Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility
Feds Deal Blow to Affordable Housing Efforts: Home Builders
By admin
Published 1 year ago on
September 5, 2023

Share

Getting your Trinity Audio player ready...

The EPA and U.S. Army Corps of Engineers missed an opportunity to provide regulatory certainty to home builders following a recent U.S. Supreme Court decision involving a controversial case.

The federal agencies issued their final Waters of the United States rule without providing a definition of a “relatively permanent” waterbody. Moreover, the rule fails to exclude all “ephemeral features” that only hold water following rainfall from federal jurisdiction.

The confusion about which waters are under federal jurisdiction — and which are not — will create bureaucratic delays during the permitting process for home builders and land developers, says the National Association of Home Builders.

The new WOTUS rule “will directly result in continued regulatory barriers to affordable housing as single-family and multifamily developers struggle to find the developable land necessary to produce the new affordable housing units this nation desperately needs,” said NAHB Chairman Alicia Huey.

The final WOTUS rule followed the high court’s decision in Sackett v. EPA. Chantell and Michael Sackett, an Idaho couple, had objected when federal officials required them to get a permit before filling part of the property with rocks and soil.

Developers and agriculture groups have long sought to limit the federal government’s power to use the Clean Water Act to regulate waterways, arguing the law should cover fewer types of rivers, streams, and wetlands. Environmental groups have long pushed for a broader definition to protect more waters.

The court’s decision broke with a 2006 opinion by former Justice Anthony Kennedy. That opinion said wetlands were regulated if they had a “significant nexus” to larger bodies of water.

WOTUS Map

(National Association of Home Builders)

One Rule for 23 States, Another for 27 States

Even with the Supreme Court verdict and the new WOTUS rule, developers face different federal oversight depending on where they’re building.

“Several federal district courts had already issued a preliminary injunction against the Biden WOTUS rule released in January, which now prevents the agencies from implementing the recent WOTUS amendments issued on Aug. 29. This means the revised WOTUS definition will only apply in 23 states, the District of Columbia and the U.S. Territories,” said the NABH.

California is among the 23 states operating under the amended regulation.

No Public Input

Business groups noted that the revised WOTUS rule was made without public input from stakeholders.

“This revised rule does not adequately comply with Supreme Court precedent,” said Courtney Briggs, chair of the industry group Waters Advocacy Coalition in a statement. “Even worse, the agencies blocked public input and engagement in the revision process.”

Perhaps that was because the WOTUS rule had to conform to the Supreme Court ruling in the Sackett case. Typically, a rule is proposed, the public weighs in and then the federal government releases a final version. This rule changed existing policy to align with the court’s verdict.

Read more at this link.

(Associated Press contributed to this article.)

 

RELATED TOPICS:

DON'T MISS

Army Veteran’s Path to Radicalization Followed Divorces, Struggling Businesses in Texas

DON'T MISS

Green Beret Soldier Shot Self in Head Before Cybertruck Exploded Outside Trump’s Hotel

DON'T MISS

Fresno Airport Evacuated for One Hour. Operations Back to Normal.

DON'T MISS

Is Fresno’s Low-Kill Animal Shelter Policy Endangering Public Health?

DON'T MISS

Fresno State Partners with High Performance Academy for Free Youth Sports Camps

DON'T MISS

Israeli Airstrikes Kill 26, Including 10 in a Gaza Humanitarian Zone

DON'T MISS

Tesla’s Annual Car Sales Slip for First Time as EV Competition Grows

DON'T MISS

What New California Laws Are Now in Effect?

DON'T MISS

Alzillion Hamilton Returns to Fresno State, Again. Another DB Enters Transfer Portal

DON'T MISS

Richardson Plans 15 Mile Walk to Work on First Day at City Hall

UP NEXT

Green Beret Soldier Shot Self in Head Before Cybertruck Exploded Outside Trump’s Hotel

UP NEXT

Fresno Airport Evacuated for One Hour. Operations Back to Normal.

UP NEXT

Is Fresno’s Low-Kill Animal Shelter Policy Endangering Public Health?

UP NEXT

Israeli Airstrikes Kill 26, Including 10 in a Gaza Humanitarian Zone

UP NEXT

Tesla’s Annual Car Sales Slip for First Time as EV Competition Grows

UP NEXT

What New California Laws Are Now in Effect?

UP NEXT

Richardson Plans 15 Mile Walk to Work on First Day at City Hall

UP NEXT

Garoppolo to Make Debut for Rams in Place of Stafford Against Seahawks

UP NEXT

Trump Falsely Links Deadly New Orleans Terror Attack to Migrants

UP NEXT

Oregon Sees Title Hopes Dashed With Early KO by Ohio State

Is Fresno’s Low-Kill Animal Shelter Policy Endangering Public Health?

5 hours ago

Fresno State Partners with High Performance Academy for Free Youth Sports Camps

7 hours ago

Israeli Airstrikes Kill 26, Including 10 in a Gaza Humanitarian Zone

7 hours ago

Tesla’s Annual Car Sales Slip for First Time as EV Competition Grows

8 hours ago

What New California Laws Are Now in Effect?

9 hours ago

Alzillion Hamilton Returns to Fresno State, Again. Another DB Enters Transfer Portal

9 hours ago

Richardson Plans 15 Mile Walk to Work on First Day at City Hall

10 hours ago

Garoppolo to Make Debut for Rams in Place of Stafford Against Seahawks

11 hours ago

Trump Falsely Links Deadly New Orleans Terror Attack to Migrants

11 hours ago

Oregon Sees Title Hopes Dashed With Early KO by Ohio State

11 hours ago

Army Veteran’s Path to Radicalization Followed Divorces, Struggling Businesses in Texas

BEAUMONT — Shamsud-Din Jabbar grew up in Texas, joined the U.S. Army and eventually settled in Houston, where he spun up a real estate busin...

3 hours ago

3 hours ago

Army Veteran’s Path to Radicalization Followed Divorces, Struggling Businesses in Texas

Photo ID of Las Vegas cybertruck driver
4 hours ago

Green Beret Soldier Shot Self in Head Before Cybertruck Exploded Outside Trump’s Hotel

5 hours ago

Fresno Airport Evacuated for One Hour. Operations Back to Normal.

5 hours ago

Is Fresno’s Low-Kill Animal Shelter Policy Endangering Public Health?

7 hours ago

Fresno State Partners with High Performance Academy for Free Youth Sports Camps

7 hours ago

Israeli Airstrikes Kill 26, Including 10 in a Gaza Humanitarian Zone

Photo of Telsa logo
8 hours ago

Tesla’s Annual Car Sales Slip for First Time as EV Competition Grows

CA Shoplifting Crackdown
9 hours ago

What New California Laws Are Now in Effect?

Help continue the work that gets you the news that matters most.

Search

Send this to a friend