Puget Soundkeeper All. v. Dep't of Ecology
Puget Soundkeeper All. v. Dep't of Ecology
Opinion
*634 ¶ 1 In this case, we are asked to decide whether Department of Ecology's current waste discharge permitting process complies with RCW 90.48.520 's requirement for "permit conditions [to] require all known , available, and reasonable methods to control toxicants in the applicant's wastewater." (Emphasis added.) No disagreement exists that Ecology uses the most sensitive testing method federally approved to monitor permit compliance. The issue in this case is whether RCW 90.48.520 requires Ecology to use a more sensitive testing method not recognized by Ecology or the United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) as reliable for permit compliance purposes. We hold that it does not and affirm the Court of Appeals. 1
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
¶ 2 This case was brought by Puget Soundkeeper Alliance (Soundkeeper), who challenged Ecology's issuance of a discharge permit to Seattle Iron and Metals (SIM). Although *635 Soundkeeper challenged the permit issuance on several theories, the issue before us centers on the testing methodology required as a permit condition to monitor compliance.
¶ 3 Ecology is a state water pollution control agency responsible for administering the National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (NPDES) permit program in compliance with the Clean Water Act (CWA) (also known as the Federal Water Pollution Control Act),
¶ 4 The permit in question 2 was issued in 2013 to SIM, an auto shredding and metal recycling facility, which extracts and sells recoverable metals from auto shredder residue. SIM is located along the Lower Duwamish Waterway (Waterway), the 5.5 mile section of the Duwamish River flowing into Elliott Bay. The EPA has designated the Waterway a cleanup site.
¶ 5 SIM's operations generate wastewater and stormwater, which are prohibited without an NPDES permit. Among other requirements, NPDES permits must impose effluent limitations to ensure against violations of water quality standards.
¶ 6 Banned since the 1970s, PCBs are manufactured toxic chemicals that persist in the environment and are capable of bioaccumulation and biomagnification: they increase in concentration in individual organisms and with each successive level of the food chain. This means that even though PCBs are no longer manufactured in the United States, they remain present in our air, water, and *636 soil. The SIM permit requires monitoring of discharged treated wastewater and untreated stormwater for PCBs using Method 608 to conduct the monitoring. Soundkeeper sought administrative review of SIM's permit, challenging, among other things, the PCB limits imposed and the use of Method 608 instead of a different, more sensitive test, Method 1668C.
¶ 7 The Pollution Control Hearings Board (Board) conducted an evidentiary hearing and concluded that to protect human health, the PCB limit in the discharged water is 0.00017 µg/L (micrograms per liter). See WAC 173-201A-240(5). The Board also concluded that under existing state and federal regulations, Ecology was required to use Method 608 in NPDES permits and could seek EPA's approval to use Method 1668C, but was not required to do so because Method 608 was the only EPA-approved test available.
¶ 8 Soundkeeper appealed, renewing its objections to the 2013 SIM permit. The Court of Appeals affirmed the Board's determination regarding Ecology's use of Method 608 in the SIM permit and Method 1668C's unavailability.
ANALYSIS
¶ 9 In its argument to us, Soundkeeper essentially contends that compliance with a regulation, WAC 173-201A-260(3)(h), 3 conflicts with a statute, RCW 90.48.520. Specifically, it argues that because the testing procedure required under the regulation cannot detect water quality violations that the statute prohibits, the permit conditions violate state law. Soundkeeper contends that Ecology could have selected the more sensitive Method 1668C because it is a "superseding method" under WAC 173-201A-260(3)(h).
*637 A. Standards of Review
¶ 10 This court reviews orders from the Board under the Washington Administrative Procedure Act, chapter 34.05 RCW. RCW 90.48.230 ; RCW 34.05.518 ;
Pub. Util. Dist. No. 1 of Pend Oreille County v. Dep't of Ecology,
¶ 11 Under the Washington Administrative Procedure Act, we may grant relief if we find the order from the Board is unconstitutional, exceeds its statutory authority or jurisdiction, is inconsistent with an agency's rule, is arbitrary and capricious, or the agency erroneously interpreted or applied the law. RCW 34.05.570(3).
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¶ 12 We review an agency's legal determinations under the "error of law" standard and may substitute our interpretation of the law for that of the agency's.
Postema v
.
