A state legislature enacted a law imposing a surcharge on anyone who failed to recycle household waste. Before the law was enforced, a homeowner filed a suit in federal court seeking to challenge the law, arguing that it would impose an undue financial burden. The homeowner had not yet been required to pay the surcharge or suffered any penalties. Which of the following explains why the homeowner's suit is likely to fail?
The homeowner's claim is not ripe because they have not yet been subjected to the surcharge or any penalty.
The case fails due to the prohibition on advisory opinions, as the court cannot advise on a hypothetical situation.
The homeowner lacks standing because they have not yet established that the law directly affects them.
The claim is moot because the homeowner has not suffered a concrete injury.
The correct answer is based on the principle of ripeness, which governs when a court may adjudicate a dispute. Courts require a real and immediate harm or a significant threat of harm before exercising jurisdiction. In this case, the homeowner has not yet been subject to enforcement of the recycling surcharge or experienced any concrete injury. This makes the claim premature and not justiciable under Article III. Other answers are incorrect because they misidentify why the claim cannot proceed. For example, mootness arises when a legal issue ceases to exist, and standing relates to whether the plaintiff is directly affected. Neither applies here since the issue is simply premature.
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