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July 2016 Articles

Farmers hear updates on crops, research at LSU AgCenter field day in St. Joseph
Buddleia adds color, attracts butterflies to landscapes
Creep Feeding
feral hog damage of topic of workshop
La. farmers should scout for soybean rust disease
Mulching trees needs to be done right
Where is the Love?
Senate Examines EPA's Unfunded Mandates
Interior Appropriations Bill Advances through Committee
Cover crops offer farmers benefits
You can control fire ants
• Farm Bureau Hails Supreme Court Victory: Farmers and Ranchers May Sue to Stop Cl
Reducing the RFS, Bad for the Environment and Economy
Environmental Best Management Practices for Poultry Production in Louisiana
Fan Dust Evaluation
Red River Station field day focuses on water use
4-H day at the capitol
Louisiana state 4-H, FFA horse show set for July 9-13 in Gonzales
Louisiana, Mississippi county agents hold joint meeting
Just Rambling July 2016

(20 articles found)

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Farm Bureau Hails Supreme Court Victory: Farmers and Ranchers May Sue to Stop Cl

Farm Bureau Hails Supreme Court Victory: Farmers and Ranchers May Sue to Stop Clean Water Regulation of Ordinary Farmland Source: www.fb.org
WASHINGTON, D.C., May 31, 2016 - A unanimous Supreme Court today ruled landowners may challenge the federal government whenever the Army Corps of Engineers tries improperly to regulate land with regulations designed to protect water. Landowners have attempted many times to challenge Corps rulings known as jurisdictional determinations, but the government successfully argued that those determinations were not "final agency actions" and the lawsuits were dismissed. Now, when the Corps asserts jurisdiction over low spots that look more like land than water, it will have to do so with the knowledge that its jurisdictional determination can be tested in court. "Today's decision removes a huge roadblock that has prevented landowners from obtaining relief from the courts when the Corps illegally claims their land is federally regulated water," AFBF President Zippy Duvall said. "Now, farmers and ranchers can have their day in court when the government tells them they cannot plow a field or improve a ditch without a federal permit." AFBF filed amicus curiae briefs in the lower court and the Supreme Court in support of the plaintiffs who were represented by the Pacific Legal Foundation. The case was titled United States Army Corps of Engineers v. Hawkes Co., Inc. Today's ruling builds on another unanimous ruling, Sackett v. EPA. The Court today recognized that once the Corps finds that a landscape feature is a "water of the United States," there are immediate and often dire legal consequences to the landowner. A farmer can continue a farming activity that results in an unlawful discharge and face an enforcement action with civil fines up to $37,500 a day per discharge, or even criminal penalties. Or, the farmer can spend tens, if not hundreds, of thousands of dollars seeking federal Clean Water Act permits over several years only to have the permit ultimately denied.

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