Lead Opinion
Defendants-appellants Oneida-Herkimer Solid Waste Management Authority (Authority) and the Counties of Oneida and Herkimer (Counties) appeal a March 31, 2000 order of the United States District Court for the Northern District of New York, Pooler, Circuit Judge sitting by designation, granting summary judgment in favor of plaintiffs-appellees United Haulers Association, Inc., Transfer Systems, Inc., Bliss Enterprises, Inc., Ken Wittman Sanitation, Bristol Trash Removal, Levitt’s Commercial Containers, Inc. and Ingersoll
We must decide whether the Counties’ so-called “flow control” ordinances, which require that all waste generated within the Counties be delivered to one of five publicly owned facilities, are unconstitutional under the Commerce Clause. The district court found the flow control laws “virtually indistinguishable from the laws examined and struck down” in C & A Carbone v. Town of Clarkstown,
We hold that because the favored facilities are publicly owned, the ordinances do not discriminate against interstate commerce, and therefore are not subject to the rigorous test set forth in Maine v. Taylor,
BACKGROUND
The history of local solid waste regulation in the state of New York and across the country has been well documented. See, e.g., Inc. Vill. of Rockville Ctr. v. Town of Hempstead,
Historically, each city, town or village within the Counties was responsible for its own waste management. This balkanization led to the proliferation of waste dumps of all sizes, and with varying degrees of environmental accountability. The environmental risks and liabilities became apparent in the 1980s when over 600 local businesses and several local municipalities and school districts were named as third-party defendants in a federal environmental clean-up action against the Ludlow Landfill in Oneida County. See generally Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act, 42 U.S.C. §§ 9601-9675.
This “solid waste crisis,” as Oneida County describes it, and the increased environmental risks and exposure to federal and state liability which flowed from it, prompted the Counties to seek a solution. Like many of their municipal neighbors in New York and throughout the country, the Counties devised a comprehensive waste management system in an attempt to provide for the safe and cost effective disposal of their residents’ solid waste. Like many of their municipal neighbors, the Counties’ plan is now the subject of a constitutional challenge.
A. The Counties’ Solid Waste Management Solution
Oneida and Herkimer Counties are located in central New York, in the Mohawk Valley, and together encompass over 2,600 square miles with a combined population of approximately 306,000 persons, residing in 78 different cities, towns and villages. Both Counties are municipal corporations of the state of New York, and together constitute a single “planning unit” under the New York State Solid Waste Management Plan and its authorizing legislation. See N.Y. Envtl. Conserv. L. § 27-0107(l)(a).
The Counties requested that then-Governor Cuomo and the New York State Legislative Commission on Solid Waste Management (Commission) create a waste management authority to assume the Counties’ joint waste management responsibilities. The Governor and Commission complied by creating the Authority, a public benefit corporation authorized by the Oneida-Herkimer solid waste management authority act of 1988(Act). See generally N.Y. Pub. Auth. L. § 2049-aa. The Authority has the power, among other things, to collect, process and dispose of solid waste generated in the Counties. Moreover, the Act permits the Counties to contract with the Authority to obligate the Counties to ensure the continued operation and solvency of the Authority. See id. at §§ 2049-ee and tt. As amended in 1990, the Act prohibits the Authority from accepting solid waste (other than recyclable material) from outside of the Counties. See id. at §§ 2049-ee(4) and (7).
1. Agreements Between the Counties and the Authority
On May 10, 1989, the Authority and the Counties entered into a Solid Waste Management Agreement, in which the Authority agreed to manage and dispose of all solid waste within the Counties. In particular, the Authority agreed to take control of the operation of the Oneida County Energy Recovery Facility and the Oneida-Herkimer Recycling Center (Recycling Center) beginning on January 1, 1990, and to collect “tipping fees” sufficient to pay its operating and maintenance costs. See SSC Corp.,
On December 28, 1989, the Authority and the Counties entered into a second solid waste management agreement. In that agreement, the Authority reaffirmed its obligations under the first agreement and the Counties agreed to pay the Authority’s operating costs and debt service to the extent those costs were not recouped through tipping fees and other disposal related charges.
