Toxics Action Center, Inc. et al v. Casella Waste Systems, Inc. et al
Filing
106
///ORDER RE 89 Motion for Summary Judgment; 96 Motion for Summary Judgment- Doc. No. 89 and Doc. No. 96 are denied with prejudice as to Count I and denied without prejudice as to Count II. So Ordered by Judge Paul J. Barbadoro.(js)
Case 1:18-cv-00393-PB Document 106 Filed 08/11/21 Page 1 of 28
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF NEW HAMPSHIRE
Toxics Action Center, Inc. &
Conservation Law Foundation
v.
Case No. 18-cv-393-PB
Opinion No. 2021 DNH 123
Casella Waste Systems, Inc. &
North Country Environmental
Services, Inc.
MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
In this citizen-suit enforcement action, two non-profit
environmental organizations have sued Casella Waste Systems,
Inc. ("Casella") and its subsidiary, North Country Environmental
Services, Inc. ("NCES") for violating the Clean Water Act
("CWA") by discharging pollutants into the Ammonoosuc River
without a permit.
The principal issue presented by the parties'
cross-motions for summary judgment is whether a surface water
channel at the landfill site that carries pollutants into the
river is a "point source" as that term is used in the CWA.
Because I conclude that facts material to the resolution of this
issue remain in genuine dispute, I deny the cross-motions.
I.
BACKGROUND
NCES owns and operates a solid waste landfill on a 61-acre
site in Bethlehem, New Hampshire.
The site lies a few hundred
Case 1:18-cv-00393-PB Document 106 Filed 08/11/21 Page 2 of 28
yards south of the Ammonoosuc.1
The landfill has been in
operation since the 1970s and has gone through multiple stages
of development.
The first waste disposal facility on the site was a fiveacre, unlined landfill that a local resident started in 1976 by
depositing solid waste into an excavated gravel pit.
That waste
eventually leached contaminants into the groundwater beneath the
site, forming a contaminant plume.
The contamination was first
detected in the early 1980s.
In the late 1980s, the New Hampshire Department of
Environmental Services ("NHDES") granted a permit to a
predecessor of NCES to construct an eighteen-acre, double-lined
landfill on the site.
As a condition of that permit, NHDES
required defendants' predecessor to remove all solid waste and
stained soil from the unlined landfill.
After the excavation
was completed in 1993, a doubled-lined landfill was constructed
over the site of the unlined landfill.
NHDES also required the
installation of a network of groundwater monitoring wells
between the site of the unlined landfill and the river to detect
and monitor contaminants.
The Ammonoosuc begins at the Lake of the Clouds on the western
slopes of Mount Washington and flows into the Connecticut River
in Haverhill, New Hampshire.
1
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In 1994, a subsidiary of Casella acquired the stock of the
corporation that then owned and operated the landfill and
changed the name of the company to NCES.
The following year,
NHDES established a Groundwater Management Zone ("GMZ") at the
site to monitor the migration and attenuation of the contaminant
plume.
NCES has been reporting the results of that monitoring
to NHDES three times per year for the past twenty-seven years.
Groundwater underneath and near the landfill flows to the
northeast, towards the Ammonoosuc.
The groundwater naturally
emerges on the embankment above the river in a network of seeps
and springs, the largest of which is called the "Main Seep."
Water emerging from the Main Seep has created a channel that
runs down the slope and discharges into the Ammonoosuc.
This
surface water channel, referred to as the "Drainage Channel," is
between one and five feet wide and is approximately 370 feet
long.2
The flow down the Drainage Channel occurs at all times at
an estimated rate of 50-100 gallons per minute.
The Main Seep,
the Drainage Channel, and the Channel’s confluence with the
Ammonoosuc River are all located within the GMZ.
The term "Drainage Channel," which plaintiffs have embraced,
appears in some correspondence between defendants and NHDES.
Although defendants maintain that the term is inaccurate and
argumentative, they, too, use it in their briefing simply to
avoid confusion.
2
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Elevated levels of iron and manganese have been detected
consistently in the Main Seep and the Drainage Channel since GMZ
monitoring began.3
Since March 2013, elevated levels of both
metals have been detected in all water samples taken at the
lower end of the Drainage Channel, about 20-25 feet from the
point where it discharges into the Ammonoosuc.
On all but three
occasions during that period, water samples collected from the
Ammonoosuc downstream from the Drainage Channel had higher
levels of iron and manganese than water samples taken upstream
from the Drainage Channel.
Iron and manganese are constituents of leachate generated
at the landfill but they also occur naturally in the soil at the
site.
Contamination from the former unlined landfill has
increased the levels of these metals in the groundwater that
emerges at the Main Seep.
