A law professor at Harvard is said to have remarked facetiously, a generation ago, that the greatest constitutional eases had concerned the sale and distribution of milk. The story might well be apocryphal as well as hyperbolic but there is truth to the statement, evidenced by the ubiquity of milk in the Supreme Court’s Commerce Clause jurisprudence.
Not long ago, municipalities took out the trash simply by hauling it to the local dump.
Smithtown, New York, responded to the environmental and regulatory crisis by arranging with the neighboring town of Huntington for the construction of a garbage incinerator — an incinerator that would be owned and operated by a private company, but financed by the towns. The two towns hoped that the incinerator would stem the flow of solid waste filling up the town dump, put the garbage to practical use by generating electricity, and ensure a reliable method of waste disposal for town residents for years to come. As part of its overall solid waste plan, and to protect its financial investment in the incinerator, Smithtown pursued two parallel strategies. First, it passed a “flow control” ordinance that required all residential and commercial garbage generated in town to be disposed of at the incinerator, where Smithtown charges so-called “tipping fees” based on the amount of garbage dumped.
The United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York (Thomas C. Platt, Chief Judge) invalidated both the ordinance and contract under the dormant Commerce Clause of the United States Constitution,
We conclude that Smithtown’s flow control ordinance — enforceable by criminal fines and jail terms — clearly constitutes municipal regulation of the waste disposal market, not participation in that market, thus subjecting the ordinance to Commerce Clause scrutiny. Following the Commerce Clause analysis set forth by the Supreme Court in Carbone, we are compelled to find that the ordinance im-permissibly discriminates against interstate commerce. On the other hand, we find that Smithtown’s garbage hauling contract with SSC constitutes municipal participation in both the waste collection and disposal markets, and is thus free from the strictures of the Commerce Clause.
Accordingly, we affirm the district court’s judgment striking down the flow control ordinance, but reverse its invalidation of the contract.
I. Facts
A. Background
Smithtown is a municipality in northwestern Suffolk County on Long Island, New York, with a population of approximately 125,000. In the mid-1980s, following the adoption of various federal
The incinerator was built and is operated by a private company, Ogden Martin Systems (“Ogden”),
In return for paying the Service Fee, Smithtown and Huntington own exclusive rights to decide what waste may be disposed at the incinerator, and thus to charge tipping fees for garbage that is dumped there.
B. The Flow Control Ordinance
To ensure a steady flow of garbage to the Huntington incinerator (and thus to ensure a steady flow of tipping fees), Smithtown enacted a “flow control” ordinance in 1991 that provides as follows:
No person authorized to collect or transport acceptable waste within the Town of Smithtown shall dispose of acceptable waste generated within the Town of Smith-town except at a solid waste management facility designated by the Town Board pursuant to this section.
Smithtown Code § 177-17(B) (1994).
Violation of the flow control ordinance is an unclassified misdemeanor, punishable by a fine of up to $5,000 and up to 60 days’ imprisonment. Id. § 177-102.
C. The Improvement Contract
The second major step in Smithtown’s solid waste plan was to arrange for municipal garbage collection and disposal for all town residents. In 1991, the town divided its residential areas into ten improvement districts and solicited competitive bids for waste collection services in each district.
Smithtown awarded seven of the ten residential contracts to SSC. SSC began to pick up household garbage in January 1992. In
Smithtown assessed that $218 as a user fee on each residential homeowner’s annual property tax bill. The town then used that user fee to pay SSC under the Improvement contract.
In early April 1994, Smithtown accused SSC of breaching the contract by diverting town residential garbage to disposal facilities other than the Huntington incinerator. SSC was allegedly pocketing the difference between the $65 per ton tipping fees built into the contract and reimbursed by Smithtown, and lower fees charged at other disposal facilities. By resolution of the Town Board, Smithtown withheld more than $750,000 in contract payments from SSC.
On April 28, 1994, SSC filed this action pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983 (1988), seeking to enjoin Smithtown from enforcing the contractual provisions and the flow control ordinance, to the extent that those provisions required the hauler to deliver all town garbage to the Huntington incinerator.
