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An Environmental Appraisal of the Law of the Sea Conference

The first session of the Third United Nations Conference on the Law of the Sea ended in Caracas, Venezuela in late August without reaching agreement on a single article of a convention on the law of the sea. The Conference is scheduled to reassemble for another two-month session in March, 1975 at Geneva, and the conferees left open the possibility of a return to Caracas next summer for final negotiations and signing of a treaty.

Aldrin/Dieldrin Suspension Upheld

The Environmental Protection Agency and the Environmental Defense Fund have won two more rounds in their fight to ban production of the carcinogenic pesticides aldrin and dieldrin, but the final outcome is still far from certain.

Seventh Circuit Backs FDA, Sets Low Burden of Proof in Food Adulteration Cases

The chub is a fish that many Americans have never heard of. To many others, however, it is a food; to the fishermen of Lake Michigan, a livelihood; and to the Vita Food Company, purveyors of smoked chub, a business. In the past few years, the level of DDT and dieldrin in Lake Michigan has risen, and so too have residues of the two chemicals in the tissues of the fish caught in the lake's waters.

Supreme Court Faces Thorny Issue of Attorneys Fees in Environmental Suits

Recent ELR Comments have discussed the gradual erosion in the past few years of the "American rule" barring awards of counsel fees to successful litigants.1 The appearance of public interest legal organizations has accelerated that trend, as the relief sought is usually injunctive, and injunctions do not pay the rent. Beginning with the Civil Rights Act of 1964, Congress has included provisions authorizing grants of counsel fees in several pieces of legislation that depend on citizens' initiative for their implementation and enforcement.

Controversial NEPA Implementation at HUD: Shifting Environmental Review Responsibilities to Local Grant Applicants

In a sweeping move that has raised some doubts among mayors, city attorneys and environmentalists, the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) secured congressional enactment in August of a new authority to shift the burden of assessing environmental impacts of HUD-supported projects to local agencies that apply for HUD funds. The operative provision, §104(h) of the Housing and Community Development Act of 1974,1 states:

Managing Contaminated Sediments in Aquatic Environments: Identification, Regulation, and Remediation

Editors' Summary: The contamination of sediments in aquatic environments poses a direct threat to water quality, bottom-dwelling organisms, and animals feeding on those organisms. In recognition of the pervasive nature of this problem, several state and federal agencies are attempting to fashion guidelines for identifying, regulating, and cleaning up polluted sediments. This Article summarizes those efforts in light of the key regulatory and scientific dilemmas faced by agencies attempting to manage such sediments.

The Mixture and Derived-From Rules Under RCRA: Once a Hazardous Waste Always a Hazardous Waste?

Editors' Summary: EPA's rules for determining what substances must be regulated as hazardous waste under RCRA are, to put it mildly, complicated. Understanding these rules, however, is vital, since hazardous wastes are subject to much more complex and costly requirements than nonhazardous solid wastes. Two of EPA's most important rules for determining whether a material will be classified as a hazardous waste are the "mixture" and "derived-from" rules.

Drafting Standing Affidavits After Defenders: In the Court's Own Words

Editors' Summary: The U.S. Supreme Court's recent decision in Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife, raises the threshold requirements that an environmental plaintiff must meet to establish its standing to sue. Although the decision will not fundamentally alter who brings environmental issues before the courts, the decision may herald an era in which pleading formalism and proof of each standing element are required. Proof offered to support standing will have to satisfy the Court's interpretation in Defenders of the standing requirements.