The leachate has consumed oxygen
present in the groundwater and altered geochemistry at the site
in a way that causes naturally occurring iron and manganese in
the soil to be more easily released into the groundwater than
would otherwise be the case under normal conditions.
When the
groundwater emerges at the Main Seep, the two metals precipitate
out of solution as they are exposed to oxygen in the air.
Over
In the 1990s, NCES also regularly detected elevated levels of
multiple volatile organic compounds ("VOCs"). The last time
VOCs were detected at the Main Seep was in July 2005.
3
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time, these precipitates accumulated in the beds of the Main
Seep and the Drainage Channel, creating rust-colored sediments.
As a condition of renewing the landfill's Groundwater
Permit in 2002, NHDES required NCES to investigate and submit
"[o]ptions for remediation of water quality" in the Main Seep
and the Drainage Channel, "including reduction of manganese and
iron concentrations and elimination of iron bacteria deposits."
Doc. No. 94-19 at 4.
In response, NCES submitted a report to
NHDES designed "to provide an evaluation of remedial options to
reduce manganese and iron concentrations and bacteria deposits
at the Main Seep."
Doc. No. 99-1 at 1.
This report presented a
range of options for addressing water conditions, including
chemical treatment of the groundwater and physical measures such
as intercepting the groundwater upgradient from the Main Seep
and pumping it either back to the landfill for discharge or
directly to the river via above-ground piping.
The report
concluded that none of the identified options were feasible and
instead recommended physically removing the rust-colored
sediments and taking "[a]dditional measures to improve the
course" of the Drainage Channel to facilitate periodic cleanup
in the future.
Doc. No. 99-1 at 15.
In addition to remediating
the appearance of the Drainage Channel, the report highlighted
"[a]nother important benefit of this alternative":
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[T]he removal of iron and manganese that occurs during
flow down the [Drainage Channel] would continue,
thereby limiting the mass loading of iron and
manganese to the river. This alternative recognizes
that the course of the [Drainage Channel] provides
treatment for removal of iron and manganese before
ultimate discharge of the [Main] Seep to the river.
Doc. No. 99-1 at 16.
In 2010, NCES implemented this alternative, calling it the
"Seep Restoration" project.
NCES excavated approximately 176
tons of contaminated sediment from the Main Seep and the
Drainage Channel using suction dredging techniques.
The
sediment ranged from several inches to several feet in depth.
After the excavation was complete, woody debris and logs of a
specific size were permanently installed in particular locations
in the Drainage Channel to manage the velocity of the waterflow
and to reduce "channel erosion and subsequent downstream
sedimentation."
Doc. No. 94-15 at 9.
In addition, a "non-woven
geotextile" made of synthetic, nonbiodegradable material was
installed on the bed of the Main Seep and covered by a layer of
gravel.
Doc. No. 94-15 at 9.
In a report submitted to NHDES
after the project was completed, NCES reiterated that one of its
goals was "maintaining the naturally occurring iron and
manganese treatment being provided by oxidation along the length
of the drainage channel prior to the discharge to the River."
Doc. No. 94-15 at 6.
Within a year after the sediments were
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removed from the Drainage Channel, new rust-colored sediments
appeared.
Plaintiffs, Toxics Action Center, Inc., and Conservation
Law Foundation, filed their complaint in May 2018.
They allege
that defendants have violated and continue to violate the CWA by
discharging pollutants to the Ammonoosuc without a permit.
Plaintiffs assert in Count I that defendants need a National
Pollution Discharge Elimination System ("NPDES") permit to
discharge pollutants into the Ammonoosuc because the Drainage
Channel, which conveys the pollutants to the river, qualifies as
a point source under the CWA.
They argue in the alternative in
Count II that the landfill is itself a point source for
defendants' discharges.
For reasons that I describe below, I
deny the parties' cross-motions for summary judgment because
facts material to the resolution of the motions remain in
genuine dispute.
II.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
Summary judgment is appropriate when the record reveals "no
genuine dispute as to any material fact and the movant is
entitled to judgment as a matter of law."
Fed. R. Civ. P.
56(a); Tang v. Citizens Bank, N.A., 821 F.3d 206, 215 (1st Cir.
2016).
In this context, a "material fact" is one that has the
"potential to affect the outcome of the suit."
Cherkaoui v.
City of Quincy, 877 F.3d 14, 23 (1st Cir. 2017) (quoting Sanchez
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v. Alvarado, 101 F.3d 223, 227 (1st Cir. 1996)).
A "genuine
dispute" exists if a factfinder could resolve the disputed fact
in the nonmovant's favor.
Ellis v. Fid. Mgmt. Tr. Co., 883 F.3d
1, 7 (1st Cir. 2018).
On cross-motions for summary judgment, the standard of
review is applied to each motion separately.
