When a body of water becomes sufficiently polluted, the Clean Water Act ("CWA") requires the state responsible for that waterbody to develop a plan to return it to acceptable pollution levels. See
In 2009 and 2010, pursuant to these provisions, Maryland and the District of Columbia jointly developed a plan to limit the amount of trash that makes its way into the Anacostia River. But instead of setting a maximum amount of trash that could enter the river before it failed to meet its water quality standards, the two jurisdictions set a minimum amount of trash that would have to be removed from the river (or prevented from entering it) for those standards to be satisfied. In this action, plaintiff Natural Resources Defense Council ("NRDC") challenges the Environmental Protection Agency's ("EPA") decision to approve the plan, arguing that its removal-based approach is inconsistent with the plain language of the CWA. For the reasons given below, the Court agrees with NRDC. EPA's approval of the plan will be vacated and remanded to the agency, but the vacatur will be stayed to allow time to develop a new plan.
BACKGROUND
I. STATUTORY AND REGULATORY BACKGROUND
The CWA is a comprehensive water quality statute enacted by Congress "to restore and maintain the chemical, physical, and biological integrity of the Nation's waters."
"A water quality standard defines the water quality goals of a water body ... by designating the use or uses to be made of the water and by setting criteria that protect the designated uses."
Once a state establishes water quality standards for its navigable waters, EPA must approve them.
When a state identifies a waterbody as impaired, it must establish a "total maximum daily load" ("TMDL") for the pollutants causing the impairment.
EPA regulations further specify the process for creating a TMDL. First, the agency's regulations define a waterbody's "loading capacity" as the "greatest amount of loading [i.e., introduction of a pollutant] that a water can receive without violating water quality standards."
Once a state establishes a TMDL, it must submit that TMDL to EPA for approval.
II. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
A. The Anacostia River
The Anacostia River flows from Maryland to the District of Columbia and spans more than 170 square miles. AR 3006.
Maryland and the District of Columbia have each established designated uses and water quality standards applicable to their portions of the Anacostia River. AR 3013-16. The District designated its portions of the river for recreational, aesthetic, and navigational uses (among others), while Maryland's waters are designated for recreation, fishing, and protection of aquatic life. AR 3014-15. Maryland and the District's water quality standards are expressed as narrative descriptions, which set "unacceptable levels of trash in subjective terms." AR 3075. According to the District's water quality standards, waters are required to "be free of discharges of untreated sewage, litter and unmarked submerged or partially submerged man-made structures that would constitute a hazard to ... users." AR 3014 (quoting
Based on the interpretations of their water quality standards' narrative criteria, both Maryland and the District determined that the Anacostia River was impaired by trash pollution and, accordingly, added the river to their 303(d) lists. AR 3013. This required the District and Maryland to create a trash TMDL for the river. See
B. The Anacostia River Trash TMDL
Following the river's designation as impaired, the District of Columbia Department of Energy and the Environment ("DOEE") and the Maryland Department of the Environment ("MDE"), in collaboration with EPA and a number of environmental groups, developed a joint TMDL for the shared waterbody. The agencies began by collecting data using two methods: monitoring trash from stormwater outfalls and counting trash in streams.
DOEE monitored ten stormwater outfalls in the District whenever there was a rainfall of at least 0.25 inches between March and August 2009. AR 3018. DOEE then installed trash traps with one-inch diameter netting to collect trash that
In addition to the stormwater outfall monitoring, both DOEE and MDE conducted in-stream trash monitoring to estimate trash loading for nonpoint sources. AR 3025-31. Volunteers from local watershed groups walked along the river to identify and count visible items of trash in the water. AR 3025, 3029. DOEE conducted this monitoring at 46 locations once per season between August 2007 and June 2008. AR 3025-28. MDE conducted in-stream monitoring at 30 locations between June 2008 and August 2009. AR 3029.
Once the agencies had collected sufficient data, they calculated what they called the "baseline load" for each point and nonpoint source of pollution, which represented the estimated amount of trash discharged into the river in an average year from that source. AR 3044. Then, by summing these quantities together and adding a 5% margin of safety, the agencies established a TMDL for the entire river (the "Anacostia River Trash TMDL" or "Trash TMDL"). AR 3044, 3049. As the agencies acknowledged, the Trash TMDL was expressed as "the quantity of trash that must be captured or removed for the waterbody to achieve the narrative criteria, rather than as the amount of trash that can be added to the waterbody without being objectionable, unsightly or constituting a nuisance." AR 3044. Nonetheless, they concluded that the Trash TMDL would "result in compliance with [the river's] narrative [water quality] standard[s], as determined by the agencies responsible for interpreting the standard[s]."
