Safiel
4
Starting with the two Cow Pasture cases that will be argued later today (Monday).
These cases involve the running of gas pipelines under the Appalachian Trail a few miles south of Roanoke, Virginia.
The Fourth Circuit held in favor of Cowpasture River Preservation Association and blocked the pipeline. Both the Federal Government and the Pipeline Company appealed to the Supreme Court.
The Petitioners (Federal Government and the Pipeline Company) both assert that the statute creating the national trails system does NOT transfer jurisdiction of the trail from the National Forest to the National Park Service. Instead, they argue that while the Secretary of the Interior has the duty to manage the trail (and has delegated that duty to the National Park Service) overall jurisdiction of the land under the trail remains with the National Forest Service, given that the trail runs over a National Forest and nothing in the statute grants jurisdiction of the underlying land to the National Park Service.
Respondent Cowpasture River Preservation Association holds to the opposite view, saying that the statute should be read so as to give the National Park Service jurisdiction over the land, which would make it effectively impossible to grant a right of way for the pipeline.
I must side wholeheartedly with the Petitioners. I read the relevant sections of Chapter 27 of Title 16 of the United States Code. A fair reading clearly indicates the statute does NOT transfer jurisdiction over the land to the National Park Service. The Secretary of the Interior is authorized to administer the trail, but jurisdiction of the land remains with the Forest Service.
I would REVERSE the judgement of the Fourth Circuit and find in favor of the Petitioners.