See Am. Home
Assurance Co. v. AGM Marine Contractors, Inc., 467 F.3d 810, 812
(1st Cir. 2006); see also Mandel v. Bos. Phoenix, Inc., 456 F.3d
198, 205 (1st Cir. 2006) ("The presence of cross-motions for
summary judgment neither dilutes nor distorts this standard of
review.").
Thus, I must "determine whether either of the
parties deserves judgment as a matter of law on facts that are
not disputed."
Adria Int'l Grp., Inc. v. Ferré Dev., Inc., 241
F.3d 103, 107 (1st Cir. 2001).
III. ANALYSIS
The CWA requires an NPDES permit whenever "pollutants" are
added to "the waters of the United States" from a "point
source."
See 33 U.S.C. § 1311(a) (prohibiting "the discharge of
any pollutant" except as otherwise authorized); § 1312
(authorizing the issuance of NPDES permits for otherwise
prohibited discharges); § 1362(12) (defining "discharge of a
pollutant" to include "any addition of any pollutant to
navigable waters from any point source"); § 1362(7) (defining
"navigable waters" as "the waters of the United States").
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Defendants do not challenge plaintiffs' claim that the Drainage
Channel is conveying iron and manganese from the landfill site
through the Drainage Channel into the Ammonoosuc.
Nor do they
dispute plaintiffs' contention that iron and manganese are
pollutants under the CWA.
Instead, the parties' cross-motions
for summary judgment are focused on plaintiffs' contention that
the discharges are from a point source.
Plaintiffs claim in
Count I that the Drainage Channel is a point source and claim in
the alternative in Count II that the point source is the
landfill itself.
Defendants challenge both claims.
I devote
the bulk of this Memorandum and Order to the parties' arguments
with respect to Count I and only briefly explain why their
arguments concerning Count II are not sufficiently developed to
permit in-depth analysis.
A.
Is the Drainage Channel a Point Source?
The CWA defines a "point source" as "any discernible,
confined and discrete conveyance . . . from which pollutants are
or may be discharged."
33 U.S.C. § 1362(14).
The term
includes, but is not limited to, "any pipe, ditch, channel,
tunnel, conduit, well, discrete fissure [or] container."
Id.
Plaintiffs assert in Count I that the Drainage Channel qualifies
as a point source because it is a "channel" that conveys
pollutants directly from the Main Seep to the Ammonoosuc.
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Defendants agree that the Drainage Channel is a channel.
They argue, however, that it cannot be a point source because it
is also a water of the United States.
proceeds in two steps.
Defendants' argument
First, defendants rely on regulations
adopted by the Environmental Protection Agency and the Army
Corps of Engineers (collectively, "the Agencies") to support
their contention that the Drainage Channel is a water of the
United States.
These regulations state that a "tributary" is a
water of the United States.
C.F.R. § 120.2(1)(ii).
See 33 C.F.R. § 328.3(a)(2); 40
They also explain that a naturally
occurring surface water channel can be a tributary.
See 33
C.F.R. § 328.3(c)(12) ("The term tributary means a river,
stream, or similar naturally occurring surface water channel
that contributes surface water flow to [waters of the United
States] in a typical year . . ."); 40 C.F.R. § 120.2(3)(xii)
(same).4
According to defendants, the Drainage Channel qualifies
as a tributary, and thus it is a water of the United States,
because it is a naturally occurring surface water channel that
The current definition of a tributary is narrower in scope than
the Agencies' prior definition promulgated in 2015, which
specified that a tributary "can be a natural, man-altered, or
man-made water." Clean Water Rule: Definition of "Waters of the
United States," 80 Fed. Reg. 37,054, 37,105 (June 29, 2015).
The 2015 rule was preliminarily enjoined in a number of states
before it went into effect and was ultimately repealed by the
Agencies in 2019. See The Navigable Waters Protection Rule:
Definition of "Waters of the United States," 85 Fed. Reg.
22,250, 22,260 (April 21, 2020).
4
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flows throughout the year and empties directly into the
Ammonoosuc.
The second step in defendants' argument is less clearly
explained.
Viewing their position generously, they claim that a
channel can in some circumstances be a point source and in other
circumstances can be a water of the United States but a channel
cannot simultaneously be both a point source and a water of the
United States.
Support for their assertion can be found in the
definition of "discharge of a pollutant," which requires an
"addition of any pollutant to navigable waters from any point
source."
33 U.S.C. § 1362(12) (emphasis added).
Defendants
reason from this definition that a water of the United States
cannot at the same time be a point source because the release of
pollutants from one water of the United States to another does
not result in the addition of pollutants to the waters of the
United States as a whole.
Thus, they claim, the Drainage
Channel cannot be a point source because it is a water of the
United States that merely transfers pollutants from one water of
the United States to another.