2. The Local Laws
In December 1989, the Oneida County Board of Legislators enacted Local Law No. 1 of 1990, Oneida’s flow control law. The law requires that all solid waste generated within the County be picked up by the municipality, a licensed private hauler or the generator, and delivered to certain approved processing sites designated by the Authority.
Two months later, in February 1990, the Herkimer County Legislature enacted Herkimer County Local Law No. 1 of 1990, Herkimer’s flow control law, which is substantially similar to the Oneida flow control law.
3. Authority Activities
Between 1990 and 1992 the Authority issued over $51 million in bonds to finance the designated facilities, to construct the Green Waste Compost Facility and the Utica Transfer Station, and to refinance prior bonds. The Authority owns all five designated facilities and operates all but the Utica Transfer Station.
a. Utica Transfer Station Operating Agreement
In 1991, the Authority accepted bids for the operation of the Utica Transfer Station. The bidding process was open to all private waste disposal companies, in-state and out-of-state. The Authority received four bids, all from out-of-state businesses, which proposed delivery of the solid waste at the transfer station to eight landfills, seven of which were located outside of New York.
In June 1991, the Authority entered into a contract with Empire Sanitary Landfill, Inc. (Empire) to operate the Utica Transfer Station. Pursuant to that contract, Empire transported all solid waste processed at the transfer station to Empire’s landfill in Taylor, Pennsylvania for disposal. The Authority agreed to deliver or cause to be delivered all solid waste generated or originating in the Counties (other than recyclables and waste burned at the Energy Recovery Facility) to the transfer station. The parties extended the contract to span the period 1995 to 1998.
In 1998, the Authority again accepted bids from private waste disposal companies. This time, Waste Management of New York (Waste Management), a Delaware limited liability company, prevailed. Waste Management agreed to dispose of the waste processed at the transfer station at two facilities, one located in-state and the other located in Erie, Pennsylvania. Waste Management continues to operate the transfer station on behalf of the Counties.
In the May 20, 1991 Final Local Solid Waste Management System Plan for the Counties, the Authority contemplates the development of additional facilities “to provide for all components of the waste stream for all residents of the two counties” (emphasis added). The Authority expressly states in the Plan that it “is wholly committed to the development of facilities within Oneida and Herkimer Counties to
b. The Authority’s Rules and Regulations
Pursuant to the May and December 1989 agreements and the local flow control laws enacted by the Counties, the Authority has promulgated rules and regulations. The Authority’s 1995 Rules and Regulations provide that private haulers “must deliver all acceptable solid waste and curbside collected recyclables generated within Oneida and Herkimer Counties to an Authority designated facility.” The 1995 Rules and Regulations also require all private haulers to obtain a Solid Waste Collection and Disposal Permit from the Authority. The Authority sets the applicable tipping fees, designates access route patterns to four of the five designated facilities and retains the right to redirect “solid waste ... to the appropriate facility according to waste production, waste origin, waste type, seasonal fluctuations or planned operating procedures.” To enforce the Counties’ local laws and the 1995 Rules and Regulations, the Authority employs “garbage cops” (as coined by United Haulers) to monitor private haulers’ activities and ensure compliance with the flow control ordinances.
B. Alleged Effect on Private Haulers
The individual plaintiff haulers are four New York corporations and two New York sole proprietorships, each of which engaged in the collection, transport, processing and disposal of solid waste within the Counties. United Haulers Association, Inc. (Association) is a not-for-profit New York corporation comprised of solid waste management companies doing business within the Counties. Each of the individual plaintiffs is a member of the Association.
Under the 1995 Rules and Regulations, private haulers must pay the Authority a tipping fee of at least $86 per ton of solid waste disposed of at the Authority’s facilities. If witnessed disposal is required or if the load contains more than 25% recyclables, the charge is increased to as much as $172 per ton. Even the lowest tipping fee charged under the Counties’ scheme is higher than the market value for the disposal services the Authority provides. But for the Counties’ flow control laws, United Haulers claims that it could deliver and dispose of solid waste at other facilities within the state of New York or in other states at a lower price. United Haulers submitted affidavits from Jeff Bliss, President of Bliss Enterprises, Inc. and David N. Levitt, Vice President of Levitt’s Commercial Containers, Inc., averring that out-of-state disposal facilities accessible to the haulers charged significantly lower tipping fees. For example, United Haulers claims that Greentree Landfill in Pennsylvania is capable of accepting municipal waste from the haulers at a tipping fee of $26-30 per ton. Therefore, according to United Haulers, the Counties’ flow control laws bar them from accessing a viable, and significantly cheaper, interstate market for waste disposal.
