MEMORANDUM OPINION
I. INTRODUCTION
This action is brought by plaintiffs Anacostia Riverkeeper, Inc. and Friends of the Earth, Inc., two DC-based non-profit corporations, to challenge defendant Environmental Protection Agency’s (“EPA” or the “Agency”) approval of a pollution control plan for the Anacostia River jointly submitted by the District of Columbia and Maryland in accordance with the Federal Water Pollution Control Amendments of 1972, commonly known as the Clean Water Act (“CWA” or the “Act”), 33 U.S.C. § 1251 et seq. Under the CWA, a State (including the District) is obligated to develop water quality standards for each navigable water body within its jurisdiction. These standards generally consist of expected uses of the water body and criteria defining the maximum level of pollution allowable to protect such uses. The CWA requires each State to monitor its waters for compliance with such standards following the implementation of technology-based pollution controls under separate provisions of the Act. A determination that a particular water body is not meeting applicable standards triggers a State’s obligation to develop and submit for EPA approval total maximum daily loads (“TMDLs”) for the pollutants in that water body. Relying on limits set by these TMDLs, federal permit programs, along with state and local actors, implement water-pollution controls to achieve contamination levels necessary to attain and maintain water quality standards. This suit involves a challenge to a TMDL for the Anacostia River developed by the District and Maryland and approved by EPA in 2007.
The Anacostia River is, in a word, dirty. Its waters are frequently turbid, resulting in an opaque and muddy appearance. This condition results from an excess of sediments and total suspended solids (“TSS”) in the river. The polluted state of the Anacostia render it unfit for the uses that the District and Maryland have designated the watershed to support, including contact recreation
(e.g.,
swimming), secondary contact recreation
(e.g.,
boating), and the protection and propagation of plant and animal life. The sullied state of today’s Anacostia is no surprise: Despite the existence of similarly turbid conditions since the inception of the CWA, neither the District nor the Agency lifted a finger to address any concerns, whether related to excess sediments and TSS or other contaminants, for nearly two decades — in contravention of statutory obligations to act as early as 1979. In plain disregard of its duties as set forth in the Act, the District did not begin to own up to its responsibilities under the CWA until being compelled by a district court ruling.
Kingman Park Civic Ass’n v. EPA,
A. Statutory Framework
The Clean Water Act “is a comprehensive water quality statute designed to ‘restore and maintain the chemical, physical, and biological integrity of the Nation’s waters.’ ”
PUD No. 1 of Jefferson Cty. v. Wash. Dep’t of Ecology,
Point sources, however, are not the only manner in which pollutants enter a water system. Sediments and other biological materials can easily accumulate in rivers through normal ecological processes, such as drainage from wooded areas or erosion of the river bank. Many toxins are also capable of entering water systems through run-off from agricultural land. And overflows from insufficiently drained urban areas — particularly during extreme weather — -often lead to a massive influx of sediments, TSS and other pollutants. To capture these and similar effects — all of which are difficult to monitor or regulate — the CWA aggregates large-scale sources of water contamination into categories of “non-point source” pollution. At the most general level, non-point source pollution is the entry of contaminants into the water body by any means other than a discrete point source.
Non-point source pollution is often so extensive that it continues to impair water bodies even after technology-based effluent limitations have been fully implemented. But “[u]nlike point source pollution, EPA lacks the authority to control non-point source discharges through a
A designated use is exactly as it sounds: after considering “the use and value of water for public water supplies, protection and propagation of fish, shellfish and wildlife, recreation in and on the water, agricultural, industrial, and other purposes including navigation,” 40 C.F.R. § 131.10(a), a State must catalogue the manner in which each of its covered waters are to be utilized by governments, persons, animals and plants. 2 Examples of designated uses include drinking or reservoir purposes, primary (e.g., swimming) or secondary (e.g., boating) recreation, and the preservation and support of plant and animal life. Id. § 131.3(f):
Water quality criteria, on the other hand, are measures of the conditions of a water body and “come in two varieties: specific numerical limitations on the concentration of a specific pollutant in the water ... or more general narrative statements applicable to a wide set of pollutants.”
Am. Paper,
After promulgating water quality standards, States are responsible for monitoring their covered waters and, when necessary, identifying those waters for which current pollution controls “are not stringent enough to implement any water quality standard applicable to such waters.” 33 U.S.C. § 1313(d)(1)(A). Every two years, a State must submit to EPA a list of waters that do not currently attain, and based on current pollution controls are not expected to attain, applicable water quality standards. 40 C.F.R. § 130.7(b)(3)
&
(d). Under governing regulations, this submission — known as a “303(d) list” — contains
The inclusion of a water body on a State’s 303(d) list triggers a statutory obligation to develop total maximum daily loads, or TMDLs, which specify the absolute amount of particular pollutants the entire water body can take on while still satisfying all water quality standards. 33 U.S.C. § 1313(d)(1)(C). As EPA explains: “A TMDL sets the quantity of a pollutant that may be introduced into a water body without causing an exceedance [sic ] of the applicable water quality standard.” EPA Decision Rationale: Total Maximum Daily Loads for Anacostia River Basin Watershed 1, July 24, 2007, Ex. 2 to EPA Cross-Mtn., Sep. 18, 2009 [27-2] (“DR”). States submit proposed TMDLs to EPA for review, at which time the Agency can either approve or reject such proposals. 33 U.S.C. § 1313(d)(2). Rejection of a submitted TMDL triggers EPA’s duty to develop a substitute TMDL for the water body in question. Id.
In addition to setting a maximum daily level of pollution, EPA regulations require TMDLs to allocate contaminant loads among point and non-point sources of pollution. Point source pollution is then further subdivided into wasteload allocations (“WLAs”), which are the portions of the water body’s pollutant discharges “allocated [under the TMDL] -to one of its existing or future point sources of pollution.” 40 C.F.R. § 130.2(h). Similarly, the total predicted non-point'source pollution is separated into load allocations (“LAs”), which are the portions of a water body’s contaminant inflow “attributed either to one of its existing or future non-point sources of pollution or to natural background sources.” Id. § 130.2(g). Along with a statutorily-mandated margin of error, the total TMDL is thus the “sum of individual WLAs for point sources and LAs for non-point sources and natural background.” Id. § 130.2(i); see also DR at 1 (“EPA’s regulations define a TMDL as the sum of [WLAs] assigned to point sources, the [LAs] assigned to non-point sources, and natural background, and a margin of safety”).
TMDLs are not self-implementing instruments, but instead serve as informational tools utilized by EPA and the States to coordinate necessary responses to excessive pollution in order to meet applicable water quality standards.
Pronsolino v. Nastri,
B. Factual and Procedural History
1. Applicable Water Quality Standards
Both the District and Maryland have promulgated water quality standards under the CWA applicable to sediment and TSS pollution in the Anacostia River. Maryland, for its part, designates its sections of the Anacostia as suitable for Uses I-P and II, which include “water contact recreation” and “support of estuarine and marine aquatic life.” Md.Code Regs. 26.08.02.08(0)(l)-(2) & 26.08.02.03-3(B)-(C). To achieve and protect these uses, Maryland provides both numeric and narrative water quality criteria applicable to sediment and TSS pollution. These metrics include numeric criteria of 50 Nephelometer Turbidity Units (“NTUs”) monthly average and seasonal Secchi depths of .4 meters, id. at 26.08.02.03-3(A)(5)(b) & (B)(1) & (C)(9)(b), 3 as well as a narrative criterion that turbidity resulting from excessive sediment and TSS pollution must “not exceed levels detrimental to aquatic life.” Id. The District, for its part, designates its sections of the Anacostia for Class A, B, C, D, and E uses, which include, inter alia, contact and secondary contact recreation, aesthetic enjoyment, and protection of plant and animal life. D.C. Mun. Regs. tit. 21 § 1101.2. The District has also promulgated both narrative and numeric criteria in order to achieve and maintain these designated uses. Included among its narrative criteria are requirements to keep the Anacostia free from “objectionable odor, color, taste, or turbidity,” maintain the watershed’s “aesthetic qualities,” and ensure that it can “support aquatic life.” Id. §§ 1104.1(c) & 1104.4. As for its numeric criterion, the District lists 20 NTUs and .8 meters Sec-chi depth as necessary to meet its water quality goals. Id. § 1104.8.
2. Prior Attempts to Develop a Sediment/TSS TMDL for the Anacostia
The development of a sediment/TSS TMDL is a story of excessive negligence and unnecessary delay. Though at its inception the CWA obligated each State to begin submitting 303(d) lists and developing TMDLs by June 28, 1979, 33 U.S.C. § 1314(a)(2)(D), the District did nothing before that deadline — or for the 18 years that followed.
Kingman Park,
As had many courts before it, the district court adopted the constructive submission theory over EPA’s objection. See id. at 5 (“Like the majority of courts that have confronted this quandary, this Court holds that if a State fails over a long period of time to submit proposed TMDLs, this prolonged failure may amount to ‘constructive submission’ by that State of no TMDLs.”) (quotations omitted; collecting cases). Emphasizing the District’s “silence and intransigence” in the face “of its Section 303(d) obligations,” the Kingman Park Court held that “[wjhere a State has made a decision that would otherwise trigger EPA review, the State may not evade such review by simply refusing to reduce its decision to a formal submission.” Id. at 6. Consistent with this holding, the court denied EPA’s motion to dismiss.