Plaintiffs counter with three arguments.
They first claim
that the Drainage Channel is not a tributary because defendants
have altered its natural features.
Next, they assert that the
Drainage Channel is not a water of the United States because it
is a "waste treatment system."
Finally, they assert that the
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Drainage Channel is a point source even if it is also a water of
the United States.
1.
I address these arguments in turn.
Whether the Drainage Channel is a Tributary
Plaintiffs argue that although the Drainage Channel is
naturally occurring5 and flows constantly, it is not a tributary
because defendants have altered its flow rate, its physical
characteristics, and the water flowing through it.
In making
this argument, plaintiffs primarily focus on the 2010 "Seep
Restoration" project, when defendants removed contaminated
sediments and installed woody debris and logs throughout the
Channel to manage the velocity of the flow.
They also point to
the continuing sedimentation and the changed composition of the
water caused by the landfill as evidence that the Drainage
Channel is no longer "natural."
The phrase "naturally occurring" refers to surface water
channels that "originally occurred naturally." The Navigable
Waters Protection Rule, 85 Fed. Reg. at 22,298. Although
plaintiffs stated at oral argument that they do not concede that
the Drainage Channel is naturally occurring, they did not seek
summary judgment on that ground. On the contrary, plaintiffs'
briefs made multiple factual assertions that effectively concede
that the Channel originally occurred naturally. See Pls.' Obj.
to Defs.' Mot. for Summ. J., Doc. No. 94 at 9 ("groundwater
naturally emerges at the Main Seep because that is the point at
which the slope of the riverbank intersects the water table");
Doc. No. 94 at 8 ("Plaintiffs also agree that 'water emerging
from the Main Seep has created a channel that runs down the
slope and discharges in the Ammonoosuc.'") (quoting Defs.' Mot.
for Summ. J., Doc. No. 89 at 4); Pls.' Cross-Mot. for. Summ. J.,
Doc. No. 96 at 5 (same).
5
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Plaintiffs' position is incompatible with the plain text of
the applicable regulations.
The regulations specify that
modifying a tributary does not change its status as a water of
the United States, provided that it continues to meet the flow
conditions included in the definition.
See 33 C.F.R.
§ 328.3(c)(12); 40 C.F.R. § 120.2(3)(xii).
The Agencies have
explained that the extent of modifications is not a factor:
The agencies' longstanding interpretation of the CWA
is that tributaries that are altered or relocated
tributaries are jurisdictional, and the agencies are
not changing this interpretation. If a tributary is
channelized, its bed and/or banks are altered in some
way, it is re-routed and entirely relocated, or its
flow is modified through water diversions or through
other means, then it remains jurisdictional under the
final rule as long as it continues to satisfy the flow
conditions in the definition of "tributary."
The Navigable Waters Protection Rule: Definition of "Waters of
the United States," 85 Fed. Reg. 22,250, 22,298-99 (April 21,
2020).
Accordingly, the fact that human intervention has
altered multiple features of the Drainage Channel does not
preclude a finding that it is a tributary.
2. Whether the Drainage Channel is a Waste Treatment System
Even if the Drainage Channel is deemed a tributary,
plaintiffs argue that the Drainage Channel does not qualify as a
water of the United States because it is a "waste treatment
system."
I conclude that facts material to plaintiffs'
contention remain in genuine dispute.
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The regulations implementing the CWA provide that a
waterway can lose its status as a water of the United States.
See 33 C.F.R. § 328.3(b); 40 C.F.R. § 120.2(2).
exclusion is for "waste treatment systems."
§ 328.3(b)(12); 40 C.F.R. § 120.2(2)(xii).
One such
33 C.F.R.
"The term waste
treatment system includes all components . . . designed to
either covey or retain, concentrate, settle, reduce, or remove
pollutants, either actively or passively, from wastewater prior
to discharge (or eliminating any such discharge)."
§ 328.3(c)(15); 40 C.F.R. § 120.2(3)(xv).
33 C.F.R.
Under this provision,
a tributary that is designed to serve as a waste treatment
system is not a water of the United States.
It is uncontested that the Drainage Channel passively
settles some iron and manganese out of the water flowing through
its bed due to a natural process of oxidation and sedimentation.
As a result, the Channel is reducing the concentration of these
metals in the water that is discharged to the river.
To qualify
as a waste treatment system, however, the water flowing through
the Drainage Channel must be "wastewater" and the channel must
have been "designed" to fulfill a pollution reducing function.
a.
Whether the Drainage Channel Conveys Wastewater
The regulations promulgating the waste treatment system
exclusion do not define the term "wastewater."
The EPA,
however, has defined that term in separate regulations that set
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forth effluent limitation guidelines for different point source
categories.
