The Clean Water Rule was a regulation issued on May 27, 2015, by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to define the scope of "waters of the United States" under the Clean Water Act, establishing federal jurisdiction over certain tributaries, adjacent wetlands, and other water features with a "significant nexus" to traditionally navigable waters.[1][2] Intended to clarify regulatory boundaries following ambiguous Supreme Court precedents like Rapanos v. United States, the rule excluded isolated waters and certain ditches but included ephemeral streams and wetlands that contribute to downstream water quality or flow.[2] It faced immediate legal challenges from 31 states, agricultural groups, and industry stakeholders who argued it constituted an unlawful expansion of federal authority beyond the Clean Water Act's textual limits to "navigable waters," potentially burdening landowners with permitting requirements for routine activities on private property.[3] Proponents, including environmental organizations, maintained it was essential for protecting public health and ecosystems from upstream pollution, estimating it would safeguard 2.8 million stream miles and 590,000 acres of wetlands.[1] The rule's implementation was halted nationwide by court order in 2015, repealed under the 2020 Navigable Waters Protection Rule, and subsequent revisions under later administrations were curtailed by the Supreme Court's 2023 Sackett v. EPA decision, which rejected the significant nexus test and required continuous surface connections for jurisdiction over wetlands, rendering key provisions invalid.[4][2] As of 2025, conforming amendments adjust the definition to align with Sackett, amid ongoing litigation and regulatory uncertainty over federal versus state water oversight.[5][6]
Historical and Legal Foundations
Clean Water Act Framework
The Clean Water Act (CWA), formally the Federal Water Pollution Control Act Amendments of 1972, was enacted on October 18, 1972, to establish a comprehensive national program for controlling water pollution.[7][8] The legislation's primary objective, as declared in Section 101(a), was to "restore and maintain the chemical, physical, and biological integrity of the Nation's waters," with interim goals including the elimination of pollutant discharges by 1985 and the attainment of fishable and swimmable waters wherever feasible.[9] It shifted from prior cooperative federal-state approaches to a more assertive federal role, prohibiting point source discharges into covered waters except through permits under the National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (NPDES), administered by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) or approved states.[10]The CWA's jurisdictional reach hinges on "navigable waters," statutorily defined in 33 U.S.C. § 1362(7) as "the waters of the United States, including the territorial seas."[11] This phrase, drawn from longstanding Commerce Clause precedents, originally connoted waters navigable in fact—those capable of sustaining interstate commerce in their ordinary condition, such as major rivers and coastal areas used for transportation.[12]Congress invoked its authority under Article I, Section 8 of the Constitution to regulate activities affecting navigable waterways and their integrity, but the definition's breadth—encompassing tributaries and connected features without precise boundaries—created inherent ambiguity, necessitating administrative rules to delineate federal limits and avoid overreach into traditionally local matters.[13]Before 1972, water quality management occurred largely through state and local mechanisms, including common law nuisance suits against polluters and statutes enforcing riparian rights, which yielded demonstrable gains such as reduced bacterial contamination in some municipal waterways via early sewer infrastructure and industrial controls dating to the 19th century.[14] Federal involvement was minimal and targeted, focusing on interstate disputes under laws like the 1899 Rivers and Harbors Act, with data from the period showing localized improvements in oxygen levels and reduced effluents in areas like the Great Lakes through bilateral agreements, though transboundary pollution persisted.[15] The CWA's framework thus preserved this baseline by anchoring jurisdiction to commerce-linked navigable waters, reflecting an intent to address genuine federal concerns like downstream effects on trade without preempting state primacy over isolated or non-commercial features.[13]
Pre-2015 Interpretations and Supreme Court Cases
In Solid Waste Agency of Northern Cook County v. U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (2001), the Supreme Court held that the Clean Water Act (CWA) does not extend federal jurisdiction to isolated, non-navigable intrastate waters, such as abandoned sand and gravel pits intermittently populated by migratory birds, absent a clear connection to traditionally navigable waters.[16] The Court, in a 5-4 decision, invalidated the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers' "migratory bird rule," which had asserted CWA authority over such features based solely on their incidental use by interstate migratory birds, ruling that this interpretation exceeded the statutory term "navigable waters" and intruded on traditional state land-use authority.[17] This precedent emphasized that CWA jurisdiction requires a demonstrable link to navigable-in-fact waters, rejecting expansive theories of federal control over purely local waters lacking hydrological ties to interstate commerce channels.The 2006 companion cases Rapanos v. United States and Carabell v. United States further clarified limits on CWA jurisdiction over wetlands lacking direct ties to navigable waters. In Rapanos, a plurality opinion authored by Justice Scalia (joined by three justices) rejected federal regulatory authority over remote wetlands adjacent only to ephemeral ditches or man-made drains that lack a continuous surface connection to traditional navigable waters, arguing that such features fall outside the ordinary meaning of "waters of the United States" (WOTUS) and that ecological "significance" alone cannot justify jurisdiction without clear hydrological limits. Justice Kennedy's concurrence, providing the fifth vote to vacate the lower court's ruling, agreed on remand but proposed a narrower "significant nexus" test: wetlands qualify as WOTUS only if they possess a continuous surface connection to relatively permanent tributaries or otherwise demonstrate substantial ecological interdependence with protected waters, cautioning against vague, case-by-case ecological assessments that could enable unbounded federal overreach into local property uses.[18] The fractured 4-1-4 decision yielded no majority test, underscoring textual and federalism constraints on extending CWA protections beyond channels of interstate navigation.[19]Following Rapanos, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and Army Corps issued joint guidance on December 2, 2008, interpreting CWA jurisdiction conservatively to assert authority primarily over "relatively permanent" waters (e.g., perennial or intermittent streams with continuous flow) and adjacent wetlands exhibiting a continuous surface connection to those waters, while excluding remote or isolated features lacking such ties.[20] This guidance directed field staff to prioritize case-specific jurisdictional determinations based on on-site evidence of permanence and adjacency, aiming to minimize regulatory burdens on landowners while focusing federal resources on waters with direct pathways to navigable systems.[21] Implementation under these pre-2015 interpretations maintained protections for core navigable waters and connected tributaries, with state programs addressing localized features; analyses indicated that narrower federal scope did not compromise overall water quality, as isolated wetlands contributed minimally to downstream pollution loads compared to regulated perennial systems.
