MEMORANDUM OPINION
Over twenty-five years ago, Congress enacted the Federal Water Pollution Control Act Amendments of 1972, an ambitious and comprehensive statute designed to “restore and maintain the chemical, physical, and biological integrity of the Nation’s *2 waters.” Pub.L. No. 92 500, § 101(a), 86 Stat. 816, 816 (codified as amended at 33 U.S.C. § 1251(a)). The 1972 Amendments were updated in the Clean Water Act of 1977 (“CWA”), Pub.L. No. 95-217, 91 Stat. 1566 (codified as amended at 33 U.S.C. §§ 1251 et seq.). Among the innovations that Congress introduced in the CWA was a mandate compelling states to establish for each of their most polluted waterways a Total Maximum Daily Load (“TMDL”), a measurement intended to regulate the discharge of pollutants into those bodies of water. See CWA § 303(d)(1), 33 U.S.C. § 1313(d)(1). The CWA required each state, including the District of Columbia, to submit by June 28, 1979 (no more than 180 days after the EPA identified certain pollutants, pursuant to § 1314(a)(2)(D)) the first of its TMDL calculations to the Administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency (“EPA”). Within thirty days after this submission, the Administrator must take one of two actions. She may approve the TMDL, in which case it becomes binding on the states. If, however, she disapproves it, the Administrator must devise her own binding TMDL for the state within thirty days of disapproval. CWA § 303(d)(2), 33 U.S.C. § 1313(d)(2).
More than eighteen years after its first TMDL submission was due, the District of Columbia had yet to forward a single TMDL calculation to the EPA. Arguing that nearly two decades of silence and inaction from the District constitute a “constructive submission” that no TMDLs are necessary, Plaintiffs Kingman Park Civic Association and other organizations and individuals have brought suit under the CWA’s citizen-suit provision, CWA § 505(a)(2), 33 U.S.C. § 1365(a)(2), to compel the Administrator to disapprove the District’s “submissions,” and to order the Administrator to establish TMDLs for the District’s polluted waters. In moving to dismiss the Plaintiffs’ Amended Complaint, EPA presents a narrow issue: whether the District’s eighteen-year recalcitrance constitutes a submission that triggers the Administrator’s nondiscretionary duty under § 303(d)(2). After careful consideration, the Court holds that a state’s consistent, longstanding failure to submit TMDL calculations can be construed as a submission that calls forth the Administrator’s nondis-cretionary duties under § 303(d)(2).
I. BACKGROUND
With its passage, the CWA “marked the ascendancy of water-quality control to the status of a major national priority,”
Monongahela Power Co. v. Marsh,
The CWA employs a variety of interrelated procedures to regulate water pollution. Among these, the National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (“NPDES”), 33 U.S.C. § 1342, represents the CWA’s primary mechanism for achieving and enforcing water-quality standards. Reduced to its essence, this regime prohibits discharges of pollutants from any “point source” — a discernable, confined, and discrete conveyance from which pollutants may be discharged — into the waters of the United States except as provided in an NPDES permit. See id. §§ 1311(a), 1362(12), (14).
Congress recognized, however, that the technology-based effluent limitations alone would fail to implement applicable water-quality standards. To supplement these
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limitations, Section 303(d) of the CWA establishes “a complex statutory scheme,” of which there are two important components.
EDF,
For each WQLS identified in the 303(d) list, a state must establish a Total Maximum Daily Loads (“TMDLs”) consistent with the priority ranking set forth in the 303(d) list. TMDLs “set the maximum amount of a pollutant which can be contributed into a stream segment without causing a violation of the water quality standards.”
EDF,
So important is Section 303(d) to the CWA’s overall structure that Congress compelled both the states and EPA to abide by strict, date-certain deadlines for submitting and implementing TMDLs. Within 180 days from the date that EPA first identified certain pollutants, see CWA § 304, 33 U.S.C. § 1314, each state was bound by statute to submit its WQLSs and corresponding TMDLs. Once each state submitted these TMDL calculations, the statute obliged EPA either to approve or to disapprove the TMDL. If approved, the TMDL is incorporated into the state’s water-quality management plans under Section 303(e). In the event that EPA disapproves the state’s TMDL submission, however, the agency inherits a nondiscre-tionary duty to establish acceptable TMDL calculations within thirty days from the date of disapproval; the EPA’s TMDL is then incorporated into the state’s Section 303(e) plan. See CWA § 303(d)(2), 33 U.S.C. § 1313(d)(2).
