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Judge sides with youth in Montana climate change trial, finds two laws
unconstitutional
By: Blair Miller <https://www.nevadacurrent.com/author/blair/> - August 14,
2023 10:56 am
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Eleven of the 16 youth plaintiffs in the Held v. Montana case pose for a
photo after Day 5 of the trial on Friday, June 16, 2023. Top row (left to
right): Lander Busse, Badge Busse, Grace, Rikki Held, Olivia. Bottom row
(left to right): Kian, Mica, Claire, Eva, Taleah, Sariel. (Photo by Blair
Miller, Daily Montanan)

The state of Montana’s failure to consider greenhouse gas emissions
<https://dailymontanan.com/2023/06/13/its-affecting-all-of-them-montana-climate-scientists-say-warming-will-worsen-if-nothing-changes/>
from
energy and mining projects violates the state constitution because it does
not protect Montanans’ right to a clean and healthful environment and the
state’s natural resources from unreasonable depletion, a judge ruled Monday
in a victory
<https://dailymontanan.com/2023/08/10/montanas-expert-witnesses-in-climate-change-trial-billed-state-95k/>
for
the 16 youth plaintiffs who sued the state.

Lewis and Clark County District Court Judge Kathy Seeley sided with
<https://dailymontanan.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/08/Findings-of-Fact-Conclusions-of-Law-and-Order.pdf>
the
young plaintiffs in her decision in the Held v. Montana trial
<https://dailymontanan.com/2023/06/20/state-plaintiffs-deliver-closing-remarks-in-landmark-montana-youth-climate-change-trial/>,
striking down as unconstitutional the so-called “limitation” to the Montana
Environmental Policy Act (MEPA), which was amended by the legislature this
year, as well as another portion of law surrounding greenhouse gas
emissions that was changed this past session.

Seeley permanently enjoined
<https://dailymontanan.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/08/Findings-of-Fact-Conclusions-of-Law-and-Order.pdf>
the
2023 version of the MEPA limitation, passed via House Bill 971 more than
halfway through the session, as well as a portion of Senate Bill 557, saying
both were unconstitutional
<https://dailymontanan.com/2023/04/23/bills-addressing-environmental-reviews-for-montana-energy-mining-projects-move-forward/>
and
the latter “removes the only preventative, equitable relief available to
the public and MEPA litigants.”

“Plaintiffs have a fundamental right to a clean and healthful environment,
which includes climate as part of the environmental life support system,”
Seeley wrote in her decision.

The Held vs. Montana case was the first case challenging state and national
climate and energy policies to make it to trial in the U.S., and is now the
first in which the plaintiffs, 16 Montana youth now ages 5 to 22, were
victorious.

Julia Olson, the chief legal counsel and executive director for Our
Children’s Trust, the group behind the lawsuit, called Seeley’s decision “a
sweeping win” for Montana, the youth plaintiffs, and the climate, and said
more court victories would be coming.

“Today, for the first time in U.S. history, a court ruled on the merits of
a case that the government violated the constitutional rights of children
through laws and actions that promote fossil fuels, ignore climate change
laws, and disproportionately imperil young people,” Olson said.

“The Honorable Judge Kathy Seeley declared Montana’s fossil fuel-promoting
laws unconstitutional and enjoined their implementation. As fires rage in
the West, fueled by fossil fuel pollution, today’s ruling in Montana is a
game-changer that marks a turning point in this generation’s effort to save
the planet from the devastating effects of human-caused climate change.”

Seeley wrote in her order
<https://dailymontanan.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/08/Findings-of-Fact-Conclusions-of-Law-and-Order.pdf>
that
the MEPA limitation, which prohibits the state from considering greenhouse
gas emissions and climate impacts when deciding whether to approve permits
for energy and mining projects, violated Montanans’ rights under the 1972
state constitution.

The constitution says
<https://dailymontanan.com/2023/06/12/climate-expert-constitutional-convention-delegate-open-testimony-in-montana-climate-change-trial/>
that
they have a right to a clean and healthful environment and that each
Montanan “shall maintain and improve a clean and healthful environment in
Montana for present and future generations.”

