Holy cow. This case is a complete microcosm of the battle over regulations, and I mean a complete microcosm.
Behold:
Yeah that really doesn't seem fair.
Oh.
Oh.
They're going to destroy regulations we actually do need using a case that's effectively moot to begin with.
Behold:
Mr. Bright laid out the basic question in his case.
A 1976 federal law requires herring boats to carry federal observers to collect data needed to prevent overfishing. That was fine with him.
"There’s nothing wrong with the monitors,” he said. “They’re actually gathering information that is valuable to us.”
But a 2020 regulation interpreting the law that required his company to pay for the oversight, at a rate of some $700 a day, was another matter. “I don’t think it’s fair,” he said, adding that Congress had not authorized the agency to impose the fee.
Yeah that really doesn't seem fair.
“In practice, the 2020 rule’s monitoring provisions have had no financial impact on regulated vessels,” the brief said, adding that the program was suspended last year and the agency reimbursed the monitoring costs that had been incurred under it.
Oh.
Mr. Bright’s company is represented by Cause of Action Institute, which says its mission is “to limit the power of the administrative state.” The plaintiffs in the Rhode Island case are represented by the New Civil Liberties Alliance, which says it aims “to protect constitutional freedoms from violations from the administrative state.” Both groups have financial ties to the network of foundations and advocacy organization funded by Charles Koch, a billionaire who has long supported conservative and libertarian causes.
Oh.
They're going to destroy regulations we actually do need using a case that's effectively moot to begin with.