In the wake of the
Kingman Park
decision, EPA, the District and the plaintiffs entered into a consent decree under which the District agreed to regularly submit 303(d) lists to EPA and begin developing TMDLs for its waters. The Anacostia River was included on the initial 303(d) list, and in 2002 the District submitted and EPA approved a TMDL to address excess sediment and TSS pollution in the Anacostia that relied upon annual, rather than daily, load limits,
Friends of the Earth v. EPA,
3. Development of the Current Sediment/TSS TMBL
On remand, the district court stayed the vacateur at the request of all parties while the Agency and the District developed a new sedimenf/TSS TMDL. DR at 10. Recognizing that the Anacostia is a multistate water body and that efforts to reduce pollution in the river necessarily require coordination between multiple jurisdictions, EPA brought the District and Maryland together to collaborate on a new, system-wide sediment/TSS TMDL for the river.
See id.
An advisory group made up of representatives from the District,
Plaintiffs, through counsel Earthjustice, submitted a series of comments in response to the draft TMDL. See Earthjustice Comments to Maryland and the District of Columbia Draft Total Maximum Daily Loads for the Anacostia River Basin, May 7, 2007, Ex. 6 to EPA Cross-Mtn., Sep. 18, 2009 [27-6] (“Earthjustice Comments”). Plaintiffs’ comments raised several general concerns, including that the draft TMDL failed to (1) implement all applicable water quality standards, (2) provide an adequate margin of safety under the CWA, (3) include properly subdivided wasteload allocations, and (4) provide assurance of proper implementation. See generally id. The District and Maryland subsequently submitted a joint response to objections raised by both plaintiffs and other commentators. See DC & Maryland Comment Response Document Regarding the TMDL of TSS in the Anacostia River Watershed, June 21, 2007, Ex. 3 to EPA Cross-Mtn., Sep. 18, 2009 [27-3] (“DC/MD Cmt. Response”).
One day later, the District and Maryland submitted their proposed TMDL to EPA for review.
See
Final Total Maximum Daily Load of TSS for the Anacostia River Basin, June 22, 2007, Ex. 1 to EPA Cross-Mtn., Sep. 18, 2009 [27-1] (“Final TMDL”). The Final TMDL’s stated objectives are to ensure (1) that “aquatic life is protected in the tidal and non-tidal waters of the Anacostia,” (2) that “MD’s and DC’s sediment-related water quality standards that support aquatic life are met in their respective portions of the watershed,” and (3) “in particular that the numeric criteria for water quality are met in the tidal waters.”
Id.
at vi. Consistent with these goals, the Final TMDL focuses almost exclusively on determining pollutant load limits for the protection of submerged aquatic vegetation (“SAV”) and other plant and animal life. To this end, the Final TMDL lists only those designated uses and water quality criteria related to aquatic life.
Id.
at 21-23. Similarly, though the Final TMDL concludes that the relevant “endpoint of the TMDL (the most stringent reduction in sediment loads) is DC’s tidal Anacostia clarity criterion,”
id.
at 24, it does not evaluate whether that criterion is more stringent than criteria tied to recreational or aesthetic uses of the Anacostia under the District or Maryland law. To evaluate its proposed reductions in sediment and TSS pollution, the Final TMDL employs a series of models to predict,
inter alia,
non-point source pollution entering the Anacostia, the hydrological and sediment erosion along the water body, the sediment loads required to meet water quality standards in the river, and flows and clarity conditions in the river basin.
See generally id.
at vi-vii. Using data collected between 1995 and 1997, the Final TMDL relies on these models to conclude that annual reductions in sediments and TSS to 7097.6 tons/year and 3396.1 tons/growing season (defined as the period from April 1 to October 31) are necessary for the protection of aquatic life in the Anacostia.
Id.
at vii. These totals are then broken down into daily maximum loads distributed among three sources: WLAs for point sources and municipal separate storm sewer systems (“MS4s”),
4
LAs
A month after the District and Maryland submitted the Final TMDL for review, EPA issued a written Decision Rationale approving the terms of the proposal. The summary of EPA’s decision echoes the three purposes articulated in the Final TMDL — to ensure protection of aquatic life, meet water quality standards related to aquatic life, and meet water quality criteria — and indicates that the numeric target for the proposal is .8 meters Secchi depth, which is the District’s water quality criterion for Class C uses. DR at i. The Decision Rationale also notes that EPA concurs with Maryland and the District that the proposed load levels will lead to an 85% reduction in sediment and TSS pollution in the Anacostia, id. at ii, and sets forth seven regulatory conclusions. See id. at ix (finding that Final TMDL (1) is “designed to implement the applicable water quality standards,” (2) includes “a total allowable load as well as individual [WLAs] and [LAs],” (8) considers “the impacts of background pollutant contributions,” (4) accounts for “critical environmental conditions,” (5) evaluates “seasonal environmental variations,” (6) includes “a margin of safety,” and (7) was “subject to public participation”). 5
4. This Litigation
New changes were made to the proposed TMDL after public comment, and plaintiffs — believing that the Final TMDL fails to account for the alleged shortcomings raised in their comments to the draft TMDL — filed this suit in early 2009 to contest the validity of EPA’s approval. Complaint, Jan. 15, 2009 [l].
6
Plaintiffs’ action is brought under the CWA and the Administrative Procedure Act (“APA”), which prohibits agency action that is “arbitrary, capricious, an abuse of discretion, or otherwise not in accordance with law.” 5 U.S.C. § 706(2)(A). The Complaint identifies five purported deficiencies that, according to plaintiffs, render EPA’s approval of the Final TMDL arbitrary and capricious: (1) failure to set load limits on sediment and TSS pollution sufficient “to
A few months after this suit was filed, WASA — the District’s sewer authority and an advisory group participant — moved to intervene as a matter of right or through permissive intervention. Motion to Intervene, Apr. 13, 2009 [8]. Plaintiffs consented, Response to Motion to Intervene, Apr. 22, 2009 [9], and the Court granted permissive intervention under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 24(b). Order, Apr. 28, 2009 [14]. Less than two months later, a group of local water authorities (the “Municipal Intervenors”) 7 requested intervention as well. Motion to Intervene, June 8, 2009 [16]. Plaintiffs again consented, Response to Motion to Intervene, June 19, 2009 [19], and the Court granted the motion. Minute Order, Aug. 6, 2009.
Plaintiffs subsequently moved for summary judgment. Plaintiffs’ Motion for Summary Judgment, July 17, 2009 [21] (“Ps’ Mtn.”). In their motion, plaintiffs advance three theories as to why EPA’s approval of the Final TMDL is in violation of the CWA: first, for a variety of reasons, the Final TMDL sets load levels that will not achieve water quality standards applicable to sediment and TSS pollution in the Anacostia River under Maryland and DC law,
id.
at 9-17; second, the Final TMDL improperly assigns WLAs on a system-wide basis for the MS4s along the watershed,
id.
at 17-20; and third, the margin of safety incorporated into the Final TMDL is factually unverifiable and thus legally insufficient.
Id.
at 20-22. EPA subsequently cross-moved for summary judgment, arguing that its decision-making was supported by a reasonable review of the evidence, EPA’s Cross-Motion for Summary Judgment 14-21, Sep. 18, 2009 [27] (“EPA Cross-Mtn.”), that plaintiffs’ concerns are unfounded and impose requirements outside the text of the CWA,
id.
at 21-26, that system-wide WLAs for MS4s are appropriate under applicable law,
id.
at 26-30, and that the margin of safety implicit in the models used to develop the Final TMDL is sufficient.
Id.
at 30-34. At the same time, both WASA and the Municipal Intervenors cross-moved for judgment on behalf of EPA. While both cross-motions parrot positions set forth by EPA, each also advances its own argument, both discussed in greater detail below, concerning what water quality standards are applicable in this context. WASA’s Cross-Motion for Summary Judgment 12-17, Sep. 18, 2009 [28] (“WASA Cross-Mtn”); Municipal Intervenors’ Cross-Motion for Summary Judgment 5-10, Sep. 18, 2009 [29] (“Municipal CrossMtn.”). The parties concluded subsequent
III. STANDARD
Summary judgment is properly granted where there is “no
genuine
issue of
material
fact.”
Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc.,
A. Review of Agency Action
EPA’s approval of the Final TMDL is an act taken pursuant to the CWA and thus is subject to challenge under the APA and the “indulgent” standards applicable to such review.
Chem. Mfrs. Ass’n v. EPA
With respect to interpretation of the CWA, courts apply the familiar
Chevron
framework. First, a court looks to the statutory language to determine whether Congress’s intent is clear. “If the intent of Congress is clear, that is the end of the matter; for the court, as well as the Agency, must give effect to the unambiguously expressed intent of Congress.”
Bluewater Network,
B. Effect of the Friends I Decision
A secondary issue concerning the appropriate legal standard is the extent to which the Court is bound or should otherwise be persuaded by prior rulings on similar issues in
Friends I.
This is particularly important here, as a number of disputes in this case closely mirror objections raised by these same plaintiffs before Judge Urbina.