After the Supreme Court handed down its decision in C & A Carbone, Inc. v. Town of Clarkstown, — U.S. —,
II. Discussion
A. The Legal Standard: The Dormant Commerce Clause & the Market Participant Doctrine
1. Dormant Commerce Clause
The Commerce Clause is primarily an affirmative grant of power to Congress. “Congress shall have Power ... To regulate Commerce with foreign Nations, and among the several States, and with the Indian Tribes_” U.S. Const, art. I, § 8, cl. 3. The power to regulate interstate commerce is extraordinarily far-reaching
The Supreme Court, however, has long interpreted the Commerce Clause “not only as an authorization for congressional action, but also, even in the absence of a conflicting federal statute, as a restriction on permissible state regulation.” Hughes v. Oklahoma,
In applying the dormant Commerce Clause, the courts have identified guiding principles — limiting “protectionist” state legislation and fostering the development of a unified ' national market — that presumably motivated the Founders to endow Congress with the affirmative power to regulate commerce. As Justice Jackson wrote:
Our system, fostered by the Commerce Clause, is that every farmer and every craftsman shall be encouraged to produce by the certainty that he will have free access to every market in the Nation, that no home embargoes will withhold his exports, and no foreign state will by customs duties or regulations exclude them. Likewise, every consumer may look to the free competition from every producing area in the Nation to protect him from exploitation by any. Such was the vision of the Founders; such has been the doctrine of this Court which has given it reality.
H.P. Hood & Sons, Inc. v. Du Mond,
To implement the goals of curbing local protectionism and facilitating a national market, the courts have derived from the Commerce Clause limitations on the states’ abilities to legislate in service of parochial interests. State regulations that discriminate against interstate commerce are subject to a “virtually per se rule of invalidity.” City of Philadelphia v. New Jersey,
2. The Market Participant Exception
The Commerce Clause only grants to Congress — and correspondingly withholds from the states — the power to “regulate Commerce ... among the several States.” (emphasis added). Because the power conferred by the Constitution is the power to “regulate,” the strictures of the dormant Commerce Clause are not activated unless a state action may be characterized as a “regulation.” At the threshold of its Commerce Clause analysis, the Supreme Court has drawn an important distinction between “regulation” of, and “participation” in, a market. When a state engages in market “participation” — that is, when it enters the open market as a buyer or seller on the same footing as private parties — there is less danger that the state’s activity will interfere with Congress’s plenary power to regulate the market. As the Court has explained, the Commerce Clause “restricts ‘state taxes and regulatory measures impeding free private trade in the national marketplace,’ but ‘[there] is no indication of a constitutional plan to limit the ability of the States themselves to operate freely in the free market.’ ” Wisconsin Dep’t of Indus., Labor & Human Relations v. Gould Inc.,
The Supreme Court introduced the market participant doctrine in Hughes v. Alexandria Scrap Corp.,
The Court next invoked the market participant exception in Reeves, Inc. v. Stake,
[S]tate proprietary activities may be, and often are, burdened with the same restrictions imposed on private market participants. Evenhandedness suggests that, when acting as proprietors, States should similarly share existing freedom from federal constraints, including the inherent limits of the Commerce Clause.
In White v. Massachusetts Council of Construction Employers,
define those limits with precision, except to say that we think the Commerce Clause does not require the city to stop at the boundary of formal privity of contract. In this case, the [employment mandate] covers a discrete, identifiable class of economic activity in which the city is a major participant. Everyone affected by the [mandate] is, in a substantial if informal sense, “working for the city.”
Id. at 211 n. 7,
One year later, the Supreme Court rejected Alaska’s invocation of the market participant doctrine in South-Central Timber Development, Inc. v. Wunnicke,
B. Smithtown’s Flow Control Ordinance
1. Market Participation
Before determining whether Smith-town’s flow control ordinance constitutes discriminatory or burdensome regulation of interstate commerce, we must first answer a threshold question: Is the ordinance a “regulation” at all, or does it merely constitute “participation” by Smithtown in the local waste disposal market?