C. District Court Proceedings
On April 14, 1995, United Haulers commenced the present action against the Counties and the Authority alleging that the flow control laws are unconstitutional and constitute a deprivation of United Haulers’ constitutional rights. See 42 U.S.C. § 1983.
United Haulers argued, as it does now, that “the recent and controlling decision by the United States Supreme Court in C & A Carbone, Inc. v. Town of Clarkstown establishes the unconstitutionality of the Flow Control Laws.” United Haulers asserted that, like the laws stricken in Car-bone, the Counties’ flow control laws discriminate against interstate commerce to finance the Counties’ solid waste management scheme. United Haulers pointed out that the flow control laws in this case are designed to support a much larger waste management system (almost 50 times more expensive) than that in Carbone and impact approximately three times more solid waste than in Carbone.
In opposition, the Counties and the Authority argued that they had adopted “an integrated system of solid waste disposal” to alleviate “important public health and environmental concerns” caused by the hodge-podge system of private enterprise and sub-standard disposal sites. They argued that the waste management system did not discriminate against or unduly burden interstate commerce under Carbone. Alternatively, they argued that they were entitled to further discovery pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(e) and (f) to enable them to show that there were no alternative means to accomplish their legitimate goals. In their view, anything less than full discovery would “reward[ ] plaintiffs for their guerilla litigation strategy and punish[ ] the [defendants] in contravention of the intent and spirit of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.”
Shortly after United Haulers moved for summary judgment, the Counties and the Authority answered the Complaint' and served an initial set of interrogatories. At a June 1,1995 scheduling conference, however, United Haulers requested a protective order staying discovery pending resolution of its motion. The magistrate judge granted the protective order suspending discovery. Accordingly, no discovery took place prior to the district court’s determination of United Haulers’ summary judgment motion that is the subject of this appeal.
The district court heard oral argument on United Hauler’s motion for summary judgment in October 1995. Almost five years later, on March 31, 2000, the district court entered an order granting United Haulers’ motion. The district court declared the flow control laws unconstitutional and enjoined the Counties and the Authority from enforcing them. After concluding that the Association did not have standing to assert a section 1983 damages claim, the district court granted summary judgment in favor of the individual haulers on that claim and referred the action to a magistrate judge for calculation of damages.
The Counties and the Authority filed timely notices of appeal on April 28, 2000. We heard argument on December 19, 2000, and following argument solicited supplemental briefing from the parties on several issues. We now reverse and remand.
DISCUSSION
In 1996, we remarked that the federal docket was “clogged with — of all things—
Although the Supreme Court’s and this Court’s recent spotlight on local, solid waste regulation provides us with a framework within which to analyze this challenge, many questions remain unanswered with respect to the constitutionality of municipal flow control laws. See generally Colin A. Fieman, The Second Circuit Upholds Waste Management Systems in the Wake of Carbone v. Clarkstown: The Decisions in USA Recycling, Inc. v. Town of Babylon and SSC Corp. v. Smithtown, 23 Fordham Urb. L.J. 767, 769 (1996) (“[Although the Second Circuit has made considerable progress in clarifying the law in this area, it has left questions about the constitutionality of flow control unanswered.”). Unfortunately, these missing pieces to the constitutional puzzle often force states and municipalities to engage in guesswork about the constitutionality of proposed solid waste management schemes, which are expensive and time-consuming to implement. See generally, e.g., Jennifer M. Anglim, Note, The Need for a Rational State and Local Response to Carbone: Alternate Means to Responsible, Affordable Municipal Solid Waste Management, 18 Va. Envtl. L.J. 129, 130-32 (1999) (“[T]he federal municipal solid waste ... management jurisprudence has followed intertwined and often-conflicting legal theories and precedents, making it difficult for states and municipalities to plan.”). With frequent reference to the guiding principles underlying the Supreme Court’s dormant Commerce Clause jurisprudence, we attempt to fill in one more piece of this puzzle.
