Case Information
*1 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA )
DELAWARE RIVERKEEPER )
NETWORK, et al. , )
)
Plaintiffs, )
) v. ) Civil Action No. 16-cv-416 (TSC) )
FEDERAL ENERGY REGULATORY )
COMMISSION, et al. , )
)
Defendants. )
) MEMORANDUM OPINION
The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) is empowered to issue “certificate[s] of public convenience and necessity” allowing entities to transport natural gas and to construct, extend, acquire, or operate natural gas pipelines. 15 U.S.C. § 717f. Plaintiffs, an environmental organization and its executive director, assert that FERC is unable to make unbiased determinations on the issuance of pipeline certificates because of a provision of the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1986 (the Omnibus Act) which requires FERC to recover its annual operating costs directly from the entities it regulates. 42 U.S.C. § 7178. Plaintiffs claim that the Commission’s structure and the resulting actual or perceived bias has deprived them of constitutional Due Process under the Fifth Amendment. The PennEast Pipeline Company intervened as a Defendant, and before the court are both PennEast’s and FERC’s motions to dismiss the Complaint.
For the reasons below, both Defendants’ motions to dismiss will be GRANTED .
I. BACKGROUND
Plaintiff Delaware Riverkeeper Network (DRN) is a non-profit organization established in 1988 to protect and restore the Delaware River and its associated watershed, tributaries, and habitats, reaching parts of New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania, and Delaware. (Compl. ¶ 25). DRN has more than 16,000 members, some of whom own land that has been impacted by pipelines authorized by the Commission in the past, and DRN believes that others own land that will be impacted by future pipelines. ( Id. ¶¶ 35, 48). Plaintiffs allege that “DRN’s members who live within the blast radius of proposed or existing Commission-jurisdictional pipelines are concerned about the increased risk of bodily and/or property harm as a result of pipeline accidents or explosions.” ( Id . ¶ 49).
PennEast applied for a certificate of public convenience and necessity allowing it to build a new natural gas pipeline system in New Jersey and Pennsylvania, and on September 28, 2015, Plaintiffs filed a motion to intervene in the FERC review process opposing the request. ( Id . ¶ 92). Pursuant to FERC regulations, Plaintiffs’ unopposed motion to intervene was granted. ( Id . ¶ 93); 18 C.F.R. § 385.214(c)(1). Plaintiffs brought this suit before completion of the FERC review process, alleging that the review process is itself constitutionally deficient. At the motions hearing on March 3, 2017, counsel for FERC informed the court that FERC has delayed the PennEast project twice to conduct additional environmental reviews, and that as of that date, it had not approved the project or granted a certificate.
FERC certification proceeds in several steps. The first is the “pre-filing process,” in which the applicant must make an initial filing including, among other things, the desired schedule of the project, anticipated application filing date, and desired date of Commission approval; information about zoning; a detailed map and description; a list of state agencies in the *3 project area with permitting requirements, and a description of the applicant’s negotiations with those agencies; a list of other persons and organizations of interest whom the applicant has contacted about the project; a description of any planning work that has already been done; an “acknowledgement” that a complete Environmental Report is required with the application at the time of filing; and a proposed Public Participation Plan for “facilitat[ing] stakeholder communications and public information.” 18 C.F.R. § 157.21.
Once the applicant has applied for the certificate, FERC then determines whether “‘the applicant is able and willing properly to do the acts and to perform the service proposed ... and that the proposed service’ and ‘construction ... is or will be required by the present or future public convenience and necessity.’” Minisink Residents for Envtl. Pres. & Safety v. FERC , 762 F.3d 97, 101 (D.C. Cir. 2014) (quoting 15 U.S.C. § 717f(e)). In deciding whether to approve the application and grant the certificate, FERC conducts an environmental review as required by the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA), 42 U.S.C. §§ 4321–4370h. FERC can approve or deny the application, and can “attach to the issuance of the certificate and to the exercise of the rights granted thereunder such reasonable terms and conditions as the public convenience and necessity may require.” 15 U.S.C. § 717f.
The statutory scheme allows “[a]ny person, State, municipality, or State commission aggrieved by an order issued by the Commission” to “apply for a rehearing within thirty days after the issuance of [an] order,” for example, approving or rejecting construction of a pipeline. 15 U.S.C. § 717r(a). If the Commission does not respond to the request for rehearing within thirty days, it is deemed denied. At that point, a party who is aggrieved can obtain a review in the federal Court of Appeals where the natural gas company is located. Id. Regulations allow “[a]ny person” to file a motion to intervene; if the motion is not opposed within 15 days, the *4 person becomes a party automatically, see 18 U.S.C. § 385.214(a), (c), and is therefore qualified to appeal the denial of rehearing to the appropriate Court of Appeals.