The 2015 Rule
Development Process
The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers initiated the rulemaking process for the 2015 Clean Water Rule with a proposed rule published in the Federal Register on May 20, 2014, seeking to define the scope of "waters of the United States" (WOTUS) under the Clean Water Act. This effort followed Supreme Court decisions, notably Rapanos v. United States (2006), which produced no majority opinion and generated interpretive uncertainty regarding jurisdiction over non-navigable features like tributaries and wetlands.[19] The agencies aimed to resolve this ambiguity by adopting Justice Kennedy's concurrence standard of a "significant nexus" to traditional navigable waters, asserting it would provide clearer categorical protections for waters with ecological, chemical, or hydrological connections while reducing case-by-case evaluations.The proposal underwent a 90-day public comment period, during which the agencies received over 1 million comments and held more than 400 meetings with stakeholders, including states, industry groups, environmental organizations, and farmers.[22] The EPA claimed a substantial majority of comments supported the rule, though mass mobilization campaigns by advocacy groups inflated supportive submissions, while detailed critiques from agricultural and property interests highlighted risks of overreach. After incorporating responses—primarily affirming the proposed approach—the agencies finalized the rule on May 27, 2015, with publication in the Federal Register on June 29, 2015, and an effective date of August 28, 2015.[22]Proponents within the Obama administration justified the process as science-driven, relying on reports like the EPA's 2013 Connectivity Study to emphasize intermittent and subsurface links between headwaters and larger waters, positing these as essential for downstream integrity. However, the rulemaking downplayed dissenting hydrological analyses favoring jurisdiction limited to continuous surface water connections for verifiable pollutant transport, as such intermittent pathways often fail to demonstrate causal impacts on navigable waters' quality or interstate commerce—the CWA's constitutional basis.[22] Empirical data from pre-2015 implementations showed no widespread pollution crises attributable to definitional gaps, with Clean Water Act progress in restoring waters largely stemming from point-source controls rather than needing expansive ecological theories lacking rigorous proof of unprotected harms. Critics, including subsequent congressional reviews, viewed the process as prioritizing regulatory expansion over evidence, influenced by institutional preferences in federal agencies for broader environmental mandates despite limited demonstrated need.
Core Provisions and WOTUS Definition
The 2015 Clean Water Rule, jointly promulgated by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, redefined "waters of the United States" (WOTUS) to encompass traditional navigable waters—those currently used, formerly used, or susceptible to use in interstate or foreign commerce, including interstate lakes and the territorial seas—as well as their tributaries. Tributaries were defined broadly as rivers, streams, or similar features with a bed, banks, and an ordinary high-water mark, including perennial, intermittent, and ephemeral channels, without requiring continuous surface flow to navigable waters.[22] The rule categorically included adjacent wetlands—those bordering, contiguous with, or neighboring tributaries—as well as certain ditches relocated from tributaries, adjacent lakes and ponds, and impoundments of otherwise jurisdictional waters.[22]On a case-by-case basis, the rule extended jurisdiction to other intrastate waters and wetlands exhibiting a "significant nexus" to traditional navigable waters, defined as a substantial effect on the chemical, physical, or biological integrity of downstream waters, either individually or in combination with similarly situated waters. This nexus standard incorporated ecological connectivity, such as subsurface hydrological flows or intermittent surface contributions, rather than limiting jurisdiction to continuous surface hydrological connections or actual navigability.[22][23] Such provisions departed from stricter interpretations rooted in navigable capacity, prioritizing downstream ecological influences over direct physical hydrological links, which aligned with the agencies' interpretation of Supreme Court precedents like Rapanos v. United States but extended beyond traditional limits emphasizing commerce clause constraints on federal authority.[22][2]Exclusions from WOTUS were retained and clarified, encompassing prior converted cropland; ditches not constructed in or relocating tributaries; artificially irrigated areas used primarily for crop production; artificial ponds for agricultural stock watering or irrigation; water-filled depressions incidental to construction; groundwater; and stormwater control features constructed for flood management.[22] Despite these carve-outs, the rule's inclusion of ephemeral tributaries—estimated to comprise approximately 59% of U.S. stream miles—drew criticism for vagueness in terms like "adjacent" (within 100-year floodplains or 1,500 feet of high-tide lines) and reliance on site-specific nexus analyses, which imposed permitting uncertainties and compliance costs on landowners without clear, objective criteria.[22]The expanded scope potentially increased federal regulatory reach over non-navigable features, with agency analyses projecting a modest rise in positive jurisdictional determinations (2.84% to 4.65% annually), though opponents contended it effectively brought under oversight a larger portion of headwater streams and isolated wetlands previously subject to state discretion, heightening federalism tensions by shifting authority from states over local hydrology to centralized ecological assessments.[24][22] This approach, while defended by the agencies as clarifying post-Rapanos ambiguities, was faulted for enabling discretionary enforcement that deviated from hydrology-based limits tied to actual interstate commerce impacts, favoring broader environmental connectivity models instead.[2][22]
Initial Implementation and Challenges
Stakeholder Impacts