Pollution Control Hr'gs Bd.,
B. Statutory and Regulatory Requirements for Water Pollution
¶ 13 State and federal law govern water pollution control. In 1972, Congress enacted the CWA to "restore and maintain the chemical, physical, and biological integrity of the Nation's waters."
¶ 14 An entity such as SIM may obtain an NPDES permit that allows some pollutant discharge,
¶ 15 Washington's water quality standards include both narrative and numeric criteria for toxicants. WAC 173-201A-010(1). The administrative code identifies the numeric water quality standards for toxic substances and limits the concentration of PCBs to 0.00017 µg/L. WAC 173-201A-240(5) tbl. 240.
C. Method 608 satisfies state and federal statutory and regulatory requirements as the only known, available, and reasonable method for compliance monitoring
¶ 16 Soundkeeper contends that requiring use of Method 608 to monitor PCB levels in accordance with state regulations violates the state statute because the test cannot ensure a permit holder complies with statutory water quality standards. However, Soundkeeper mistakes monitoring for ensuring compliance.
¶ 17 As mentioned earlier, an NPDES permit specifies water quality criteria and the required methods to apply it. WAC 173-20lA-260(3). Method 608 has a practical quantitation limit of 0.5 µg/L, which means that it can reliably *639 quantify PCB concentrations only at that level. 4 WAC 173-201A-240(5) tbl. 240; Admin. Record (AR) at 3305. Using Method 608 does not test for effluent concentrations to the 0.00017 µg/L level, nor does it reliably quantify anywhere between that level and the 0.5 µg/L level. Soundkeeper's position is that this, in turn, violates RCW 90.48.520.
¶ 18 The question here is whether the permitting scheme violates the statutory mandate and the corresponding federal duty to refrain from issuing discharge permits "[w]hen the imposition of conditions cannot ensure compliance with the applicable water quality requirements of all affected States."
¶ 19 The Board upheld Ecology's use of Method 608 as the only method currently approved by the EPA for compliance monitoring in NPDES permits and suggested that Ecology may petition the EPA for approval of an alternative test procedure. It rejected Soundkeeper's contention that Ecology's failure
*1177
to seek EPA approval of Method 1668 violated our water pollution control act (WPCA), chapter 90.48 RCW. It noted that "[t]he policy declarations in the WPCA do not 'control over the more specific statutory provisions adopted to implement those general declarations' and those declarations 'have no operative force in and of themselves.' " Clerk's Papers (CP) at 48 (quoting
Puget Soundkeeper All.
v.
State,
¶ 20 Division Two affirmed the Board's conclusion in an unpublished opinion. It found Soundkeeper's argument to
*640
be inconsistent with federal and state laws regarding testing methods. In reconciling state and federal statutes and regulations, it noted that the EPA has not yet approved Method 1668C, that
¶ 21 The federal aspect of that legal question is answered by
¶ 22 The state monitoring scheme is read in conjunction with the statutory mandate. RCW 90.48.520, the statute in question, in relevant part, reads as follows:
In order to improve water quality by controlling toxicants in wastewater, the department of ecology shall in issuing and renewing state and federal wastewater discharge permits review the applicant's operations and incorporate permit conditions *641 which require all known , available, and reasonable methods to control toxicants in the applicant's wastewater. Such conditions may include, but are not limited to: (1) Limits on the discharge of specific chemicals, and (2) limits on the overall toxicity of the effluent. ... In no event shall the discharge of toxicants be allowed that would violate any water quality standard, including toxicant standards, sediment criteria, and dilution zone criteria.
(Emphasis added.)
¶ 23 From the outset we note that the blanket prohibition on "the discharge of toxicants ... that would violate any water quality standard" in RCW 90.48.520 does not mean that this court, and not the agency charged with enforcement and employing its expertise, will command a specific way of ensuring compliance by a permittee. As Ecology and various amici point out, monitoring is just one of the ways in which discharge permits ensure compliance with RCW 90.48.520 and other applicable state and federal laws.
6
Requiring the permittee to implement specific water treatment practices that are designed to reach the required PCB cap is, as logic would dictate, a more effective method of preventing unlawful discharges
before
they can occur than simply to monitor a release of harmful chemicals that has already
*1178
occurred. Thus, while
¶ 24 More importantly, the statute's plain language does not require a perfectly sensitive test. It requires that the test, in addition to being known and available, also be reasonable. Methods 608 and 1668C are both "known" and *642 both appear to be available. 7 The question we have to answer here is whether Ecology's decision to use Method 608 in the 2013 SIM permit was also "reasonable." We conclude that it was.