The D.C. Circuit has held that section 717r’s language requiring the Commission to take
action with regard to a rehearing request within 30 days, or have it deemed denied, does not
require FERC to act on the merits.
California Co. v. Fed. Power Comm’n
,
Plaintiffs claim the Commission is unconstitutionally structurally biased because of its funding mechanism, which requires the Commission to recover its budget by charging regulated *5 natural gas companies, see 42 U.S.C. § 7178, [1] because Commissioners may be removed only for cause, and because “the Commission is insulated from Congressional budgetary oversight,” resulting in deprivation of their Fifth Amendment due process rights. They argue that the Commission’s actual bias supports their claim of structural bias, as evidenced by the Commission’s: 100 percent approval rate; failure to enforce the terms and conditions of its certificates; treating requests for rehearing arbitrarily by issuing indefinite tolling orders; never granting a request for rehearing to a non-industry party; never determining that a full Environmental Impact Statement is necessary after completing an Environmental Assessment; failure to ever fund its Office of Public Participation; and “revolving door” through which former Commissioners have gone on to work in industry positions. (Compl. ¶¶ 175–240). Plaintiffs suggest FERC is able to effectuate pro-industry bias through the use of eminent domain and preemption of local and state laws; preventing Plaintiffs from attaining due process. ( Id . ¶¶ 241– 261).
Plaintiffs ask the court to either declare FERC’s reimbursement mechanism to be unconstitutional, or declare the Commission’s power of eminent domain or authority to preempt state and local laws to be unconstitutional. They also ask the court to declare the PennEast certification procedure specifically, along with the procedure the Commission utilized for any project in the Delaware River Basin, to be a violation of due process.
II. LEGAL STANDARD
A. Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(1)
In evaluating a motion to dismiss under Rule 12(b)(1), the court must “assume the truth
of all material factual allegations in the complaint and ‘construe the complaint liberally, granting
*6
plaintiff the benefit of all inferences that can be derived from the facts alleged.’”
Am. Nat’l Ins.
Co. v. FDIC
,
Federal courts are vested with the power of judicial review extending only to “Cases” and
“Controversies.” U.S. Const. art. III, § 2. Courts have, in interpreting this limitation on judicial
power, “developed a series of principles termed ‘justiciability doctrines,’ among which are
standing ripeness, mootness, and the political question doctrine.”
Nat’l Treasury Emps. Union v.
United States
,
Standing requires, at a minimum, that a plaintiff have “suffered an ‘injury in fact,’” that
was or is “actual or imminent, not ‘conjectural’ or ‘hypothetical;’” that there be a causal
relationship between the injury and the basis for the claim; and that it be “‘likely,’ as opposed to
merely ‘speculative,’ that the injury will be ‘redressed by a favorable decision’.”
Lujan v. Defs.
of Wildlife
,
Ripeness also “shares the constitutional requirement of standing that an injury in fact be
certainly impending.”
Nat’l Treasury Emps. Union
B. Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6)
A Rule 12(b)(6) motion to dismiss “tests the legal sufficiency of a complaint.”
Browning v. Clinton
,
III. ANALYSIS
A. Justiciability
i. Standing
Defendants FERC and PennEast contend that Plaintiffs—the Delaware Riverkeeper
Network and its Director—do not have standing to bring this suit. An association may have
standing when it can demonstrate that it meets the elements of standing as an entity, or when “its
members would otherwise have standing to sue in their own right, the interests at stake are
germane to the organization’s purpose, and neither the claim asserted nor the relief requested
requires the participation of individual members in the lawsuit.”
Friends of the Earth, Inc. v.
Laidlaw Envtl. Servs. (TOC), Inc.
,
Plaintiffs’ Complaint states that “DRN is . . . deeply familiar with the impacts to human health, the environment, and property rights as a result of pipeline construction activity.” (Compl. ¶ 39). It indicates that DRN “brings this action on behalf of the organization as part of the pursuit of its organizational mission, and on behalf of its impacted members, the board, and staff.” ( Id . ¶ 41). According to the Complaint, DRN’s director, Maya K. van Rossum, “regularly visits” the Delaware River and “has taken family, friends, DRN members, and other interested people onto the Delaware River and its tributaries to educate them.” ( Id . ¶ 45). The Complaint asserts that “DRN’s members . . . have had their aesthetic, recreational, and property interests harmed as a result of construction and operational activity” of pipelines within the Commission’s jurisdiction. ( Id . ¶ 46). The Complaint alleges that the various pipelines’ impact on DRN members is both past and future, including “damage to real estate,” “encroachment of *9 construction debris upon their homes and property,” “increased risk of bodily and/or property harm as a result of pipeline accidents or explosions,” members’ property being subject to eminent domain proceedings, which in turn “compromise[s]” members’ “bargaining position with pipeline companies for easement agreements,” and aesthetic degradation of public parks affecting members’ recreational interests. ( Id . ¶¶ 48–52). Generally, the Complaint alleges irreparable injury to “members’ aesthetic, conservation, economic, recreational, scientific, educational, wildlife preservation, and property interests.” ( Id. ¶ 54). It also alleges injury in the form of FERC’s “violat[ion] [of] DRN’s right to timely judicial review of Commission certificates.” ( Id. ¶ 53).