The 2015 Clean Water Rule prompted significant apprehension among agricultural stakeholders over its potential to impose permitting requirements on previously unregulated land features, such as ephemeral streams, ditches, and isolated wetlands common on farmland. While the rule retained exemptions for many normal farming activities under Clean Water Act section 404(f), critics argued it expanded jurisdiction in ways that could necessitate costly permits for routine practices like plowing or drainagemaintenance if features were deemed connected to navigable waters.[22]Compliance costs for such permits were estimated at up to $28,915 per application, potentially affecting farm operations without commensurate improvements in downstream water quality, as agricultural runoff from permitted activities often stems from diffuse sources rather than point discharges amenable to strict regulation.[25] Farmers contended that the rule represented overreach, subjecting marginal hydrological features to federal oversight that disrupted land use efficiency, with limited empirical evidence linking these isolated elements to significant pollution transport under typical conditions.[26]The EPA's economic analysis projected overall annual compliance costs for the rule at $158.4 million to $272 million, encompassing permitting, mitigation, and administrative burdens across sectors, though agriculture-specific increments were not isolated due to baseline exemptions.[27] Agricultural representatives highlighted risks to productivity, including reduced flexibility for irrigationinfrastructure and soil management on millions of acres potentially reclassified, exacerbating operational uncertainties amid volatile commodity prices.[28]Development and industrial stakeholders faced anticipated delays from the rule's broadened "adjacent" waters category, which included wetlands with hydrological connections lacking surface flow, necessitating expanded buffer zones and compensatory mitigation for infrastructure projects like roads, pipelines, and urban expansion.[22] This shift from case-by-case evaluations to presumptive jurisdiction increased the scope of required Clean Water Act section 404 permits, with industry analyses warning of protracted review times—often exceeding 200 days per permit—potentially halting projects in wetland-adjacent areas.[29] For instance, linear infrastructure developments, such as energy transmission lines crossing intermittent drainages, encountered redesign mandates to avoid incidental fallback or require avoidance measures, elevating upfront costs and timelines without clear proportionality to pollution risks from non-point sources.[30]Environmental advocacy groups praised the rule for clarifying protections over headwater streams and wetlands, estimating it would safeguard ecological functions like nutrientfiltration and flood attenuation that benefit 117 million people reliant on streams feeding public drinking water systems.[29] They attributed minimal incremental burdens to stakeholders, citing retained exemptions and science-based connectivity criteria that targeted only features with verifiable downstream effects, countering claims of overregulation by emphasizing unquantified benefits in habitat preservation and reduced eutrophication.[22] In contrast, farmer and developer reports underscored regulatory asymmetry, where administrative hurdles disproportionately impacted private landholders while yielding diffuse, hard-to-measure gains, reflecting divergent priorities between localized property rights and broader watershed management.[31]
Legal Opposition and Stays
Following the Clean Water Rule's effective date of August 28, 2015, opponents including 31 states—primarily those with Republican-led governments—and various industry groups such as agricultural, mining, and construction organizations filed multiple lawsuits challenging its legality.[32][33] These suits, initiated in federal district and appellate courts, contended that the rule unlawfully expanded federal jurisdiction beyond the Clean Water Act's (CWA) text, which limits regulation to "navigable waters," by including intermittent and ephemeral streams without clear surface connections to traditional navigable waters.[34] Challengers argued this constituted administrative overreach, disregarding Supreme Court precedents like Rapanos v. United States (2006), which emphasized narrower interpretations such as "relatively permanent" waters or those with "continuous surface connections," and raised separation-of-powers concerns akin to what would later be framed under the major questions doctrine due to the rule's vast economic and regulatory implications without explicit congressional authorization.[35][36]The lawsuits highlighted a stark partisan divide, with Republican-led states prioritizing property rights and arguing that the rule intruded on state sovereignty over local land use, potentially burdening agriculture and development without commensurate environmental gains, as existing state-level protections already safeguarded non-navigable waters effectively.[37] Opponents cited data showing that pre-2015 regulatory frameworks under prior guidance had sufficed for water quality, with states implementing tailored programs that avoided the federal rule's perceived vagueness and overbreadth, which could regulate up to 60% more waters than previously.[38]On October 9, 2015, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit granted an emergency motion for a nationwide stay in consolidated cases led by Ohio and other states, halting the rule's implementation across the United States and restoring the pre-2015 status quo pending resolution of jurisdictional and merits questions.[34][36] The court found petitioners demonstrated a likelihood of success on claims that the rule exceeded agency authority, irreparable harm from enforcement disruptions to economic activities, and that the balance of equities favored a pause given the rule's abrupt nationwide scope.[34] This stay, effective immediately, prevented patchwork enforcement—where some district courts had issued regional halts—and remained in place through 2016 as the court reviewed whether challenges belonged in district or appellate courts.[39][37]
Trump Administration Changes (2017-2021)
Repeal of the 2015 Rule
