Fishing companies seek to overturn ‘Chevron deference’, which calls for judges to defer to government where laws are ambiguous
The US supreme court heard arguments on Wednesday in a dispute involving a government-run program to monitor for overfishing of herring off New England’s coast that gives its conservative majority a chance to further limit the regulatory powers of federal agencies.
The justices are weighing appeals by two fishing companies of lower court rulings allowing the National Marine Fisheries Service to require commercial fishermen to help fund the program. The companies – led by New Jersey-based Loper Bright Enterprises and Rhode Island-based Relentless – have argued that Congress did not authorize the agency, part of the commerce department, to establish the program.
More Stories
Australia exposed to modern slave labour imports and many businesses ‘ignoring the facts’, commissioner warns
Tech titans bicker over $500bn AI investment announced by Trump
‘Rising star’: EU made more electricity from solar than coal in 2024