See 40 C.F.R. §§ 401-471.
The parties agree that
the landfills point source category, which "applies to
discharges of wastewater from landfill units," is applicable
here.
See 40 C.F.R. § 445.1(a).
In that context, the EPA has
defined "landfill wastewater" broadly as "all wastewater
associated with, or produced by, landfilling activities except
for sanitary wastewater, non-contaminated storm water,
contaminated ground water, and wastewater from recovery pumping
wells."
40 C.F.R. § 445.2(f).
The term includes, but is not
limited to, "leachate, gas collection condensate, drained free
liquids, laboratory derived wastewater, contaminated storm water
and contact washwater."
Id.
It is undisputed for purposes of the present motions that
the unlined landfill conveyed leachate to the groundwater
beneath the site, and that this leachate has created conditions
that cause high levels of iron and manganese in the soil to be
dissolved into the groundwater that emerges at the Main Seep and
flows through the Drainage Channel.
Thus, the water feeding the
Channel is contaminated with these pollutants as a result of
landfilling activities and it, therefore, meets the definition
of landfill wastewater.
To the extent defendants maintain that the water in the
channel is excluded as "contaminated ground water," their
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argument has no merit.
The regulation defines "contaminated
ground water" as "water below the land surface in the zone of
saturation which has been contaminated by activities associated
with waste disposal."
40 C.F.R. § 445.2(a).
The groundwater
beneath the site of the former unlined landfill appears to
satisfy this definition.
But once that groundwater emerges from
the Main Seep and starts flowing through the Drainage Channel –
which is when the waste treatment begins – it is no longer below
the land surface.
At that point, the contaminated water flows
at surface level, so it is no longer groundwater.
This interpretation of the regulation's plain language is
consistent with the Agencies' guidance on what constitutes
"groundwater" in a related regulation.
Like waste treatment
systems, "groundwater" is excluded from the waters of the United
States.
See 33 C.F.R. § 328.3(b)(2); 40 C.F.R. § 120.2(2)(ii).
The Agencies have explained, however, that this "exclusion does
not apply to surface expressions of groundwater, such as where
groundwater discharges to the channel bed and becomes baseflow
in intermittent or perennial streams."
Protection Rule, 85 Fed. Reg. at 22,325.
The Navigable Waters
This example precisely
describes the water that flows through the Drainage Channel.
extension then, that water is not "contaminated ground water"
16
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excluded from the definition of landfill wastewater.6
Because
landfill-related pollutants flow through the Drainage Channel
from a surface expression of groundwater, I agree with
plaintiffs that the Channel conveys wastewater.
b.
Whether the Drainage Channel was Designed to Treat
Wastewater
Plaintiffs also contend that the Drainage Channel was
"designed" to treat iron and manganese in the wastewater before
it is discharged to the river.
To support their contention,
plaintiffs point out that, as part of renewing the facility's
Groundwater Permit in 2002, NHDES required NCES to investigate
options to improve the water quality in the Main Seep and the
Drainage Channel, which included both "reduction of manganese
and iron concentrations" in the water and the "elimination of"
the contaminated sediments.
Doc. No. 94-19 at 4.
Defendants
The Agencies' rationale for not regulating pollutants in
groundwater under the CWA is that groundwater quality is
regulated through other legal mechanisms, including the Safe
Drinking Water Act, the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act,
and various state and local laws. See The Navigable Waters
Protection Rule, 85 Fed. Reg. at 22,318-19 (citing this
rationale behind the exclusion of groundwater from the waters of
the United States); Effluent Limitations Guidelines,
Pretreatment Standards, and New Source Performance Standards for
the Landfills Point Source Category, 65 Fed. Reg. 3,008, 3,015
(Jan. 19, 2000) ("EPA concluded that, whether as a result of
corrective action measures taken pursuant to RCRA authority or
State action to clean up contaminated landfill sites, landfill
discharges of treated contaminated ground water are being
adequately controlled.").
6
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submitted a range of treatment options to the State agency for
approval and ultimately recommended physical removal of
sediments and "[a]dditional measures to improve the course" of
the Drainage Channel.
Doc. No. 99-1 at 15.
Defendants claimed
that this option would allow the Drainage Channel to continue to
"provide[] treatment for removal of iron and manganese before
ultimate discharge" to the river.
Doc. No. 99-1 at 16.
When
they implemented the project in 2010, defendants not only
removed the sediments but also reconstructed the Drainage
Channel by installing permanent structures to manage the
velocity of the flow and thus reduce "channel erosion and
subsequent downstream sedimentation."
Doc. No. 94-15 at 9.
Plaintiffs argue that this evidence conclusively establishes
that defendants intended to redesign the Drainage Channel in
ways that promote the passive settling of iron and manganese
along its bed.
