Our Work
Our Work
NEDC protects and conserves the natural resources of the Pacific Northwest by enforcing environmental laws such as the Clean Water Act and Clean Air Act, engaging with government agencies, and tracking federal and state actions in the region. NEDC serves as a watchdog of regulatory agencies and regulated entities and strives to identify and fill advocacy gaps that warrant attention.
Recent Work:
Dirty Diesel in Oregon
NEDC is partnering with Lewis & Clark Law School’s Green Energy Institute on a new project aimed at reducing diesel pollution in Oregon. Increasingly stringent diesel engine phase-out requirements in California and Washington are resulting in dirty diesel dumping in Oregon, and we’re working to make a difference.
Willamette Dams Litigation
Highlighting nearly a decade’s worth of missed deadlines, postponed actions, and poor communications from the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, NEDC is partnering with a coalition of conservation groups that recently sent formal notice to federal water managers of its intent to file suit to protect threatened Willamette River Chinook and steelhead. With only 1-2% of the wild fish’s historical numbers returning to spawn this year, time is of the essence.
NEDC is a co-plaintiff in this effort with the Native Fish Society and WildEarth Guardians. The groups are represented by Lizzy Potter and Laurie Rule of Advocates for the West.
Past Work:
US Supreme Court Case
Columbia River Crossing
CWA Dredge and Fill Permits
Industrial Stormwater Permit Litigation
NEDC’s Clean Water Act permit enforcement work can only be effective at reducing water
pollution if the permit terms that we are enforcing are adequately protective. We have long been concerned that Oregon’s industrial stormwater permits are lagging behind neighboring states, and this fall we joined forces with Columbia Riverkeeper in a lawsuit to tighten up limits to protect water quality in Oregon’s 1200-Z stormwater permit. We are represented in this matter by Earthrise Law Center attorneys Jamie Saul and Allison LaPlante, and NEDC board member Karl Anuta.
Port of Vancouver
The final chapter has closed in NEDC, Columbia Riverkeeper, and the Sierra Club’s multi-year lawsuit against the Port of Vancouver, Washington, over a proposal to build what would have been the nation’s largest rail-to-marine oil terminal there.
Read more about this victory here.
Ongoing Work:
Stormwater Enforcement
NEDC has invested considerable resources over the last decade focusing on pollution problems caused by stormwater discharges. The primary tool we use in this effort is tracking and enforcing legal requirements in pollution permits.
Article: Seeking Stronger Oversight
Article: Mo’s Mess
Article: NEDC by the Numbers
Energy Transport in the Pacific Northwest
Large-scale extraction of coal, oil and gas in the center of North America has made Washington and Oregon ports particularly attractive destinations for transloading proposals that would facilitate the movement of dirty energy sources to markets across the globe. NEDC has been actively engaged to ensure our region’s air and water quality remains protected.
Suction Dredge Mining
Suction dredge mining poses significant risks to Oregon’s natural resources. NEDC works to ensure federal and state regulations are sufficient to protect Oregon’s water quality from the adverse impacts of suction dredge mining.
Blog: New and Improved Suction Dredge NPDES Permit in Oregon
Blog: Mining in our National Forests deserves greater scrutiny from the U.S. Forest Service
Public Review of State Actions
Oregon Department of Environmental Quality: active public notices
Washington Department of Ecology: public review page
Northwest Environmental Defense Center is located in Law School.
MSC: 51
email nedc@lclark.edu
voice 503-768-6726
fax 503-768-6671
Jonah Sanford
Executive Director
jonah@nedc.org
Eve Goldman
Law Clerk
nedc@lclark.edu