See, e.g., Friends I,
IV. ANALYSIS
Plaintiffs’ objections to EPA’s decision approving the Final TMDL can be broadly grouped into three categories. First, plaintiffs assert that the Final TMDL is insufficient under the CWA because it (1) does not set load limits necessary to achieve all water quality standards under DC and Maryland law, (2) improperly permits periodic violations of those standards, and (3) relies on the wrong water quality criteria. Second, plaintiffs content that the WLAs for MS4s are improperly aggregated to include a single load allocation for
A. Achievement of Applicable Water Standards
1. TMDLs Must Implement All Water Quality Standards Made Applicable to a Water Body under State Law
Before the Court can review EPA’s conclusion that the Final TMDL is sufficient to attain water quality standards applicable to the Anacostia, a predicate issue must be resolved: what are these standards? The CWA instructs that a TMDL must establish pollutant load restrictions “at a level necessary to implement
the applicable water quality standards
with seasonal variations and a margin of safety.” 33 U.S.C. § 1313(d)(1)(C) (emphasis added). And under the Act’s implementing regulations, each water quality standard “defines the water quality goals of a water body, or a portion thereof, by designating the use or uses to be made of the water and by setting criteria necessary to protect the uses.” 40 C.F.R. § 130.3;
see also Nat’l Wildlife Fed’n v. Adamkus,
Under DC and Maryland law, the Anacostia River is designated for uses related to recreation, aesthetic enjoyment, and protection of aquatic life, and the States have promulgated water quality criteria to protect each such use.
Supra
Section II. B.l. The Final TMDL, however, expressly focuses on the propagation of plant and animal life and — as plaintiffs correctly observed in comments on the draft TMDL—
WASA and Municipal Intervenors, while joining the positions staked out by EPA in support of its approval of the Final TMDL, also raise separate arguments defending the Final TMDL’s narrow focus on aquatic life. On the one hand, WASA insists that the scope of a TMDL is dictated by the specification of use-impairments in a State’s 303(d) list. Thus, WASA argues, because the 303(d) lists submitted by the District and Maryland identify sediment and TSS pollution as detrimental only to plant and animal life, the Final TMDL is required to remedy only these effects. WASA Cross-Mtn. at 12-15. On the other hand, the Municipal Intervenors urge that under the CWA, a TMDL need not target all designated uses or water quality criteria, but may focus its attention — as the Final TMDL did — on a subset of water quality standards. Municipal Cross-Mtn. at 5-10. The Court discusses each of these arguments in turn.
a. The Scope of a TMDL is Not Limited by Impairment Reports in a 303(d) List
The need to develop TMDLs for a particular water body is prompted by the placement of that waterway on a State’s 303(d) list. Both the identification and creation stages of this process are governed by section 303 of the CWA, which provides, in relevant part:
(A) Each State shall identify those waters within its boundaries for which the effluent limitations required by section 301(b)(1)(A) and section 301(b)(1)(B) are not stringent enough to implement any water quality standards applicable to such waters....
(C) Each state shall establish for the waters identified in paragraph (1)(A) of this subsection, and in accordance with the priority ranking, the total maximum daily load, for those pollutants which the Administrator identifies under section 1314(a)(2) of this title as suitable for such calculation. Such load shall be established at a level necessary to implement the applicable water quality standards with seasonal variations and a margin of safety which takes into account any lack of knowledge concerning the relationship between effluent limitations and water quality.
33 U.S.C. § 1313(d)(1). WASA argues that these two subsections are linked, and that subsection (l)(C)’s direction to set load limits that will protect “applicable” water quality standards restricts establishment of TMDLs to only those uses and criteria in identified waters “that have first been listed as impaired pursuant to subsection (1)(A).” WASA Cross-Mtn. at 12.
WASA’s understanding of the interaction between a 303(d) list and the obligation to develop TMDLs cannot be squared with the CWA’s plain text. First, WASA’s reading of the listing requirements confuses the CWA’s instruction to identify impaired waters with an extra-textual obligation to distinguish among water quality standards applicable to such waters. A return to basic grammar is instructive. Subsection (1)(A) is a single independent clause that includes a subject, a verb, and a direct object. Here, the clause directs the “State” to “identify” those “waters.” Two prepositional phrases then follow and clarify which “waters” should be identified. The first — “within its boundaries” — limits the waters to those found inside a State’s borders, while the second — “for which the effluent limitations ... are not stringent enough to implement any water quality standards applicable to such waters” — specifies only impaired waters. Obviously, a State must review applicable standards to determine whether a water body is impaired, just as it must review its boundaries to determine whether a water body is within its borders; but as part of the prepositional phrase, “standards” are not another direct object to be identified, but merely modify those direct objects to be identified — in this case, only those “waters” that are impaired. This focus on waters rather than standards is also underscored by the fact that the clause classifies a water body as impaired if any water quality standard is violated; in other words, whether one, some, or all of the water quality standards are not met, the water body is impaired and therefore must be listed. In short, the clause instructs a State to identify those waters for which water quality standards are not met — not to identify those standards.
Second, even if subsection (1)(A) could be read to require identification of particular water quality standards, nothing in this provision can be read to imply that where a water quality standard is not “impaired,” it is no longer “applicable” to the water body. Indeed, subsection (1)(A) references all water quality standards “applicable
to such waters.” Id.
(emphasis added). A water quality standard is “applicable” to a particular water body if the particular designated uses and water quality criteria that form that standard apply to the water body under state law. Nowhere is it written that once a water quality criterion is attained and a designated use protected,
Third, subsection (1)(C) requires the creation of TMDLs “for the waters identified in paragraph (1)(A) ... [and] at a level necessary to implement the applicable water quality standards.” 33 U.S.C. § 1313(d)(1)(C). This provision mirrors the language of subsection (1)(A), as the direct objects for the action — here, development of TMDLs — are “waters” identified in subjection (1)(A) and not particular water quality standards. Also similar is the use of “applicable” rather than “impaired” — load levels must be set to satisfy “applicable water quality standards.” In this context, the proper function of the term “applicable” is to narrow designated uses and water quality criteria from all possible standards to those specified as applicable to the water body under state law. The TMDL provision thus requires the development of pollutant limits for identified waters that satisfy applicable water quality standards, rather than TMDLs for particular standards.
Fourth, WASA’s tortured interpretation of “applicable” in subsection (1)(C) is unsupported by any link between subsections (1)(A) and (1)(C). As an initial matter, the suggestion that “applicable” water quality standards in subsection (1)(C) are only those identified in subsection (1)(A) presupposes that subsection (1)(A) requires identification of the particular water quality standards that are impaired
11
— which is incorrect.
Supra.
And to the extent that “applicable water quality standards” in subsection (1)(C) should be understood in reference to subsection (1)(A), as WASA urges, subsection (1)(A) does not distinguish between impaired and non-impaired water quality standards, but specifies
“any
water quality standards applicable
to such waters.”
33 U.S.C. § 1313(d)(1)(A) (emphasis added). Reading these provisions together clarifies that subsection (1)(C)’s direction to develop TMDLs incorporates a requirement to protect
any
water quality standards that, under state law, are applicable to the water body in question. This reading is not only consistent with the parallel language employed in the two subsections’ mandates to identify impaired “waters” and then develop TMDLs for those identified “waters,”
see Martini v. Fannie Mae,
Finally, even if WASA were correct that subsections (1)(A) and (1)(C) only obligate a State to identify impaired water quality standards and develop a TMDL to address those specific standards, its proposed interpretation would still fail because it improperly substitutes “designated uses” for “water quality standards.” The term water quality standard encompasses all designated uses of a water body and all water
The Court’s interpretation of the CWA is also consistent with regulations concerning the creation of 303(d) lists and the development of TMDLs for waters identified on such submissions. EPA regulations governing the listing of impaired waters provide:
Each State shall identify those water quality-limited segments 13 still requiringTMDLs within its boundaries for which (i) Technology-based effluent limitations ... (ii) More stringent effluent limitations (including prohibitions) required by either State or local authority ... and (iii) Other pollution control requirements ... are not stringent enough to implement any water quality standards (WQS) applicable to such waters.
40 C.F.R. § 130.7(b)(1). Mirroring the language of subsection (1)(A), this provision requires a State to identify the waters that do not meet “applicable” standards. Id. Nothing in this provision, however, requires a State to further subdivide its 303(d) list by identifying particular designated uses that are impaired. Quite the contrary, § 130.7 explains that, “for purposes of listing waters,” the term “water quality standard applicable to such waters” means “those water quality standards established under section 303 of the Act, including numeric criteria, narrative criteria, waterbody uses, and antidegredation requirements.” Id. § 130.7(b)(3) (emphasis added). Consistent with the CWA, this provision references water quality standards “established” under § 303 of the Act — not standards identified as impaired on a State’s 303(d) list. And under § 303, water quality standards incorporate by definition all designated uses of a particular water body. 33 U.S.C. § 1313(c)(2)(A).
WASA, however, points to EPA regulations stating that “TMDLs shall be established at levels necessary to attain and maintain the applicable narrative and numerical WQS,”
id.
§ 130.7(c)(1), to support its contention that there is no regulatory requirement “that TMDLs address all designated uses.” WASA Reply in Support of Cross-Mtn. for Summary Judgment 7-8, Oct. 28, 2009 [41] (“WASA Reply”). As an initial matter, this interpretation of EPA’s regulation is inconsistent with the CWA’s plain meaning, which requires a TMDL to address all “applicable water quality standards,” 33 U.S.C. § 1313(d)(1)(C) — meaning
“any
water quality standard applicable to such waters,”
id.
§ 1313(d)(1)(A) (emphasis added), inclusive of all designated uses.
Id.
§ 1314(c)(2)(A). As the Supreme Court made clear, “under the literal terms of the statute, a project that does not comply with a designated use of the water does not comply with the applicable water quality standards.”
