Farmer faces $2.8 million fine after plowing field

cawacko

Well-known member
I don't know all that much about farming but this seems crazy to me. No I'm not suggesting there be zero regulations but we punish people for growing food on their own land?




Farmer faces $2.8 million fine after plowing field


A farmer faces trial in federal court this summer and a $2.8 million fine for failing to get a permit to plow his field and plant wheat in Tehama County.

A lawyer for Duarte Nursery said the case is important because it could set a precedent requiring other farmers to obtain costly, time-consuming permits just to plow their fields.

“The case is the first time that we’re aware of that says you need to get a (U.S. Army Corps of Engineers) permit to plow to grow crops,” said Anthony Francois, an attorney for the Pacific Legal Foundation.

“We’re not going to produce much food under those kinds of regulations,” he said.

However, U.S. District Judge Kimberly J. Mueller agreed with the Army Corps in a judgment issued in June 2016. A penalty trial, in which the U.S. Attorney’s Office asks for $2.8 million in civil penalties, is set for August.

The case began in 2012 when John Duarte, who owns Duarte Nursery near Modesto, bought 450 acres south of Red Bluff at Paskenta Road and Dusty Way west of Interstate 5.

According to Francois and court documents, Duarte planned to grow wheat there.

Because the property has numerous swales and wetlands, Duarte hired a consulting firm to map out areas on the property that were not to be plowed because they were part of the drainage for Coyote and Oat creeks and were considered “waters of the United States.”

Francois conceded that some of the wetlands were plowed, but they were not significantly damaged. He said the ground was plowed to a depth of 4 inches to 7 inches.

The Army did not claim Duarte violated the Endangered Species Act by destroying fairy shrimp or their habitat, Francois said.

The wheat was planted but not harvested because in February 2013 the Army Corps of Engineers and the California Central Valley Regional Water Quality Control Board issued orders to stop work at the site because Duarte had violated the Clean Water Act by not obtaining a permit to discharge dredged or fill material into seasonal wetlands considered waters of the United States.

Duarte sued the Army Corps and the state, alleging they violated his constitutional right of due process under the law by issuing the cease and desist orders without a hearing. The U.S. Attorney’s Office counter-sued Duarte Nursery to enforce the Clean Water Act violation.

Farmers plowing their fields are specifically exempt from the Clean Water Act rules forbidding discharging material into U.S. waters, Francois said.

However, according court documents filed by the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Sacramento, the tractor was not plowing the field. Rather, it was equipped with a ripper, with seven 36-inch ripper shanks that dug an average of 10 inches deep into the soil.

Also, the U.S. Attorney alleges, Duarte ripped portions of the property that included wetland areas.

The ripping deposited dirt into wetlands and streams on the property, in violation of the Clean Water Act, according to documents filed by the U.S. Attorney.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Gregory Broderick said he could not comment on the case and referred questions to his office’s public affairs department, which did not call back Monday.

However, documents filed in court explain some of the rationale behind the government’s case.

“Even under the farming exemption, a discharge of dredged or fill material incidental to the farming activities that impairs the flow of the waters of the United States still requires a permit, because it changes the chemical, physical and biological integrity of the waters,” the U.S. Attorney said in court filings.

The creeks also flow into the Sacramento River, home to endangered salmon.

In addition to civil penalties, the attorney’s office is also asking the judge to order Duarte to repair the damage to the wetlands, including smoothing out the soil and replanting native plants in the wetlands.

He may also be required to purchase other wetlands to compensate for the alleged damage to the property south of Red Bluff, according to the U.S. Attorney’s proposed penalties.

Francois said he thought the proposed penalties were unfair because his client thought the plowing exemption allowed him to till the soil.

“A plain reading of the rules says you don’t need a permit to do what he did,” Francois said. “How do you impose a multimillion penalty on someone for thinking the law says what it says.”


http://www.redding.com/story/news/2017/05/23/farmer-faces-2-8-million-fine-plowing-field/336407001/
 
You would think that he had plowed-up public lands instead of, say, his own sacred, hallowed, private, personal land.

:eyeroll:
 
Under the law one is not allowed to plow creeks, modify natural drainages, or plow over wetlands.

Why? Number one, because private property owners do not own the nations waterways. The nations waters and drainages belong to the people of the United States. And secondly, anything one does to a creek or drainage running through their property can detrimentally affect both people and wildlife downstream.

