Although the general model of sovereignty suggests that different sovereign states normally occupy different geographic territories, see,
e.g.,
Restatement (3d) of the Foreign Relations Law of the United States, § 201 (1986), the existence of federations and confederations shows that overlapping sovereignty is also a common feature of modern political organization. In this case, we confront one of the more complex kinds of overlapping sovereignty that exists in the United States today: that between the States and Indian tribes. The Supreme Court addressed one aspect of that relationship in its 2000 Term in
Nevada v. Hicks,
— U.S. -,
I
A. The Clean Water Act
The Clean Water Act (the Act) prohibits the discharge of pollutants into navigable waters unless the discharge is sanctioned
In 1987, Congress amended the Act to authorize the EPA to treat Indian tribes as states under § 518 of the Act. Once a tribe has treatment-as-state (TAS) status, the statute permits it to establish water quality standards for bodies of water within its reservation and to require permits for any action that may create a discharge into those waters. 33 U.S.C. § 1377(e). In 1991, after full notice-and-comment rule-making, the EPA issued a final rule implementing this provision and setting forth the requirements Indian tribes would have to meet in order to be granted TAS status:
(1) the tribe must be federally recognized;
(2) the tribe must have a governing body carrying out substantial governmental duties and powers;
(3) the functions to be exercised by the tribe must pertain to the management and protection of water resources which are held by the tribe, held by the United States in trust for the tribe, or otherwise within the borders of the reservation; and
(4) the tribe must be capable of carrying out the functions of the Act.
40 C.F.R. § 131.8(a); see also 33 U.S.C. §§ 1377(e)(l)-(3).
Relying heavily on the Supreme Court’s decision in
Montana v. United States,
The EPA acknowledged that this will usually be an easy showing, based on “generalized findings” that water quality is related to human health and welfare. See id. Although the EPA stated that it would make a case-specific determination with regard to the scope of each tribe’s authority, once a tribe has shown that impairment of the waters on the reservation would have a serious and substantial effect on the health and welfare of the tribe, the EPA presumes that there has been an adequate showing of inherent authority. Id. at 64879.
B. The Mole Lake Band and its Application For TAS Status
The waters at issue in this case are lakes and streams adjacent to or surround
In August 1994, the Band applied for TAS status under the Act. Wisconsin opposed the application, arguing that it was sovereign over all of the navigable waters in the state, including those on the reservation, and that its sovereignty precluded any tribal regulation. Nevertheless, after elaborate administrative proceedings, on September 29, 1995, the EPA approved the Band’s application, finding that the tribe had satisfied all of the requirements of 40 C.F.R. § 131.8, including the necessary demonstration of its inherent authority over all water resources on the reservation. In keeping with its earlier positions, the EPA noted that the inherent authority question did not turn on who had title to the land underneath the waters.
This grant of TAS status alarmed the State of Wisconsin, which saw it as both an affront to the state’s sovereignty and, more pragmatically, as an action with the potential to throw a wrench into the state’s planned construction of a huge zinc-copper sulfide mine on the Wolf River, upstream from Rice Lake. Concerned about its loss of authority over certain territory within its outer boundaries and worried that the tribal water standards might limit the activities of the mine by prohibiting some or all of the discharge from the mine, Wisconsin filed this action in district court on January 25, 1996, reiterating its challenge to the EPA’s grant of TAS status to the Band. (The United States and the EPA waived immunity under 5 U.S.C. § 702.) The state’s case raises a fundamental challenge to the TAS grant; the relief it seeks is outright revocation of the grant, rather than mere accommodation for any particular project. We are therefore satisfied that the issue is ripe now and need not await the Band’s promulgation of specific water quality standards. If Wisconsin is right, it is entitled to have the EPA’s creation of a state-like entity within its borders voided — an action that lies within the power of the court. See
Commodity Trend Service, Inc. v. Commodity Futures Trading Comm’n,
In April 1999, the district court upheld the TAS grant, finding that the EPA’s determination that a tribe could regulate all water within the reservation, regardless of ownership, was a reasonable interpretation of the relevant statutes and regulations. Wisconsin now appeals.