A. Legal Background
The Commerce Clause states that “Congress shall have Power ... [t]o regulate Commerce with foreign Nations, and among the several States, and with the Indian Tribes.” U.S. Const. art. I, § 8, cl. 3. On its face, the clause does not speak to the power, if any, of the states to regulate interstate commerce. Although the Supremacy Clause prohibits state regulation of interstate commerce in areas where Congress has spoken, see U.S. Const, art. VI, cl. 2, neither the text of the Commerce Clause nor the Supremacy Clause “say what the states may or may not do in the absence of congressional action.” Dep’t of Revenue v. Ass’n of Wash. Stevedoring Cos.,
In Gibbons v. Ogden,
Justice Jackson later expressed the rationale underlying the judicially created dormant Commerce Clause:
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.
H.P. Hood & Sons v. Du Mond,
Not surprisingly, the Court’s effort to preserve a national market has, on numerous occasions, come into conflict with the states’ traditional power to “legislat[e] on all subjects relating to the health, life, and safety of their citizens.” Huron Portland Cement Co. v. City of Detroit,
B. Dormant Commerce Clause Analysis
As a threshold matter, a court must determine whether a state or local government is “regulating” and, if so, whether that regulation affects interstate commerce. See Carbone,
The Supreme Court has left no doubt that flow control regulation affects interstate commerce. In Carbone, the Supreme Court stated that “[w]hile the immediate effect of the ordinance is to direct local transport of solid waste to a designated site within the local jurisdiction, its economic effects are interstate in reach.”
1. Discrimination or Incidental Effects
Once a court determines that a state regulation affects interstate commerce, it must next determine whether the regulation “discriminates against interstate commerce” or regulates even-handedly with incidental effects on interstate commerce. Id. at 390,
A local law is discriminatory if it provides for “differential treatment of instate and out-of-state economic interests that benefits the former and burdens the latter.” USA Recycling v. Town of Babylon,
On the other hand, “[w]here the statute regulates even-handedly to effectuate a legitimate local public interest, and its effects on interstate commerce are only incidental, it will be upheld unless the burden imposed on such commerce is clearly excessive in relation to the putative local benefits.” Pike,
The district court held that the Counties’ flow control laws discriminated against interstate commerce in favor of the Authority’s designated facilities and that, in light of Carbone, the Counties could not, as a matter of law, demonstrate that no alternatives existed. The district court relied on its belief that “[c]ourts have considered it almost a foregone conclusion that flow control laws violate the dormant commerce clause.” (citing Sal Tinnerello & Sons,
First, the district court erroneously attributed to the Supreme Court a per se prohibition against flow control laws. See Harvey & Harvey,
The following discussion focuses on the latter of these errors and concludes that a municipal flow control law does not discriminate against out-of-state interests in violation of the Commerce Clause when it directs all waste to publicly owned facilities. As such, the district court should have analyzed the Counties’ flow control laws under the Pike test to determine whether the laws’ effects on interstate commerce substantially outweigh the local benefits.
2. Private Ownership vs. Public Ownership
The Counties’ waste management scheme creates a bottleneck. Within the bottle, private waste haulers compete for the opportunity to collect solid waste from individual and corporate generators located within the Counties. Once collected, the private waste haulers must deliver the waste to one of five designated, Authority-owned processing facilities located within the Counties, the “bottleneck.” For the time being, once the waste has been delivered, private waste disposal companies, both in-state and out-of-state, stand outside the bottle to bid, on an open and competitive basis, for the right to process and ultimately dispose of the waste delivered to the Counties’ transfer station. The parties do not dispute, in any relevant respect, how the Counties’ system is organized, but instead disagree about whether the flow control restrictions on private haulers, those within the bottle, are discriminatory under the Commerce Clause.