SSC argues that Smithtown’s flow control ordinance cannot be considered municipal “participation” in the waste disposal market because the ordinance constitutes an exercise of the town’s “sovereign powers of civil and criminal enforcement.” Smithtown responds, first, that it is generally a “participant” in the waste disposal market because it has placed substantial public funds at risk by assuming extensive financial obligations in connection with the Huntington incinerator. The town further contends that the flow control ordinance is valid under the market participant exception because it protects the town’s financial investment in the incinerator. We agree with SSC.
To the extent that the flow control ordinance threatens garbage haulers with criminal fines and jail terms if they fail to do business with Smithtown at the Huntington incinerator, the town is engaging in market regulation, not market participation. See Atlantic Coast Demolition & Recycling, Inc. v. Board of Chosen Freeholders,
Smithtown points to language in South-Central Timber stating that although Alaska “may be a participant in the timber market, it is using its leverage in that market to exert a regulatory effect in the processing market, in which it is not a participant,”
Smithtown also draws our attention to City of Philadelphia,
[w]hen a public entity participates in a market, it may sell and buy what it chooses, to or from whom it chooses, on terms of its choice; its market participation does not, however, confer upon it the right to use its regulatory power to control the actions of others in that market.
Atlantic Coast,
2. Commerce Clause Analysis
Our finding that the market participant exception does not apply to Smithtown’s flow control ordinance compels us to turn to the question of whether the ordinance violates the Commerce Clause. Our analysis is governed by the recent case of C & A Carbone v. Town of Clarkstown, — U.S. —,
The cost of building the transfer station was estimated at $1.4 million. A local private contractor agreed to construct the facility and operate it for five years, after which the town would buy it for one dollar. During those five years, the town guaranteed a minimum waste flow of 120,000 tons per year, for which the contractor could charge the hauler a so-called tipping fee of $81 per ton. If the station received less than 120,000 tons in a year, the town promised to make up the tipping fee deficit. The object of this arrangement was to amortize the cost of the transfer station: The town would finance its new facility with the income generated by the tipping fees.
The problem, of course, was how to meet the yearly guarantee. This difficulty was compounded by the fact that the tipping fee of $81 per ton exceeded the disposal cost of unsorted solid waste on the private market. The solution the town adopted was [a] flow control ordinance.... re-quirting] all nonhazardous solid waste within the town to be deposited at the [new] transfer station.... Noncompliance is punishable by as much as a $1,000 fine and up to 15 days in jail.
Id. at —,
That the flow control ordinance was at bottom a financing measure, aimed at ensuring the viability of the new transfer station, did not excuse its discriminatory effect on interstate commerce. The Court stated that
revenue generation is not a local interest that can justify discrimination against interstate commerce. Otherwise States could impose discriminatory taxes against solid waste originating outside the State.
Clarkstown maintains that special financing is necessary to ensure the long-term survival of the designated facility. If so, the town may subsidize the facility through general taxes or municipal bonds. But having elected to use the open market to earn revenues for its project, the town may not employ discriminatory regulation to give that project an advantage over rival businesses from out of State.
