Book Summary of Resolving Environmental Regulatory Disputes by Lawrence Susskind, Lawrence Bacow and Michael Wheeler, eds.
Citation:
Resolving Environmental Regulatory Disputes. Lawrence Susskind, Lawrence Bacow and Michael Wheeler, eds. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Schenkman Books, 1983, 261 pp.
This Book Summary written by: Conflict Research Consortium Staff
Resolving Environmental Regulatory Disputes analyses the use of
voluntary, informal negotiations to resolve environmental disputes.
The authors proceed by examining case studies.
Resolving Environmental Regulatory Disputes will be of interest to
those who seek a better understanding of environmental regulation, and
of alternatives to litigation. This work is divided into seven case
studies, with an Introduction and Conclusions by the editors.
David Gilmore investigates a case of successful regulatory
negotiation between the Brown Company paper mill and the EPA
regarding sulfur dioxide emissions. Negotiations in this case pursued
a joint problem-solving approach. Gilmore reviews the background
conditions of the dispute. He then identifies the productive tactics
which enabled the disputants to reach a mutually beneficial solution.
Alexander Jaegerman examines the behind-the-scenes negotiations
between the EPA and Tennessee Eastman Company for a Holston River
discharge permit under the Federal Water Control Act. This case is an
example of highly technical conflict. Negotiations made use of neutral
experts, and ended in a mutually acceptable compromise. Gilmore
argues that negotiations were sustained by the disputants' desire to maintain
control< over the negotiation process; control which would be lost in
public negotiations or adjudication.
Timothy Sullivan explores the difficulties of mandatory
negotiation through the Colstrip power plant case in Montana. The
Montana Power Company proposed to build two coal fired electric power
plants. The Northern Cheyenne Indian Tribe requested negotiations to
address air quality concerns. Negotiations failed to reach an
agreement. Sullivan argues that "the legislatively determined agenda of
environmental issues served to focus negotiations but failed to create a
bargaining situation that would benefit both sides."[57]
Stephen Hill examines intergovernmental grant negotiation
via the case of a dispute between the local governments of the town of Jackson
and Teton County over the site of a sewage treatment plant. Jackson's old plant
was overloaded and hence out of compliance with the Federal Water Pollution
Control Act. The new plant was to be funded in part by an EPA grant. Hill
examines the impact of balance of power on negotiations, the parties'
motivations to participate in negotiation, and the need for mechanisms
to bind parties to their agreements.
Heidi Burgess and Douglas Smith analyze the use of mediation
in the Brayton Point coal conversion case, a dispute centering on air
quality standards. Use of mediation in this case averted lengthy, expensive
and acrimonious litigation. Instead, the mediated settlement "benefited
all the parties without compromising their respective interests."[126].
The authors describe the mediation process in this case, and identify key
factors in the mediation's success.
Burgess further discusses the case of the proposed Foothills
water treatment complex in Colorado. The foothills case involved extreme
demands, numerous parties and issues, public pressure
and intense distrust among the disputants. Burgess identifies the obstacles
to mediation which this case presented. She then describes the non-traditional
approach to mediation which was used to successfully resolve this dispute, and
considers whether such unorthodox tactics might be applicable in other cases.
Burgess, Diane Hoffman and Mary Lucci explore the
use of negotiation in the rule-making process via the case of
EPA regulations under Section301(h) of the 1977 Clean Water Act.
They present an overview of the issues, parties and course of this dispute.
They then identify important substantive and procedural lessons to be drawn from
this case. Substantively, they explore the use of uniform technology-based
standards. Procedurally, more flexible and open negotiations would
improve the quality and productivity of EPA rule-making.
In their Conclusion the editors identify three themes which run through the
previous case studies. First, informal negotiations can successfully
resolve environmental regulatory disputes. Second, negotiated settlements may
produce more beneficial outcomes than litigated settlements. Third, use
of mediators can be helpful, particularly in suggesting mutually
beneficial options to disputants.
Resolving Environmental Regulatory Disputes presents detailed case
studies of the use of informal negotiation in environmental regulatory disputes.
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