Plаintiffs-Appellants, a group of neighbors in East Genoa, New York (“Appellants”), appeal the decision of the United States District Court for the Northern District of New York (Scullin,
J.)
granting Defendants-Appellеes Willet Dairy and its owners Scott and Dennis Eldred (collectively “Willet Dairy”) summary judgment on all of Appellants’ claims.
Coon v. Willet Dairy,
LP, Nos. 5:02-cv-1195, 5:04-cv-917,
First, Appellants contend that Willet Dairy violated the CWA by operating as a Concentrated Animal Feeding Operation (“CAFO”) without a permit before July 1999. Aрpellants, however, failed to raise this claim properly before the District Court, and therefore we deem it waived.
See Medforms, Inc. v. Healthcare Mgmt. Solutions, Inc.,
Second, the District Court correctly found that Willеt Dairy was shielded by its “permit shield” from citizen suits for violations between July 1999 and December 2006.
Coon,
There is no indication, as Appellants contend, that there were any permit requirements for which a citizen could bring suit before the date Willet Dairy had to be in full compliance with its permit. 1 Furthеr, though Appellants correctly note that Willet Dairy was supposed to be on a schedule toward compliance, they do not offer particular evidence showing how Wil-let Dairy failed to meet any specific deadlines. Finally, the permit provides that the DEC has the authority to monitor and sanction Willet Dairy before its compliance deadline. 2
Because the DEC’S renewed general permit clearly extends the compliance deadline for large CAFO’s, such as Willet Dairy, until December 2006, we also reject Appellants’ claim that Willet Dairy had to be in full compliаnce by July 2004. 3
Lastly, we turn to Appellants’ contention that Willet Dairy nеeded a permit before it diverted Schaeffer Brook to create a stock pond, which allegedly caused harm to ponds and streams on Appellants’ properties. This is a new issuе for our Circuit and thus we write to clarify our position.
Before diverting a stream, the CWA generally requires that a party obtain a permit from the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (“the Corps”), which administers the section of the CWA that governs discharges of dredged or fill material. See 33 U.S.C. §§ 1344(a),(d). In December 1999, Willet Dairy diverted the upstream reach of the Schaeffer Brook without contacting the Corps. After complaints abоut the diversion, Willet Dairy sought a jurisdie-tional determination from the Corps on whether it needed a permit. The Corps then inspected, and its answer was no.
The Corps’s decision that it did not have jurisdiction оver the pond project stemmed from an exception to Section 1344(a) that allows a party to proceed without a permit if diverting the navigable water is “for the purpose of сonstruction or maintenance of farm or stock ponds.... ” 33 U.S.C. § 1344(f)(1)(C); 33 C.F.R. § 323.4(a)(3). There is an exception to this exemption, however, called the “recapture provision,” which requires a permit if the divеrsion project is for the purpose of bringing an area “into a use to which it was not previously subject.” 33 U.S.C. § 1344(f)(2). Appellants contend that because Willet Dairy was constructing a new pond, it was using the area for a new use, so the activity falls within the recapture provision.
Other courts have, hоwever, interpreted the recapture provision to mean that a party needs a permit only when it is starting a new farming operation, not when it is building a new pond to support an existing farming oрeration.
See Conant v. United States,
Any other reading would makе the statute incoherent. Given that Section 1344(f)(1)(C) provides a permit exemption for the construction of a stock pond, which is by definition new, that section would be rendered meaningless by an interpretation of the recapture provision that required permits for all new uses, including new ponds. Moreover, even if there was ambiguity over the scope of the recapture provisiоn, we would give deference to the agency interpretation that the recapture provision did not apply in this instance.
Cf. Chevron U.S.A., Inc. v. Natural Res. Def. Council, Inc.,
We have carefully considered all of Appellants’ claims, and we find them to be without merit. Accordingly, the judgment of the District Court is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. For example, there is no indication that Willet Dairy had to implement the generic requirements in the DEC general permit immediately.
. We recognizе that limiting citizen suits in this respect can cause serious injury to persons living near environmental dangers if the DEC and other environmental regulatory agencies are unable to monitor and sanction рolluters effectively before compliance deadlines. Given that Willet Dairy had more than seven years before it was required to comply fully with its permit, that means no citizen could have brought a suit over that entire time for CWA violations. Such regulatory agencies may be unable to ensure that polluters are acting in accordance with their compliance schedules, given thе numerous violations likely to occur. Consequently, limiting the ability of “private attorneys general” to bring suit until after compliance deadlines may be inadequate for ensuring the safety of our environmеnt and for protecting citizens from serious injury. But that is the remedy that Congress has provided and to which we are bound.
See Alexander v. Sandoval,
.Appellants argue that the extended compliance deadline does not apply to Willet Dairy because of a provision in the renewed permit stating: "Existing Permits. Unless otherwise notified by the [DEC], coverage under this permit does not suspend, revoke, or modify the provisions of any other permit issued by the Department.” This provision, however, does not apply to the original general permit
. Appellants attempt to distinguish the facts of their case from those of
Carsten,
noting that in
Carsten
the farm dredged a shallow marsh that was already being used as a watering hole to create a pond for its livestock.
In re Carsten,
