NORTH AND SOUTH RIVERS WATERSHED ASSOCIATION, INC., Plaintiff, Appellant, v. TOWN OF SCITUATE, Defendant, Appellee.
No. 91-1255.
United States Court of Appeals, First Circuit.
Heard Aug. 2, 1991. Decided Nov. 27, 1991.
Rehearing and Rehearing En Banc Denied Jan. 14, 1992.
949 F.2d 552
The matter is remanded to the district court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. The district court will report its findings of fact and statement of reasons to this court as soon as possible. This court will retain appellate jurisdiction, and the district court‘s release order of October 9, 1991 will remain in effect while those proceedings are pending.
Gary D. Thomas with whom Kelly, Kethro, Flannigan & Thomas, Hanover, Mass., Peter Shelley, Darshan Brach, Conservation Law Foundation and Jonathan Kaledin, Boston, Mass., were on brief, for appellant.
Catherine M. Flanagan with whom Richard B. Stewart, Asst. Atty. Gen., Anne H. Shields, Anne S. Almy, and Nancy K. Stoner, Attys., Dept. of Justice, Environment & Natural Resources Div., and Mary St. Peter, Office of Enforcement, U.S. E.P.A.,
Charles C. Caldart, National Environmental Law Center, Kenneth L. Kimmell and Bernstein and Bronstein, Boston, Mass., on brief, for Massachusetts Public Interest Research Group, Massachusetts Student Public Interest Research Group and Natural Resources Defense Council, amici curiae.
John W. Giorgio with whom Brian W. Riley and Kopelman and Paige, P.C., Boston, Mass., were on brief, for appellee.
Before TORRUELLA, Circuit Judge, HILL,* Senior Circuit Judge, and SELYA, Circuit Judge.
HILL, Senior Circuit Judge.
Appellant appeals from district court granting of Appellee‘s motion for summary judgment, claiming the district court erred in ruling Appellant‘s suit was barred under section 309 of the Federal Clean Water Act. Because the State had commenced and was diligently prosecuting an enforcement action under State law comparable to the Federal Act Appellant sought to enforce, we AFFIRM the district court‘s ruling that Appellant is barred under the Federal Clean Water Act section 309(g)(6)(A) and granting of Appellee‘s motion for summary judgment.
I. BACKGROUND
In 1987, the Massachusetts Department of Environmental Protection (“DEP“) issued Administrative Order Number 698 to the Appellee town of Scituate. The State alleged that Scituate owned and operated a sewage treatment facility that was discharging pollutants into a coastal estuary without a federal discharge permit. DEP ordered Scituate to (1) immediately prohibit any new connections to its sewer system; (2) take all steps necessary to plan, develop and construct new wastewater treatment facilities; and (3) begin extensive upgrading of the facility subject to DEP‘s review
DEP was operating under its authority found in the Massachusetts Clean Waters Act (the “State Act“),
Since receiving the Order, Scituate has engaged the services of the engineering firm of Metcalf & Eddy, Inc., to effectuate compliance with the State Order. In May of 1987, Metcalf & Eddy submitted the study plans required by Administrative Order Number 698 to the State. In March of 1988, Scituate submitted an application for State financial assistance requesting over three quarters of a million dollars in funding to assist in the upgrading of the town‘s wastewater treatment facilities. In January of 1989, Metcalf & Eddy submitted a draft of the interim report for the supplemental facilities plan to the State. This report contained detailed analysis of the proposed alternatives for wastewater treatment, effluent disposal, and sludge management at the facility. The report explained that some effluent disposal alternatives were cost prohibitive and offered four alternatives which would be pursued for sludge processing and disposal. Based in part on these reports, the DEP informed Scituate in November of 1989 that it would not allow land disposal of effluent due to the lack of land sites adequate in size and that alternatives should be pursued. In July of 1990, Metcalf & Eddy submitted the draft of the final plan for upgrading the existing wastewater facility, which contained detailed analysis and cost comparisons of proposed discharge methods.
In 1989, Appellant citizen group brought suit in the district court, charging the Appellee with violation of the Federal Clean Water Act.4 Appellant sought civil penalties as well as declaratory and injunctive relief. Appellant also sought the costs and expenses of the action, including attorney‘s fees.