II
We review a grant of summary judgment
de novo, Doe v. Howe Military Sch.,
Wisconsin is challenging the EPA’s findings only with respect to the third requirement for TAS status — the demonstration of the tribe’s inherent authority to regulate water quality within the borders of the reservation. Wisconsin gives three reasons why the EPA’s determination that the tribe had established such authority was unreasonable.
1. Not “Within the Borders”
For the first time on appeal, Wisconsin contends that Rice Lake is not “within the borders” of the reservation because the legal description of the reservation runs only to the Lake’s highwater mark. This argument is waived, however, because Wisconsin did not present it to the EPA. See
Vermont Nuclear Power Corp. v. Natural Res. Def. Council, Inc.,
2. No Authority Because No Title
Second, Wisconsin argues that the tribe does not have authority over the water resources on the reservation because the state has ownership of the underlying lake beds. We will assume for the purposes of this appeal that, pursuant to the Equal Footing Doctrine, the state does indeed have title to the lake beds within the reservation. See
Idaho v. Coeur d’Alene Tribe of Idaho,
This court has indeed held that, in some situations, state ownership of lake beds may restrict a tribe’s authority to regulate the waters running over those beds. In
Wisconsin v. Baker,
But contrary to Wisconsin’s assertions,
Baker
does not dispose of this case. Most importantly,
Baker
did not involve a particular statute under which Congress specified that tribes would be entitled to be treated as states under particular circumstances, and both Congress and the re
Baker
therefore has little or no application to the case before us. We find pertinent instead a number of legal principles all of which support the EPA’s determination that a state’s title to a lake bed does not in itself exempt the waters from all outside regulation. First, “the power of Congress to regulate commerce among the states involves the control of the navigable waters of the United States.”
Coyle v. Smith,
The breadth of federal authority over Indian affairs is equally well-established: “The Constitution vests the Federal Government with exclusive authority over relations with Indian tribes.”
Montana v. Blackfeet Tribe,
Because the state does not contend that its ownership of the beds would preclude the federal government from regulating the waters within the reservation, it cannot now complain about the federal government allowing tribes to do so. It was reasonable for the EPA to determine that ownership of the waterbeds did not preclude federally approved regulation of the quality of the water, and we uphold that determination.
Finally, Wisconsin argues that the Band did not make the required showing of authority over those activities potentially affected by its imposition of water quality standards. Because the EPA has determined that, unlike the Clean Air Act, the Clean Water Act is not an express delegation of power to tribes, see 56 Fed.Reg. at 64880, the EPA requires tribes to show that they already possessed inherent authority over the activities undoubtedly affected by the water regulations. EPA regulations allow a tribe to establish this authority by showing that impairment of the reservation’s waters would affect “the political integrity, the economic security, or the health or welfare of the tribe.” 56 Fed.Reg. at 64877.
This regulatory language tracks the Supreme Court’s decision in
Montana v. United States, supra,
in which the Court recognized the general rule that “the inherent sovereign powers of an Indian tribe do not extend to the activities of nonmembers of the tribe,”
Once a tribe is given TAS status, it has the power to require upstream off-reservation dischargers, conducting activities that may be economically valuable to the state
(e.g.,
zinc and copper mining), to make sure that their activities do not result in contamination of the downstream on-reservation waters (assuming for the sake of argument that the reservation standards are more stringent than those the state is imposing on the upstream entity). See
Albuquerque v. Browner,
But this is not the only situation where upstream and downstream users may have different standards and some accommodation is necessary. Wisconsin’s argument could be made equally if the downstream regulator were Illinois, yet in that case the need for the two states to coordinate their standards, or for the upstream company to comply with the more stringent rules, would be clear. In fact, Congress anticipated this very problem in the statute, and it had the following to say about it:
The Administrator shall, in promulgating such regulations [for TAS status],consult affected States sharing common water bodies and provide a mechanism for the resolution of any unreasonable consequences that may arise as a result of differing water quality standards that may be set by States and Indian tribes located on common bodies of water. Such mechanism shall provide for explicit consideration of relevant factors including, but not limited to, the effects of differing water quality permit requirements on upstream and downstream dis-chargers, economic impacts, and present and historical uses and quality of the waters subject to such standards. Such mechanism should provide for the avoidance of such unreasonable consequences in a manner consistent with the objective of this chapter.
