Please Wait a Moment

The Voices of Land blog

Get insight on current land trends and issues from experts across the land real estate industry.

13Mar

EPA Announces New Effort to Redefine WOTUS

Kat Szymanski | 13 Mar, 2025 | 0 Comments | Return|

By Russell Riggs, Director, Environmental and Sustainability Policy for the National Association of REALTORS and RLI's Advocacy Liaison

NAR President Kevin Sears was in attendance at the EPA headquarters as Administrator Lee Zeldin initiated a new effort to redefine waters of the US, or WOTUS, to comply with the US Supreme Court's 2023 ruling in Sackett v. EPA, which lifted Clean Water Act jurisdiction on many wetlands and other water bodies.

"I appreciate EPA extending an invitation for this WOTUS announcement to our association. It shines a light on our consistent and productive working relationship with the EPA, and now with the new Administrator. NAR has long advocated for clear, fair, and lasting definitions of WOTUS that protect both our nation’s waters and the rights of property owners. We appreciate the EPA’s commitment to a simple and durable rule that aligns with the Supreme Court’s Sackett decision. NAR will continue to engage at every step to ensure regulatory clarity for property owners, businesses, and communities nationwide," said Sears.

The Environmental Protection Agency also said wetlands protected under the Clean Water Act are only those that directly abut navigable waterways, according to new guidance on how federal agencies shall respond to Sackett.

The EPA will pursue a "definition that is simple and durable and withstands the test of time," Zeldin said during an announcement in Washington. "This is to simply follow the rule of law."

The agency will hold a series of public "listening sessions" that will "inform any future administrative actions", such as a rulemaking, on the definition of WOTUS, according to a draft Federal Register notice EPA published with the guidance.

Waters and wetlands that have a physically-remote hydrological connection to traditionally navigable waters don't count as WOTUS, the new guidance says. The guidance will be implemented by the EPA and the Army Corps of Engineers, which determines Clean Water Act jurisdiction in most states.

The approach is to issue guidance that is fairly limited and then plan for the rulemaking. The EPA has not identified specifically what the rulemaking is, but the EPA is starting with notice and comment of a possible rulemaking with major changes likely to come in the future.

Read the release from the EPA.

About the Author

Related

Everything You Need to Know About Bringing in Outside Parties to a Land Transaction

Everything You Need to Know About Bringing in Outside Parties to a Land Transaction

If you are bringing outside parties into your land transaction, be sure to know the "who",...

Read More >
Gathering and Verifying Comparable Sales for Rural Land

Gathering and Verifying Comparable Sales for Rural Land

Land expert and Future Leaders Committee member explains the best ways to gather and verify Comparab...

Read More >
Confessions of a Land Pro: Chuck Wingert, ALC

Confessions of a Land Pro: Chuck Wingert, ALC

Have you ever wondered how the best land brokers got to the top of their game? “Confessions of a La...

Read More >
Five Books All Land Agents Should Read

Five Books All Land Agents Should Read

What beats curling up with a good book? In our latest article, we count down the top five books that...

Read More >
LANDU Education Week Attendees Awarded ALC Pins At NLC19

LANDU Education Week Attendees Awarded ALC Pins At NLC19

Once a year, the REALTORS® Land Institute (RLI) offers land professionals the opportunity to greatly...

Read More >
Section 1031 Exchanges are Important to a Healthy Economy

Section 1031 Exchanges are Important to a Healthy Economy

Debunking a few of myths and quantifying just how important 1031 like-kind exchanges are to a health...

Read More >
You need to login in order to comment