¶ 25 We first note that when the EPA considered approving Method 1668C for compliance monitoring, it deferred action after receiving mixed comments from public agencies and industry stakeholders about feasibility and cost. Guidelines Establishing Test Procedures for the Analysis of Pollutants Under the Clean Water Act; Analysis and Sampling Procedures,
¶ 26 Ecology's decision to use Method 608 in this context is not only reasonable but perhaps the most sensible and viable decision. Ecology sets maximum effluent limits for certain pollutants at numbers presently undetectable and unquantifiable in order to encourage scientific progress toward the goal of cleaner and safer water. 10 Given these considerations, Soundkeeper has not established that Method 1668C is a "reasonable" method for Ecology to use or that Ecology's use of Method 608 is "unreasonable." Soundkeeper's argument might result in Ecology losing the ability to enforce and monitor discharge of pollutants into our streams and waters.
¶ 27 The Board held that Method 1668C was not available to use in SIM's permit because WAC 173-201A-260(3)(h) requires federal approval of effluent testing methods. CP at 47. Method 608 is EPA approved, and *1179 Ecology was required to use that test. Soundkeeper contends that Ecology could have selected the more sensitive but less reliable Method 1668C because it is a "superseding method" under WAC 173-201A-260(3)(h). We disagree.
¶ 28 Ecology applies state water quality criteria according to WAC 173-201A-260(3). This regulation provides that Ecology may select a testing method that (1) is listed in
¶ 29 EPA approves testing methods through a process of formal notice and comment rulemaking.
¶ 30 Thus, for Method 1668C to qualify under WAC 173-201 A-260(3)(h) it must be a "superseding method[ ] published." The parties do not disagree that Method 1668C is a "published" method by EPA. Instead, Ecology disputes whether the method is "superseding," Resp't's Suppl. Br. at 12-14, which requires us to interpret WAC 173-20lA-260(3)(h).
¶ 31 When interpreting agency regulations, we apply the same principles used to construe statutes.
Lopez Demetrio v
.
Sakuma Bros. Farms,
¶ 32 State regulations do not define the term "superseding," so we determine the meaning of this term by
*645
looking at its ordinary definition.
HomeStreet, Inc. v. Dep't of Revenue,
¶ 33 These definitions demonstrate that "supersede" means to take the place of something, to supplant it. Here, Method 1668C has not taken the place of Method 608. The EPA developed Method 1668C intending it to be used in Clean Water Act programs. AR at 2751. Importantly, the EPA has stated that it expects the method to be "add[ed]" to other CWA testing processes published at
CONCLUSION
¶ 34 Ecology's use of Method 608 in the SIM permit is consistent with the plain meaning of the statutory language in question, RCW 90.48.520. Nothing in the language of the statute requires Ecology to use unreliable and unapproved testing methods *1180 to ensure compliance with the law. Neither federal nor state law require that the monitoring method reach the PCB limit of 0.00017 µg/L. *646 WAC 173-201A-260(3)(h) does not conflict with RCW 90.48.520. Ecology followed WAC 173-201 A-260(3)(h)'s directive that "analytical testing methods for these numeric criteria must be in accordance with ... (40 C.F.R. Part 136) or superseding methods published," and that "[t]he department may also approve other methods following consultation with adjacent states and with the approval of the [EPA]." Method 608 is the only reliable test currently available, and Ecology, in applying its expertise, determined that it should be used as one of several ways the agency ensures compliance with permit limitations. The record before the Board supports this decision.
¶ 35 Use of an unapproved and unreliable test, such as Method 1668C, would not provide a basis for enforcement of the PCB permit limits. Both Ecology and the Board agree on this issue, and we have established that "we are loath to override the judgment of both agencies, whose combined expertise merits substantial deference."
Port of Seattle,
WE CONCUR:
Fairhurst, C.J.
Madsen, J.
Owens, J.
Stephens, J.
Wiggins, J.
Gordon McCloud, J.