33 U.S.C. § 1377(e).
The EPA has developed the mechanism called for by the statute, which allows it to mediate conflicting interests when a tribe’s standards differ from those of a state. See also 33 U.S.C. § 1341(a). In addition, once a tribe is given TAS status, the Act gives it the same right as that given to states to object to permits issued for upstream off-reservation activities. See 56 Fed.Reg. at 64887. In deciding whether to issue a permit for discharge within a state that may violate the water quality standards of a downstream tribe, the EPA may ask the parties to engage in mediation or arbitration, in which the decision-maker and the EPA administrator, who has the final authority over the issuance of the permit, will consider such factors as “the effects of differing water quality permit requirements on upstream and downstream dischargers, economic impacts, and present and historical uses and quality of the waters subject to such standards.” 33 U.S.C. § 1377(e). The EPA may then ask the tribe to issue a temporary variance from its standards for the particular discharge or may ask the state to provide additional water pollution controls. See 54 Fed.Reg. at 39099-101; 56 Fed.Reg. at 64885-89; 40 C.F.R. §§ 121.11 through 121.16. This mechanism, rather than a futile effort' to avoid extraterritorial effects, is the way both Congress and the agency sought to accommodate the inevitable differences that would arise.
We say “inevitable” because activities located outside the regulating entity (here the reservation), and the resulting discharges to which those activities can lead, can and often will have “serious and substantial” effects on the health and welfare of the downstream state or reservation. There is no case that expressly rejects an application of Montana to off-reservation activities that have significant effects within the reservation, and it would be exceedingly hard to say that the EPA’s interpretation is contrary to law in the face of the express recognition of this issue and the choice of a solution in the statute itself. It was reasonable for the EPA to determine that, since the Supreme Court has held that a tribe has inherent authority over activities having a serious effect on the health of the tribe, this authority is not defeated even if it exerts some regulatory force on off-reservation activities.
Finally, we think Wisconsin exaggerates the power of the tribe to veto upstream discharge activities. The tribe cannot impose any water quality standards or take any action that goes beyond the federal statute or the EPA’s power. To the contrary, the EPA supervises all standards and permits. Far from allowing a tribe to veto a state permit, granting TAS status to tribes simply allows the tribes some say regarding those standards and permits. It is quite possible that, in particular cases, perhaps through the vehicle of the statutory mediation mechanism, the EPA may require the tribe’s more stringent stan
Because the Band has demonstrated that its water resources are essential to its survival, it was reasonable for the EPA, in line with the purposes of the Clean Water Act and the principles of Montana, to allow the tribe to regulate water quality on the reservation, even though that power entails some authority over off-reservation activities. Since a state has the power to require upstream states to comply with its water quality standards, to interpret the statutes to deny that power to tribes because of some kind of formal view of authority or sovereignty would treat tribes as second-class citizens. Nothing in § 1377(e) indicates that Congress authorized any such hierarchy. Particularly in light of the deference we owe to the EPA’s decisions here, we see nothing that would justify our setting aside the agency’s action.
Ill
We conclude that the EPA’s grant of TAS status to the Band is not arbitrary, unreasonable, or contrary to law and we therefore AffiRM the district court’s judgment. We note once again in closing that the EPA’s decision in each case seeking TAS status is fact-specific. In this case, both parties conceded that the waters within the Band’s reservation are very important to the Band’s economic and physical existence. Additionally, the reservation here is unusual in that there are no parcels of fee land within the reservation owned by non-members of the tribe. We have no occasion to say whether, on a different set of facts, the EPA might extend the notion of a tribe’s “inherent authority” to affect off-reservation activities so far as to go beyond the standards of the statute or the regulations. If it ever arises, that will be another case, for another day.
