Ferguson joins 10 other AGs suing Trump administration over water rule

NEW YORK (AP) — Eleven Democratic state attorneys general on Tuesday sued President Donald Trump's administration over its decision to delay implementation of an Obama-era rule that would have expanded the number of wetlands and small waterways protected by the Clean Water Act.

The lawsuit challenging last week's decision by the Republican administration to postpone implementation of the 2015 Clean Water Rule for two years is Washington Attorney General Bob Ferguson's 21st against the Trump Administration since January 2017.

“I won’t allow the Trump Administration to continue to ignore the law to try to undermine important environmental rules simply because it doesn’t like them,” Ferguson said. “This thoroughly vetted rule adds much-needed clarity to the laws that protect our waterways. If the Administration wants to change it, it must follow the law.”

Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Scott Pruitt has called the rule an overreach that could hurt farmers and ranchers. Mining and industry groups also opposed it.

The lawsuit was filed in New York by Eric Schneiderman and his counterparts in California, Connecticut, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Jersey, Oregon, Rhode Island, Vermont, Washington and the District of Columbia. It seeks to stop the government from blocking implementation of the rule while considering alternatives.

The regulation was put on hold for the past two years by various court challenges that kept it from taking effect.

Schneiderman said the delay jeopardizes protections for streams that help provide drinking water to more than half of New York state residents and more than 100 million other Americans.

The attorneys general accuse the EPA and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers of violating federal law. They claim the EPA does not have the authority to hold off on a regulation that "rests on a massive factual record," according to the suit.

Public outreach in past years elicited more than 1 million comments, and was based on scientific studies demonstrating how waters are connected by tributaries, streams and wetlands, the attorneys general said.