Defendants counter that the evident purpose of the 2010
project was not to create a waste treatment facility but to
remove contaminated sediments and to restore the Drainage
Channel in accordance with NHDES permit requirements.
Even if
the effect of the natural cycle of oxidation results in some
metals precipitating out of solution along the length of the
Channel, defendants maintain, this is not a treatment system
that they created, designed, or sought to harness.
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Viewing the record in the light most favorable to
defendants, I conclude that a factual dispute exists as to
whether the Drainage Channel was designed to serve as a waste
treatment system.
On one hand, as defendants boasted to NHDES
on several occasions, the reconstruction of the Channel was done
in ways that sought to encourage the natural treatment of iron
and manganese before they reach the river, which suggests that
it was designed to treat those pollutants.
On the other hand,
defendants did not undertake that work unilaterally but in
response to a permit condition, and they point to evidence that
they merely sought to "restore" the Drainage Channel to its
prior condition.
Especially since the issue is one of intent,
summary judgment is not appropriate.
See Brandt v. Fitzpatrick,
957 F.3d 67, 75 (1st Cir. 2020) (unsettled issues of motive and
intent as to the conduct of a party will normally preclude a
grant of summary judgment).
Accordingly, a triable issue exists
as to whether defendants "designed" the Drainage Channel to
treat iron and manganese from landfill wastewater prior to
discharge to the Ammonoosuc.7
Defendants also argue that the waste treatment system exclusion
does not apply because the purpose of the exclusion when it was
first promulgated in the 1970s was to exempt facilities that
discharge pollutants into their own closed system treatment
ponds. See, e.g., N. Cal. River Watch v. City of Healdsburg,
496 F. 3d 993, 1002 (9th Cir. 2007) (explaining that this was
the original purpose). When the Agencies defined the term
"waste treatment system" in 2020, however, they neither included
7
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3.
Whether the Drainage Channel is Simultaneously a Point
Source and a Water of the United States
Plaintiffs argue that they should prevail even if the
Drainage Channel is a water of the United States because a water
of the United States can also simultaneously be a point source.
That position, however, cannot be squared with the statutory
text.
The CWA defines a "discharge of a pollutant" as "any
addition of any pollutant to navigable waters from any point
source."
33 U.S.C. § 1362(12) (emphasis added).
As Justice
Scalia's plurality opinion in Rapanos v. United States
recognized, this definition "conceive[s] of 'point sources' and
'navigable waters' as separate and distinct categories."
U.S. 715, 735 (2006).
547
Otherwise, the definition "would make
little sense if the two categories were significantly
overlapping."
Id.8
such a limitation in the text of the regulation nor otherwise
indicated that the limitation would apply. The text of the
regulation is not ambiguous. The definition of a waste
treatment system is plainly broad enough to encompass the use of
a surface water channel (such as the Drainage Channel) to treat
wastewater before its discharge into a water of the United
States. Absent uncertainty, the regulation "just means what it
means — and the court must give it effect, as the court would
any law." Kisor v. Wilkie, 139 S. Ct. 2400, 2415 (2019).
Plaintiffs instead lean on Justice Kennedy's concurrence in
Rapanos for the proposition that "certain water-bodies could
conceivably constitute both a point source and a [navigable]
water." 547 U.S. at 772 (Kennedy, J., concurring). They also
point out that Justice Scalia's plurality opinion stops short of
8
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If a waterway can simultaneously be a navigable water (that
is, a water of the United States) and a point source, the
distinction the statute draws between the two categories using
the prepositions "from" and "to" would be rendered meaningless.
"[T]he word 'from' seeks a 'point source' origin," Cnty. of Maui
v. Haw. Wildlife Fund, 140 S. Ct. 1462, 1476 (2020), whereas the
word "to" indicates a destination – the waters of the United
States.
Conflating the two categories requires reading those
terms out of the statute.
Plaintiffs' argument is also incompatible with the term
"addition."
Although that term is not defined in the CWA, it is
commonly understood to mean the act of combining one thing with
another in a way that results in an increase in what was
originally there.
See Webster's Third New International
Dictionary 24 (1961) (defining "addition" as "the act or process
of adding: the joining or uniting of one thing to another" and
listing "increase" and "augmentation" as its synonyms).
Assuming a point source and a water of the United States were
one and the same, a pollutant that is present in such a point
source would already be in the waters of the United States, so
concluding that the two terms are mutually exclusively. But
neither opinion offers guidance for identifying those apparently
exceptional cases where the two categories may overlap.
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there would be no addition of pollutants to the waters of the
United States.
Plaintiffs argue in response that the "addition" of
pollutants occurs when a polluted water of the United States
(the Drainage Channel) empties into another water of the United
States (the Ammonoosuc).
