Latest news with #LeslieSouthwick


E&E News
17-05-2025
- Business
- E&E News
Texas court reverses itself in power plant case
Federal judges have ordered EPA to revisit its decision to flunk the area around a high-polluting east Texas power plant for compliance with a key Clean Air Act standard. EPA 'seems to have forced a result on sparse and suspect evidence' in deeming parts of two counties surrounding the Martin Lake plant to be in nonattainment for its 2010 ambient air quality standard for sulfur dioxide, according to the opinion released Friday by a three-judge panel on the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. The ruling reverses the panel's split decision early last year in favor of EPA. Luminant, the Martin Lake facility's owner, and the state of Texas, then sought a rehearing. Advertisement Friday's opinion, written by Judge Leslie Southwick, repeatedly cited the Supreme Court's 2024 ruling in Loper Bright v. Raimondo that curbed judicial deference to agency decision-making.


Associated Press
12-05-2025
- Politics
- Associated Press
Federal court approves Mississippi legislative redistricting. Special elections will proceed
A panel of three federal judges has approved a revised legislative redistricting plan from the Mississippi Election Commission, which will allow special elections to move forward this year for 15 legislative seats. The court in April had ordered state officials to develop yet another legislative map to ensure Black voters in the DeSoto County area have a fair opportunity to elect candidates to the state Senate. The panel, comprised of U.S. District Judge Daniel Jordan, U.S. District Judge Sul Ozerden and U.S. 5th Circuit Court of Appeals Judge Leslie Southwick, previously ruled that when lawmakers redrew their districts in 2022 to account for population shifts, they violated federal civil rights law because the maps diluted Black voting power. To remedy the violation, the court allowed the Legislature to propose a new House map redrawing House districts in the Chickasaw County area and a new Senate map redrawing districts in the DeSoto County and Hattiesburg areas. Earlier this year, during the 2025 session, the Legislature attempted to comply with the order and tweaked those districts. However, the plaintiffs still objected to parts of the Legislature's plan. The plaintiffs, the state chapter of the NAACP and Black voters from around the state, did not object to the Hattiesburg portion of the Senate plan. But they argued the Chickasaw County portion of the House plan and the DeSoto County portion of the Senate plan did not create a realistic opportunity for Black voters in those areas to elect their preferred candidates. The judges accepted the Chickasaw County redistricting portion. Still, they objected to the DeSoto County part because the Legislature's proposed DeSoto County solution 'yokes high-turnout white communities in the Hernando area of DeSoto County to several poorer, predominantly Black towns in the Mississippi Delta,' which would make it hard for Black voters to overcome white voting blocs. The panel, comprised of all George W. Bush-appointed judges, ordered state officials to, again, craft a new Senate map for the area in the suburbs of Memphis. The panel has held that none of the state's prior maps gave Black voters a realistic chance to elect candidates of their choice. The court in its latest ruling set deadlines and a schedule for special elections for Mississippi legislative seats impacted by the new maps. The deadline to publicize and share the maps with local election officials is May 12. Candidate qualification to run will run from June 2-9 and the slate of candidates will be submitted by June 13. Absentee voting for the Aug. 5 primaries will begin June 21. Absentee voting for general elections will begin Sept. 20 and general elections will be Nov. 4. ___ This story was originally published by Mississippi Today and distributed through a partnership with The Associated Press.