Maryland and the District submitted their TMDL to EPA in September 2010. AR 3113. EPA recognized that, "[u]nlike most TMDLs, which are expressed in positive terms of the loads of a pollutant that may be added to a waterbody, these trash TMDLs are expressed in the negative, i.e., in terms of quantities of trash that must be captured, prevented from entering, or removed from the waterbody." AR 3114. But "given the nature of trash and how it is transported to the waterbody," EPA concluded that the TMDL's "expression ... in terms of trash to be captured, prevented from entering, or removed from the waterbody is an 'appropriate measure.' " AR 3120-21 (quoting
C. NRDC Files Suit
In September 2016, after unsuccessfully petitioning DOEE and MDE to revise the Trash TMDL, NRDC filed this action challenging EPA's approval of the TMDL under the Administrative Procedure Act ("APA").
NRDC moved for summary judgment on its APA claims, and EPA filed a cross-motion for summary judgment. Thereafter, the District of Columbia Water and Sewer Authority ("D.C. Water") intervened as a defendant and filed its own summary judgment motion. See Intervenor-Def. D.C. Water's Mot. & Br. in Supp. of Cross-Mot. for Summ. J. [ECF No. 17] ("D.C. Water MSJ"). All three summary judgment motions are currently pending before the Court.
LEGAL STANDARD
Because NRDC seeks judicial review of an agency action, the standard for summary judgment under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 56 does not apply. St. Francis Med. Ctr. v. Price,
An agency's interpretation of a statute that it administers is entitled to deference under the familiar two-step Chevron framework. First, the Court asks "whether Congress has spoken directly to the precise question at issue." Chevron, U.S.A., Inc. v. Nat. Res. Def. Council, Inc.,
DISCUSSION
NRDC argues that the Trash TMDL violates both the CWA and EPA's own regulations because, instead of setting a maximum daily amount of trash that can enter the river, it sets a minimum amount of trash that must be removed. See Pl.'s Mot. for Summ. J. [ECF No. 10] at 15-22. According to NRDC, this violates not only the CWA's statutory command that a "total maximum daily load" be established for the river, see
The Court "begin[s], as always, with the statute's language." Friends of the Earth, Inc. v. EPA,
"Each State shall establish for [its impaired] waters ... the total maximum daily load, for those pollutants which the Administrator identifies ... as suitablefor 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."
(emphasis added). Though no court has yet addressed the meaning of the terms "maximum" and "load" in the phrase "total maximum daily load," the Court's reading of those terms is guided by the D.C. Circuit's analysis in Friends of the Earth, where that court determined the meaning of the term "daily" in the same phrase. See
In that case, EPA had approved one TMDL that limited "the annual discharge of oxygen-depleting pollutants" into the Anacostia River and another that limited "the seasonal discharge of pollutants contributing to turbidity."
Nothing in [ § 1313(d)(1)(C)'s] language even hints at the possibility that EPA can approve total maximum "seasonal" or "annual" loads. The law says "daily." We see nothing ambiguous about this command. "Daily" connotes "every day." See Webster's Third New International Dictionary 570 (1993) (defining "daily" to mean "occurring or being made, done, or acted upon every day"). Doctors making daily rounds would be of little use to their patients if they appeared seasonally or annually. And no one thinks of "[g]ive us this day our daily bread" as a prayer for sustenance on a seasonal or annual basis. Matthew 6:11 (King James).