González, J. (dissenting)
¶ 36 In Washington, there is no right to discharge pollutants. Accordingly, an entity is not permitted to discharge unless it can prove that there will be no resulting pollution of our waterways. RCW 90.48.520 ; WAC 173-201A-240(1) (toxic substances "shall not be introduced above natural background levels in waters of the state which have the potential ... to adversely affect" water use, toxicity, or public health), -510(1) ("The primary means to be used for controlling ... waste discharges shall be through the issuance of waste discharge permits ... [which] must be conditioned so the discharges authorized will meet the water quality standards."). Here, the majority is turning the protective nature of Washington's water quality standards on its head by reducing *647 entities' responsibility to establish they will not pollute through their discharge. As a result, I respectfully dissent.
¶ 37 Washington law highly regulates the discharge of pollutants into the waters of our state. Ch. 90.48 RCW. It is "unlawful for any person to ... discharge into any of the waters of this state ... matter that shall cause or tend to cause pollution of such waters." RCW 90.48.080. As a concession, perhaps, to the perceived necessities of the time, pollution may be permitted, subject to stringent controls, under discharge permits issued by the Department of Ecology. RCW 90.48.520. Even when done under a permit, however, "[i]n no event shall the discharge of toxicants be allowed that would violate any water quality standard, including toxicant standards, sediment criteria, and dilution zone criteria."
¶ 38 Seattle Iron and Metal (SIM) operates an auto shredding and metal recycling business that discharges polluted wastewater and storm water into the Lower Duwamish Waterway (Waterway), the 5.5 mile section of the Duwamish River flowing into Elliott Bay.
¶ 39 For many years, the Waterway has been utilized as a resource. Native American peoples, such as the Squaxin Island Tribe, have caught and consumed fish and shellfish from its waters. Amicus Curiae Squaxin Island Tribe Br. at 1. Seattle industries have used the Waterway since the 1900s, resulting in heavy pollution of the area. Pollution Control Hr'gs Bd. Findings of Fact, Conclusions of Law & Order (PCHB Order) at 3. As a result, the sediment and tissues of resident sea life now exhibit elevated levels of substances hazardous to human health. Of particular concern are polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs). Banned since the 1970s, PCBs are manufactured chemicals once widely *648 used in *1181 products like electric transformers, paint additives, and fire retardants. These chemicals are highly toxic, persist in the environment for decades, and possess bioaccumulative properties.
¶ 40 The heightened level of PCBs in the Waterway's organic and inorganic material has attracted the attention of multiple state and federal agencies. The Washington Department of Health cautions against human consumption of seafood caught on the Waterway, classifying it as a "public health hazard." Id. at 4 (emphasis omitted). The United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has designated the Waterway a cleanup site with federal and state governments cooperating to remediate and prevent further contamination.
¶ 41 In September 2013, Ecology issued a waste discharge permit to SIM. The permit allowed wastewater discharges from the facility and required use of Method 608 to measure toxicants in its wastewater and storm water discharges. The permit further required SIM to collect and submit discharge samples to a registered laboratory for testing and to report this monitoring data to Ecology. Any water quality violations were to be immediately reported. Between December 2007 and June 2008, SIM failed to meet permit effluent limitations and conducted an unauthorized discharge. In response, Ecology issued a violation and noncompliance notice. 1
¶ 42 The permit established toxicant limitations and required testing methods to monitor these toxicants. Puget Soundkeeper Alliance (Soundkeeper) challenged the permit before the Pollution Control Hearings Board (Board), which largely upheld it. Soundkeeper asks this court to reverse the Board's ruling and hold that state regulations allow use of a more sensitive testing method than required by SIM's permit or, alternatively, that the permit was contrary to *649 state law because it could not ensure compliance with water quality standards.
¶ 43 At the outset, I agree with the majority that Method 1668C does not constitute, a "superseding method[ ]" under WAC 173-201 A-260(3)(h). Majority at 1179-80. Under WAC 173-201A-260(3), Ecology must use EPA-approved testing methods, and Method 1668C is not an approved method. 2
¶ 44 I diverge from the majority because requiring use of Method 608 to monitor PCB levels fails to ensure a permit holder's compliance with statutory water quality standards. Accordingly, a permit that relies on Method 608 violates state law. Such a permit should be denied. I cannot join the majority's conclusion that we should set aside state law standards in favor of less protective federal water quality standards. This deference is to the detriment of our state law and our State's environment. Accordingly, I respectfully dissent.
¶ 45 The National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (NPDES) permits must ensure compliance with
both
state and federal water quality standards.
¶ 46 Federal regulations recognize that states may implement more stringent water quality standards than provided in federal law.