Because EPA neglected to promulgate its list of identified pollutants until December 28, 1978, 43 Fed.Reg. 60662 (1978), “the states’ duty to submit TMDL calculations ... did not arise until June 28,1979,”
EDF,
While the District has neglected its obligations under Section 303(d) for almost two decades, its waters have grown increasingly polluted. Today, sewage discharges into District waters contain unsafe levels of fecal coliform bacteria. In some cases, this fecal coliform bacteria exist in levels a thousand times greater than the maximum safe-level for swimming. See District of Columbia Consumer and Regulatory Affairs, Environmental Regulation Admin., The District of Columbia Water Quality Assessment at 211 (1996) [hereinafter Water Quality Assessment ] (Pis.’ Exs. C & E). Beyond fecal coliform, District waters boast unhealthy amounts of toxics, organic compounds, pathogens, bacteria, metals, nutrients, and oil and grease to name a few. Toxic pollutants have accumulated in sediments, are ingested by fish, and are ultimately ingested by District residents, who may, according to some studies, face an increased risk of cancer. See D. Velinsky & J. Cummins, Distribution of Chemical Contaminants in Wild Fish Species in Washington, D.C., ICPRB Rep. No. 94-1 (June 1994), at 62-67 (Pis.’- Ex. D) D.C. Commissioner of Public Health Urges Limited Consumption of Fish Caught in D.C. Waters, D.C. Gov’t News Release, Nov. 15, 1994 (Pis.’ Ex. E); Water Quality Standards, supra, at 202-09. Recently, the Anacostia River has been bestowed with the dubious distinction of being one of the ten most polluted rivers in the country. See id. at 85. 2
Plaintiffs filed this lawsuit under the CWA’s citizen-suit provision, § 505(a)(2), 33 U.S.C. § 1365(a)(2), and the Administrative Procedure Act, § 10(e), 5 U.S.C. § 706(l)-(2), to compel the EPA to establish TMDLs for the District’s WQLSs. EPA has moved to dismiss, maintaining that neither the CWA nor the APA affords the Plaintiffs a mechanism to compel the agency to take action at this time. 3
II. DISCUSSION
A. Subject-matter jurisdiction is proper to compel EPA to perform a nondiscretionary duty under the CWA.
The citizen-suit provision of the CWA allows private individuals to sue EPA in federal district court “where there is alleged a failure of the Administrator [of EPA] to perform any act or duty under [the CWA] which is not discretionary with the Administrator.” CWA § 505(a)(2), 33 U.S.C. § 1365(a)(2). Plaintiffs állege that EPA has failed to discharge its mandatory duty under Section 303(d)(2) 4 of the CWA *5 to prescribe TMDL calculations for the District of Columbia. EPA, to be sure, acknowledges that Section 803(d)(2) imposes a nondiseretionary duty on the agency to approve or disapprove a state’s TMDL submissions, and if disapproving, to establish TMDLs for the state. It emphasizes, however, that only an actual “submission” of TMDL data triggers its nondiseretion-ary duty. By its own account, EPA has a nondiseretionary duty, to impose TMDL limits on states who bother to submit incomplete or. inadequate TMDL data, but the agency inherits no similar imperative if a state simply opts never to tender a TMDL report.
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 TMDL’s, this prolonged failure may amount to the ‘constructive submission’ by that state of no TMDL’s.”
Scott v. City of Hammond,
Refracted through the prism of EPA’s analysis, Sierra Club and its application to this case assume distorted dimensions. On one level, EPA is correct: The CWA does not compel the agency to act by an explicit date if states fail to propose their own TMDL limits by a certain date. But that is not the question before the Court. Rather, the more appropriate inquiry here is whether a state that has failed to submit a single TMDL in over eighteen years can be deemed to have “submitted” a finding that no TMDLs are necessary. For if such historic, longstanding recalcitrance is tantamount to a submission, then there is no question that EPA has a nondiseretionary duty. In that case, the submission would constitute a “fixed event” to which EPA must respond by either approving or disapproving the submission within thirty days.
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Nor is this result dictated by “reason of an inference drawn from the overall statutory framework.”