The D.C. Circuit's reasoning in Friends of the Earth is controlling here. The words "maximum" and "load" each have an unambiguous meaning. A "maximum" is "an upper limit allowed by law or other authority" or "the greatest quantity or value attainable in a given case." Maximum, Webster's Third New International Dictionary 1396 (1993). Similarly, a "load" is "the quantity that can be ... carried at one time by an often specified means of conveyance." Load, Webster's Third 1325; see
EPA's own regulations confirm this definition. The agency defines the term "[l]oad" as "[a]n amount of matter ... that
Contrary to this statutory and regulatory authority, the Trash TMDL "is expressed as the quantity of trash that must be captured or removed for the waterbody to achieve the narrative criteria." AR 3044. But nothing in the CWA suggests that the word "maximum" can mean "minimum," or that the word "load" can refer to a quantity of pollution either that is removed from or that is prevented from entering a waterbody. Cf. Friends of the Earth,
EPA's arguments to the contrary are unpersuasive. The agency first relies on out-of-circuit precedents to argue that while the individual words in the phrase "total maximum daily load" may be unambiguous, the phrase as a whole "is susceptible to a broader range of meanings." Nat. Res. Def. Council, Inc. v. Muszynski,
The Court does not doubt EPA's uncontested assertions regarding the difficulty of measuring trash pollution. But even if the Court were persuaded by the Second Circuit's reasoning in Muszynski, the D.C. Circuit has explicitly rejected that court's approach. See Friends of the Earth,
Equally unavailing is EPA's reliance on its own regulations, which state that "TMDLs can be expressed in terms of either mass per time, toxicity, or other appropriate measure."
Intervenor-defendant D.C. Water offers a slightly more creative argument in defense of the Trash TMDL. Instead of arguing that the terms "maximum" and "load" are ambiguous, D.C. Water concedes that the terms have an unambiguous meaning but nonetheless claims that the Trash TMDL comports with that meaning: "[t]he Trash TMDL defines the 'maximum load,' or 'loading capacity,' by numerically identifying the amount of trash that must be prevented from discharge and determining that the modest amount of trash that reaches the waterway beyond that baseline is the maximum load for the river." D.C. Water MSJ at 20. This definition is sufficient, D.C. Water contends, because the CWA requires only that a TMDL be "established at a level necessary to implement the applicable water quality standards,"
D.C. Water is certainly correct that the Anacostia River's water quality standards use qualitative descriptors instead of quantitative values, see
As a final matter, it remains for the Court to determine the appropriate remedy. NRDC urges the Court to vacate EPA's approval of the Trash TMDL, to remand to the agency with instructions to establish a new TMDL for trash in the Anacostia River "within a reasonable amount of time," and to stay its order of vacatur until the new TMDL is complete. Pl.'s Mot. for Summ. J. at 28. For its part, EPA asks the Court to remand without vacatur and without setting a time limitation or requiring the agency to take any specific action on remand. See EPA MSJ at 39-40.
"The decision whether to vacate depends on [1] 'the seriousness of the order's deficiencies (and thus the extent of doubt whether the agency chose correctly) and [2] the disruptive consequences of an interim change that may itself be changed.' " Anacostia Riverkeeper II,
The Court will not, however, direct EPA to establish a new TMDL within a "reasonable amount of time," as NRDC requests. The APA already requires agencies to act diligently, see
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, NRDC's motion for summary judgment will be granted,
The CWA divides pollution sources into two types: point sources and nonpoint sources. A point source is "any discernible, confined and discrete conveyance, including but not limited to any pipe, ditch, channel, [or] tunnel."
Citations to "AR" numbers are references to pages in the administrative record [ECF No. 26].
APA suits are subject to the six-year limitations period that applies to all suits against the United States under
NRDC also argues that EPA's conclusion that the Trash TMDL was "established at a level necessary to implement the [Anacostia River's] water quality standards" was arbitrary and capricious.
EPA's attempt to distinguish Friends of the Earth is unpersuasive. True, that case addressed the meaning of a different word in the phrase "total maximum daily load." See EPA MSJ at 22. But the agency does not explain why the decision's reasoning-which focused on the word's plain meaning-does not apply here with equal force.
Even if it were proper for the Court to consider these arguments, their force is diminished considerably because here, as in Friends of the Earth, "the agency's predicament is largely of its own creation":
The CWA requires the establishment of TMDLs only for "suitable" pollutants,33 U.S.C. § 1313 (d)(1)(C), and although a 1978 EPA regulation provides that "all pollutants [regulated by the CWA] are suitable for the calculation of total maximum daily loads,"43 Fed. Reg. at 60,665 , EPA conceded at oral argument that nothing forecloses the agency from reconsidering that position. Given that EPA's entire justification for establishing non-daily loads is that certain pollutants are unsuitable for daily load limits, we are at a loss as to why it neglected this straightforward regulatory fix in favor of the tortured argument that "daily" means something other than daily.