The Counties and the Authority urge us to analyze the flow control ordinances as part of their overall waste management scheme. Specifically, they argue that the bidding process for the operation of the Utica Transfer Station negates any alleged hoarding of the disposal service because it opens the local disposal market to out-of-state bidders. See, e.g., Harvey & Harvey,
a. Carbone
Our analysis naturally begins with Car-bone, the Supreme Court’s only occasion thus far to apply the Commerce Clause to a flow control ordinance. The Supreme
The Town of Clarkstown, 'New York agreed with environmental authorities to close its landfill and build a solid waste transfer station. See Carbone,
Clarkstown’s ordinance differs from the Counties’ ordinances in two significant respects. , First, the Clarkstown ordinance applied to all solid waste within the town, whether that waste was generated within or outside the town. In contrast, the Counties’ flow control ordinances apply only to waste generated within the Counties.
The majority opinion in Carbone held that Clarkstown’s flow control ordinance was “just one more instance of local processing requirements that [the Court] long [has] held invalid.” Id. at 391,
United Haulers casts a blind eye to the Court’s repeated reference to Clarkstown’s favoritism for a single local proprietor. United Haulers contends that, read in conjunction, all three Carbone opinions imply a rejection of the distinction between public and private ownership for Commerce Clause purposes. The argument proceeds as follows: The dissenters in Carbone argued that the favored facility was an agent of the municipality and therefore publicly owned. Accordingly, the dissent argued that the ordinance did not discriminate against out-of-state business in favor of instate business:
While our previous local processing cases have barred discrimination in markets served by private companies, Clarkstown’s transfer station is essentially a municipal facility, built and operated under a contract with the municipality and soon to revert entirely to municipal ownership....
The majority ignores this distinction between public and private enterprise, equating Local Law 9’s “hoard[ing]” of solid waste for the municipal transfer station with the design and effect of ordinances that restrict access to local markets for the benefit of local private firms.
See id. at 419-20,
We disagree with United Haulers’ reading of Carbone. A careful reading of the separate opinions in Carbone does not support United Haulers’ theory. Indeed, if we were to divine direct guidance from those opinions, we would reach the opposite conclusion; namely, that in Carbone the Justices were divided over the fact of whether the favored facility was public or private, rather than on the import of that distinction.
As noted above, the Carbone majority referenced the private character of the favored facility several times, id. at 387,
Nevertheless, we require more than the Court’s silence on this point before concluding that it either rejected or accepted the public/private distinction advocated by the concurring and dissenting opinions. See Fort Gratiot Sanitary Landfill v. Mich. Dep’t of Natural Res.,
b. The Local Processing Cases
A commonly cited example of the Court’s local processing cases is Dean Milk Co. v. City of Madison,
Other decisions in the local processing line of cases evidence the same intent to prevent state or local governments from favoring in-state business or investment at the expense of out-of-state businesses. In Baldwin v. G.A.F. Seelig,
United Haulers asks us to focus on the Court’s broadly stated prohibition against the “hoarding” of local resources that otherwise would enter the stream of interstate commerce. A blanket prohibition against the hoarding of articles of commerce would appear to preclude the Counties’ flow control scheme. However, we must interpret the Court’s holdings in context, not in a vacuum. The common thread in the Court’s dormant Commerce Clause jurisprudence, highlighted in the local processing cases discussed above, is that a local law discriminates against interstate commerce when it hoards local resources in a manner that favors local business, industry or investment over out-of-state competition. See, e.g., College Sav. Bank v. Fl. Prepaid Postsecondary Educ. Expense Bd.,
There is sound reason for the Court’s consistent, although often unstated, recognition of the distinction between public and private ownership of favored facilities:
Reasons other than economic protectionism are ... more likely to explain the design and effect of an ordinance that favors a public facility.... An ordinance that favors a municipal facility, in any event, is one that favors the public sector, and if we continue to recognize that the States occupy a special and specific position in our constitutional system and that the scope of Congress’ authority under the Commerce Clause must reflect that position, then surely this Court’s dormant Commerce Clause jurisprudence must itself see that favoring state-sponsored facilities differs from discriminating among private economic actors, and is much less likely to be protectionist.
