This is taking power away from regulator bodies like EPA that enforce the laws and giving it to the courts... taking the enforcement out of the hands of the experts.
How is it "taking the enforcement out of the hands of the experts?" Judges are supposed to be experts on law. That's literally their job. If the parties before them feel that they need expert knowledge to render the right ruling, then they need to take those experts and either depose them or have them testify. Expert witnesses are a thing; this is not some new idea.
> How is it "taking the enforcement out of the hands of the experts?" Judges are supposed to be experts on law.
Because the laws are about particular things in the real world that have nothing to do with the legal system. They are frequently about scientific matters, for example. What constitutes a threat to public health? What constitutes pollution of a waterway?
When Congress authorizes an agency to maintain, say, clean drinking water, it entrusts scientific experts to determine, based on the most up-to-date evidence, what constitutes a pollutant that is harmful to human health. We do not need Congress to pass a new law every time we get new scientific evidence that a particular chemical (say, PFAS), is harmful.
They did do that, every agency exists with a mandate.
SCOTUS just decided that despite the madnates existing, being funded, and being regularly renewed, that's not good enough.
But they haven't defined how specific the mandate and laws must be. They can just, you know, keep shifting the goal posts until they get the desired result.
Because this is not law in terms of billy having stolen a bushel of apples, and the expert is not called on to evaluate the value of the apples in order to determine whether billy is below or above the line for a class 3 misdemeanour.
The statutes regulating agencies are generally broad signposts, giving the agency a mission statement and a direction but leaving it a large latitude to implement it and decide on the details. That latitude has a legal implication since the agency is generally responsible for setting and enforcing standards.
The Chevron Deference is the legal doctrine that since congress delegated its power to the agency as matter and implementation experts, the agency's policy decisions should be deferred to so long as:
- it's legally ambiguous aka congress has not answered the precise issue themselves
- it is a permissible construction of the statute
The entire point of the chevron statute is that it's not up to the judicial branch to set government policy, and if a problem is a legal void then they have no authority, and unless and until congress makes a specific decision the agency does.
The US is a constitutional republic, not a dictatorship of experts. Go to Singapore if you want that.
What I find funny is how the court is simply asking Congress to do their job - be clear in the intent of how laws should be executed. None of this "well, I'll leave it up to unelected bureaucrats to decide" and people think this is somehow a bad thing.
"is a legal test for when U.S. federal courts must defer to a government agency's interpretation of a law or statute."
The idea Congress could pass a law "you can't pollute", and then a all of the legal details behind it aren't actually a part of the law, but rather "administrative decisions" by unelected state apparatus is a run-around of the system.
Congress can still pass such laws, and bureaucrats can create rules. The only difference is now the courts can overturn their interpretation.
Because congress cannot predict which new chemicals will be invited. They cannot act quickly enough to actually adapt to realities of the world today.
Is CO2 a pollutant? Who decides? Congress or scientists? Judges or scientists?
Now do that for every tiny detail of every part of every law.
It is computationally intractable to write laws specifying every possible scenario and exactly how an agency should act.
I don’t think you realize that these laws were passed with the understanding that agencies would fill in these gaps. Congress wanted these agencies to make these decisions at the time these laws creating said agencies were passed.