¶ 47 Washington regulation explains that a testing method must meet one of three requirements for use in NPDES permits: be in accord with
¶ 48 An enforcement regime that fails to enforce the law renders RCW 90.48.520 meaningless.
State v
.
J.P.,
¶ 49 At issue here is Method 608 and the human health criteria of 0.00017 µg/L (micrograms per liter), the applicable water quality and toxicant standard. Method 608 has a practical quantitation limit of 0.5 µg/L, meaning it can reliably quantify PCBs only at that level. WAC 173-201A-240(5) tbl. 240. Any test result showing toxic substances between 0.00017 and 0.5 µg/L would not reveal effluent limit violations. Because Method 608 cannot quantify these violations, it cannot ensure permit holders comply with state water quality standards under RCW 90.48.520.
See also
¶ 50 NPDES permit testing procedures detect toxicants at different concentrations. "All testing methods have a method detection level," which is the "lowest level at which the concentration of a substance can reliably be detected." PCHB Order at 26. Using this method detection level, the practical quantitation level is calculated; this represents the lowest level at which a concentration can be reliably quantified.
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¶ 51 The majority cites
¶ 52 In light of the applicable toxicant standard set for SIM, to satisfy the law, SIM's permit must contain a testing method
*1183
that has the capacity to quantify toxicants at the level of 0.00017 µg/L. Ecology argues that under WAC 173-201A-260(3)(h), it could select only a method approved by
¶ 54 The Board's ruling that Ecology may issue a waste discharge permit that complies with state regulation but cannot accurately quantify water quality violations was contrary to state law, RCW 90.48.520, and federal regulation,
Yu, J.
The Court of Appeals affirmed in part and reversed in part the Pollution Control Hearings Board's decisions on two different permit provisions that Puget Soundkeeper Alliance challenged below. The lower court's partial reversal is not before us.
SIM's current permit is set to expire on October 1, 2018.
The regulation reads, in relevant part, "The analytical testing methods for [the] numeric criteria must be in accordance with the 'Guidelines Establishing Test Procedures for the Analysis of Pollutants' (40 C.F.R. Part 136) or superseding methods published. The department may also approve other methods following consultation with adjacent states and with the approval of the [EPA]."
In the record, Method 608 is referenced as having a practical quantitation limit of 0.5 µg/L and a method detection limit of 0.25 µg/L. The former represents "the lowest level at which a concentration can be detected where the accuracy (precision and bias) of the detection achieves the objectives of the intended purpose." Clerk's Papers at 39.
Puget Soundkeeper All. v
.
State,
No. 48267-3-II, slip op. at 11,
See, e.g.,
While Method 1668C has not been approved by
We note here that Ecology is wise to keep exploring the best testing available and might even have a duty to implement the most technologically superior monitoring methods. Based in its widespread adoption in the watershed and other facts in the record, CP (Finding of Fact 51) at 40, the Board encouraged Ecology to seek EPA approval to use Method 8082A for monitoring of permit compliance at SIM. CP (Conclusion of Law 29) at 61. Whether Ecology has a duty to do so, we need not consider because the issue is not currently before us.
Ecology has previously issued SIM notices of violation for exceeding its 2007 permit effluent limits resulting in SIM making improvements to its discharge treatment system. CP at 20.
Wash. Supreme Court oral argument, supra, at 16 min., 46 sec. through 17 min., 10 sec. (explaining how "it is common to have the limit driving the technology. In other words, we have a number of toxic chemicals ... where the limit is lower than what the current tests are able to reach. But, setting that human health limit where we know it needs to be still has value because it allows laboratories to strive towards that goal").
Ecology previously issued a discharge permit to SIM in 2007. Neither the 2007 permit nor earlier violations are at issue here.
Clean Water Act Methods Update Rule for the Analysis of Effluent,
At the Board's hearing in this matter, an Ecology representative acknowledged that Method 8082A was originally required in SIM's 2013 permit because the agency felt it needed to detect PCBs at lower levels than Method 608 allowed. PCHB Order at 27. Prior to the hearing, Ecology determined Method 8082A was ineligible for use in discharge permits because it was not included in
Reference
- Full Case Name
- PUGET SOUNDKEEPER ALLIANCE, Petitioner, v. STATE of Washington, DEPARTMENT OF ECOLOGY; And State of Washington Pollution Control Hearings Board, Respondents.
- Cited By
- 10 cases
- Status
- Published