PUD No. 1,
Finally, WASA quotes a single sentence from 65 pages of EPA guidance stating that a State may sub-categorize its 303(d) list to “show that some designated uses of a water are being attained and some designated uses are not.” EPA, Memorandum: Guidance for 2006 Assessment, Listing and Reporting Requirements Pursuant to Sections 303(d), 305(b) and 314 of the Clean Water Act, July 29, 2005,
available at
http://www.epa.gov/owow/tmdl/2006IRG/ reporty2006irg-report.pdf (“2006 Guidance”). According to WASA, this guidance permits a State to list pollutants as only affecting certain designated uses, “thereby limiting their TMDL obligations and those of EPA to the listed use impairments.” WASA Reply at 9. This is incorrect. As an initial matter, to the extent WASA’s reading of this guidance is proper, its interpretation would be inconsistent with the CWA’s plain language and therefore unworthy of deference.
Adams v. Bell,
In sum, the CWA and EPA regulations require that a State’s 303(d) list identify those waters which have failed, and will continue to fail, to attain applicable water quality standards, and are clear that the development of TMDLs depends on whether a water body is listed.
Bravos v. Green,
b. Partial-TMDLs are Not Permitted under the CWA
Municipal Intervenors separately argue that even if the CWA requires that TMDLs address all water quality standards, a State is empowered to focus on particular subsets of uses and criteria to create partial-TMDLs. This position relies on the CWA’s mandate that a State develop a priority list to determine the order in which it should develop needed
Section 303(d)(1)(A) of the CWA, which governs the creation of both 303(d) lists and priority rankings, calls only for a priority ranking of impaired water bodies — it does not envision the ranking of particular impairments within a single water body. The provision reads:
Each State shall identify those waters [not meeting water quality standards.] The State shall establish a priority ranking for such waters, taking into account the severity of the pollution and the uses to be made of such waters.
33 U.S.C. § 1313(d)(1)(A). The key clause in this statutory provision directs a State to develop a priority list “for such waters, taking into account the severity of the pollution and the uses.” Id. (emphasis added). In the common parlance, creating a ranking “for” a set of objects requires the generation of a list “with respect to” or “concerning” those objects. Merriam Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary 161 (11th ed. 2004). Thus, if one places a set of movies on a shelf in order of preference, one creates a ranking for those movies. The phrase “taking into account,” by contrast, is understood as evaluating or considering certain reasons for an action. See id. at 10 & 1282 (defining “take” as “consider” and “account” as “reasons for an action” or “basis”). Thus, when placing the movies on the shelf, one might take into account the actors, the dialogue, and the cinematography in each film to place them in order. Section 303(d)(1)(A), properly understood, thus directs a State to rank the waters on its 303(d) list by evaluating factors such as pollution levels and designated uses — it does not command prioritization among particular pollutants or uses within a single water body. To return to our shelving exercise, the placement of a movie in a particular spot on the shelf would permit one to comment on the overall quality of the acting in that film compared to those movies placed above or below it; the placement would not, however, say anything about the quality of the individual actors within a particular film vis-á-vis each other. Municipal Intervenors’ contrary interpretation thus ignores the clear distinction between the task of preparing the list for impaired waters and the task of taking into account factors such as pollution and designated uses when preparing the list.
This reading of § 303(d)(1)(A) is confirmed by the repeated reference to “waters” throughout that provision. The use of the plural form is evidence that Congress intended the priority requirement— like the listing requirement' — to apply
across all
waters. Had Congress intended to specify that the priority list rank pollutants and uses
within a single
water body, it could have required a State to identify those “waters” not meeting water quality standards in the listing clause, and then directed the State to develop a priority list for “each water body” in the ranking clause. It did not do so, however — despite the fact that Congress demonstrated an ability to specify the singular form elsewhere in the CWA.
See, e.g.,
33 U.S.C. § 1314(a)(1) (referring to single “body of water”). Instead, Congress envisioned that a State would develop a priority list of waters identified in its 303(d) list by comparing the relative states of those waters; for example, a heavy-traffic river with significant human contact impaired by fecal
This broad, water-based approach to prioritization fits nicely with the TMDL provision of the CWA. The relevant clause of that provision states:
Each state shall establish for the waters identified in paragraph (1)(A) of this subsection, and in accordance with the priority ranking, the total maximum daily load, for those pollutants which the Administrator identifies under section 304(a)(2) of this title as suitable for such calculation.
Id. The phrasing of this subsection is clear: A TMDL is established for waters and not for designated uses. Supra. A ranking for all the designated uses of a particular water body is of little or no utility in the face of the obligation to develop a single TMDL that addresses all of those designated uses. By contrast, a priority ranking among impaired waters directly aids the State by specifying the next water body for which it must develop a TMDL. This reading is also consistent with the placement of the phrase “in accordance with the priority ranking” in § 303(d)(1)(C), which follows the reference to the waters identified in a State’s 303(d) list. 17
Nor is there a basis for Municipal Intervenors’ prioritization argument in EPA regulations. As an initial matter, EPA regulations concerning the ranking of impaired waters largely mimic the language and structure of the CWA itself, and thus the Court’s interpretation of the Act applies with equal force to its implementing regulations. See 40 C.F.R. § 130.7(b)(1) (stating that 303(d) list “shall include a priority ranking for all listed water[s], taking into account the severity of the pollution and the uses to be made of such waters”) (emphasis added). And where the regulations do differ from the CWA, they weigh in against Municipal Intervenors’ position. For example, two separate regulatory provisions add an additional command that priority rankings include “the identification of waters targeted for TMDL development in the next two years,” 40 C.F.R. § 130.7(b)(4); see also id. § 130.10(b)(2) (requiring State to submit to EPA “the priority ranking including waters targeted for TMDL development within the next two years.”) — a reporting requirement consistent with lists that are made up of waters rather than pollutants in, or designated uses of, a single water body. At a minimum, therefore, EPA regulations are consistent with the Court’s interpretation of the CWA and do not provide any contrary support for Municipal Intervenors’ position. 18
Finally, Municipal Intervenors appeal to policy, insisting that a prohibition on partial-TMDLs would call into question “literally thousands” of existing TMDLs. Municipal Cross-Mtn. at 9. This protest rings hollow. As an initial matter, to the extent EPA does in fact endorse the partialTMDL practice, the Court “cannot rewrite the Clean Water Act” to accommodate an EPA interpretation that the Agency itself has not promulgated.
Friends II,
Based on the foregoing discussion, the Court holds that when developing a TMDL for a particular pollutant, the CWA and its implementing regulations require the State — in devising the TMDL — and EPA — in reviewing the proposed TMDL— to evaluate whether the load levels, once implemented, will protect all applicable water quality standards, including all designated uses and all water quality criteria.
See Am. Paper,
2. EPA’s Approval of the Final TMDL’s Load Limits
Plaintiffs offer three specific objections to EPA’s conclusion in its Decision Ratio
a. There is Insufficient Evidence in the Record to Support EPA’s Suggestion that the Final TMDL Protects All Designated Uses
In the above discussion, the Court held that a TMDL for a particular pollutant must be designed to implement all water quality standards applicable to the water body in question. Accordingly, the question for the Court is not, as a matter of fact, whether the limits on sediment and TSS pollution set by the Final TMDL actually protect recreational and aesthetic uses of the Anacostia, but whether, as a matter of law, EPA properly exercised its discretion in finding that the Final TMDL achieves these standards. The Court finds that it did not.
In determining how to best protect the Anacostia River, Maryland and the District relied heavily on the Chesapeake Bay Program (“CBP”) for guidance. See Final TMDL at 22 (“Both MD and DC water clarity criteria are based on CBP’s determination of light requirements for underwater bay grasses.”). According to its website, the CBP was formed in the early 1980s after the Chesapeake Bay became the Nation’s first estuary targeted for restoration by Congress. CBP, History of the Chesapeake Bay Program, available at http://www.chesapeakebay.net/ historyofcbp.aspx?menuitem=14904. The CBP was subsequently constituted as a coalition between EPA and the governments of Maryland, Virginia, Pennsylvania, and the District. Id. Much of the CBP’s mission has been the protection and propagation of submerged aquatic vegetation, or SAV, which are more commonly thought of as underwater grasses. CBP, Water Clarity, available at http://www. chesapeakebay.net/waterclarity.aspx? menuitem=14656. To promote growth of SAV, the CBP focuses on improving water clarity in the Bay through the removal of excess nutrients, sediments, and TSS. Id. In measuring water clarity, the CBP relies on Secchi depth, which measures how deep a “Secchi disk” remains visible from the surface of the water. Id. As the Final TMDL explains:
Secchi depth is a simple measure of water clarity based on the visibility of a “Secchi disk,” an eight-inch diameter disk with black and white quadrants. Secchi depth is defined as the depth at which a submerged Secchi disk is no longer visible.
Final TMDL at 14. In the period before submission of the Final TMDL, Maryland and the District — relying on the CBP— each promulgated new numeric water
The development of the Final TMDL relied explicitly on these new water quality criteria. Specifically, the Final TMDL declares that its objectives “are 1) to ensure that aquatic life is protected in the tidal and non-tidal waters of the Anacostia River; 2) to ensure that MD’s and DC’s sediment-related water quality standards that support aquatic life are met in their respective portions of the river; and 3) to ensure in particular that the numeric criteria for water clarity are met in the tidal waters.” Final TMDL at 25. Observing that “[t]he health of [SAV] beds is an important indication of water quality conditions in the tidal Anacostia” because “SAV depends on good light conditions,” id. at 18, the Final TMDL relies entirely on criteria for the protection of SAV by defining the Secchi depth criteria promulgated by the District and Maryland as the sole target for the load reductions in the Final TMDL. 20 Recognizing that the proposed load limits’ narrow focus on SAV-related criteria could fail to ensure that other designated uses are adequately protected, plaintiffs submitted the following comment to the draft TMDL: “[T]here is no evidence in this Draft TMDL that the load reductions needed to achieve water clarity that is protective of SAV will also be sufficient to protect other forms of plant and animal life ... nor that such clarity is sufficient to fully support the river’s recreational and aesthetic designated uses.” Earthjustice Comments at 1-2. The Final TMDL, however, does not address this objection, and EPA subsequently relies upon the Final TMDL’s CBP-related criteria to conclude that the chosen load levels would implement applicable water quality standards. DR at 21-23.