That argument runs headlong into the
EPA's longstanding position that "navigable waters" are one
unitary whole and that an "addition" occurs only when pollutants
first enter navigable waters from "the outside world," not when
they are moved between navigable waters.
See National Pollutant
Discharge Elimination System (NPDES) Water Transfers Rule, 73
Fed. Reg. 33,697, 33,700-01 (June 13, 2008).
This so-called
"unitary waters" theory underlies the EPA's Water Transfers
Rule, which exempts from NPDES permitting requirements
"[d]ischarges from a water transfer," defined as an engineered
activity that connects one water of the United States to
another.
See 40 C.F.R. § 122.3(i).
The EPA has explained that
such transfers are exempt because movements of pollutants from
one water of the United States to another water of the United
States "do not result in the 'addition' of a pollutant" to
navigable waters.
See Water Transfers Rule, 73 Fed. Reg. at
33,699.
The two circuit courts that have considered the Water
Transfers Rule have upheld the unitary waters theory as a
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reasonable interpretation of the CWA that is entitled to
deference under Chevron.
See Catskill Mountains Ch. of Trout
Unlimited, Inc. v. EPA, 846 F.3d 492, 533 (2d Cir. 2017);
Friends of Everglades v. S. Fla. Water Mgmt. Dist., 570 F.3d
1210, 1228 (11th Cir. 2009).
I agree with those courts.
The
definition of "navigable waters" as a singular entity – "the
waters of the United States" - does not differentiate among
separate water bodies but refers to them in a collective sense.
See 33 U.S.C. § 1362(7) (emphasis added).
A metaphor that the
Eleventh Circuit used aptly illustrates the rationality of the
unitary waters theory:
Two buckets sit side by side, one with four marbles in
it and the other with none. There is a rule
prohibiting "any addition of any marbles to buckets by
any person." A person comes along, picks up two
marbles from the first bucket, and drops them into the
second bucket. Has the marble-mover "add[ed] any
marbles to buckets"? . . . . [A]s the EPA would
decide, there were four marbles in buckets before, and
there are still four marbles in buckets, so no
addition of marbles has occurred.
Friends of Everglades, 570 F.3d at 1228.
Plaintiffs do not argue that the unitary waters theory is
an unreasonable interpretation of the statute.
Instead, they
point out that the discharge from the Drainage Channel to the
Ammonoosuc is not a water transfer as defined in the rule
because the conjunction of the Channel and the Ammonoosuc is not
an engineered connection.
That is true but inapposite.
23
The
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unitary waters theory that underlies the rule also applies to
the natural convergence of a river and its tributary.
See Water
Transfers Rule, 73 Fed. Reg. at 33,704 ("[C]ommenters who read
the natural convergence of two rivers as being a water transfer
are incorrect, though such natural convergences also do not
require NPDES permits.").
To the extent both waterways are
waters of the United States, they are not to be considered
individually in this context.
Thus, the movement of pollutants
from the Drainage Channel to the Ammonoosuc does not result in
an "addition" of pollutants to navigable waters if the Drainage
Channel is itself a water of the United States.
Plaintiffs contend that the EPA has nonetheless taken the
position that a waterway may be both a point source and a water
of the United States.
The most recent agency guidance they
cite, however, does not stand for the proposition that a
waterway can be both at the same time.
On the contrary, the EPA
has recognized that certain waterways, such as ditches, may be
either a water of the United States or a point source depending
on their unique features, not both.
See The Navigable Waters
Protection Rule, 85 Fed. Reg. at 22,297 ("Either [a ditch] is
water of the United States that subjects a discharger to
sections 402 and 404 permitting requirements for the direct
discharges into the ditch, or, if it is non-jurisdictional but
conveys pollutants to downstream jurisdictional waters, it may
24
Case 1:18-cv-00393-PB Document 106 Filed 08/11/21 Page 25 of 28
be a point source that subjects a discharger into a ditch to
section 402 permitting requirements."); Revised Definition of
"Waters of the United States," 84 Fed. Reg. 4,154, 4,179 (Feb.
14, 2019) ("[T]he agencies propose to delineate the categories
of ditches that would be 'waters of the United States,' and are
proposing to exclude all other ditches from that definition.").
The older agency sources plaintiffs cite are either vague or
pre-date and contradict the unitary waters theory.
See Clean
Water Rule: Definition of "Waters of the United States," 80 Fed.