FERC argues that Plaintiffs cannot establish standing: while allegations of past injury
cannot be used to attain standing for declaratory or injunctive relief, as Plaintiffs seek, their
claims of future injury are too attenuated and speculative.
See Clapper v. Amnesty Int’l USA
,
Plaintiffs’ opposition clarifies that they do not argue that DRN has standing as an
organization, but rather that they intend to demonstrate only associational standing. They
maintain that they have associational standing because DRN’s members, including director
Rossum (whom Plaintiffs call “the Riverkeeper”), “have suffered a constitutional injury” in the
form of being “subject to a biased decisionmaking process, or the appearance of a biased
process.” (Opp. at 9). Plaintiffs argue that they need not demonstrate a protected liberty or
property interest in order to have standing, because the deprivation of fair process itself
*10
constitutes sufficient injury. Plaintiffs cite a case in which the Seventh Circuit found a church
had experienced constitutional injury in the form of deprivation of due process when a medical
commission with a direct financial stake in the matter presided over a determination of whether
to revert the church’s land title.
United Church of the Med. Ctr. v. Med. Ctr. Comm’n
, 689 F.2d
693 (7th Cir. 1982). Plaintiffs also cite a Sixth Circuit case in which landowners alleged, among
other things, deprivation of due process by a state agency, which plaintiffs claimed was biased in
favor of the state’s interests, and which granted a permit to a waste water treatment facility
impacting their land.
Hammond v. Baldwi
n,
But neither the Sixth nor Seventh Circuit addressed what type of interest has to be at
stake for a biased decision-making process to constitute injury. Both cases made an implicit
assumption that the plaintiffs had a cognizable liberty interest at stake, which they pursued in an
allegedly biased administrative forum. The Supreme Court has explicitly rejected the argument
that a procedural injury alone is sufficient for standing: “deprivation of a procedural right
without some concrete interest that is affected by the deprivation—a procedural right
in vacuo
—
is insufficient to create Article III standing. Only a ‘person who has been accorded a procedural
right to protect
his concrete interests
can assert that right without meeting all the normal
standards for redressability and immediacy.’”
Summers v. Earth Island Inst.
,
Plaintiffs suggest that their status as intervenors in the PennEast proceeding—which required them to demonstrate an “interest which may be directly affected by the outcome of the proceeding,” see 18 C.F.R. § 385.214, is sufficient to establish standing based on procedural *11 injury. But leave to intervene in the FERC proceedings is granted automatically absent opposition, meaning that a person could be granted intervenor status without actually demonstrating any interest that may be affected by the proceeding. While neither FERC nor PennEast objected to the intervention, this court’s jurisdiction requires that the plaintiffs have standing, and jurisdiction is not waivable.
Plaintiffs must, therefore, demonstrate a concrete interest tethered to the alleged deprivation of due process in order to have standing , but the inquiry is not identical to the question of whether they have stated a claim for a procedural due process violation, which requires a protected liberty or property interest. The threshold for the former is lower.
Plaintiffs submitted six declarations from DRN members and van Rossum, describing some past pipeline-related injuries, ( see Farrell Decl.), as well as future likely injuries of the type stated in the Complaint: the upsetting impact of seeing the Delaware River and surrounding area “permanently altered and damaged by the Project” (van Rossum Decl. ¶ 11); negative impact to the use and enjoyment of areas near the pipeline resulting from deforestation, construction, and decreased wildlife (van Rossum Decl. ¶ 13); potential damage to property that sits fifty to a hundred feet from the PennEast proposed pipeline (Rader Decl. ¶¶ 7, 11); potential damage from proximity to a proposed pipeline expansion by Columbia Gas and/or from possible drilling under a DRN member’s property for that project, as well as excessive construction noise (Nelson Decl. ¶¶ 16, 25, 27, 32–22); potential impact on property values and ability to enjoy wildlife (Heindel Decl. ¶¶ 9, 13); and potential adverse impact to commercial hay production and drinking water quality (Kelly-Mackey Decl. ¶¶ 21, 28).