Seeley also wrote that the state constitution commands the legislature to
“provide for the administration and enforcement” to meet the state’s
obligation to maintain and improve the environment and provide remedies to
prevent its unreasonable depletion and degradation.

“Montana’s climate, environment, and natural resources are
unconstitutionally degraded and depleted due to the current atmospheric
concentration of GHGs and climate change,” Seeley wrote.

She said that MEPA makes clear the state should use “all practicable means”
to fulfill those constitutional responsibilities, and that the law’s
limitation, in place since 2011 and tweaked by lawmakers this session in
response to a Yellowstone County judge’s order regarding emissions at a
plant in Laurel, is failing to meet those constitutional duties.

Seeley wrote, rather, that the MEPA limitation “conflicts with the very
purpose of MEPA” in trying to meet those obligations.

“By prohibiting consideration of climate change, (green house gas)
emissions, and how additional GHG emissions will contribute to climate
change or be consistent with the Montana Constitution, the MEPA Limitation
violates Plaintiffs’ right to a clean and healthful environment and is
facially unconstitutional,” Seeley wrote in her order.

Further, she said, the state did not put forward any evidence there was a
compelling governmental interest in having the limitation in place, and
Seeley noted there was undisputed testimony that the state could evaluate
greenhouse gas emissions and their impacts, as well as consider switching
more energy sources to renewable energy.

She also found a section of law created by the legislature this year
through Senate Bill 557 to be unconstitutional. That new portion of law
said that a challenge to an agency’s permitting decision if it did not
involve a greenhouse gas emissions evaluation could not vacate, void or
delay a permit unless Congress added carbon dioxide as a regulated
pollutant.

Both that clause of Senate Bill 557
<http://laws.leg.mt.gov/legprd/LAW0203W$BSRV.ActionQuery?P_SESS=20231&P_BLTP_BILL_TYP_CD=SB&P_BILL_NO=557&P_BILL_DFT_NO=&P_CHPT_NO=&Z_ACTION=Find&P_ENTY_ID_SEQ2=&P_SBJT_SBJ_CD=&P_ENTY_ID_SEQ=>
 and House Bill 971
<http://laws.leg.mt.gov/legprd/LAW0203W$BSRV.ActionQuery?P_SESS=20231&P_BLTP_BILL_TYP_CD=HB&P_BILL_NO=971&P_BILL_DFT_NO=&P_CHPT_NO=&Z_ACTION=Find&P_ENTY_ID_SEQ2=&P_SBJT_SBJ_CD=&P_ENTY_ID_SEQ=>
were
created by the Republican supermajority in direct response to Judge Michael
Moses’ ruling that a NorthWestern Energy power generating station in Laurel
could not proceed because the Department of Environmental Quality had
failed to consider emissions impacts from the plant. He later vacated the
order
<https://dailymontanan.com/2023/06/12/construction-on-laurel-power-station-will-continue-while-appeals-head-to-supreme-court/>
after
the legislature’s moves.

Seeley wrote the new law is unconstitutional “because it eliminates MEPA
litigants’ remedies that prevent irreversible degradation of the
environment, and it fails to further a compelling state interest.”

The Attorney General’s Office did not immediately respond to a request for
comment Monday morning. A spokesperson for the Governor’s Office said the
office was reviewing the decision and “evaluating next steps.”

The state has indicated previously it would appeal the decision if it did
not win the case. Last week
<https://dailymontanan.com/2023/08/10/montanas-expert-witnesses-in-climate-change-trial-billed-state-95k/>,
an attorney with Our Children’s Trust told the Daily Montanan it intended
to seek attorneys’ fees and costs should Seeley side with the plaintiffs.
[image: Creative Commons License]
<http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nd/4.0/>

On Mon, Aug 14, 2023 at 1:42 PM Ron Baiman <[email protected]> wrote:

> Dear Colleagues,
>
> This has been all over the US news today, but probably not so much
> globally:
>
> https://www.nevadacurrent.com/2023/08/14/judge-sides-with-youth-in-montana-climate-change-trial-finds-two-laws-unconstitutional/
>
> These kinds of youth climate lawsuits taking place all over the world
> appear to be gaining traction, which is a welcome development!
>
> Best,
> Ron
>

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