On February 28, 2017, President Donald Trump issued Executive Order 13778, directing the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to review the 2015 Clean Water Rule for potential rescission or revision, emphasizing alignment with statutory text, Supreme Court precedents, federalism principles, and economic growth by reducing regulatory uncertainties.[40] The order highlighted the need to limit federal overreach into traditional state and local land-use domains, citing ambiguities in the 2015 rule's "significant nexus" test that expanded jurisdiction over ephemeral features and isolated waters lacking clear hydrological connections to navigable waters.[41]In response, the agencies proposed repeal on July 27, 2017, seeking to rescind the 2015 definition of "waters of the United States" (WOTUS) and recodify the pre-2015 regulatory approach, which interpreted the Clean Water Act more narrowly in line with the Supreme Court's decisions in Solid Waste Agency of Northern Cook County v. Army Corps of Engineers (SWANCC, 2001) and Rapanos v. United States (2006).[42] These cases rejected expansive federal jurisdiction over intrastate waters without continuous surface connections or significant effects on downstream navigable waters, arguing that the 2015 rule deviated from such limits by including distant wetlands and intermittent streams based on speculative ecological links.[43] The proposal aimed to restore regulatory predictability for landowners, farmers, and developers, who faced permitting delays and compliance burdens under the broader 2015 scope, which agencies estimated would affect an additional 2.5 to 4.65 million stream miles and 270,000 to 620,000 acres of wetlands annually.[41]The repeal was finalized on October 22, 2019, through a joint rule published in the Federal Register, effective December 23, 2019, which removed the 2015 WOTUS provisions and reinstated the pre-2015 regulations as guidance, pending further clarification. This action prioritized textual statutory interpretation over the 2015 rule's reliance on ecological "connectivity," reducing federal oversight of features like dry ditches and isolated ponds that states could regulate under their own programs. The process involved public comment periods and addressed over 700,000 submissions, with the agencies concluding that the 2015 expansions exceeded congressional intent and judicial boundaries without commensurate environmental gains.[43]Economically, the repeal avoided annualized compliance costs projected under the 2015 rule, ranging from $272 million to $474 million, primarily benefiting small landowners and agricultural operations through eliminated needs for jurisdictional determinations and permits on marginal features.[44] These savings stemmed from streamlined development on rural properties, where pre-2015 practices had not led to measurable water quality declines, as evidenced by national trends showing improved river and lake conditions from 1972 to 2014 under narrower federal scope, driven by point-source controls and state initiatives rather than wetland expansions.Environmental advocates, including groups like the Natural Resources Defense Council, criticized the repeal as risking pollution in headwater streams and wetlands, potentially undermining downstream protections by exposing 20 million acres to development.[45] However, agencies countered with historical data indicating no causal link between pre-2015 jurisdictional limits and degradation, as Clean Water Act progress relied on enforceable effluent limits and technology standards applicable regardless of WOTUS breadth, with states maintaining authority over non-federal waters. Post-repeal monitoring through 2020 showed stable or improving metrics in key indicators like dissolved oxygen and nutrient levels, consistent with prior decades' outcomes under similar regimes.
Navigable Waters Protection Rule (NWPR)
The Navigable Waters Protection Rule (NWPR) was promulgated by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and the Department of the Army on April 21, 2020, as a replacement for the 2015 Clean Water Rule, aiming to provide a more predictable and narrower definition of "waters of the United States" (WOTUS) under the Clean Water Act. The rule emphasized surface water connections to traditional navigable waters, drawing primarily from the plurality opinion in Rapanos v. United States (2006), which prioritized relatively permanent waters and continuous physical linkages over broader ecological considerations.[46] It became effective on June 22, 2020, in 49 states, enabling relatively swift implementation by federal agencies for permitting and enforcement decisions.[47]Under the NWPR, WOTUS was categorically limited to six types of waters: (1) traditional navigable waters, the territorial seas, and interstate waters; (2) impoundments of WOTUS; (3) tributaries with an ordinary high water mark (OHWM) that contribute perennial or intermittent flow to traditional navigable waters in a typical year; (4) certain ditches, including those constructed in traditional navigable waters or that meet tributary criteria; (5) lakes and ponds with an OHWM or that contribute perennial or intermittent flow to a jurisdictional water; and (6) adjacent wetlands possessing a continuous surface connection to traditional navigable waters, impoundments, or covered tributaries in a typical year, such that jurisdictional waters can be observed where they meet. The rule explicitly excluded ephemeral features lacking an OHWM, artificially irrigated areas, stormwater management systems, groundwater, and isolated wetlands without the required surface connection.[46]The NWPR rejected the "significant nexus" test derived from Justice Kennedy's concurrence in Rapanos, which had evaluated ecological or hydrological connections beyond continuous surface flow, deeming it inconsistent with the Clean Water Act's focus on navigable-in-fact waters affecting interstate commerce. Agencies estimated the rule would exclude jurisdiction over certain intermittent and ephemeral streams and disconnected wetlands compared to the 2015 rule, potentially covering fewer waters overall while preserving protections for features with direct ties to commerce-affecting waterways, as supported by U.S. Army Corps of Engineers jurisdictional determinations. Independent analyses varied, with some watershed studies indicating reduced coverage of wetlands by up to 28% in arid regions relative to prior interpretations.[48] Implementation proceeded amid immediate legal challenges from 17 states, including California and New York, and environmental groups, who argued the rule unlawfully narrowed federal authority and failed to protect downstream water quality under the Act.