The court finds Plaintiffs have stated sufficiently concrete and imminent injury, tethered
to the alleged procedural due process violation, for the purposes of standing. Plaintiffs have
*12
plausibly alleged the high likelihood of PennEast’s approval for the pipeline project, as well as
the high likelihood that its members will suffer concrete and particularized injuries as a result.
[2]
FERC argues that the alleged potential injuries are too speculative because the pipeline has not
been approved and “may never be,” but FERC’s interpretation of the Supreme Court’s standing
precedent is too narrow. The likelihood of approval is enough.
See City of Los Angeles v. Lyons
,
The other two elements of standing are causation and redressability. Plaintiffs’
Complaint and the declarations submitted with their Opposition plausibly allege causation.
While the past harms described in the declarations do not support injunctive relief, they do
demonstrate that the potential injuries Plaintiffs describe would be “fairly . . . traceable” to the
Commission’s approval of a pipeline project.
Lujan
,
Redressability is a slightly more challenging element, but is “loosen[ed]” in the
procedural due process context, at least where statutory procedural rights are at issue.
See
Summers
,
ii. Ripeness PennEast devotes several pages to arguing that Plaintiffs’ actual bias claim is not ripe. In response, Plaintiffs indicate that they do not intend to bring an actual bias claim regarding the PennEast pipeline approval, but rather to use that pipeline as an “example” of structural bias. PennEast’s concerns about ripeness are not implicated in a structural bias claim.
B. Rule 12(b)(6)
Stating a claim for a procedural due process violation requires a showing that (1) an
official has deprived the plaintiff (2) of liberty or property (3) without “providing appropriate
procedural protections.”
Atherton v. D.C. Office of Mayor
,
i. Deprivation of a liberty or property interest
*15
Plaintiffs conflate the requirements of standing with the requirements of stating a claim
for a procedural due process violation, suggesting that they need not demonstrate deprivation of
a protected liberty or property interest in order to survive the motion to dismiss. But
administrative decision-maker bias is a subset of procedural due process, not an independent area
of law. The Supreme Court addressed the issue of administrative decision-maker bias in
Tumey
v. Ohio
,
Plaintiffs argue that the Pennsylvania Constitution creates and confers a property right in
the environment that is afforded due process protection. Article I, section 27 of the state
constitution reads: “The people have a right to clean air, pure water, and to the preservation of
the natural, scenic, historic and esthetic values of the environment. Pennsylvania’s public natural
resources are the common property of all the people, including generations yet to come. As
trustee of these resources, the Commonwealth shall conserve and maintain them for the benefit
of all the people.” Pa. Const. art. I, § 27. Plaintiffs argue the right to clean air, pure water, and
preservation of the environment is analogous to the right created by the state constitution to a
*16
free public education, which a federal district court found merited due process protection.
See
Mullen v. Thompson
,
Mullen v. Thompson
is not analogous to the case at bar. While free public education is a
right that is specific to an individual, section 27 creates a general, public right. Pennsylvania
courts have affirmed this principle.
See
,
e.g.
,
Payne v. Kassab
,
Plaintiffs also hint at potential impact to real property as a property interest for which they are guaranteed due process. But any actual taking of real property related to a FERC proceeding would occur through the process of eminent domain, which would be a separate proceeding from the issuance of a certificate, and which has generated its own due process jurisprudence. Plaintiffs do not appear to be challenging a lack of due process in the exercise of *17 eminent domain; they appear to challenge the FERC proceedings which sometimes lead to eminent domain, and the real property at stake in potential subsequent eminent domain proceedings does not constitute a protected property interest granting the Plaintiffs additional, pre-eminent domain due process rights during the certificate approval stage.
Neither are aesthetic interests or enjoyment of wildlife “liberty interests” of the type
protected by the Fifth Amendment. Liberty interests that garner such protection include liberty
from actual physical restraint; marriage and reproductive choices, and the right to live in the
United States,
see Kerry v. Din
,
Because Plaintiffs have not identified any liberty or property interest that is cognizable
under the Fifth Amendment’s due process clause, they have failed to state a claim upon which
relief can be granted. The declarations attached to Plaintiffs’ opposition allege some degree of
past property damage caused by FERC-approved pipelines, but those allegations do not allege a
“deprivation” of a protected liberty or property interest within the meaning of the Fifth
Amendment. Negligent conduct on the part of the government does not constitute a Fifth
Amendment deprivation.