Throughout its Decision Rationale, EPA remains silent as to water quality standards related to recreational and aesthetic uses, despite those standards’ applicability to the Anacostia under both DC and Maryland law. Indeed, the Agency concedes as much before the Court: “Although EPA did not attempt to quantify what TSS target would be necessary to meet the applicable aesthetic and recreational water quality standards, ...” EPA’s Reply in Support of Cross-Motion for Summary Judgment, Oct. 28, 2009 [38] (“EPA Reply”). Instead, the Decision Rationale repeatedly declares that the goal of the Final TMDL is to promote and protect aquatic life by satisfying the District’s .8 meter Secchi depth criterion.
See
DR at i (noting that Final TMDL establishes loads for sediment that “ensure that aquatic life is protective,” meet “sediment-related water quality standards that support aquatic life,” and attain “the numeric criteria for water quality” promulgated by DC);
id.
at
These omissions are fatal. EPA is obligated under the CWA and its implementing regulations to consider whether a TMDL will implement all designated uses and meet all water quality criteria before granting its approval. And where the Agency determines — through exercise of its expert judgment and scientific review— that a proposed TMDL will meet all applicable water quality standards, the Court will generally defer to that judgment. But where EPA simply ignores some applicable water quality standards by, for example, failing to consider certain designated uses or ignoring particular water quality criteria, it acts outside the scope of its legal and regulatory authority, and must be rebuked.
See United States v. FCC,
In light of its selective omission of water quality standards in its Decision Rationale, EPA expends significant effort before the Court explaining what it
might have
decided based on the record. For example, EPA notes that the District’s narrative criteria “are based upon words and phrases, such as ‘objectionable’ and ‘aesthetic,’ that require the exercise of agency judgment at a more fundamental level,” and argues that the Court should defer to the Agency’s reasoned judgment that the Final TMDL satisfies the narrative criteria. EPA Reply at 8. The Court, of course, would be happy to rely upon the Agency’s scientific evaluation of whether such sediment and TSS load reductions are sufficient to implement applicable narrative criteria under DC and Maryland law. The problem is that the Decision Rationale does not explain what judgment EPA is exercising, the scientific basis for that judgment, or the reasonable conclusions of that exercise. The Court will not supply post-hoc rationales for action where the Agency’s own Decision Rationale contains none.
Bowman Trans.,
Tacitly acknowledging that it never formally evaluated water quality standards related to recreational or aesthetic uses, EPA seeks refuge in two lines from its Decision Rationale expressing concurrence with “the District’s and Maryland’s conclusion that the improvement of water quality ... will
substantially improve, if not achieve
aesthetic, primary and secondary recreation water uses.” DR at 3 (emphasis added);
see also id.
(agreeing that “85% reductions ...
will significantly improve
the water quality and make the river
certainly more desirable
for other uses such as primary and secondary contact recreation”) (emphasis added). On their face, however, both statements are severely qualified opinions — no better than quasi-educated guesses — rather than reasoned expressions of the Agency’s judgment. The first statement — that the Final TMDL will “substantially improve, if not achieve” water quality — implicitly acknowledges a failure to determine whether the Final TMDL will actually achieve these standards, while the second merely expresses optimism that the Final TMDL will make the Anacostia “more desirable” for recreational and aesthetic uses. But the CWA and its implementing regulations demand more than imprecise guesses and hopeful utterances; they require that pollutant load limits be set at levels
necessary
“to implement,” or “to attain and maintain,” water quality standards. 33 U.S.C. § 1313(d)(1)(C); 40 C.F.R. § 130.7.
22
Nor can EPA find shelter in explanations provided separately by the District or Maryland — none exist. The only reference to recreational and aesthetic water quality standards made by either jurisdiction is located in their responses to comments concerning the draft TMDL, in which the District and Maryland express their “belie[f| that the 85% reductions of sediment loads called for in the TMDL will significantly improve the water quality and make the river certainly more desirable for other uses such as primary and secondary contact recreation.” DC/MD Cmt. Response at 16. This statement, however, constitutes the same non-committal posturing that EPA adopts. And just as with the Agency’s Decision Rationale, this response points to no evidence or scientific basis to support the proposition that an 85% reduction is sufficient to protect the recreational and aesthetic uses of the Anacostia. The Final TMDL, for its part, adds absolutely nothing to this discussion. Faced with reasonable concerns expressed by plaintiffs and others, the District’s and Maryland’s dismissal of such objections in favor of an unsupported “belief’ is precisely the sort of “high-handed and conclusory” response the D.C. Circuit has regularly rejected.
Chem. Mfrs. Ass’n,
In light of the Decision Rationale’s obvious shortcomings, EPA pleads for judicial deference and repeatedly points to the complexity and depth of the modeling process to defend its approval of the Final TMDL. The Court does not question the conclusion of those models, which is that the proposed load limits will lead to an 85% reduction in sediment and TSS pollution. But the issue is not the factual matter of whether the Final TMDL will lead to such a reduction — a conclusion to which the Court defers to EPA’s finding — but the evaluative question of whether an 85% reduction
will protect the applicable designated uses.
The models, however numerous or complicated, only address the former. This can be seen in EPA’s Decision Rationale, which goes to great lengths beyond the models to explain why the 85% reduction will lead to at least .8 Secchi depth throughout the Anacostia River, DR at 13-21, why .8 Sec-chi depth will lead to increased SAV growth,
id.
at 21-24, and why increased SAV growth will implement the designated uses for the Anacostia related to the protection and support of plant and animal life.
Id.
at 21-22. At the same time, neither the Final TMDL nor the Decision Rationale bothers to explain why the 85% reduction will lead to similar attainment of narrative or numerical water quality criteria related to recreational or aesthetic uses. Under the CWA, it is the District’s, Maryland’s, and EPA’s responsibility to
Assuming momentarily, however, that EPA’s educated guess in its Decision Rationale was in fact a genuine determination that an 85% reduction in sediment and TSS pollution would satisfy all applicable water quality standards, that conclusion lacks any support in the record and is therefore entirely inadequate.
23
Though presenting substantial argument, EPA’s briefing points to “no findings and no analysis to justify” a conclusion that the load limits on sediment and TSS pollution set by the Final TMDL will attain and maintain water quality at a level necessary to protect recreational or aesthetic uses of the Anacostia.
Motor Veh. Mfrs.,
Finally, in their response to plaintiffs’ comments to the draft TMDL, the District and Maryland indicate that they “will continue to monitor the water quality” and if “it is determined ... that additional reductions are necessary to attain uses such as primary (swimming) and secondary contact recreation (boating), then the TMDL can be revised.” DC/MD Cmt. Response at 16. And in approving the Final TMDL, EPA explains that it “agrees with the plan of Maryland and the District to perform post-TMDL monitoring and take additional steps, as necessary, to address any additional concerns.” DR at 3. Though published EPA guidance indicates that a State may choose to implement a TMDL through an “adaptive” or “iterative” process, that guidance is clear that such an approach is only appropriate where “each new phase utilizes new information to reevaluate the original TMDL.” Environmental Protection Agency, Memorandum: Clarification Regarding “Phased” Total Maximum Daily Loads 4, Aug. 2, 2006, Ex. 7 to EPA Cross-Mtn., Sep. 18, 2009 [27-7] (emphasis added). While a TMDL may (and perhaps should) acknowledge the possibility of future revision upon discovery of new data, the Agency’s guidance is not a license to create a first-generation TMDL that is not intended “to attain and maintain the applicable water quality standard,” as required. Id. at 3. EPA concedes as much. See EPA Cross-Mtn. at 19 n. 10 (“TMDLs must be calculated to meet water quality standards given EPA’s current understanding of the data, but the possibility of revising the TMDL may be part of an implementation strategy.”). Here, the “iterative” approach in the Final TMDL is not compensating for a lack of data or uncertainty in the models, but is masking the absence of any determination as to whether the proposed load levels will protect recreational and aesthetic uses of the Anaeostia. The Court will not countenance the substitution of a promise to “get to it, eventually” for the statutory requirement that the Final TMDL include load levels “necessary to implement” all water quality standards. 33 U.S.C. § 1313(d)(1)(C).
Under the CWA and applicable regulations, States must develop TMDLs to achieve all applicable water quality standards, and EPA may only approve those TMDLs that it determines are up to this task. In approving the Final TMDL for sediment and TSS pollution in the Anaeostia, however, EPA merely expresses its hope that the proposed reductions will do the trick. And even if the Court were to treat the Agency’s optimism as a genuine conclusion, the Decision Rationale provides no basis in evidence or reasoned judgment to support such a finding. This is not enough. The Court is reminded of the Supreme Court’s venerated observation: “Our recognition of Congress’ need to vest administrative. agencies with ample power to assist in the difficult task of governing a vast and complex industrial Nation carries with it the correlative responsibility of the agency to explain the rationale and factual basis for its decision, even though we show respect for the agency’s judgment in both.”