Sierra Club,
In construing a related subdivision of Section 303(d), the Eleventh Circuit reached just such a result.
See Miccosukee Tribe,
Although construing a different provision of the CWA, Miccosukee Tribe articulates a principle that transcends that case: Where 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. Here, as in Miccosukee Tribe, the District’s failure to tender an actual “submission” to EPA is not disposi-tive. An eighteen-year failure to calculate and submit TMDLs constitutes a constructive — if not outright — determination that no TMDLs are necessary. Accordingly, the District may not so easily undermine one of the lynchpin mechanisms of the CWA. At bottom, as the Seventh Circuit has held:
We think it unlikely that an important aspect of the federal scheme of water pollution control could be frustrated by the refusal of states to act. This is especially true in light of the short time limits both on a state’s action, and on the EPA’s required reaction to the state submissions, with respect to promulgation of the TMDL’s.
Scott,
To interpret “submission” in the excessively literal manner that EPA advocates is entirely unreasonable. Although EPA’s briefs are long on literalism, they are conspicuously short on reconciling their interpretation with the structure of the CWA and Congress’s intent. As EPA acknowledges, by enacting Section 303(d)(2), Congress has already made the policy choice of depriving the agency of all discretion over when it must approve or disapprove a state’s TMDL submission. In light of this choice, it is implausible that Congress would wish to preserve EPA’s discretion over establishing TMDLs when a state has essentially decided that no TMDLs are necessary. With Section 303(d)(2), Congress already has “aecord[ed] a particular
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agency action such high priority as to impose upon the agency a ‘categorical mandate’ that deprives it of all discretion over the timing of its work.”
Sierra Club,
Indeed, to a' large extent it was state intransigence that animated Congress to enact the Federal Water Pollution Control Act Amendments in 1972 in the first place. Although 1965 legislation required the states to develop water-quality standards for interstate waters within their boundaries, Congress lamented in 1971 that “[m]ore than 4 years after the deadline for submission of standards, only a little more than half of the States have fully approved standards.” S. REP. NO. 92-414, at 4 (1971), re-printed in 1972 U.S.C.C.A.N. 3668, 3671. Moreover, the legislative history suggests that Congress did envision a limited time frame for achieving its goal of high water quality when it enacted these provisions. In their Report to the Senate, the Committee on Public Works demonstrates Congress’s intent to pursue the major alterations in water quality which the Act contemplated within a limited period of time, one far smaller than that in which the District of Columbia neglected to offer its TMDLs. The Senate Report enumerates its goals with an optimism that appears, in hindsight, somewhat idealistic:
The Committee believes the restoration of the' natural chemical, physical, and biological integrity of the Nation’s waters is essential. To achieve this objective, the Committee recommends that the following be adopted as national policy: — The discharge of pollutants into the navigable waters be eliminated by 1985; — An interim goal of water quality be achieved by 1981 to provide for the protection and propagation of fish, shellfish, and wildlife, and for recreation in and on the water.
Id. at 3674. If in enacting its Amendments to the Federal Water Pollution Control Act, Congress intended that, as a matter of national policy, water pollutants be eliminated by 1985, then it strains credulity to posit that Congress meant for the EPA to stand passively aside for more than a decade after that while states flagrantly violated their statutory mandates.
Therefore, the Court denies EPA’s Motion to Dismiss.
B. Plaintiffs have stated a claim loith respect to the Hickey Run TMDL
Count IV. of the Complaint avers that in January, 1998, the District at long last made a TMDL submission for a body of water known as Hickey Run. It further alleges that upon reviewing the TMDL, EPA disapproved it. Based on these facts, which the Court is obliged to accept as true for purposes of a motion to dismiss,
see Conley v. Gibson,
EPA concedes that where a state has submitted a TMDL, and where the agency has disapproved it, EPA inherits a nondis-cretionary duty to prescribe its own TMDL calculations for that body of water.
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All that animates EPA!s motion to dismiss with respect to the Hickey Run TMDL is a formalistic objection to the syntax of the Plaintiffs’ Amended Complaint. Based on EPA’s disapproval of the Hickey Run TMDL, Plaintiffs alleged in their Amended Complaint that EPA had a nondiscretion-ary duty to prepare TMDLs for
all
WQLSs in the District.