Biden Administration Revisions (2021-2025)
Repeal of NWPR
Upon taking office on January 20, 2021, President Biden issued Executive Order 13990, which revoked prior Trump administration directives promoting regulatory simplification and directed the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (Corps) to review the Navigable Waters Protection Rule (NWPR) for alignment with public health, environmental, and scientific objectives. On June 9, 2021, the agencies announced a two-step rulemakingprocess to repeal the NWPR: the first step would formally rescind it and reinstate the pre-2015 regulatory definition of "waters of the United States" (WOTUS), while the second would propose a new definition. This initiative followed a federal district court vacatur of the NWPR on August 30, 2021, in Arizona v. EPA, after which the agencies immediately halted nationwide implementation of the NWPR and reverted to applying pre-2015 WOTUS interpretations on an interim basis pending litigation over the 2015 Clean Water Rule.[49]The agencies justified the repeal on ecological grounds, asserting that the NWPR's narrower jurisdictional scope disrupted the Clean Water Act's objective to protect navigable waters from pollution by excluding significant ephemeral and intermittent features with hydrologic connections to traditional waters, potentially allowing upstream impairments to affect downstream quality.[49] However, critics, including agricultural and construction industry groups, contended that the rapid reversal ignored the NWPR's alignment with Supreme Court precedents limiting federal overreach and introduced substantial regulatory instability, as stakeholders navigated conflicting rules amid ongoing lawsuits.[50] This uncertainty delayed permitting decisions and infrastructure projects, with reports indicating stalled developments in sectors like energy and real estate due to unclear compliance requirements during the transition.[51]Empirical data from the NWPR's implementation period (February 2020 to mid-2021) showed no verifiable increase in water pollution incidents or impairments directly linked to its provisions, as state and tribal programs maintained baseline protections without reported gaps leading to measurable degradation.[52] The formal proposed rule to codify the NWPR repeal and pre-2015 WOTUS definition was published on December 7, 2021, but the process contributed to prolonged limbo for regulated entities until subsequent rulemaking.[49] This episode exemplified broader patterns of administrative oscillation, where successive administrations prioritized differing interpretations of statutory authority, amplifying compliance costs estimated in the tens of millions annually from retraining and legal consultations alone.[53]
2023 WOTUS Rule
The 2023 Revised Definition of "Waters of the United States" was jointly issued by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and the Department of the Army on January 18, 2023, with an effective date of March 20, 2023.[54] The rule reinstated the "significant nexus" framework from Justice Kennedy's concurrence in Rapanos v. United States (2006), defining jurisdictional waters as those with a significant chemical, physical, or biological effect on the integrity of traditional navigable waters, the territorial seas, or interstate waters, either alone or in combination with similarly situated waters within the same region.[13] This test applied to categories including tributaries, impoundments, and adjacent wetlands, prioritizing ecological connectivity over strict physical contiguity in some cases.[55]Tributaries under the rule encompassed relatively permanent waters and those flowing intermittently or ephemerally, provided they met the significant nexus threshold through contributions to flow, transport of materials, or habitat functions impacting downstream navigable waters.[13] Wetlands qualified as jurisdictional if abutting traditional navigable waters with a continuous surface connection or possessing a significant nexus via ecological linkages, including non-continuous separations like berms if evidence demonstrated substantial effects on water quality or biology.[13] The definition excluded certain features like prior converted cropland and waste treatment systems but retained broad inclusions for intrastate waters with demonstrated nexus, aiming to align with pre-2015 practice while addressing ambiguities from prior rules.[54] Compared to the 2020 Navigable Waters Protection Rule, the 2023 rule regulated waters more broadly by reincorporating ecological tests over the NWPR's emphasis on observable surface connections, potentially encompassing additional intermittent and isolated features.[44]Implementation commenced in March 2023 but faced immediate scrutiny for purportedly exceeding Rapanos limits, where the plurality advocated continuous surface water for wetlands and Justice Scalia's opinion rejected expansive ecological assertions lacking clear textual support in the Clean Water Act.[2] Critics, including agricultural and development sectors, contended the rule invoked the major questions doctrine by imposing nationwide permitting requirements on diffuse ecological impacts without explicit statutory delegation, potentially complicating case-by-case determinations.[2] The agencies' economic analysis projected incremental annual costs of approximately $54 million to $88 million from permitting and mitigation shifts relative to the NWPR baseline, primarily affecting Section 404 dredge-and-fill activities, though these figures excluded broader administrative delays or state-level enforcement variations.[44] Industry analyses highlighted unquantified risks of prolonged review processes, estimating heightened compliance burdens that could delay infrastructure and agriculture without verifiable proportional gains in downstream water quality.[56]
Supreme Court Intervention
Sackett v. EPA Case Background
