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The Guardian - US
The Guardian - US
World
Oliver Milman

How the US supreme court and an Idaho couple upended wetlands protection

Lake Caddo, on the border between Louisiana and Texas, is a beautiful cypress swamp.
Lake Caddo, on the border between Louisiana and Texas, is a beautiful cypress swamp. Photograph: wanderluster/Getty Images

Often dismissed as dismal wet bogs and rampantly cleared since European arrival in the US, the underappreciated importance of wetlands has been placed into sharp relief by a supreme court ruling that has plunged many of these ecosystems into new peril.

The extent of wetlands, areas covered or saturated by water that encompass marshes, swamps and carbon-rich peatlands, has shrunk by 40% over the past 300 years as the US drained and filled them in for housing, highways, parking lots, golf courses and other uses. Globally, wetlands are disappearing three times faster than forests are.

Wetlands received federal protection under the 1972 Clean Water Act but the future of many of these remaining ecosystems, which span 290m acres, or about twice the size of France, is now in jeopardy following the supreme court’s decision in May to severely narrow the scope of what is protected.

Environmentalists are now nervously eyeing developments in several states that have relatively weak wetlands protections in the wake of the case. At risk, they say, are systems that act as the kidneys of America by filtering clean water as well as providing a home to a treasure trove of wildlife, from dragonflies to frogs to waterfowl, and acting as an important buffer to floods and storms projected to worsen due to the climate crisis.

Michael and Chantell Sackett of Priest Lake, Idaho. The ruling in their case made it harder for the government to protect clean water.
Michael and Chantell Sackett of Priest Lake, Idaho. The ruling in their case made it harder for the government to protect clean water. Photograph: Haraz N Ghanbari/AP

“A lot of people see wetlands as mosquito breeding habitat, but I think the general public is recognizing more and more the functions and values that they provide,” said John Lowenthal, a biologist at the Society of Wetland Scientists, who said that he enjoys little more than pulling on his boots to discover new wetlands.

“Without them, you have less wildlife habitat, less habitat for seafood, so people have less seafood to eat, you have more of the drinking water rationing you’re seeing in the south-west, you’ll have more loss of property along the Atlantic and Gulf coasts.”

By some estimates, about half of remaining wetlands have now been stripped of federal protection following the supreme court ruling, in which five conservative justices decided that the Clean Water Act only applied to bodies of water with a “continuous surface connection” to rivers, lakes or other navigable waters.

This case, brought by an Idaho couple, Michael and Chantell Sackett, who wanted to fill in a section of wetland to develop a house in Priest Lake without getting a permit first, has upended previous assumptions about the protection of wetlands and now places many of the remaining, prized wetlands at risk. In August, the Environmental Protection Agency released a new, scaled-down set of water protections that its administrator, Michael Regan, said was necessary after the “disappointing” supreme court decision.

Sunset in the trees at Manatee Springs, Florida.
Sunset in the trees at Manatee Springs, Florida. Photograph: Michael Warren/Getty Images/iStockphoto

“This is our bedrock environmental law and the court just turned precedent and reasoning on its head. It was devastating,” said John Rumpler, a clean water attorney at Environment America. “We are already seeing the effects of it and we expect to see more.”

Under the new definition, even the Everglades, perhaps the most famous wetland of all, would be “dramatically affected”, according to Lowenthal, as much of the sprawling ecosystem is not obviously connected to major bodies of water, separated by agricultural ditches or other barriers.

Florida has insisted it has a robust system of wetlands protections that can provide adequate protection, but other states aren’t as well-equipped to safeguard wetlands from developers. States such as Texas, Nevada, Oklahoma and Missouri have scant wetland protections, according to an analysis by Earthjustice, with a host of other states, including Georgia, Louisiana and Alaska, having both weak protections as well as exceptionally large tracts of wetlands.

Whole types of wetlands such as the “prairie pothole” wetlands of North and South Dakota – shallow, unconnected freshwater marshes – and the sort of ephemeral streams and wetlands created seasonally in more arid states in the US south-west, have now been left vulnerable without state intervention. Even a new federal project to create new flood levees in Louisiana would leave 8,000 acres of wetlands cut off and technically ripe for new development, environmentalists have warned.

White faced ibis gather in a marsh along their migratory path in Nevada’s wetlands.
White-faced ibis gather in a marsh along their migratory path in Nevada’s wetlands. Photograph: Ty Oneil/Sopa Images/Rex/Shutterstock

Even the largest swamp in North America – the Okefenokee in Georgia, a place considered treasured enough to prompt an application for a Unesco world heritage site listing – has been caught up in this uncertainty. Conservation groups recently dropped a legal challenge to a controversial proposed mine on the fringes of the swamp because the supreme court’s decision had made the protection sought “effectively unavailable”.

Similarly redrawn battles are set to erupt across the US as the country reorientates towards a situation where wetlands are again judged as expendable. “It’s a concerning time,” said Lowenthal.

“But I try to tell myself that we’ve weathered the storm before. We’re still losing wetlands at a rate that’s too great but more people are being educated about wetlands, more people are speaking up. Hopefully we can push Congress to try to fill the gap legislatively.”

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