Dave Owen

Harry Sunderland '61 Professor of Law

  • San Francisco CA UNITED STATES

Contacts: owendave@uchastings.edu / 415-703-8285 / Office 368-200

Contact

Biography

Professor Dave Owen teaches courses in environmental, natural resources, water, land use, and administrative law. His interest in the subject area began when he was about six years old and his parents denied him access to all television except for PBS wildlife specials. He then became inordinately interested in poachers. He went on to study geology in college, primarily because the labs were outside, and became an environmental consultant. During one hot summer day of hazardous waste site sampling, while sweating miserably in a Tyvek suit and inhaling aniline fumes, he decided graduate school sounded like a nice idea. So he became an environmental lawyer. He went to Berkeley Law, where he served as editor-in-chief of Ecology Law Quarterly and was selected for the Order of the Coif.

Professor Owen went on to clerk at federal district court and then work for a small law firm in San Francisco, where his practice focused primarily on water law. He worked on Colorado River allocation, Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta litigation, and federal state disputes over the proposed Yucca Mountain nuclear waste repository, among other matters. In 2007, he began teaching at the University of Maine School of Law. He joined the Hastings faculty in 2015.

His research focuses primarily on water resource management, and some recent projects have addressed taxation of water consumption, the roles of federal regional offices, stream protection under the Clean Water Act, policies to expedite dam removals and hydropower upgrades, and the intersection of groundwater use regulation and the takings clause. Four of his articles have been recognized by his peers as among the top environmental law articles of their respective years; another article has won the Morrison Prize as the top sustainability law article of its year, and he has presented three articles at the Harvard-Stanford-Yale Junior Faculty Forum. He also contributes frequently to the Environmental Law Prof Blog.

In his spare time, Professor Owen was once a passably competent ultimate Frisbee player. Now he mostly runs on trails, a bit slower with each passing year, and coaches soccer. He lives in Albany with his wife Megan, a pediatric occupational therapist, his two children, and a dog named Steve.

Areas of Expertise

Environmental Law
Natural Resources Law
Water Law
Administrative Law
Water Resource Management
Implementation of the Endangered Species Act

Accomplishments

Morrison Prize

Professor Owen's recent paper "Trading Dams", coauthored with The Nature Conservancy's Colin Apse, received the first annual Morrison Prize for sustainability research. The Morrison Prize, sponsored by Arizona State Law School, "seeks to recognize the most impactful sustainability-related legal academic article published in North America during the previous year."

Land Use and Environmental Law Review

The Land Use and Environmental Law Review, a compilation of the top environmental and land use law articles of the preceding academic year, has republished Professor Owen's article "Mapping, Modeling, and the Fragmentation of Environmental Law" (2013 Utah L. Rev. 219).

The Land Use and Environmental Law REview

The Land Use and Environmental law Review, a compilation of the top environmental and land use articles of the previous academic year, has republished Professor Owen's article "Regional Federal Administration" (63 UCLA L. Rev. 58).

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Education

University of California, Berkeley School of Law

J.D.

Law

2002

Amherst College

B.A.

Geology

1996

Affiliations

  • University of Maine School of Law : Professor of Law and Associate Dean for Research

Selected Articles

Water and Taxes

UC Davis Law Review

2017-03-01

This article considers how water consumption in the United States is and should be taxed. It reviews the few federal and state tax code provisions that directly target water use and the somewhat larger number of provisions with indirect implications for water policy. It also draws upon existing literature on tax policy, water law, and water economics to evaluate whether taxation of water consumption makes sense.

That analysis leads to two key conclusions. First, although provisions of tax law affect water use, and although some provisions undercut key policy goals of water law, they do so only to a modest extent. The
intersections between the two fields are limited and largely inadvertent. Second, the interconnections between the fields should be stronger; water
use should be taxed. The reasons are similar to commonly-cited justifications for carbon taxes and other so-called Pigouvian taxes: taxation would encourage more efficient water consumption, decreasing the negative environmental and energy consequences of water overuse and alleviating conflict among competing users. Taxation also would raise revenue, which could fund badly-needed water infrastructure and governance or reduce the need to tax more socially desirable activities.

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Regional Federal Administration

UCLA Law Review

2015-02-25

Conventional accounts of federalism and administrative law generally assume that the federal government is highly centralized in Washington DC. Judges, politicians, and academic commentators often speak of “bureaucrats in Washington,” and they often contrast the poor governance supposedly provided by those bureaucrats with more responsive, innovative, and democratically legitimate governance from states and municipalities. Beyond pejorative rhetoric, assumptions about federal centralization also lead to a variety of widely-accepted policy prescriptions. This Article questions that conventional wisdom. Using a detailed study of the United States Army Corps of Engineers’ regulatory program, it demonstrates that geographic decentralization within the federal government is a real and important phenomenon. That decentralization has implications cutting across the fields of federalism and administrative law. It undercuts conventional wisdom about the relative advantages and disadvantages of state (and local) and federal governance. It offers nuance to theories explaining how a federalist system actually functions. And it offers new possibilities for policy reforms designed to promote innovative, responsive governance.

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Little Streams and Legal Transformations

Utah Law Review

2017-03-01

In 1972, Congress passed a statute whose text offered sweeping protection for waterways across the nation. In theory, those protections extended to little streams. Actual practices were different, not just in the 1970s but also well into the 1990s. But over the past twenty years, small streams have become a central focus of regulatory protection, with the extent and type of those protections continuing to evolve to this day, and with additional changes still possible. The future of that evolution is uncertain, and it may hang in the balance; Congress, the incoming administration, or the courts could nip much of this progress in the bud. But so long as it lasts, the story of little streams illustrates the continuing ability of environmental law to evolve and change, and the incremental—and often unnoticed—ways in which those changes occur.

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Courses

Legislation and Administrative Regulation

This course focuses on statutory interpretation, the roles of administrative agencies in American governance, and the laws and policy concerns that govern administrative agency activities.

Environmental Law

This course surveys the field of environmental law. We will focus on major statutes regulating water and air quality, hazardous waste management and cleanup, and environmental impact assessment, and will use those statutes to discuss various approaches to environmental regulation, intersections between environmental, administrative, and constitutional law, and the roles of different governmental branches, regulated industry, non-profit advocacy groups, and private citizens in environmental governance. Climate change will be a recurring theme of the course, and we will consider potential regulatory approaches for addressing climate change.

Water Law

This course introduces students to laws governing the allocation, use, and environmental protection of freshwater resources. Among other subjects, we will consider the scope of public and private rights in water, the division of authority among federal, state, local, and tribal governments, environmental laws that affect water resource planning, and the laws applicable to hydropower generation

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