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EPA parsimoniously reads this phrase to mean that the Plaintiffs seek TMDLs for all waters and nothing less. Thus, by EPA’s stringent pleading standards, a prayer for relief extending to all waters does not encompass a more particularized prayer for relief limited to just one body of water. At this stage in the litigation, however, “[t]he complaint must be ‘liberally construed in favor of the plaintiff,’ who must be granted the benefit of all inferences that can be derived from the facts alleged.”
Schuler v. United States,
C. Disapproval of one TMDL does not obligate EPA to promulgate TMDLs for all WQLSs.
Based on EPA’s disapproval of the District’s Hickey Run TMDL, Plaintiffs suggest that the agency now has a nondiscretionary duty to establish TMDLs for every WQLS in the District. Undergirding this argument is an interpretation of Section 303(d)(2) that erroneously presumes a particularized meaning of the word “such.” The relevant portion of Section 303(d)(2) provides:
If the Administrator [of EPA] disapproves such identification and load, he shall not later than thirty days after the date of such disapproval identify such waters in such State and establish such loads for such waters as he determines necessary to implement the water quality standards applicable to such waters
CWA § 303(d)(2), 33 U.S.C. § 1313(d)(2). According to the Plaintiffs, “[t]he phrase ‘for such waters’ refers back to the previous phrase ‘such waters in such State’ earlier in the same sentence. Thus, having disapproved a state’s submission, EPA’s duty is to establish TMDLs for waters ‘in such State’ as necessary to implement the water quality standards applicable to such waters.” Pis.’ Opp’n at 17.
Recently, however, this Circuit has recognized that the word “such” is amenable to generalized interpretations.
See North Broward Hosp. Dist. v. Shalala,
D. Since jurisdiction is proper under the citizen-suit provision of the CWA, Plaintiffs’ claims under the APA must be dismissed.
Plaintiffs’ Count V, which articulates several claims under Section 10(e) of the Administrative Procedure Act (“APA”), 5 U.S.C. § 702(l)-(2), must be dismissed because they are duplicative of the claims that have been validly asserted in Count IV under the citizen-suit provision of the CWA. It is well established that “Congress did not intend the general grant of review in the APA to duplicate existing procedures for review of agency action.”
Bowen v. Massachusetts,
III. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, EPA’s Motion to Dismiss shall be denied with respect to Count IV and granted with respect to Count V.
Notes
. Congress directed EPA to identify and publish these pollutants by October 18, 1973, one year from the date that the CWA was enacted. See CWA § 304(a)(2)(D), 33 U.S.C. § 1314(a)(2)(D). Not until Judge John Sirica of this Court ordered EPA to delay no further did the agency publish its identifications on December 28, 1978.
. In its Reply Memorandum in Support of its Motion to Dismiss, EPA maintains that "District waters are not unprotected in the absence of TMDLs...,” and that "it is not factually true that EPA and the District have been inactive in working to improve the District’s waters.” Def.’s Reply Mem. Further Supp. Mot. Dismiss at 23 n. 16, EPA is correct in asserting that the CWA contemplates TMDL monitoring as a supplement to other means of achieving water-quality standards and technology-based regulations. See id. This supplementary function, however, neither diminishes the importance of TMDLs, nor indicates that the District has managed to realize high, or even passable, standards of water quality without TMDLs.
. After EPA filed its Motion to Dismiss, the parties agreed to dismiss voluntarily Counts I — III. Only Counts IV-V, therefore, are at issue.
.Section 303(d)(2) provides, in pertinent part:
The Administrator shall either approve or disapprove such identification and load not later than thirty days after the day of submission. If the Administrator approves such identification and load, such State shall incorporate them into its current plan under subsection (e) of this section. If the Administrator disapproved such identification and load, he shall not later than thirty days after the date of such disapproval identify such waters in such State and establish such loads for such waters as he determines necessary to implement the water quality standards applicable to such waters and upon such identification and estab *5 lishment the State shall incorporate them into its current plan under subsection (e) of this section.
CWA § 303(d)(2), 33 U.S.C. § 1313(d)(2).
. Furthermore, EPA has expressly indicated that, for the limited purpose of adjudicating its Motion to Dismiss, it accepts the truth of all of the Plaintiffs’ factual allegations.
. The validity of this assertion is addressed in the next section of this Memorandum Opinion.