Appellant‘s charges were based on the same discharge violations as the State‘s Order, which, at some level, had been ongoing since the issuance of Administrative Order Number 698. Appellant‘s lawsuit
The district court denied Appellant‘s motion for summary judgment and granted Appellee‘s motion for summary judgment, dismissing Appellant‘s claim. The Court ruled Appellant‘s suit was barred by
Appellant brings this appeal, claiming that the district court erred in dismissing the Appellant‘s civil suit. Appellant argues the
II. APPELLANT‘S CLAIMS
Appellant claims that the district court erred in ruling that the 1987 Massachusetts DEP Administrative Order constitutes a bar under the provisions of section 309 of the Federal Clean Water Act. On summary judgment, our review of the district court‘s determination that there is no material factual dispute is de novo. See Lussier v. Louisville Ladder Co., 938 F.2d 299, 300 (1st Cir.1991). We view the facts in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party, here the Appellant. See Oliver v. Digital Equipment Corp., 846 F.2d 103, 105 (1st Cir.1988).
A. Comparability
The bar against citizen‘s civil penalty suits only operates where the State has brought an action comparable to subsection 309(g). See
The primary function of the provision for citizen suits is to enable private parties to assist in enforcement efforts where Federal and State authorities appear unwilling to act. Congress has found it necessary expressly to “recognize, preserve and protect the primary responsibility and rights of the States to prevent, reduce and eliminate pollution.”
Appellant argues that if it can be found that governmental action to correct the violation which is being diligently pursued nevertheless has not specifically demanded a financial penalty, a citizen‘s suit may be instituted.6 Such an interpretation
The state‘s decision not to utilize penalty provisions does not alter the comparability of the State Act‘s statutory scheme to the scheme found in the Federal Act. While the specific statutory section under which the State issued its Order does not, itself, contain a penalty provision, see
Appellant urges that we determine comparability upon whether the precise statutory section under which the State issued its Administrative Order contains penalty provisions comparable to the Federal Act. Such a narrow reading of
Second, the goal of all actions brought under the Clean Water Acts is “to restore and maintain the chemical, physical, and biological integrity of the nation‘s waters.”
It is enough that the Massachusetts statutory scheme, under which the State is diligently proceeding, contains penalty assessment provisions comparable to the Federal Act, that the State is authorized to assess those penalties, and that the overall scheme of the two acts is aimed at correcting the same violations, thereby achieving the same goals.7 What the Appellant‘s suit seeks to remedy is already in the process of being remedied by the State Administrative Order, an action comparable to section 309(g).8
B. Diligent Enforcement
The bar against citizen‘s suits also requires that the State diligently enforce its Order. Appellant argues that, at best, the State action is “diligent non-prosecution.” Upon examination of the record, we disagree with this assessment.
The Supreme Court in Gwaltney sketched the relationship between governmental and section 505 citizen enforcement actions. “The great volume of enforcement actions [are intended to] be brought by the State,” citizen suits are proper only “if the Federal, State, and local agencies fail to exercise their enforcement responsibility.” Gwaltney, 484 U.S. at 60, 108 S.Ct. at 383, (citing S.Rep. No. 92-414, p. 64 (1971), reprinted in 2 A Legislative History of the Water Pollution Control Act Amendments of 1972, p. 1482 (1973)). Where an agency has specifically addressed the concerns of an analogous citizen‘s suit, deference to the agency‘s plan of attack should be particularly favored.
With this in mind, we fail to see how DEP has failed to exercise its responsibility under the State Clean Waters Act. The record shows the town has complied with a variety of mandatory and ongoing tasks since the Order was issued in 1987. In addition to those already mentioned, these tasks include: (1) the submission of monthly, weekly and daily test results from groundwater monitoring wells, effluent tanks and discharges to the tidal ditch; (2) the expenditure of close to one million dollars to plan the new treatment facility; and (3) enforcement of a sewer hookup moratorium. Further, the Order specifically leaves open the possibility of imposing penalties upon the town. Scituate is well into the process of diligently complying with Administrative Order Number 698.
We agree that, especially from the community‘s perspective, the ordered corrective measures are of vital concern. Nonetheless, Appellant‘s characterization of the State‘s Order and subsequent action is simply inaccurate. While it is true we are not in the business of planning, designing and constructing sewage treatment facilities, we are not prepared to say that the State has not enforced its Order with diligence. In light of the ongoing and undisputed actions of both Appellee and the State, we conclude that the State Order represents a substantial, considered and ongoing response to the violation, and that the DEP‘s enforcement action does in fact represent diligent prosecution.
