Textualism's Limits on the Administrative State: Of Isolated Waters, Barking Dogs, and Chevron

August 2001
Citation:
31
ELR 10928
Issue
8
Author
Michael P. Healy

In Solid Waste Agency of Northern Cook County (SWANCC) v. U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, the U.S. Supreme Court recently held that the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (the Corps) does not have authority under the Clean Water Act (the Act or the CWA) to regulate the filling of "other waters." This decision demonstrates a major shift in the Court's approach to statutory interpretation, particularly in the context of reviewing an agency's understanding of a statute. The significance of the case is best gauged by contrasting it with United States v. Riverside Bayview Homes, Inc. There, the Court, acting just one year after it had famously established its deferential regime for the review of agency legal interpretations in Chevron, U.S.A., Inc. v. Natural Resources Defense Council, Inc., held unanimously that the Corps had discretion to interpret the CWA contrary to the apparent meaning of the statutory text. In returning to the issue of the jurisdictional scope of the CWA 15 years later, the Court's bare conservative majority has now interpreted the Act to have a clear textual meaning and to foreclose an agency interpretation accepted and enforced by several administrations.

This Article will summarize briefly the factual background to the Court's decisions in SWANCC and Riverside Bayview Homes, and then compare the Court's interpretive approach to resolving the statutory issue in the two cases. This comparison will focus on the Court's shift to a textualist interpretive method and the Court's deviation from the principle of statutory stare decisis. The Article will then discuss how the Court's textualist approach in SWANCC yields an interpretation that has no contextual legitimacy and undermines the federal regime of water pollution control. The final section of the Article examines the Court's activist use of a clear statement rule in rejecting the Corps' request for deference under Chevron. This rule has the effect of ignoring the strong evidence—the metaphorical, insistent barking of dogs—that Congress intended the broadest scope to the exercise of federal authority over the nation's waters when it enacted and amended the CWA.

Dorothy Salmon Professor of Law, University of Kentucky College of Law. J.D., University of Pennsylvania, 1984; B.A., Williams College, 1978. Many thanks to my colleague, John Rogers, for his comments on a previous draft. Any errors are my own.

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Textualism's Limits on the Administrative State: Of Isolated Waters, Barking Dogs, and Chevron

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