OPINION
The Board of Trustees of Painesville Township and representatives of Mayridge Construction Company sued the City of Painesville for alleged violations of the Federal Water Pollution and Control Act (FWPCA), as amended by the Clean Water Act of 1977(CWA), 33 U.S.C. § 1251 et seq. The plаintiffs requested declaratory relief and a mandatory injunction compelling the City to provide them with waste-water treatment service. The City moved to dismiss the plaintiffs’ claims for lack of subject matter jurisdiction pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(1), and for failure to state a claim upon which relief could be granted under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6). The district court granted the City’s motion to dismiss, holding that the Clean Water Act does not authorize persons located within an area рlanned to receive services from a federally-funded waste treatment facility to enforce the terms of the service plan in federal court. In addition, the district court found that, even if the plaintiffs’ claims were authorized under the Act, plаintiffs failed to give notice to the defendant at least 60 days before bringing suit, as required by 33 U.S.C. § 1365, the provision of the Clean Water Act that confers upon citizens a private right of action to enforce certain of the CWA’s substantive provisions.
We must affirm thе district court’s decision dismissing this case because the Supreme Court’s decision in
Middlesex County Sewerage Auth. v. National Sea Clammers Ass’n,
I
In May 1971, the City of Painesville authorized a $2,500,000 bond issue to improve and expand its wastewater treatment facilities. Needing additional funding, the City in 1974 submitted to the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), the agency responsible for administering federal subsidies awarded under the CWA for waste treatment projects, a plan detailing proposed improvements to Painesville’s existing wastewater treatment plant. In 1975, the EPA approved the City’s request for federal financial assistance and agreed to subsidize the cost of improving the *398 City’s wastewater treatment fаcilities pursuant to the City’s proposed service plan. The City’s plan for improving its existing wastewater treatment plant included a reference to “Facilities Plan Service Area P-5,” a geographic region encompassing a significant рortion of Painesville Township as well as land owned by plaintiff May-ridge Construction Company. Although the plan suggests that entities located within Service Area P-5 should have access to the City’s improved wastewater treatment facilities, the City has refused to extend service to the plaintiffs or to any other area outside the City’s boundaries.
Plaintiffs argue that the inclusion of Service Area P-5 in the City’s federal grant application entitles them to use the waste-water facility because the federal grant was conditioned on providing service to Area P-5. The City argues in response that, at the time its grant application was approved, it was under no contractual obligation to provide wastewater treatment service to areas outside the city. In short, the City maintains that referencing Service Area P-5 in its proposal did not obligate it to provide sewer service to the plaintiffs. The district court declined to decide this question because it held that, even if the grant werе conditioned on the provision of service to Area P-5, the Clean Water Act does not grant plaintiffs a private right of action — express or implied— to enforce the grant provisions in federal court. It is similarly unnecessary for us to determine the scope of the defendant’s contractual obligations because the Supreme Court’s decision in Sea Clammers clearly precludes plaintiffs from proceeding with their suit under the CWA.
II
This court reviews
de novo
the propriety of the district court’s dismissal of plaintiffs complaint for lack of subject matter jurisdiction pursuant to Fed. R.Civ.P. 12(b)(1), and for failure to state a claim upon which relief may be granted pursuant to Fed. Rule Civ. P. 12(b)(6).
See Anderson v. Liberty Lobby Inc.,
Wе must also recognize that the plaintiffs’ burden of proving federal question jurisdiction in an effort to defeat the defendant’s Rule 12(b)(1) motion is “not onerous.”
Musson,
Section 1365 is the Clean Water Act’s citizen suit provision and is the sole avenue оf relief for private litigants seeking to enforce certain enumerated portions of the statute. See 33 U.S.C. § 1365 (1994). Section 1365 permits private citizens to enforce specified provisions of the CWA by conferring upon them the right to sue parties alleged to be in violation of “(A) an effluent standard or limitation” or “(B) an order issued by the Administrator or a State with respect to such a standard or limitation.” 33 U.S.C. § 1365(a); see also id. at § 1365(f) (defining “effluent standard or limitation” as used in subsection (a)). Plaintiffs concede that their claims regarding thе City’s contractual obligations to the EPA fall outside the scope of §' 1365, but contend that this court has general jurisdiction over their claims pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1331 because they seek relief against the City not under the substantive provisions enumerated in § 1365, but under §§ 1255, 1282 and 1284 — the provisions that govern the administration of grants under the CWA.
To establish federal question jurisdiction under § 1331, “a plaintiffs well-pleaded complaint must raise an issue ‘arising under’ the laws of the United States; the presence of a federal question defense is inadequate.”
Musson,
In view of these elaborate enforcement provisions it cannot be assumed that Congress intended to authorize by implication additional judicial remedies for private citizens suing under [the Clean Water Act]. As we stated in Transameyica Mortgage Advisors, Inc. v. Lewis,444 U.S. 11 , 19,100 S.Ct. 242 ,62 L.Ed.2d 146 (1979), “it is an elemental canon of statutory construction that where a statute expressly provides a particular remedy or remedies, a court must be chary of reading others into it.”
Sea Clammers,
As the Supreme Court made clear in
Sea Clammers,
the CWA’s legislative history and elaborаte enforcement provisions preclude lower federal courts from recognizing an implied private right of action under provisions other than § 1365.
See id.
at 15,
As we observed in
Musson,
“it is not the role of federal courts to articulate federal interests — but to enforce the federal interests identified by Congress.”
Id.
at 1250.
1
In
Walls,
this cоurt dismissed for lack of subject matter jurisdiction all elements of the plaintiffs’ complaint that were premised on the existence of an implied private right of action for damages under the CWA.
See Walls,
Ill
In
Walls,
a panel of this court dismissed two counts of the plaintiffs’ complaint, which were authorized under § 1365, because plaintiffs failed to comply with the statutory notice requirement, which this court has long recognized as a jurisdictional prerequisite to maintaining a cause of action under the Act.
See Walls,
No action may be commenced [under the citizen suit provision] ... prior to sixty days after the plaintiff has given notice of the alleged violation (i) to the Administrator, (ii) to the State in which the alleged violation occurs, and (iii) to any alleged violator of the standard, limitation or order....
Plaintiffs never gave such notice. Plaintiffs argue, however, that their case should not have been dismissed for failure to give notice. The lack of notice, they contend, was precisely because their claims do not fall under § 1365. Because both Supreme Court precedent and the law of this circuit preclude plaintiffs from pursuing a cause of action under any provision of the Clean Water Act other than § 1365, plaintiffs’ only hope of relief would be a suit consistent with the requirements of the citizen suit provision. This circuit has always required plaintiffs to adhere to § 1365’s notice provision because compliance with the notice requirement is a jurisdictional prerequisite to recovery under the statute.
See Hallstrom v. Tillamook County,
IV
Because sections 1255, 1282 and 1284 of the Clean Water Act do not give plaintiffs a substantive right to enforce any contractual obligations of the defendant to the *401 EPA, and because plaintiffs failed to comply with the procedural and substantive requirements of 33 U.S.C. § 1365, we AFFIRM the district court’s order granting the defendant’s motion to dismiss.
Notes
. Conceding that the Supreme Court held that the relevant federal statute did not provide a private righL of action — express or implied— the plaintiff in
Musson
asked this court to recognize a federal common law cause of action against the defendant. In dismissing the plaintiff's federal common law claims, this court characterized the plaintiff's theory as a request to imply a statutory private right of action even though Congress clearly did not intend to create such a right when it enacted the statute governing the plaintiff's case.
Musson,