Id. at 421,
The principal burden of any economic inefficiency imposed by the Counties’ ordinances falls on the residents of the Counties. They must pay over twice as much to dispose of their solid waste as they paid prior to the adoption of the
The Commerce Clause was not passed to save the citizens of Clarkstown from themselves. It should not be wielded to prevent them from attacking their local garbage problems with an ordinance that does not discriminate between local and out-of-town participants in the private market for trash disposal services and that is not protectionist in its purpose or effect.
Id. at 430,
United Haulers also relies on the fact that no case has yet expressly relied on the distinction between public and private ownership, see U & I Sanitation v. City of Columbus,
Only one case has expressly addressed and rejected the distinction. See Southcentral Pa. Waste Haulers Ass’n,
Moreover, we find ample precedential support for our conclusion in (1) the consistent underlying facts of the local processing line of cases, a line in which the majority squarely placed Carbone, and (2) the opinions of four Supreme Court Justices, all of whom characterized the facility in Carbone as publicly owned, and therefore would have analyzed the challenged ordinance under the more lenient Pike test. In this case, unlike Carbone, there is no confusion or room for debate regarding the ownership of the favored facilities. They are owned by the Authority, a public entity, and not by any local business.
To summarize, a flow control ordinance governing the processing of waste is not discriminatory under the Commerce Clause unless it favors local private business interests over out-of-state interests. Flow control regulations like the OneidaHerkimer ordinances, which negatively impact all private businesses alike, regardless of whether in-state or out-of-state, in favor of a publicly owned facility, are not discriminatory under the dormant Commerce Clause. The district court erred by so holding.
C. The Pike Balancing Test
Having concluded that the Counties’ system does not discriminate against interstate commerce in favor of in-state business interests, we admit a temptation to undertake the Pike balancing test in the first instance.
This temptation, to which we do not succumb, arises from the well-settled principle that waste disposal is a traditional local government function. See Resource Conservation and Recovery Act, 42 U.S.C. § 6901(a)(4); N.Y. Gen. Mun. L. § 120-aa; Carbone,
In the past, we have held that a municipality “has legitimate — indeed, compelling — interests that are served by its waste management program.” USA Recycling,
We do hold, however, that although it does not, in and of itself, give a municipality free reign to place burdens on the free flow of commerce between the states, the fact that a municipality is acting within its traditional purview must factor into the district court’s determination of whether the local interests are substantially outweighed by the burdens on interstate commerce. With that understanding, we reverse and remand for a determination of whether the Counties’ flow control laws pass constitutional muster under the Pike balancing test.
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we reverse the district court’s judgment and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
The parties shall bear their own costs.
Notes
. Section 2(a) of the Oneida Local Law provides:
*250 In order to provide for public health and safety and to facilitate the conservation of vital resources: Each person shall provide for the removal of solid waste and recyclables from the property on which they are generated either through a service provided by a municipality or licensed private hauler or by direct haul by the individual generator to a disposal location approved 'by the County.
(emphasis added).
. Section 2(c) of the Herkimer Local Law provides:
After placement of garbage and of recyclable materials at the roadside or other designated area approved by the Legislature by a person for collection in accordance herewith, such garbage and recyclable material shall be delivered to the appropriate facility designated by the Legislature, or by the Authority pursuant to contract with the County.
(emphasis added).
. In doing so, the district court also effectively foreclosed the Counties' ability to show that they had no reasonable alternatives to implementing flow control laws. Although Maine v. Taylor is the only example of a state meeting the strict burden imposed on a dis
. Carbone owned a recycling facility within the Town of Clarkstown, but a significant amount of its waste was collected in the state of New Jersey. The briefs and oral argument transcript reveal that Carbone challenged the ordinance only to the extent that its application to waste originating out-of-state increased the cost of disposal for New Jersey generators and subjected Carbone to inconsistent local regulations. See C & A Carbone v. Town of Clarkstown,
Concurrence Opinion
I concur in both the result and the opinion. I do so because this case deals with waste processing by a publicly owned facility. Waste disposal is both typically and traditionally a local government function. With respect to such functions, the opinion’s analysis of the significance of public ownership under C & A Carbone, Inc. v. Town of Clarkstown,