Bowen,
b. EPA Reasonably Concluded that Periodic Violations of Water Quality Standards are Permissible
According to plaintiffs, the EPA-approved Final TMDL includes maximum
The CWA does not specify a particular time period during which a TMDL must prevent violations of applicable water quality standards. While plaintiffs point to the opinion in
Friends II,
the D.C. Circuit held only that a TMDL must include daily
load limits,
and did so in express reliance on the statutory requirement to develop a “total maximum daily load.”
The first stop for evidence of an EPA interpretation — the Agency’s regulations— does not shed any light on this issue. Relevant regulations define water quality standards as “[pjrovisions of State or Federal law which consist of a designated use or uses for the waters of the United States
Turning elsewhere, the Agency appears to have resolved this issue through published memoranda. In its 2006 Guidance, EPA explained that when evaluating whether a particular water quality standard is satisfied, a State should rely upon the language of the underlying standard. 2006 Guidance at 39-40. For example, if a water quality criterion requires that a particular pollutant should not exceed a specified level more than ten percent of the time, a TMDL that sets load limits that effectively prevent pollutant levels from exceeding the stated maximum in more than 10% of measurements is sufficient.
Id.
at 39. Along these same lines, where the criterion in question is expressed through a particular timeframe — such as daily or seasonal averages — then the TMDL must set load levels that ensure daily or seasonal compliance.
Id.
at 40. Plaintiffs’ alternative interpretation— which would demand that a TMDL meet a criterion expressed as a monthly average under State law
every single day
— not only unreasonably transforms a monthly average into a daily maximum, but also erodes the discretion explicitly granted to the States by the CWA to determine whether their water quality standards should be expressed as daily, weekly, monthly, seasonal, or annual máximums or averages. By contrast, tying the TMDL’s requirements to the period set forth in a State’s water quality standard is consistent with the CWA, its implementing regulations, and common sense. The Court will therefore defer to EPA’s interpretation of the CWA’s instruction to develop TMDLs to implement “applicable water quality standards,” 33 U.S.C. § 1313(d)(1)(C), as requiring daily pollutant loads that will meet water quality standards in whatever timeframe applies to those standards under state law.
See Bluewater Network,
In this case, the most stringent water quality criteria considered by EPA is the District’s .8 meter Secchi depth criterion. DR at 23. And under applicable DC law, that criterion must be met on a “seasonal segment average.” D.C. Mun. Regs. tit. 21 § 1104.8. In reliance on this “seasonal” criterion, the District and Maryland observed — in their responses to the objections to the draft TMDL — that “the range of daily loads must
generally
meet standards from day to day, because they must, over the course of a given growing season and year,
also
meet the seasonal and annual loading caps determined to protect water clarity in the long term.” DC/MD Cmt. Response at 17. And in response to
The daily loads, when considered as an average over the growing season, are shown to meet the District’s seasonal water clarity criterion. Because of the variability of storm loads, some daily loads during the dry weather conditions may be close to, if not, zero, while at other times, during extreme wet weather, the loadings will be quite high. On a daily basis these variable loads might exceed loadings necessary to achieve a certain Secchi depth measurement for that day. However, the applicable criterion is not applied on a daily basis but rather on a seasonal basis. Therefore, the potential periodic daily high excursions of the water clarity criteria are not relevant to determining whether the TMDL’s allocations are set at a level necessary to implement the applicable water quality standards expressed as a seasonal average.
DR at 5;
see also id.
at 23-24 (“[Cjompliance with applicable water quality criterion is not evaluated on a daily basis but rather on a seasonal basis. Therefore, the potential for infrequent, periodic high daily sediment loadings does not mean that these TMDLs have not been set a level necessary to attain and maintain the applicable water quality criteria expressed as a seasonal average.”). To conclude that the Final TMDL will attain .8 meters Secchi depth on a seasonal basis, EPA relies on historical measurements of water flow in the Anacostia over a three-year period from 1995 to 1997 — which included a dry year, a wet year, and an average year — to model predicted sediment and TSS levels under the proposed load limits.
Id.
at 32-34. This process of modeling water and contaminant flows, which is an established method for predicting effective loads,
Chem. Mfrs. Ass’n,
c. EPA Properly Relied on the Secchi Depth Criterion in Approving the Final TMDL for Aquatic Life
Plaintiffs’ final objection concerning EPA’s approval of load levels in the Final TMDL is the Agency’s exclusive reliance on Secchi depth criteria. Under both DC and Maryland law, water quality criteria tied to the protection of aquatic life are
In response to this criticism, which was raised in plaintiffs’ comments to the draft TMDL, the District and Maryland put forth the results of an EPA study from 1995 to 2002 on the relationship between Secchi depth and NTUs. DC/MD Cmt. Response at 17. The study plots the level of measured NTUs in the water against the measured Secchi depth, and the resulting graph shows that where Secchi depth was at least .8 meters- — the criterion relied upon in the Final TMDL — the level of sediment and TSS in that water was never measured above 20 NTUs. Id 32 Relying on this study, the Final TMDL notes that NTUs are “the inverse of Secchi depth,” and thus concludes that achieving a Secchi depth of .8 meters will effectively satisfy the most stringent NTU criterion of 20. Final TMDL at 14. EPA in turn determines that the District’s and Maryland’s reliance on the Agency’s prior study of the correlation between Secchi depth and NTUs is reasonable and finds that “turbidity will remain under 20 NTU on a long-term basis if the Secchi depth remains at or above the criteria of .8 meters.” DR at 4.
EPA’s choice to focus solely on Secchi depth criteria is a permissible exercise of the Agency’s discretion under the CWA. The D.C. Circuit has made clear that the use of a surrogate criterion is permissible where “it is reasonable to do so,”
Sierra Club v. EPA,
B. Waste Load Allocations for Municipal Sewer Systems
Moving beyond questions concerning the viability of pollutant load limits in the Final TMDL, the Court next turns to the manner in which the total maximum daily discharge is allocated among the various sources of pollution throughout the watershed. A core requirement of any TMDL is to divide sources of contamination along the water body by specifying load allocations, or LAs, to predict inflows of pollution from particular non-point sources; and to then setting wasteload allocations, or WLAs, to allocate daily caps
First, the CWA itself does not mandate that a TMDL include individual WLAs; rather, the WLA requirement is a creature of EPA regulation. And while the Agency’s regulations instruct that a WLA should be assigned to “one of [the water body’s] existing or future point sources of pollution,” 40 C.F.R. § 130.2(h), such that the total TMDL is made up of, among other things, the aggregate of all “individual WLAs for point sources,”
id.
§ 130.2(i), the Agency has never interpreted these regulatory statements to require development of WLAs that are broken down and allocated to each individual discharge point throughout an entire MS4. An agency’s interpretation of its own regulations is entitled to substantial deference,
Auer v. Robbins,
Second, with respect to WLAs for MS4 jurisdictions, EPA’s interpretation permitting system-wide WLAs is consistent with, and in furtherance of, the goals implicit in the Agency’s regulations concerning point sources. Total pollutant loads established by a TMDL are incorporated into the NPDES permit system, which is a key step in the enforcement of those load limits. Absent specification of WLAs for individual point sources in the TMDL, therefore, the task of breaking down the total pollutant load — represented by a single number — into individual allocations is effectively delegated to NPDES permit writers. To the extent multiple permit writers oversee a single water body, such delegation risks either failure to implement the TMDL through overly-generous individual allocations that, in the aggregate, exceed total load limits, or over-enforcement of the TMDL through the setting of unnecessarily harsh individual allocations developed out of fear of under-enforcement. To minimize these risks, EPA reasonably de
The use of MS4 WLAs is consistent with EPA’s motivation for requiring WLAs because, unlike other individual point sources in a particular area, a MS4 is regulated by a single entity that receives a single NPDES permit. 33 U.S.C. § 1342(p)(3)(B)(i);
see also id.
§ 1342(q). And even though a MS4 contains multiple outflows that can contribute contaminants to the water body, a single entity is responsible for monitoring and controlling all such discharges. Thus, through the permitting process EPA can effectively impose on each MS4 permit-recipient the burden of sub-allocating discharges throughout the MS4 to individual point sources, lest the entire system be found in violation of its NPDES permit. And EPA’s choice to allocate WLAs in such a manner is consistent with one of the foundational principles of the CWA, which is that the burdens of cleaning up the Nation’s waters is one to be shared among federal, state, and local authorities.
Friends I,
Plaintiffs protest, however, that setting WLAs on a jurisdiction-wide basis will make it nearly impossible to monitor for compliance with NPDES permits and the Final TMDL. Ps’ Mtn. at 19-20. According to plaintiffs’ expert, without well-defined WLAs for each individual point source in a MS4, it will be “hard or impossible to do actual real-time monitoring.” Sulkin Memo at 4-5. As an initial matter, the Court does not see why this is so. If a single entity controls all of the outflows in a particular MS4 jurisdiction — as is the case here — that entity is surely capable of monitoring sediment and TSS discharges from each point source and then aggregating those outputs to ensure that total outflows remain below the system-wide maximum set forth in the WLA and subsequent NPDES permit. And to the extent plaintiffs rely on a hypothetical collective action problem, this concern is effectively nullified by the fact that the MS4s are overseen by individual entities. In a scenario where five different polluters are subject to a single WLA, each polluter might have little incentive to limit its own outflows because — as long as the outflows from its single point source does not exceed the full WLA — it could not be found in violation of the TMDL. Where every point source in a MS4 is controlled by a single entity, however, there is a single permit-holder that is accountable across the jurisdiction. Thus if WASA were to allow each point source in its MS4 to discharge the full WLA, it could not blame another point source within that jurisdiction for the violation, as WASA also controls that point source.