Carbone, — U.S. at —,
Carbone compels us to find that Smith-town’s flow control ordinance facially discriminates against interstate commerce because it directs all town waste to a single local disposal facility, to the exclusion of both in-state and out-of-state competitors. Accordingly, Smithtown must “demonstrate, under rigorous scrutiny, that it has no other means [than its flow control ordinance] to advance a legitimate local interest.” Id. at —,
C. Smithtown’s Improvement Contract
Smithtown’s improvement contract with SSC stands on more solid ground than does its flow control ordinance, inasmuch as we find that the contract constitutes market participation, rather than regulation. The central question in determining whether the contract constitutes “market participation” by Smithtown is whether it more closely resembles Boston’s local-hiring requirements in White, or Alaska’s local-processing requirements in Southr-Central Timber. In both cases, the government reached beyond “the boundary of formal privity of contract” to influence the economic relationships between its trading partners and other parties. See South-Central Timber,
Smithtown is a “major participant” in two “discrete, identifiable class[es] of economic activity”: waste collection and waste disposal. See White,
If Boston could require contractors for city-funded projects to hire a certain percentage of city residents, then Smithtown can require SSC to hire town residents to drive its garbage trucks — since those truck drivers would be “in a substantial if informal sense, “working for the city.’ ” Id. at 211 n. 7,
The itemization of “disposal” and “collection” charges on SSC’s bid for the improvement contract reinforces our conclusion that Smithtown is a buyer, rather than a regulator, of disposal services, the ordinance and its criminal penalties notwithstanding. Because Smithtown pays the disposal portion of the bid to reimburse SSC for tipping fees at the Huntington incinerator, the disposal costs are “passed through” SSC to town residents — who ultimately foot the bill for disposal through user fees assessed on their annual property tax bill.
There are four principal reasons why Smithtown charges SSC tipping fees at the incinerator and then reimburses SSC for those charges, instead of charging no tipping fees at the incinerator and simply keeping the taxpayers’ user fees in the first place. First, and most important, Smithtown’s tipping fees combat the free-rider problem (or free-dumper problem, as it were), by discouraging SSC and the other contract haulers from insinuating out-of-town garbage into the waste they bring to the Huntington incinerator. Second, by charging haulers $66 to dump a ton of garbage, but nothing to dump recyclables, Smithtown encourages its waste haulers to abide by their contractual obligation to separate recyclables from the waste stream. Third, the pass-through mechanism encourages bidders to forecast accurately the amount of waste generated in each improvement district, and not to “low-ball” their estimates to win the contract. If each bid area in the district generates less waste than contemplated by the prevailing estimate, the contractor keeps the difference between the bid and the actual disposal costs. If the area generates more garbage than expected, the hauler must still pay the tipping fees and absorb the excess. Fourth, by itemizing the disposal costs in the contract, Smithtown can easily adjust its charges to town residents in the event of a change in tipping fees. Thus, the principal purpose of the pass-through mechanism is to minimize the town’s costs of monitoring SSC’s performance under the contract. That SSC pays tipping fees to use the incinerator does not detract from the reality that Smithtown is the one consuming — and ultimately paying for — those disposal services.
SSC directs our attention to Waste Recycling v. Southeast Alabama Solid Waste Disposal Authority,
We decline to adopt the reasoning of the Waste Recycling court. First, it is well established that a protectionist motive does not automatically render state activity “regulation.” As the Supreme Court stated in Reeves:
We find the label “protectionism” of little help in this context. The State’s refusal to sell to buyers other than South Dakotans is “protectionist” only in the sense that it limits benefits generated by a state program to those who fund the state treasury and whom the State was created to serve. Petitioner’s argument apparently also would characterize as “protectionist” rules restricting to state residents the enjoyment of state educational institutions, energy generated by a state-run plant, police and fire protection, and agricultural improvement and business development programs. Such policies, while perhaps “protectionist” in a loose sense, reflect the essential and patently unobjectionable purpose of state government — to serve the citizens of the State.