In 2007, Michael and Chantell Sackett purchased a 0.63-acre residential lot near Priest Lake in Kootenai County, Idaho, within a established subdivision where neighboring properties had been developed with homes served by septic systems.[57] The Sacketts obtained local building permits and began backfilling the lot with dirt and gravel in April and May to prepare for single-family home construction, as the site was dry with no standing water or perennial stream.[57][58] The U.S. Environmental ProtectionAgency (EPA) responded with a November 2007 administrative compliance order, asserting the lot constituted "wetlands" adjacent to a man-made ditch connected intermittently to Kalispell Creek—a non-navigable tributary over 300 feet away that flows into Priest Lake more than a half-mile distant—thus falling under Clean Water Act jurisdiction as "waters of the United States."[57][58] The order demanded immediate cessation of filling, site restoration to pre-disturbance conditions, and compliance monitoring, while threatening civil penalties of up to $37,500 per day per violation, plus potential criminal fines, effectively totaling over $40,000 daily for ongoing noncompliance.[57]The Sacketts challenged the order, contending their property lacked any continuous surface connection to navigable-in-fact waters, rendering EPA jurisdiction invalid under the Clean Water Act's text limiting regulation to "navigable waters."[57] The U.S. District Court for the District of Idaho granted summary judgment to the EPA, and the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed in 2021, applying the "significant nexus" test derived from Justice Kennedy's concurrence in Rapanos v. United States (2006), which extends jurisdiction to wetlands demonstrating a substantial ecological link—such as chemical, physical, or biological effects—to traditional navigable waters, even absent abutting adjacency or continuous surface flow.[57][59] This approach, binding in the Ninth Circuit, prioritized downstream hydrological and ecological dependencies over direct physical connectivity, allowing regulation of the Sacketts' isolated lot based on its purported influence on Priest Lake via intermittent drainage.[57]The litigation highlighted ambiguities in prior interpretive frameworks, where landowners incurred escalating penalties without pre-enforcement judicial review until the 2012 Sackett I ruling enabled suits against compliance orders. In the Sacketts' case, the threatened fines—potentially exceeding the property's value—exemplified disproportionate enforcement for minimal, localized disturbance on developable land, as the site posed no evidence of imminent pollution to distant navigable waters and aligned with standard residential permitting absent federal overlay.[58] Similar instances under broad "significant nexus" applications have involved EPA penalties against small-scale landowners for activities like driveway construction or farming on marginally wet soils, often yielding fines in the millions despite negligible measurable environmental harm, as documented in agency enforcement records and subsequent challenges underscoring the test's vagueness and overreach.[60]
2023 Ruling and Rationale
In Sackett v. Environmental Protection Agency, decided on May 25, 2023, the Supreme Court ruled 5-4 that the Clean Water Act's jurisdiction over "waters of the United States" (WOTUS) extends to wetlands only if they possess a continuous surface connection to bodies of water that are relatively permanent and connected to traditional navigable waters.[57][61] Justice Alito's majority opinion emphasized a textualist reading of the Act's phrase "waters of the United States," interpreting it to exclude isolated or intermittently connected wetlands lacking such a clear physical link, as these do not align with the statute's focus on navigable or traditionally regulable waters.[57] The Court rejected the EPA's reliance on ecological "significant nexus" tests—derived from prior precedents like Rapanos v. United States—as impermissibly vague and unbounded, arguing they allow agencies to assert control over any feature with hydrological effects on downstream waters, far beyond congressional intent.[57][61]Alito's rationale prioritized the ordinary meaning of statutory terms over agency interpretations, holding that the Clean Water Act targets pollution of "relatively permanent, standing or continuously flowing bodies of water" rather than diffuse ecological functions.[57] This approach implicitly curtailed deference to administrative claims by insisting on unambiguous textual limits, declining to defer to the EPA's broader view of adjacency under the Act.[62][63] The dissent, led by Justice Kagan and joined by Justices Sotomayor, Kavanaugh, and Barrett (with Kavanaugh authoring a separate concurrence), contended that the majority's test overlooked Congress's aim to protect interconnected water systems but failed to sway the outcome.[61]The decision invalidated portions of the Biden administration's 2023 WOTUS rule that incorporated significant nexus criteria for tributaries and wetlands, rendering federal oversight inapplicable to isolated features without surface continuity.[4] By narrowing WOTUS to physically connected, permanent waters, the ruling reinforced federalism principles, shifting regulatory authority for non-connected wetlands and ephemeral features primarily to states, which retain baseline water quality powers under the Act's cooperative federalism framework.[57][62]
On August 29, 2023, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and the Department of the Army announced a final rule amending the January 2023 definition of "waters of the United States" (WOTUS) to align with the Supreme Court's May 25, 2023, decision in Sackett v. Environmental Protection Agency.[64][65] This conforming rule specifically targeted provisions invalidated by Sackett, which rejected the "significant nexus" test for determining jurisdiction over adjacent wetlands and emphasized that such wetlands must have a continuous surface connection to otherwise jurisdictional waters to qualify as "indistinguishable" from them.[66][67]The amendments removed references to the significant nexus framework, which had allowed jurisdiction over wetlands and tributaries based on ecological or hydrological connections without physical adjacency.[66] The revised definition of "adjacent" now requires a continuous surface connection—such as through a berm, dike, or barrier that is not a natural riverbed or watercourse—making non-adjacent wetlands and intermittent streams lacking such links ineligible for federal jurisdiction under the Clean Water Act.[65] Tributaries were narrowed to those exhibiting relatively permanent, standing, or continuously flowing bodies of water, excluding ephemeral features that only flow in direct response to precipitation.[66] These changes preserved core protections for traditional navigable waters, their impoundments, and directly connected perennial or seasonal tributaries while eliminating broader assertions of authority.[67]Effective September 8, 2023, the rule provided immediate clarity for permitting and enforcement without necessitating a complete regulatory overhaul, thereby reducing uncertainty and potential litigation expenses associated with non-conforming elements of the 2023 rule.[65] The agencies issued field implementation guidance emphasizing case-by-case evaluations based on the revised criteria, focusing on observable surface connections and flow permanence to maintain continuity in safeguarding navigable systems while narrowing the overall jurisdictional footprint.[66] This targeted approach avoided vacating the entire 2023 rule, which remained in effect in certain jurisdictions pending further review.[67]
