cournoyer is GOVERNING's senior web editor.
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