Second, a town need not possess a proprietary interest in the garbage itself in order to place contractual restrictions on its disposal. As the Supreme Court observed in Carbone, the article of commerce is not merely the physical trash sitting in barrels or dumpsters, but also the demand for garbage processing and disposal services. Carbone, — U.S. at —,
Our conclusion that Smithtown has an identifiable interest in the disposal of its garbage is reinforced by the towns’ vulnerability to liability under the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act (“CERCLA”), 42 U.S.C. § 9607(a) (1988), if they “arrange” for the disposal and treatment of municipal solid waste. B.F. Goodrich Co. v. Murtha,
That Smithtown has favored itself, rather than some private company, as the provider of disposal services does not affect our analysis. As discussed earlier, it is true that Smithtown “participates” in the waste disposal market not only as a buyer of disposal services from SSC, but also as a buyer of services from Ogden and a re-seller of those services to SSC. But while these latter two forms of doing business may constitute “market participation” on the part of Smithtown,
Finally, we address SSC’s contention that Smithtown should not be considered a market participant, on the theory that such a characterization would subject the town to the antitrust laws. The logic of this argument escapes us. First, it is far from clear that treating Smithtown as a “market participant” for Commerce Clause purposes necessarily subjects it to the antitrust laws. As the Supreme Court held in City of Lafayette v. Louisiana Power & Light Co.,
Second, and more important, it is unclear why this court should use the antitrust statutes — which are subject to legislative change — to guide our interpretation of the word “regulation” as defined in the Constitution. It is axiomatic that we prefer constructions of ordinances and statutes that do not conflict with the Constitution. Ashwander v. Tennessee Valley Auth.,
III. Conclusion
To summarize:
1. Smithtown’s flow control ordinance, which is enforceable through criminal penalties, constitutes market regulation rather than market participation. The ordinance is indistinguishable from the one struck down by the Supreme Court in Carbone, and thus violates the dormant Commerce Clause.
2. The improvement contract constitutes municipal participation in both the waste collection and disposal markets, and thus does not violate the Commerce Clause.
The judgment is accordingly affirmed in part and reversed in part.
Notes
. See, e.g., Polar Ice Cream & Creamery Co. v. Andrews,
The nexus between milk and garbage is significant, but often overlooked. Minnesota v. Clover Leaf Creamery Co.,
.C & A Carbone, Inc. v. Town of Clarkstown, — U.S. —,
. See Carbone, — U.S. at —,
. See, e.g., Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act ("CERCLA"), 42 U.S.C. §§ 9601-9657 (1988 & Supp. V 1993).
. "Sometimes referred to as a gate fee or disposal charge, the term ‘tipping fee' is derived from the fact that trucks delivering waste must 'tip' the back-end of the truck to drop off the waste.” Eric S. Petersen & David N. Abramowitz, Municipal Solid Waste Flow Control in the Post-Carbone World, 22 Fordham Urb. LJ. 361, 369 n. 46 (1995).
. The Commerce Clause provides that "Congress shall have Power ... To regulate Commerce with foreign Nations, and among the several States, and with the Indian Tribes.” U.S. Const, art. I, § 8, cl. 3. The term "dormant” Commerce Clause refers to the negative implications of that constitutional provision, which limit the authority of state and local governments that either discriminate against, or unduly burden, interstate commerce. Oklahoma Tax Comm’n v. Jef
. The Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976 ("RCRA”), Pub.L. No. 94-580 (codified at 42 U.S.C. §§ 6901-6902), for example, required states receiving federal financial assistance under the Act to "prohibit the establishment of new open dumps" and to require all solid waste to be either "utilized for resource recovery” or "disposed of in sanitary landfills” that satisfy standards promulgated by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. 42 U.S.C. § 6943(a)(2) (1988). The legislation provides some leeway for a state to upgrade its open dumps to sanitary landfills, provided that it establish an approved timetable for compliance. Id. § 6945. Pursuant to RCRA, the EPA has promulgated minimum national criteria for municipal solid waste landfills in Part 258 of 40 C.F.R. (1994).
. The Long Island Landfill Law, 1983 N.Y.Laws 299 (codified at N.Y. Envtl.Conserv.Law § 27-0704 (McKinney 1984)), phased out the practice of landfilling raw garbage, prohibited development of new landfills in deep flow groundwater recharge zones, and designated resource recovery, incineration, or composting as the preferred alternatives for disposal of municipal solid waste on Long Island.
. In December 1989, the towns of Smithtown and Huntington executed a Municipal Cooperation Agreement under Article 5G of the General Municipal Law of the State of New York. See N.Y.Gen.Mun.Law §§ 119-m to -oo (McKinney 1986 & Supp.1994). Under this agreement, the two towns assumed joint responsibility for the obligations originally incurred by Huntington in its Service Agreement with the operator of the incinerator, and in related agreements with the New York State Environmental Facilities Corporation and the State of New York, both of which contributed grant funds to the project. The towns also agreed to share certain obligations incurred by Smithtown to expand its existing landfill. Each town is entitled to equal access and use of both the Huntington incinerator and the Smithtown landfill under the municipal agreement.