Finally, in recognition of EPA’s adopted approach to MS4s, Congress amended the CWA to authorize the issuance of NPDES permits for MS4s “on a system- or jurisdiction-wide basis,” 33 U.S.C. § 1342(p)(3)(B)(i), and to require NPDES permits that conform to the strictures of the Combined Sewer Overflow Control Policy, which was promulgated by EPA in 1994 and also provides for system-wide MS4 permits.
Id.
§ 1342(q)(1). In light of these amendments, EPA published guidance explaining “that the available data and information usually are not detailed enough to determine waste load allocations for NPDES-regulated storm water discharges on an outfall-specific basis.” EPA, Memorandum: Establishing Total Maximum Daily Load (TMDL) Wasteload
Consistent with EPA’s guidance, the District and Maryland previously explained, with respect to sediment and TSS pollution throughout the Anacostia, that
[t]here is insufficient monitoring data available to break down the allocations by sub-basin. It will require additional time and financial resources to collect such information, which perhaps may not be cost-effective for refining implementation plans. As more data are collected in the future, TMDL implementation plans can be developed to effectively target various specific sources with appropriate sediment reduction goals.
DC/MD Cmt. Response at 3. In reliance on this lack of sufficient information, the District and Maryland developed system-wide WLAs for MS4s that “follow[ ] EPA guidance,” noting that the countervailing “proposition that assigning allocations to many hundreds, possibly thousands, of MS4 outfalls would be an effective means of achieving the goals of a TMDL is extremely questionable.” Id. at 19-20. The Court finds no fault with this practical decision, and — in conjunction with Congress’ amendments to the CWA, subsequent EPA guidance, and the practical and scientific limitations present — holds that EPA properly exercised its discretion in approving system-wide WLAs for MS4s in the Final TMDL. In this matter, the Court concurs with Judge Urbina: “Because EPA’s allocation of wasteloads to categories of sources does not deviate from the purpose of the regulation and is implicitly countenanced by other sections of the CWA, EPA has not acted improperly.”
Friends I,
C. Margin of Safety in the Final TMDL
Plaintiffs’ last challenge to EPA’s approval of the Final TMDL turns on the adequacy of the margin of safety incorporated into the relevant models to calculate maximum load levels for sediment and TSS pollution. Under the CWA, any TMDL must provide “a margin of safety which takes into account any lack of knowledge concerning the relationship between effluent limitations and water quality.” 33 U.S.C. § 1313(d)(1)(C). In this instance, the margin of safety in the Final TMDL “is implicit and not specific as a separate term,” Final TMDL at 37, and is constructed using “several implicit conservative assumptions used in the modeling framework.”
Id.
at 38. According to the Final TMDL, these assumptions include underestimating predicted Secchi depths, not incorporating the process of “sediment aging” — the inclusion of which “would have led to greater improvements in water clarity” as predicted by the model — discounting the effects of SAV growth in trapping suspended material and thus reducing the sediments and TSS in the water body, and using maximum — rather than average— discharges from municipal and industrial
EPA’s review of the assumptions incorporated into the Final TMDL was undertaken in light of its own “guidance suggesting] two approaches to satisfy the [margin of safety] requirement,” one of which is to use “conservative modeling assumptions to develop the TMDL and its allocations” DR at 32, and the Agency expresses “confidence in the ealibrated/validated modeling foundation serving as the basis for the TMDL calculations.” Id. And in reviewing the particular assumptions, EPA concludes that the use of the years Í995-97 incorporates then-existing conditions along the Anacostia, which are worse than today’s conditions, and thus underestimates Secchi depths that will result from implementation of the Final TMDL. Id. The Agency also finds that the model’s exclusion of the effects of sediment aging and SAV growth on total sediments and TSS in the water causes “the model [to] under-predict[ ] water clarity” resulting from the proposed maximum loads. Id. at 32-33. Finally, EPA concurs that using point sources’ maximum outputs in the model — rather than their average outputs — also overestimates the total amount of sediment and TSS pollution actually in the Anacostia, leading to modeled results that are poorer than in reality. Id. at 33. Based on this review, EPA concludes that “the proposed TMDLs meet the requirement to include a margin of safety.” Id.
The Court finds no fault with EPA’s decision to approve an implicit margin of safety developed through conservative modeling assumptions. The CWA mandates only the
existence
of a margin of safety — it does not dictate any particular manner in which that margin is to be incorporated into the TMDL, nor does it require a margin of safety that is “quantifiable,” as plaintiffs insist. Plaintiffs cannot point to any statutory or regulatory provision prohibiting reliance on an implicit margin of safety. In light of the dearth of specific guidance in either the CWA or its implementing regulations, EPA has promulgated an agency -memorandum that explicitly approves of the use of implicit margins of safety. EPA, Protocol for Developing Sediment TMDLs, Oct. 1999,
available at
www.epa.gov/owow/tmdl/ sediment/pdf/sediment.pdf. Absent contrary statutory requirements, the Court will defer to the Agency’s determinations concerning methods for incorporating appropriate margins of safety into a TMDL.
See Friends I,
Nor does the absence of specific, quantifiable data with respect to the margin of safety in the Final TMDL raise any alarms. As the Second Circuit has observed in similar circumstances, “simply to reject EPA’s efforts to implement the CWA because it must respond to real water quality problems without the guidance of a rigorously precise methodology would essentially nullify the exercise of agency discretion.”
Muszynski,
V. CONCLUSION
The Court is not enamored with the prospect of causing further delay in the implementation of a sediment/TSS TMDL that is already more than thirty years late to the party. At the same time, the Court is not eager to take lightly its constitutional and statutory obligations to review the actions of EPA, as well as the District and Maryland, particularly when these parties’ deliberate indifference was largely responsible for the extensive hold-up. The CWA was enacted in light of severe threats to the Nation’s navigable waters, and it was intended to spur immediate action by both federal and state authorities. Yes despite the Act’s command that States identify and develop TMDLs for implemented waters, the District and EPA spent 20 years ignoring these obligations and fighting attempts to compel them to act. Then, despite the Act’s unmistakable requirement to develop a total maximum daily load for each pollutant, EPA and the District spent the next 7 years insisting that they need only develop annual loads. And now, despite the Act’s clear instruction that each TMDL set levels necessary to implement all applicable water quality standards, EPA and the District — now joined by Maryland — have spent the last 4 years arguing that they need only pay attention to some of those standards. The Court will not countenance such conduct, and therefore grants plaintiffs’ motion for summary judgment based on its conclusion that EPA acted arbitrarily and capriciously, in violation of the APA and the CWA, by approving a sediment/TSS TMDL that ignored the effects of sediment and TSS pollution on recreational and aesthetic uses of the Anacostia River.
A separate Order and Judgment shall issue this date.
Notes
. For purposes of the CWA, the District is considered a State. 33 U.S.C. § 1362(3).
. Uses are “designated” because all potential uses of a water body must be considered "whether or not they are being attained” at the time the State determines which particular uses are deemed applicable to each individual water body. 40 C.F.R. § 131.3(f).
. NTUs and Secchi depth are discussed in greater detail below. See infra Sections IV. A.l & IV.A.2.C.
. MS4s are the sewer and storm drainage systems for major urban areas. “Although MS4s transport non-point sources of pollutants in stormwater, they are legally catego
. The Final TMDL became effective upon EPA’s approval, rendering the former TMDL ineffective. The prior suit concerning that TMDL was then dismissed as moot. Order,
Friends I,
No. 04 Civ. 92,
. Challenges to most EPA actions under the CWA are taken directly to the D.C. Circuit.
See
33 U.S.C. § 1369(b)(1) (providing that review of Administrator’s actions under enumerated sections of CWA "may be had by any interested person in the Circuit Court of Appeals of the United States”). A TMDL, however, is promulgated under § 1313 of the Act, which is not one of the enumerated provisions in § 1369. Jurisdiction thus properly lies with this Court.
See Friends of the Earth v. EPA,
. Specifically, the Municipal Intervenors include The National Association of Clean Water Agencies, the Wet Weather Partnership, the Maryland Association of Municipal Waste-water Agencies, the Virginia Association of Municipal Wastewater Agencies, the Virginia Municipal Stormwater Association, the Storm Water Association of Maryland, and the West Virginia Municipal Water Quality Association.
. This case was later transferred by consent from Judge Roberts to Chief Judge Lamberth this past May. Reassignment of Civil Case, May 5, 2011 [43].
. For example, when listing designated uses for the Anaeostia under state law, the Final TMDL observes only that “DC has classified the Anaeostia for current and designated uses including category Class C.” Final TMDL at 22 (emphasis added). The Final TMDL does not, however, specify that the District has also classified the Anaeostia for Class A and Class B designated uses related to recreational and aesthetic enjoyment.
. Both the Maryland and DC 303(d) lists are submitted as part of an integrated reporting option that permits a State to merge a 303(d) list with information provided as required under § 305(b) of the Act. 40 C.F.R. § 130.8(b)(2). This distinction is important: placement of a water body on the 303(d) list— not any information included in a 305(b) report — is what triggers a State’s duty to develop a TMDL to ensure compliance with applicable water quality standards.