2025 Revisions under Second Trump Administration
In March 2025, EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin announced plans to revise the definition of "waters of the United States" (WOTUS) under the Clean Water Act, directing the EPA and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to undertake a formal rulemaking process. This initiative aims to align the regulatory scope more closely with the Supreme Court's 2023 Sackett v. EPA decision, which limited federal jurisdiction to relatively permanent bodies of water with a continuous surface connection to traditional navigable waters, tributaries, or impoundments thereof, excluding many isolated wetlands and ephemeral features.[68][57] The revisions seek to provide greater clarity and simplicity, reducing regulatory uncertainty that has persisted through multiple administrations' rulemakings and subsequent litigation.[68][6]On March 12, 2025, the agencies issued the "WOTUS Notice: The Final Response to SCOTUS," establishing a public docket to solicit input on implementation challenges, including the interpretation of "continuous surface connection" for wetlands adjacency.[6] This guidance emphasizes empirical boundaries over speculative ecological connections, responding to data from prior rules showing significant permitting delays and costs—estimated in the billions annually—for landowners without demonstrable improvements in downstream water quality.[69][70] Listening sessions, such as one held for local governments on May 6, 2025, gathered feedback on cooperative federalism, with states advocating for deference to local determinations to avoid overreach.[71][72]By August 2025, the administration signaled an upcoming proposed rule expected to further narrow protections, potentially excluding millions of acres of wetlands lacking continuous surface ties, based on Sackett's textualist reading of the Clean Water Act's "navigable waters" term.[73] This approach prioritizes verifiable hydrological links over broader "significant nexus" tests from earlier frameworks, addressing criticisms from agricultural and property sectors that expansive definitions imposed undue burdens, as evidenced by over 100 lawsuits challenging the 2023 Biden-era rule.[74] While environmental advocates, such as Earthjustice, contend this risks pollution migration, the revisions are framed as restoring pre-2015 jurisdictional baselines without causal evidence linking broader assertions to enhanced environmental outcomes.[75][76] As of October 2025, the rulemaking remains in progress, with no final rule promulgated.
Controversies and Broader Implications
Environmental Protection Debates
Proponents of expansive Clean Water Act jurisdiction, including the 2015 Clean Water Rule, argue that regulating ephemeral streams and adjacent wetlands is essential for maintaining downstream water quality through hydrologic connectivity. They contend that these features serve as conduits for pollutants, sediments, and nutrients during storm events, potentially affecting navigable waters. A 2024 peer-reviewed study modeling stream networks across the contiguous United States estimated that ephemeral streams contribute an average of 55% of the discharge exported from regional river systems, suggesting a substantial pathway for pollutant transport to larger waterways.[77] Environmental advocacy groups and agencies like the EPA under Democratic administrations have cited such models to assert that excluding these features risks degrading ecosystems, with claims of preventing wetland losses and supporting restoration efforts, though direct attributions to the 2015 rule's implementation from 2015 to 2020 remain limited in empirical documentation.[78][79]Critics counter that the purported ecological benefits lack robust empirical causal evidence linking regulation of ephemeral features to measurable improvements in navigable water quality. Hydrological analyses emphasize the primacy of continuous surface flows over intermittent or groundwater-mediated pathways for significant pollutant delivery, noting that ephemeral channels often cease flow before reaching perennial streams, limiting downstream impacts.[80] Pre-2015 regulatory frameworks, constrained by Supreme Court decisions like Solid Waste Agency of Northern Cook County v. Army Corps of Engineers (2001) and Rapanos v. United States (2006), still facilitated substantial water quality gains through targeted point-source controls and state programs; for instance, Clean Water Act implementations since 1972 achieved over 90% reductions in conventional pollutants like biochemical oxygen demand in treated municipal effluents, without broad jurisdiction over isolated or ephemeral waters. These outcomes suggest that efficacy stems more from direct pollution controls than expansive territorial claims, with models of connectivity often overstating risks amid institutional biases in academia and regulatory science favoring regulatory expansion.[81]Media narratives framing narrower definitions as a "war on wetlands" have amplified proponent concerns, particularly following the 2023 Sackett v. EPA ruling, but overlook historical data showing net wetland acreage stabilization or increases in recent decades under varied jurisdictional scopes, achieved via voluntary conservation rather than federal mandates. Independent economic assessments indicate that broad surface water regulations frequently underperform cost-benefit analyses compared to more precise interventions, questioning the necessity of including features with tenuous causal ties to traditional navigable waters.[27] This debate underscores a tension between precautionary modeling and verifiable causal mechanisms, where empirical monitoring of actual impairments—rather than hypothetical connectivity—better informs effective environmental protection.