. Ogden is a Delaware corporation that formed a Delaware limited partnership, C-E Huntington L.P., as a special subsidiary to construct and operate the Huntington incinerator.
.The town code defines "acceptable waste” as Only solid waste acceptable at specific town-designated facilities, including but not limited to garbage, trash, rubbish, refuse, construction and demolition materials and yard waste that are normally disposed of by and collected from residential, commercial, industrial, governmental, community facilities or institutional establishments, except that "acceptable wastes” shall not include unacceptable waste and recyclables. Smithtown Code § 177-4 (1994). "Unacceptable waste" and "recyclables” are defined elsewhere in the town code.
. For convenience, this opinion will use the terms “garbage” and "acceptable waste” interchangeably.
. The improvement districts include all residences in Smithtown, except for those in three incorporated villages.
. “It is the responsibility of ... each Prospective Bidder to determine to their own satisfaction, the quantity of Residential Solid Waste to be generated in each Contract Bid Area and to include the costs for disposal of the residential solid waste, at the prescribed tipping fees, in the Itemized Bid Proposal.” § 1.07(A)(2), Contract.
. SSC collects residential garbage in Smith-town pursuant to the Improvement contract, and commercial garbage pursuant to private agreements with various Smithtown businesses. SSC has not challenged Smithtown's authority to create improvement districts for the collection of residential garbage, or to contract with a private company to collect that garbage. Instead, the plaintiff garbage hauler only contests Smith-town's right to include in the contract the requirement that SSC bring its garbage to a designated waste disposal facility.
. See Garcia v. San Antonio Metro. Transit Auth.,
. See, e.g., Tyler Pipe Indus, v. Washington State Dep’t of Revenue,
. The “market participant” doctrine applies to local as well as state governments. See White v. Massachusetts Council of Constr. Employers,
. The Court ultimately struck down the Oklahoma statute because it also applied to privately owned power plants.
. We note preliminarily that the market participant doctrine was not mentioned in any of the several opinions in Carbone. Although in his dissent Justice Souter contended that the Clarks-town transfer station was "essentially a municipal facility,” — U.S. at —,
. The New York State Legislature passed legislation specifically authorizing Smithtown to adopt ordinances
imposing appropriate and reasonable limitations on competition with respect to collecting, receiving, transporting, delivering, storing, processing and disposing of solid waste or the recovery by any means of any material or energy product or resource therefrom, including local laws requiring that all solid waste generated, originated or brought within its boundaries, subject to such exceptions as may be determined to be in the public interest, shall be delivered to a specified solid waste management-resource recovery facility....
N.Y.Gen.Mun.Law § 120-bb(4) (McKinney Supp. 1994). The same statute specifically authorizes the Municipal Agreement between Huntington and Smithtown. Id. § 120-bb(l)-(3), (5)-(7). Finally, the Legislature specifically approved the cooperative venture between Smithtown and Huntington in legislative findings in 1989 N.Y.Laws 80. The Legislature found that
the proper management of solid waste is often most economically and efficiently achieved by the cooperative regional development by municipalities of facilities designed to address their mutual disposal needs and that it is in the public interest to encourage such cooperation and that such cooperative development is consistent with the state’s solid waste management policy.
The legislature further finds and declares that the towns of Huntington and Smithtown have demonstrated the value of such cooperation and have moved forward to reduce, reuse and recycle solid waste pursuant to the statutory hierarchy established under the Solid Waste Management Act of 1988.
Smithtown's project also met with the approval of the state bonding authority, which lent funds to construct the incinerator. Any lingering doubt as to whether the State of New York approves of Smithtown’s activities should be put to rest by the state’s filing of an amicus brief in this case supporting Smithtown.