Davidson v. Cannon
,
ii. Structural or actual bias Although the court finds that Plaintiffs have failed to state a claim for procedural due process violation based on Plaintiffs’ inability to demonstrate deprivation of a protected liberty or property interest, the court will also address Plaintiffs’ claims of bias.
Plaintiff’s claim of structural bias is that the Budget Act’s provision requiring that FERC recoup its annual operating budget through a proportional charge on the regulated entities means that FERC cannot make unbiased determinations on applications for certificates. FERC argues, and the court agrees, that Plaintiffs have not plausibly pleaded that the funding structure results in bias. Plaintiffs do not dispute that Congress determines FERC’s budget, which has no relationship to the number of approved pipelines or the quantity of gas being transported within FERC’s jurisdiction. Plaintiffs do claim that there are “contested issues of fact” surrounding whether FERC can “increase its annual revenues beyond the amount appropriated by Congress.” (Opp. at 28). But this statement, without more, is insufficient; the court is not required to assume the truth of allegations by Plaintiffs that directly conflict with the statutory scheme at issue. The plain language of the statute indicates that FERC does not have control over its own budget. The Commission’s budget cannot be increased by approving pipelines; rather, 42 U.S.C. § 7178 requires the Commission to make adjustments to “eliminate any overrecovery or underrecovery.” If Plaintiffs are unhappy with Congress’s chosen appropriations to the Commission (“Congress does not set meaningful expense limits on the commission,” (Opp. at 30)), Plaintiffs’ recourse lies with their legislative representatives.
Unlike the agencies in
Tumey
,
Ward
, and
McClure
, FERC stands to gain no direct benefit
from the approval of a particular pipeline project. If FERC does not approve any one project, its
budget remains the same, with the proportional volumetric charge per gas company being
slightly higher. If FERC commissioners also had ownership interests in gas companies, they
might individually have a financial stake in granting certificates because it would reduce the
proportional charges on their own companies.
See
,
e.g.
,
Gibson v. Berryhill
,
But the Commission’s general, long-term interest in its own continued existence does not
result in a “possible temptation to the average [person] as a judge . . . which might lead him not
to hold the balance nice, clear, and true.”
Tumey
,
Plaintiffs argue that discovery is necessary to gather information regarding the dates that all current pipeline projects will theoretically have run their full course, but the court disagrees with the premise that the existence of such a date creates a potential for bias. Additionally, if it became clear at some future point that FERC’s ability to recoup its full budget through volumetric charges was jeopardized, Congress would likely come up with a new funding mechanism, because ultimately it is Congress, not regulated pipeline companies, that funds the Commission and determines its authority and activities.
Because the court finds there is no inherent structural bias or appearance of structural bias, Plaintiffs’ purported examples of actual bias, which Plaintiffs offer as “evidence of the Commission’s inherent bias” (Opp. at 8), are not relevant to the court’s analysis. Allegations of actual bias cannot create structural bias where the court determines there is none. The Budget Act on its face does not create a FERC funding mechanism that creates unconstitutional bias for the basic reason that approval of pipeline projects does not increase FERC’s budget. Plaintiffs have not alleged facts upon which relief could be granted. [4]
IV. Conclusion
For the reasons set forth above, both Defendants’ motions to dismiss will be GRANTED .
A corresponding order will issue separately.
Dated: March 22, 2017
Tanya S. Chutkan TANYA S. CHUTKAN United States District Judge
Notes
[1] Plaintiffs claim these charges comprise twenty percent of the Commission’s overall budget and 100 percent of the gas program budget. (Opp. at 37).
[2] Plaintiffs cite as evidence of actual bias that the Commission has a 100% approval rate for its projects. (Compl. ¶ 99). PennEast responds with several examples of denials of certificate applications, (PennEast Mot. to Dismiss at 28), which Plaintiffs in turn say do not disprove their claim that “Defendants have a perfect approval record for pipeline projects that come before the Commission for a vote.” (Opp. at 39–40). There appears to be no dispute that the approval rate is high, regardless of whether it is 100 percent; the court finds it is high enough to state a likelihood of approval for standing purposes.
[3] FERC claims that Plaintiffs’ suit is “a preemptive attempt to avoid D.C. Circuit precedent that
actual bias claims with ‘no foundation’ lack standing.” (FERC Mot. to Dismiss at 19) (citing
No
Gas Pipeline
,
[4] Because the court finds that Plaintiffs fail to state a claim under Rule 12(b)(6), and dismissal is therefore appropriate, the court will not reach FERC’s argument that the court should exercise its discretion to dismiss a declaratory judgment case. (FERC Mot. to Dismiss at 41–42).
