Brookline v. COMMR. OF DEPT. OF ENVTL. QUALITY ENG'G

497 N.E.2d 9, 398 Mass. 404
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedSeptember 8, 1986
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 497 N.E.2d 9 (Brookline v. COMMR. OF DEPT. OF ENVTL. QUALITY ENG'G) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brookline v. COMMR. OF DEPT. OF ENVTL. QUALITY ENG'G, 497 N.E.2d 9, 398 Mass. 404 (Mass. 1986).

Opinion

398 Mass. 404 (1986)
497 N.E.2d 9

TOWN OF BROOKLINE & others[1]
vs.
COMMISSIONER OF THE DEPARTMENT OF ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY ENGINEERING & others[2] (and a companion case[3]).

Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts, Suffolk.

May 8, 1986.
September 8, 1986.

Present: HENNESSEY, C.J., LIACOS, ABRAMS, & LYNCH, JJ.

Thomas B. Bracken for the town of Brookline & others.

Galen Gilbert for Mission Hill Intervenors.

Michael Lambert, pro se.

Janet G. McCabe, Assistant Attorney General, for Commissioner of the Department of Environmental Quality Engineering.

Verne W. Vance, Jr., for Medical Area Total Energy Plant, Inc., intervener.

LIACOS, J.

Medical Area Total Energy Plant, Inc. (MATEP), constructed a facility in the Mission Hill area of Boston, near the Brookline border, to provide steam, chilled water, and electricity to hospitals and educational and research institutions near the Harvard Medical School, and steam to the Mission Park housing complex. MATEP sought from the Department of Environmental Quality Engineering (DEQE) the required preconstruction approval of its plan. See 310 Code Mass. Regs. *406 § 7.02 (2) (1983).[4] DEQE approved much of the plan, and we reviewed certain aspects of the DEQE decision. See Brookline v. Commissioner of the Dep't of Envtl. Quality Eng'g, 387 Mass. 372 (1982). In Brookline, supra, we affirmed the decision of DEQE, in part, but remanded the matter to DEQE for a determination of the potential adverse health effects of the carcinogenic and mutagenic emissions from the diesel engine generators at the facility.[5] DEQE conducted additional hearings and rendered a decision on January 3, 1985, approving the MATEP plan after finding that the diesel portion of the plant does not pose an unreasonable risk of carcinogenic or mutagenic human health effects.

The town of Brookline, Brookline Citizens to Protect the Environment, and three Brookline residents (collectively, Brookline) sought judicial review of the decision pursuant to G.L.c. 30A, § 14 (1984 ed.), naming the commissioner of DEQE and MATEP as defendants. Mission Hill Intervenors[6] and Michael Lambert (collectively, Mission Hill) also challenged the decision pursuant to G.L.c. 30A, § 14, naming DEQE as defendant. MATEP was permitted to intervene in the Mission Hill action. The two challenges were consolidated and reported to the Appeals Court without decision. Mass. R. Civ. P. 64, 365 Mass. 831 (1974). All parties joined in a petition for direct appellate review, which we granted. We *407 now affirm DEQE's decision. We summarize the decision of DEQE and the arguments of Brookline and Mission Hill.

1. The DEQE decision. DEQE approached its task after the remand by first considering whether diesel exhaust generally poses a significant risk to health as a carcinogen or mutagen. If this question could be answered, "No," with an acceptable degree of confidence, no further inquiry would be necessary. DEQE found that the evidence supports the conclusion that "the causation of human lung cancer is complex, involving multiple causes often acting in combination. The causes include smoking, occupational exposure and pollutants in the ambient air.... [A] link between lung cancer in humans and exposure to diesel exhaust cannot be ruled out." The evidence, however, did not require the conclusion that a causal link exists between mutagenesis and air pollution.[7]

*408 DEQE's next task, having determined that diesel exhaust is potentially carcinogenic, was to ascertain the magnitude of the risk that MATEP emissions might pose. The mechanism of cancer causation is largely unknown. One popular theory suggests that there is no level of exposure to a carcinogen which constitutes a threshold too little to cause cancer and a threshold enough to cause cancer. That is, exposure to any amount, perhaps even so little as one molecule, theoretically could result in development of the disease. Whether this theory is correct, it has been established for carcinogens, generally, that, as the exposure increases, the risk increases. The magnitude of the risk of cancer from MATEP emissions consequently depends on (1) the relationship between exposure to diesel exhaust emissions and increased risk of cancer and (2) the likely exposure of people in the area to emissions from MATEP.

There is no consensus that diesel exhaust, in fact, causes cancer. DEQE characterized a study of workers at the London Transit Authority (LTA) as the best available evidence on the risk of cancer due to diesel exhaust exposure. The LTA study compared lung cancer rates of the group of workers exposed to diesel exhaust in their jobs and the group of workers not exposed. The comparison showed no increased risk of lung cancer for workers exposed to diesel exhaust. This negative finding is not proof because there may have been risks that were unaccounted in the study. One witness before the DEQE analyzed the experimental data and statistically estimated the range of uncertainty in the data to determine the maximum undetected risk. (The maximum undetected risk is the greatest risk that could have been present without being found in the study.) DEQE considered the determination credible and found that there could have been a maximum undetected increase in the risk of lung cancer of 0.05% for each unit of exposure, arbitrarily set at inhalation of a concentration of one microgram of diesel exhaust particulates per cubic meter of air for one year.

DEQE next sought to calculate the likely exposure of people in the area of MATEP emissions. To determine the projected levels of emissions, DEQE worked with MATEP to develop *409 a testing program and authorized MATEP to operate two of the six diesel engines for a specified number of hours. MATEP collected and analyzed samples of the exhaust emissions. Using mathematical models, MATEP calculated the likely emissions and dispersion of the diesel exhaust under varying conditions. The mean annual concentration of diesel exhaust particulates from MATEP emissions within seventeen kilometers of the facility was calculated to be approximately 0.01 micrograms of particulates per cubic meter of air. Under very unfavorable assumptions, the maximum particulate concentrations would be approximately 0.1 micrograms per cubic meter. Inhalation of the expected emissions would, therefore, increase the risk of lung cancer for a person continuously exposed for one year by 0.005% at most, according to the model and calculations. This risk is roughly equivalent to the risk one would incur by smoking one cigarette every year.[8]

After assessing the magnitude of the potential risk from MATEP diesel emissions, DEQE considered whether the risk was too great to permit approval of the MATEP diesel units. As part of this process, DEQE considered the magnitude of other risks common in our society. Using these comparisons, DEQE determined that the potential risk due to MATEP diesel operation is not unreasonable and consequently approved MATEP's application.

2. Arguments of Brookline and Mission Hill. Brookline and Mission Hill make several arguments against DEQE's decision: (a) MATEP emissions will degrade the quality of the air, and DEQE could not approve the facility in light of that degradation; (b) DEQE improperly shifted to Brookline the burden of proving that diesel exhaust emissions are associated with bladder

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Bluebook (online)
497 N.E.2d 9, 398 Mass. 404, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brookline-v-commr-of-dept-of-envtl-quality-engg-mass-1986.