Economic and Property Rights Concerns
The 2015 Clean Water Rule generated significant regulatory burdens, with the EPA estimating annual compliance costs ranging from $210 million to $465 million, driven largely by expanded permitting requirements for activities near newly designated waters of the United States (WOTUS).[29][25] These costs included administrative expenses for delineating jurisdictional features and obtaining Clean Water Act section 404 permits, disproportionately affecting rural economies where small-scale land alterations—such as plowing or drainage—faced heightened scrutiny.[29] Unquantified indirect impacts, including multi-year permitting delays, further strained sectors like agriculture, which directly accounts for roughly 1% of U.S. GDP but relies on timely infrastructure maintenance to sustain productivity.[82]Expansive WOTUS interpretations under the rule infringed on property rights by imposing federal oversight on isolated or intermittently connected features, often without providing landowners clear notice of regulatory status, thereby violating due process principles.[57] In the Sackett v. EPA case, for instance, the agency threatened the property owners with over $40 million in cumulative fines—initially $37,500 per day—for backfilling approximately 0.3 acres of wetlands on their Idaho lot, which lacked a continuous surface connection to navigable waters, highlighting how vague jurisdictional tests enabled aggressive enforcement absent fair warning.[57] Such actions contributed to depressed rural land values and curtailed development, as prospective buyers and farmers avoided properties potentially subject to unpredictable permitting hurdles or penalties exceeding project values.[83]While the rule's advocates quantified benefits from pollution reductions—such as up to $572 million annually in avoided health and recreational losses—independent assessments have indicated these gains are low and uncertain relative to costs, with federal expansions yielding marginal improvements over state programs already addressing localized water quality.[84][85] The 2017 proposed repeal analysis, for example, projected cost savings matching the rule's burdens while estimating forgone benefits at only a fraction of proponent claims, underscoring that incremental federal controls often fail to deliver proportional economic value given preexisting nonpoint source management by states.[86]
Federalism and Regulatory Overreach
The Clean Water Act of 1972 establishes federal jurisdiction primarily over "navigable waters," defined as the waters of the United States, thereby limiting federal authority to interstate commerce-related concerns while preserving state sovereignty over intrastate waters and land use decisions.[23] This structure reflects cooperative federalism, where states retain primary control over local water resources not connected to navigable waterways, including regulation of isolated wetlands and nonpoint source pollution, which constitute the majority of pollution challenges.[2] Expansive interpretations of "waters of the United States" in regulatory rules have been criticized as federal overreach, as they extend authority beyond the Act's textual focus on navigable waters, intruding into state prerogatives over traditionally local matters like agriculture and development.[87]Mechanisms such as Clean Water Act Section 401 enable states to certify federal permits for compliance with state water quality standards, providing a targeted tool to address potential downstream impacts without necessitating blanket federal control over all waters.[88] Similarly, delegation of the National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (NPDES) permit program to 47 states demonstrates effective state-led implementation of point source controls, with these programs enforcing effluent limits and monitoring that have contributed to measurable reductions in industrial discharges since the 1970s.[89][90] Empirical outcomes vary by state, but analyses show that primacy states often achieve compliance rates comparable to or exceeding federal administration, fostering tailored approaches to local hydrology and economics without uniform mandates.[91]Proponents of broader federal rules argue that interstate pollutionmigration necessitates centralized oversight to prevent free-rider problems among states, yet evidence from state-administered programs indicates that cooperative tools suffice for mitigation, as states routinely adopt standards exceeding federal minima to protect shared basins.[92] Narrower federal scopes, aligned with the Act's navigable waters emphasis, reduce bureaucratic overlap and enable stateinnovation in areas like watershed management, avoiding the regulatory uncertainty and compliance costs associated with asserting jurisdiction over ephemeral or isolated features disconnected from commerce.[93] This approach upholds constitutional limits on Commerce Clause authority, prioritizing state experimentation over prescriptive uniformity that may stifle localized solutions.[94]