At the Center
The Conservation Law Center provides legal counsel without charge to conservation organizations, works to improve conservation law and policy, and offers law students clinical experience in the practice of law and the profession's public service tradition.
Animal Migration Seminar
March 21, 2010
CLC attorneys and Clinic interns are participating in the second semester of a year-long series of interdisciplinary seminars on protecting animal migrations, an effort initiated by the environmental program of the Indiana University Maurer School of Law and the School of Public and Environmental Affairs. Featured guests in 2009 were Holly Doremus, professor of law at the University of California at Berkeley; David Wilcove, professor at Princeton and expert on conservation; Paul Cryan, bat expert with the USGS in Colorado; and Peter Marra, bird migration expert at the Smithsonian Migratory Bird Center. This semester the seminar will feature Joanne Vining, professor at the University of Illinois and expert in conservation psychology, and Kathleen Miller, an economist at the National Center for Atmospheric Research and expert in climate change impacts, vulnerability, and adaptation.
Ballast Water Treatment Regulations
February 17, 2010CLC attorneys and Clinic interns advised long-standing client, Great Lakes United, and four other conservation groups in preparing comments on the U.S. Coast Guard's ballast water rulemaking (docket number USCG-2001-10486) The dangers that ballast water poses for the introduction of aquatic invasive species have been recognized for well over a century. With the opening of the St. Lawrence Seaway in 1959, ocean vessels have become the main way that invasive species, such as the zebra mussel and round goby, have been introduced into the Great Lakes, costing millions of dollars in damage and taking a tremendous toll on the environment.
The detailed comments recognized the rule's strides to ensure ballast water discharges to U.S. waters, including the Great Lakes, no longer introduce aquatic invasive species. However, the comments also note significant weaknesses in the proposed rule. The comments call on the Coast Guard to: strengthen the phase one (first level) standards; shorten the timelines for implementation; tighten the technology practicability review process; verify treatment and technologies will work in a truly freshwater system; address the whole ship, including invasive species carried on anchors, anchor chains, and hulls; and establish a rigorous monitoring and enforcement program for compliance with the new regulations.
CAFO Rulemaking
January 11, 2010
Indiana's Hoosier Environmental Council has asked for CLC's help in advancing their interests in an upcoming rulemaking that will change the way Confined Animal Feeding Operations -- or factory farms -- are regulated. CLC attorneys and Clinic interns will participate in this administrative law process to ensure that the new CAFO regulations adequately protect streams and lakes from pollution.
Animal Migration Seminar and Publication
January 11, 2010
The CLC attorneys and Clinic interns will be participating in the second semester of a year-long series of interdisciplinary seminars on protecting animal migrations, an effort initiated by the environmental program of the Indiana University Maurer School of Law and the School of Public and Environmental Affairs. Featured guests in 2009 were Holly Doremus, professor of law at the University of California at Berkeley; David Wilcove, professor at Princeton and expert on conservation; Paul Cryan, bat expert with the USGS in Colorado; and Peter Marra, bird migration expert at the Smithsonian Migratory Bird Center. Prior to the start of the seminar series, Jeff co-authored a paper with Professor Robert Fischman titled "The Legal Challenge of Protecting Animal Migrations as Phenomena of Abundance" which is currently in press.
Antidegradation Rulemaking
January 7, 2009
CLC attorneys and Clinic interns continue the CLC's multiyear involvement in Indiana's antidegradation rulemaking on behalf of client Alliance for the Great Lakes. The rulemaking is required under the Clean Water Act. After more than a year of stakeholder working groups and intense negotiations over the language of the rule, the draft rule issued by the agency is still unlikely to be approved by USEPA. CLC attorneys and interns are currently writing comments in response to the official draft regulations recently issued by the Indiana Department of Environmental Management.
Prioritization for Federal Conservation Funds
January 3, 2010
We have been asked to advise CEAP (Conservation Effects Assessment Project) -- a multi-agency effort to quantify the environmental benefits of USDA-funded conservation programs -- on a geographic prioritization strategy for identifying which watersheds are the best candidates for conservation dollars.
CLC Attorneys Present at LTA Rally
October 22, 2009
In mid-October, CLC attorneys presented workshops at the annual national meeting of the Land Trust Alliance in Portland, Oregon. Bill co-presented the workshop "Conservation Easements in a Changing World - Balancing Flexibility with Permanence." Bill, Andrea, and Jeff, along with Christian Freitag, executive director of our long-standing client Sycamore Land Trust, presented the workshop "Drafting Working Landscape Conservation Easements."
CLC Helps Friends of Patoka River Incorporate
October 2, 2009
With the legal assistance of CLC attorneys and Clinic interns, Friends of the Patoka River National Wildlife Refuge incorporated as a not-for-profit organization. The Friends' mission is to educate the public about the Patoka River NWF, located in southern Indiana near Oakland City, and to help protect its precious resources.