Camarillo Sanitary Dist. v. State Water Resources Control Bd.

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 5, 2025
DocketF087362
StatusPublished

This text of Camarillo Sanitary Dist. v. State Water Resources Control Bd. (Camarillo Sanitary Dist. v. State Water Resources Control Bd.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Camarillo Sanitary Dist. v. State Water Resources Control Bd., (Cal. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

Filed 8/5/25

CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FIFTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

CAMARILLO SANITARY DISTRICT et al., F087362 Plaintiffs and Appellants, (Super. Ct. No. 22CECG02195) v.

STATE WATER RESOURCES CONTROL OPINION BOARD,

Defendant and Respondent.

APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Fresno County. Kristi Culver Kapetan, Judge. Downey Brand, Melissa A. Thorme, Lauren M. Murvihill; Stoel Rives, Melissa A. Thorme, Kristen T. Castaños, Lindsay D. Puckett, and Monica Browner for Plaintiffs and Appellants. Rob Bonta, Attorney General, Tracy L. Winsor, Assistant Attorney General, Gary E. Tavetian, John Sasaki, Benjamin Lempert, and Eric M. Katz, Deputy Attorneys General, for Defendant and Respondent. -ooOoo- Protecting California’s water is difficult. There are many laws and regulations covering a wide variety of federal, state, and local interests. Complexity also arises from the wide variety of pollutants and sources of potential pollution that need to be regulated, the unique cooperative federalism model embodied in the nationally governing Federal Water Pollution Control Act (the Clean Water Act; 33 U.S.C. § 1251 et seq.) and the many ways to challenge modifications to the rules. This case focuses California’s efforts to adopt a new statistical model when testing for a type of pollution known as whole effluent toxicity. Whole effluent toxicity is not dependent upon any specific chemical pollutant. Rather, whole effluent toxicity looks to the combined effect of all pollutants in the water and defines when that combination of pollutants is deemed toxic. Unsatisfied with the existing testing for whole effluent toxicity, California looked to a model developed by the Environmental Protection Agency (the Agency) known as the Test of Significant Toxicity. This new model was designed to provide greater precision when analyzing test results, limit both the potential for false positives and false negatives, and encourage potential polluters to provide a higher quality and quantity of test data. To adopt this model, California’s State Water Resources Control Board (the State Board) developed the State Policy for Water Quality Control: Toxicity Provisions (the Toxicity Provisions). Among other things, the Toxicity Provisions require analyzing whole effluent toxicity tests using the Test of Significant Toxicity. This change affected many interested entities, including entities regulated under the National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (NPDES). These entities are required to obtain permits to discharge wastewater. And these permits contain water testing and quality mandates that include whole effluent toxicity testing requirements. Appellants Camarillo Sanitary District, Central Valley Clean Water Association, and Clean Water SoCal are entities or representatives of entities affected by the Toxicity Provisions.

2. Appellants have challenged the Toxicity Provisions and the Test of Significant Toxicity in both federal and state courts over the years. In this case, appellants contend the Test of Significant Toxicity is not an approved method under federal law, that the Toxicity Provisions are not legally authorized, and that in adopting the Toxicity Provisions, the State Board violated state environmental and procedural laws. The trial court rejected appellants’ arguments, holding that the Toxicity Provisions were properly adopted and the Test of Significant Toxicity was not an improper change to the controlling federal standards. For the reasons set forth below, we find that the Test of Significant Toxicity cannot be utilized in NPDES proceedings to measure whole effluent toxicity but that the State Board has otherwise properly adopted the Toxicity Provisions. We therefore reverse in part, affirm in part, and remand for further proceedings. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND Appellants challenge the Toxicity Provisions adopted by the State Board. We first outline that document before recounting relevant regulatory and procedural history. Overview of the Toxicity Provisions Initially adopted in December 2020 and revised to its current state in October 2021, the Toxicity Provisions comprise a combined state-wide water policy and state water quality control plan intended to apply to “all INLAND SURFACE WATERS, ENCLOSED BAYS, and ESTUARIES AND COASTAL LAGOONS of the state, including both waters of the United States and surface waters of the state.” The Toxicity Provisions recognize that they are intended to cover waters “for which water quality standards are required by the” Clean Water Act and specifically note that the policies will “be incorporated into the Water Quality Control Plan for Inland Surface Waters, Enclosed

3. Bays, and Estuaries of California.”1 Relatedly, the Toxicity Provisions state that they “automatically supersede any Regional Water Quality Control Plans … for waters of the United States” and “shall supersede any Regional Water Quality Control Plans … for all waters of the state” to the extent of any conflict. At their most simplified, the Toxicity Provisions are designed to implement the Test of Significant Toxicity for both acute and chronic toxicity water quality standards in California.2 The Toxicity Provisions self-define as numeric toxicity objectives based on the regulatory management decisions implemented for each test. For example, in chronic testing, the toxicity objective is described through the following hypothesis: “[T]he ambient water is toxic because the RESPONSE (e.g., survival, reproduction, growth) of the test organisms in the ambient water sample is less than or equal to 75 percent of the test organisms’ RESPONSE in the control water sample.”3 When this statement is disproven through the testing, the water is considered nontoxic. The Toxicity Provisions thus detail a testing procedure that compares an ambient water sample, which is representative of the water body, to a control sample. This testing procedure must be conducted using one of the Agency’s testing methods “and shall follow methods identified in the Code of Federal Regulations, title 40, part 136,” or other Agency-approved methods, such as those disclosed in a document named “Short-term Methods for Estimating the Chronic Toxicity of Effluents and Receiving Waters to Freshwater Organisms, Fourth Edition (EPA-821-R-02-013)” (the 2002 Methods

1 The State Board appears to have ceased efforts to develop this water quality control plan. No argument has been made regarding the effect of this decision on the claimed authority to enact the Toxicity Provisions, and we take no position on this point. 2 For simplicity this court will utilize examples and generally discuss issues from the perspective of chronic toxicity. Unless specifically noted, the court’s analysis is equally applicable to issues arising in acute toxicity testing. 3 The Toxicity Provisions define “RESPONSE” as a “measured biological effect (e.g., survival, reproduction, growth) as a result of exposure to a stimulus.”

4. Manual). In the case of chronic freshwater toxicity, this means using one of the water flea, fathead minnow, or green alga testing methods. However, the Toxicity Provisions require that test “results shall be analyzed using the [Test of Significant Toxicity]” and that to the extent the Agency procedures “require that observations be made of organisms’ RESPONSE in multiple concentrations of effluent or receiving water, the INSTREAM WASTE CONCENTRATION (IWC) shall be included as one of the selected concentrations” so that the Test of Significant Toxicity can “be conducted using the IWC and control” as the relevant samples.

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