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Chevron decision may lead to environmental suits, permit delays


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The Supreme Court’s June Chevron ruling will likely have a seismic impact on laws that pertain to the construction industry, legal experts say. 

In their Loper Bright Enterprises v. Raimondo decision this summer, the justices struck down the 1984 decision in Chevron v. Natural Resources Defense Council — previously one of the most consequential rulings on federal administrative law. The decision rolled back the power of federal agencies to interpret the laws they administer, and ruled instead that courts should interpret ambiguities.

Now, with the fall of what was known as the Chevron deference doctrine, a slew of regulations are ripe for challenges on the grounds that the federal agencies enforcing them have overstepped their bounds, legal experts told Construction Dive. The National Environmental Policy Act, Endangered Species Act and OSHA’s heat standard are among those likely to be challenged.

“In the immediate future, we’re going to see an increase in litigation on this basis, and we’re already seeing a lot of complaints being amended to include Loper Bright in cases that are before the courts now,” said attorney Prianka Sharma, vice president and counsel for regulatory affairs for the American Road & Transportation Builders Association. 

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Prianka Sharma

Permission granted by American Road & Transportation Builders Association

 

In theory, the decision should result in less vacillation in regulations when presidential administrations change. However, the changes will take time to shake out, which could delay permitting as agencies try to understand how they must adapt. There will continue to be uncertainty until some legal precedent is established at the federal district court and circuit court levels, according to Sharma.

“One thing that we’re really hoping for is that [Loper Bright] will lead to less pendulum swinging depending on who’s in office,” Sharma said. 

A second ruling

Just days after Loper Bright, the Supreme Court ruled in Corner Post v. Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System that the six-year window to challenge an agency regulation starts when a plaintiff is injured by the rule, rather than when the regulation was finalized. In other words, builders that are newly impacted by longstanding regulations may now have the chance to challenge them.

Together, these rulings open up established rules to new scrutiny, and this time, agencies will not receive the same deference they had under Chevron. That likely means the construction industry will dispute laws they previously thought weren’t worth the effort, said attorney Curtis Moore, partner at Atlanta-based Fisher Phillips.

Headshot of a brown haired man in a suit.

Curtis Moore

Permission granted by Fisher Phillips

 

“If an employer has a disagreement with the agency over an interpretation, in the past, we might say, ‘Well, this is a pretty uphill battle, given that the agency gets deference to its interpretation.’ Now there really isn’t that thumb on the scale, so to speak,” Moore said.

Legal changes post-Chevron

Congress will likely pass more detailed laws going forward as a result of Loper Bright, according to attorney Rafe Petersen, partner at Miami-based Holland & Knight and member of the firm’s Chevron Deference Working Team. 

When new administrations come in, they typically want to undo the work of the previous administration, but now, rather than new agency appointees interpreting laws differently, Congress must amend those laws in order to advance a new agenda.

“It used to be the Congress, I think, felt like they were doing a favor by drafting a relatively vague law that would give the agency wiggle room,” Petersen said. “Now with the current jurisprudence … unless there’s a real clear statement and Congress wanted the agencies to do it, the courts are going to say, ‘Well, no, you don’t have authority, go back to Congress if you want that fixed.’”

That said, agencies will also be preparing for a post-Chevron landscape, according to Sharma, “so they will be trying to bolster their arguments too.”

One unintended consequence of Loper Bright is that agencies may rely more on recommendations rather than regulations, which would be more difficult to challenge, Petersen said.



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