Bravos v. Green,
. This same confusion can be seen in WASA's own briefing, which describes a "mandate that a water body first be listed as impaired ... before the states and EPA are required to establish a TMDL,” WASA CrossMtn. at 12 (emphasis added), and then immediately thereafter conflates that statutory requirement to identify waters with the issue of whether a particular use has been listed as impaired. Id. at 13.
. WASA attempts to distinguish
PUD No. 1,
arguing that the opinion "stands for the proposition that the States can look beyond the adopted water quality criteria when imposing conditions to protect designations that may be impacted because the criteria may not always encompass all the foreseeable impacts from a project or activity." WASA Cross-Mtn. at 15. This reading is too narrow. The Supreme Court in
PUD No. 1
interpreted the meaning of “water quality standard” under § 1313(d), and concluded that the term encompasses all water quality criteria and designated uses.
. EPA regulations define "water quality limited segment” as any portion of a water body "where it is known that water quality does not meet applicable water quality standards, and/or is not expected to meet applicable water quality standards, even after the application of the technology-based effluent limitations.” 40 C.F.R. § 130.2(j). To spare the
. Notably, EPA does not express any hint of agreement with WASA’s reading of its regulations. The Court observes this fact not to suggest, as plaintiffs urge, that EPA’s abstention requires the Court to ignore the argument, but simply to emphasize that EPA does not appear to defend 40 C.F.R. § 130.7 as an interpretation that permits States to ignore
all
designated uses and focus
only
on those listed as impaired by a particular pollutant in the State's 303(d) list when developing a TMDL. And while such an interpretation by EPA might be entitled to deference if the Court were to conclude that § 303(d) of the CWA is ambiguous — which it does not — WASA's parsing of isolated regulatory language is not similarly privileged.
See Nat’l Mining Ass’n v. Fowler,
. A related point is worth making. Even if WASA was correct that the phrase “narrative and numeric WQSs” permits a State to ignore designated uses when developing a TMDL — a conclusion with which the Court does not concur — the fact remains that narrative and numeric water quality criteria are linked to specific designated uses. Supra. WASA points to no language in either the CWA or its implementing regulations — because there is none — that would permit a State to ignore certain water quality criteria. Thus, even if § 130.7(c)(1) permits the District and Maryland to ignore recreational and aesthetic uses when developing the sediment/TSS TMDL for the Anacostia, under no circumstances would that interpretation also permit them to ignore the narrative and numeric water quality criteria tied to those uses under state law.
. Indeed, throughout its briefing before the Court, WASA is consistently careful to state only that recreational and aesthetic uses are not listed as impaired because of sediment and TSS pollution, and not to address whether DC and Maryland have determined that recreational and aesthetic uses of Anaeostia are not actually impaired by such contamination.
. Moreover, the term "designated uses” does not even appear in the clause referencing the priority ranking. Municipal Intervenors' argument thus reads additional language into the text, as the Court would need to read this provision as requiring, for the waters listed and in accordance with the priority ranking of designated uses, a TMDL. The Court dedines to follow Municipal Intervenors down this path.
. As with the separate position advanced by WASA concerning the relationship between 303(d) lists and TMDLs, EPA does not appear to join Municipal Intervenors' prioritization argument.
. Municipal Intervenors present a hypothetical in which "a water is impaired for copper
. Because the District's Secchi depth criterion is more stringent than the depth adopted by Maryland, the Final TMDL uses the District’s chosen depth as the target criterion when developing maximum loads throughout the watershed. See Final TMDL at 22 (“Analyses done for this TMDL show that sediment load reductions required to meet the District’s water clarity criterion for DC tidal waters are significantly larger than load reductions required to meet MD’s water quality standards for sediment related to aquatic life in the Anacostia watershed.... DC's water clarity criterion for tidal waters is [therefore] the standard that will determine the TMDL load reductions.’’).
. Nor can EPA rely on the Final TMDL itself, as that document repeatedly fails to address several aspects of applicable water quality standards. For example, the Final TMDL (1) only mentions Class C designations under DC law, (2) fails to discuss or evaluate certain numeric water quality criteria applicable under both Maryland and DC law, and (3) specifies only “protection of aquatic life” as the applicable narrative criteria under DC law, without mentioning other narrative criteria related to other designated uses as set forth in DC law.
. The Court does not intend to suggest that EPA is required to reach scientific certainty and is not entitled to make expert judgments with respect to unresolvable issues. This is not a case, however, where the Agency diligently reviewed the relevant evidence and—
. Courts "do not generally give credence to ... post hoc rationalizations” for agency action, but instead "consider only the regulatory rationale offered by the agency” at the time of such action.
Gerber v. Norton,
. This is where the Court parts ways with Judge Urbina. In
Friends I,
the district court noted that "[w]here a subjective water quality criteria such as ‘objectionable turbidity’ has not been translated into a numeric pollution-concentration endpoint, no frame of reference exists against which to compare evidence," and thus concluded that "one cannot say that a 77% reduction will not result in the elimination of objectionable turbidity for recreational and aesthetic use.”
. In its reply brief, EPA argues that "[t]he modeling described in the TMDL Report and the Approval Decision is evidence of detailed analysis to ensure that the Anacostia TSS TMDL would meet the District’s and Maryland’s numeric criteria for water clarity.” EPA Reply at 8. The pages of both the Final TMDL and Decision Rationale that the Agency references, however, discuss only numeric criteria for the protection of SAV and aquatic life, and do not mention criteria for recreational or aesthetic uses. See Final TMDL at 33 (discussing analyses necessary to determine "the maximum average annual sediment load required to support the designated uses related to aquatic life”); Decision Rationale at 17 (specifying "the maximum daily loads of [TSS] necessary to assure that the applicable water quality standard for water clarity of .8 meters Secchi depth will be met”).
. On this point, EPA and the intervenors frequently accuse plaintiffs of questioning the validity of the State standards rather than the effectiveness of the Final TMDL, and insist that such a challenge should have been mounted when the District and Maryland submitted these standards to the Agency for review. This argument misses the mark. Plaintiffs do not challenge the conclusion that .8 meters Secchi depth will be sufficient to protect designated uses related to aquatic life, but instead challenge EPA’s use of Secchi depth criterion as the target for the Final TMDL to ensure protection of all designated uses. Because plaintiffs' contention is that the Final TMDL's reliance solely on this criterion results in a Final TMDL that sets load levels insufficient to achieve all applicable water quality standards — as required, 33 U.S.C. § 1313(d)(1)(C) — the objection is properly lodged at this time.
. EPA does make a finding in the Decision Rationale that the District’s criterion of .8 meters Secchi depth is the most stringent criteria among those it has considered, DR at 22, but the Agency only considered those criteria related to the protection of aquatic life. Id.
. Mr. Sulkin spent a number of years in the Division of Water Pollution Control in Tennessee’s Department of Health and Environment.
. This question is of critical importance when addressing a sedimenl/TSS TMDL, as severe storm conditions causing high-flow events often result in excessive sediment runoff, particularly from non-point sources of pollution that — unlike most discrete point-source flows — cannot be mechanically controlled.
. Nor do the CWA provisions defining water quality standards include any periodic reference. See 33 U.S.C. § 1313(c)(2)(A) (stating that water quality standard "shall consist of the designated uses of the navigable waters involved and the water quality criteria for such waters based upon such uses”).
. The Court pauses to emphasize its earlier holding that EPA improperly fails to consider all relevant water quality criteria when approving the Final TMDL. Thus, while it would be proper to rely on the seasonal Sec-chi depth measure if that was the only applicable criteria, to the extent relevant water quality criteria related to recreational and aesthetic uses incorporate a different time-frame, this holding does not shield the Agency from having to evaluate those alternative periods when revising the sediment/TSS TMDL for the Anacostia. For example, Maryland's numeric water quality criterion for recreational uses is expressed both as a monthly average and as a criterion that may not be exceeded "at any time.'' Md. Code Regs. 26.08.02.08(A)(5)(b) & (B)(1).
. At no point do plaintiffs question the accuracy of this study.
. In response, plaintiffs cite
Central Laborers
for the proposition that EPA’s chosen practice is invalid if the Agency’s methods violate its own regulations.
. Plaintiffs raise two specific objections to these assumptions. First, plaintiffs argue that that the use of daily and weekly máximums in the models — as compared to monthly máximums set by the WLAs — does not create an "obvious” margin of safety. But the answer to this apparent mystery is simple. To account for daily flow variations, a daily maximum is greater than the 7-day average of a weekly maximum, and a weekly maximum is greater than the 4'¿-week average of the monthly maximum. For example, a point source might allocate 5 units of pollution per day, but only 25 per week (rather than 35 based on the daily maximum), and only 100 per month (rather than 150 based on the daily maximum.) If the model uses the 5 units-per-day maximum, it would predict annual pollution of 5*365 = 1825 units per year. Thus, the model calls for load limits necessary to move from 1825 units in annual pollution to a level required to meet applicable water quality standards. The WLAs, however, would only permit 100* 12 = 1200 units per year in actual pollution. Thus, the true conditions of the water would be far better than the modeled conditions, and the resulting reduction— calculated from predicted conditions — would call for a far greater decline in pollution than is necessary to meet water quality standards given actual conditions.
Second, plaintiffs point to an analysis they submitted during the comment period for the draft TMDL that calls into question some of the conclusions of EPA’s prior analysis concerning the correlation between Secchi depth and TSS levels. EPA, however, chose to rely on its own prior research, and the Court will not second-guess the Agency's scientific conclusion on this point.