Reg. 37,054, 37,098 (June 29, 2015) (merely noting that "the
approach that ditches can be considered both [a point source and
a water of the United States] reflects the CWA itself as well as
longstanding agency policy"); In re Riverside Irrigation Dist.,
1975 WL 23864, at *4 (EPA Gen. Couns. Mem., June 27, 1975)
(opining that irrigation ditches that discharge to navigable
waters required NPDES permits even if they themselves qualify as
navigable waters).9
Plaintiffs also cite three district court opinions from other
circuits for the proposition that a channel can be a point
source and a water of the United States at the same time. See
United States v. Vierstra, 803 F. Supp. 2d 1166, 1173-74 (D. Id.
2011); N.C. Shellfish Growers Ass'n v. Holly Ridge Assoc., LLC,
278 F. Supp. 2d 654, 672-73, 679 (E.D.N.C. 2003); Albahary v.
City and Town of Bristol, 963 F. Supp. 150, 155 (D. Conn. 1997).
Because these courts did not engage with the statutory text,
their persuasive value is limited. In addition, two of the
cases involved human-made tributaries, so under the current
regulations neither would be considered a water of the United
9
25
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Lastly, plaintiffs argue that their interpretation should
prevail because it is consistent with the congressional purpose
in passing the CWA, namely protecting the Nation's waters.
But
"it frustrates rather than effectuates legislative intent to
simplistically assume that whatever furthers the statute's
primary objective must be the law."
Norfolk S. R. Co. v.
Sorrell, 549 U.S. 158, 171 (2007) (quoting Rodriguez v. United
States, 480 U.S. 522, 526 (1987) (per curiam)).
Importantly,
"even after a court looks to the broad purpose of a statute, it
still must give effect to the words actually used by Congress to
achieve that purpose."
(6th Cir. 1991).
Boettger v. Bowen, 923 F.2d 1183, 1186
Reaching a result in this case that is
consistent with what plaintiffs claim are the CWA's broad goals
would require reading specific terms out of the statute.
Because plaintiffs' contention that the Drainage Channel can
simultaneously be a point source and a water of the United
States is incompatible with the statutory text, I cannot adopt
their argument.
B.
Is the Landfill a Point Source?
Plaintiffs argue in the alternative in Count II that the
landfill itself is a point source that discharges pollutants
into the Drainage Channel and the Ammonoosuc.
Although each
States. See Vierstra, 803 F. Supp. 2d at 1173-74; N.C.
Shellfish Growers Ass'n, 278 F. Supp. 2d at 672-73.
26
Case 1:18-cv-00393-PB Document 106 Filed 08/11/21 Page 27 of 28
side argues that it is entitled to complete or partial summary
judgment on Count II, they have not developed a sufficient
record to permit me to reliably address their arguments.
Whether the landfill qualifies as a "discernible, confined and
discrete conveyance" as that phrase is used in the CWA's
definition of a point source, see 33 U.S.C. § 1362(14), presents
a complicated factual question that requires a more fully
developed record to resolve.
Equally troubling is the parties'
failure to carefully assess how the Supreme Court's recent
decision in County of Maui, 140 S. Ct. 1462, affects my analysis
of their arguments.
In that case, the court held that a release
of pollutants from a point source to groundwater before reaching
the waters of the United States requires an NPDES permit only if
the release is the "functional equivalent of a direct
discharge."
Id. at 1476 (emphasis omitted).
The parties have
failed to sufficiently brief this issue, and I decline to take
up the issue on my own.
Accordingly, I deny the parties' cross-
motions with respect to Count II without prejudice.
IV.
CONCLUSION
In sum, the undisputed evidence shows that unless the
Drainage Channel is a waste treatment system, it is a tributary
of the Ammonoosuc River and therefore may be considered a water
of the United States and not a point source within the meaning
of the CWA.
A genuine issue of material fact exists, however,
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Case 1:18-cv-00393-PB Document 106 Filed 08/11/21 Page 28 of 28
as to whether the Channel was designed to function as a waste
treatment system.
I reject plaintiffs' alternative theory that
a channel can be both a point source and a water of the United
States at the same time.
Accordingly, I deny the cross-motions
for summary judgment with respect to Count I to the extent that
they are based on the theories of liability discussed in this
Memorandum and Order.
I also deny the parties' cross-motions addressing Count II
without prejudice because the parties' arguments with respect to
that count have not been sufficiently developed to permit me to
resolve the difficult questions of fact and law that the
parties' motions present.
SO ORDERED.
/s/ Paul J. Barbadoro
Paul J. Barbadoro
United States District Judge
August 11, 2021
cc:
Daniel J. Mullen, Esq.
David A. Nicholas, Esq.
Joshua R. Kratka, Esq.
Kevin P. Budris, Esq.
Margaret M. A. Nivison, Esq.
Charles Craig Caldart, Esq.
Thomas F. Irwin, Esq.
Bryan K. Gould, Esq.
Callan E. Sullivan, Esq.
Cooley Ann Arroyo, Esq.
28
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