C. The Scope of Preclusion
Appellant contends that even if the
In contrast,
section 505 of the Act does not authorize civil penalties separately from injunctive relief: rather, the two forms of relief are referred to in the same subsection, even the same sentence.33 U.S.C. § 1365(a) . The citizen suit provision suggests a connection between injunctive relief and civil penalties that is noticeably absent from the provision authorizing agency enforcement.
Gwaltney, 484 U.S. at 58, 108 S.Ct. at 382.
The statutory language suggesting a link between civilian penalty and injunctive actions, considered in light of the Gwaltney opinion‘s language outlining the supplemental role the citizen‘s suit is intended to play in enforcement actions, leads us to believe that the
Both the Congress and the Supreme Court have recognized: (1) that the primary responsibility for enforcement of Clean Water Acts rests with the government; (2) that citizen suits are intended to supplement rather than supplant this primary responsibility; and (3) that citizen suits are only proper if the government fails to exercise its enforcement responsibility. Given this high degree of deference accorded analogous and diligently enforced governmental action, it is inconceivable to us that the
The State is already acting with diligence to remedy the violations Appellants seek to enjoin. Appellants argue their claim for injunctive relief should stand because the violations have been ongoing since the Order issued. Yet violations may continue despite everything reasonably possible being done by the State and Appellee to correct them. At oral arguments, Appellants conceded their suit was brought primarily to “spur action” on the part of the State and Appellee. As explained above, action is already being taken by those parties. Merely because the State may not be taking the precise action Appellant wants it to or moving with the alacrity Appellant desires does not entitle Appellant to injunctive relief. Finally, Appellant argues that the literal language of
III. JUDGMENT
The district court‘s ruling granting Appellee‘s motion for summary judgment and denying Appellant‘s motion for summary judgment is
Affirmed.
SELYA, Circuit Judge (concurring).
I join in Judge Hill‘s persuasive opinion, but I have nonetheless elected to write separately for two reasons. First, I think
The appellant‘s attempt to balkanize the MCWA by focusing the requisite comparison more narrowly would, if successful, produce a weird asymmetry, destroying uniformity in the application of federal law by subjecting the workings of an important federal statute to the vagaries of draftsmanship in the legislatures of the several states. Moreover, the approach would require that cases like this one turn on essentially clerical considerations—here, whether or not the state‘s formal recital of the source of its power, in the issuance of its administrative order, included, or omitted, a specific reference to
Notes
(1) The Town was required to submit to the DEP for approval a study plan for collecting data and evaluating alternative methods for upgrading wastewater treatment and disposal by June 1, 1987. The Order also required the town, within one year of approval of the study plan, to submit, for DEP approval, a final plan for upgrading the facility.
(2) Effective April 13, 1987, the Town was ordered to prohibit any new connections to or extensions of the Town‘s sewer system, subject to certain narrow exceptions.
(3) By July 1, 1987, the Town was required to submit design plans for ground water monitoring wells, and to install the wells within ninety (90) days of DEP‘s approval of the plans. The Order detailed the testing to be performed from these wells, and in the drainage ditch leading to the estuary, and ordered that monthly reports of the testing be submitted to the DEP.
“(1) Issuance of an order under this paragraph shall not be deemed an election [by the State] to forgo any action for criminal or civil penalties under Section 42.”
“Except as in compliance with this section and [other sections of the Act that establish various prohibitions and conditions on discharges; notably including the requirement for a National Pollution Discharge Elimination System (NPDES) permit under § 402], the discharge of any pollution by any person shall be unlawful.”
“Except as provided in ...
(1) against any person ... who is alleged to be in violation of an effluent standard or limitation under this [Act].”
Under
“(a) Except as provided in subsection (b) of this section, any citizen may commence a civil action on his own behalf—
(1) against any person ... who is alleged to be in violation of [the Clean Water Act].”
“(A) ... Any violation—
(ii) with respect to which a state has commenced and is diligently prosecuting an action under a State law comparable to this subsection,
shall not be the subject of a civil penalty action ... under section [505].”
