The concept of Chevron deference was borne out of the 1984 decision, which involved a challenge to a regulation enacted by the Environmental Protection Agency under the Clean Air Act that defined "stationary sources" of air pollution. In that case from four decades ago, the Supreme Court used ...
The Supreme Court overturned Chevron deference, a 40-year legal principle that has shaped the role of government agencies. The outcome could affect medication approval, pollution regulation, and more
How a Landmark Supreme Court Decision Will Reshape the U.S. Energy Sector The Supreme Court’s recent ruling on“Chevron deference”could affect federal regulations of everything from power plant emissions to electric vehicles to transmission lines ByNiina H. Farah,Lesley Clark&E&E News...
Just a few days ago, the Supreme Court struck down the 1984 decisionChevron v. Natural Resources Defense Council. The practical consequences of that move will unfold over the coming years, but the philosophical implications of it are already clear and consequential. The end of “Chevron deference...
Supreme Court decision inChevron U.S.A., Inc. v. Natural Resources Defense Council, in which the justices held that sometimes, courts are required to defer to “permissible” agency interpretations of statutes those agencies administer — even when the reviewing court might read the statute ...
The Supreme Court overturned a landmark 40-year-old decision that gave federal agencies broad regulatory power.
Brown & Williamson, the Supreme Court appeared to create an exception to Chevron deference for agency enactments that effect "major" changes. Neither the Supreme Court nor the scholarly literature, however, has ever articulated a satis-factory justification for the majorness line. Indeed, in the ...
Chevron Deference雪佛龙尊敬.pdf,2005] THE SUPREME COURT — LEADING CASES 395 decided not to detain admitted aliens indefinitely. This proliferation of issues needing resolution similarly defeats the minimalist justification that avoidance reduces the num
In a 6-3 decision, the Supreme Court held that Chevron deference violated the Administrative Procedure Act (APA) by improperly prioritizing agencies’ interpretations over courts’ interpretations. Writing for the majority, Chief Justice Roberts explained that Congress enacted the APA to serve as a “...
Chevron is a bedrock 1984 Supreme Court decision that established the test for judicial deference to government agencies' interpretations of certain agency-related statutes. The question ultimately considered by the Supreme Court nearly four decades ago was how to assess statutory interpretations by agenci...