EPA and state environmental agencies are not in the habit of imposing arbitrary and capricious fines.

In this case, I am 98 percent sure they are just doing their jobs as required by the law.
 
You would think that he had plowed-up public lands instead of, say, his own sacred, hallowed, private, personal land.

:eyeroll:
He did, wetlands are public lands, don't like the law, change it, but often to your own detriment. I bet a permit would have been cheaper.
 
Liberals say regulations never increase costs. Liberals never saw an activity they didn't think they could tell people how to don better.
 
However, according court documents filed by the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Sacramento, the tractor was not plowing the field. Rather, it was equipped with a ripper, with seven 36-inch ripper shanks that dug an average of 10 inches deep into the soil.

that IS how you plow land......shut these idiots down by ripping the Army Corp of Engineers budget with a 36 inch shank.............
 
Under the law one is not allowed to plow creeks, modify natural drainages, or plow over wetlands.

Why? Number one, because private property owners do not own the nations waterways. The nations waters and drainages belong to the people of the United States. And secondly, anything one does to a creek or drainage running through their property can detrimentally affect both people and wildlife downstream.

EPA and state environmental agencies are not in the habit of imposing arbitrary and capricious fines.

In this case, I am 98 percent sure they are just doing their jobs as required by the law.

A waterway is a navigable body of water. How many ships or boats were using this "waterway" on the farmers land?
 
A waterway is a navigable body of water. How many ships or boats were using this "waterway" on the farmers land?
or interstate waterway..
it's bastardization by the EPA where they came up with WOTUS..

Trump has overturned it or directed the EPA to do so..the violation is not going to stand,but he might be in past violation?
had violated the Clean Water Act by not obtaining a permit to discharge dredged or fill material into seasonal wetlands considered waters of the United States.
ephemeral streams as part of WOTUS
 
Water rights are a hotly contested issue all over the US.
I wonder how the farmer down the aquifer would feel about his neighbor plowing his land and absorbing the drainage.
Without regulation there would be farming wars.
Republicans would probably like that.
 
or interstate waterway..
it's bastardization by the EPA where they came up with WOTUS..

Trump has overturned it or directed the EPA to do so..the violation is not going to stand,but he might be in past violation?
ephemeral streams as part of WOTUS

Another Trump fail.
 
A waterway is a navigable body of water. How many ships or boats were using this "waterway" on the farmers land?


You should stay out of topics you know nothing about.

Don't fuck with me on this topic. Are you an expert on the Clean Water Act? No? Of course you aren't.

Navigable waters broadly include mainstem rivers, their hydrologically connected tributaries, and certain hydrologically connected wetlands.

And you obviously do not know this, but the Clean Water Act is not simply about navigation.

Do you think you know more about the Clean Water Act that professional EPA regulators? I promise you, you do not.
 
farmers should just tell america to go fuck themselves and have us all starve. Bet we would change our tune pretty quickly when we don't have anything to eat.
 
You should stay out of topics you know nothing about.

Don't fuck with me on this topic. Are you an expert on the Clean Water Act? No? Of course you aren't.

Navigable waters broadly include mainstem rivers, their hydrologically connected tributaries, and certain hydrologically connected wetlands.

And you obviously do not know this, but the Clean Water Act is not simply about navigation.

Do you think you know more about the Clean Water Act that professional EPA regulators? I promise you, you do not.

Really? Apparently you do not know fuck all about the definition of a waterway. I do. So how about you stop with the faux intelligence and learn something before posting it???
 
Another Trump fail.
there are reasons where aquifers are prohibited from being disturbed by activity.
same with interstate streams or navigable waterways.

Here it's clearly EPA over-reach with their bogus WOTUS rulings under Obama.

Trump is merely correcting the over-correction
 
Under the law one is not allowed to plow creeks, modify natural drainages, or plow over wetlands.

Why? Number one, because private property owners do not own the nations waterways. The nations waters and drainages belong to the people of the United States. And secondly, anything one does to a creek or drainage running through their property can detrimentally affect both people and wildlife downstream.

EPA and state environmental agencies are not in the habit of imposing arbitrary and capricious fines.

In this case, I am 98 percent sure they are just doing their jobs as required by the law.

keep bowing down to uncle sam, statist. the founders would exile you back to england.
 
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