City of Battle Creek v. Federal Trade Commission

481 F. Supp. 538
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Michigan
DecidedDecember 19, 1979
DocketK79-595 CA9
StatusPublished

This text of 481 F. Supp. 538 (City of Battle Creek v. Federal Trade Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Michigan primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Battle Creek v. Federal Trade Commission, 481 F. Supp. 538 (W.D. Mich. 1979).

Opinion

OPINION AND ORDER

INTRODUCTION

HILLMAN, District Judge.

This is an action in which the City of Battle Creek and Calhoun County seek to enjoin the continuation of an administrative hearing presently pending before the Federal Trade Commission until such time as the administrative law judge complies with the National Environmental Policy Act (42 U.S.C. 4321, et seq., hereinafter NEPA), 1 by ordering the preparation and issuance of an environmental impact statement.

In April of 1972, the Federal Trade Commission initiated an anti-trust enforcement proceeding against four manufacturers of ready-to-eat cereal — Kellogg, General Foods, General Mills and Quaker Oats— alleging that these four companies had violated and continued to violate Section 5 of the Federal Trade Commission Act (15 U.S.C. 45). The complaint in that action alleges that these four manufacturers have established a “shared monopoly” of the cereal market in violation of the anti-trust laws. Quaker Oats has subsequently been dismissed from the action.

In April of 1976, after discovery and other pre-trial activity, an adjudicatory proceeding commenced before an administrative law judge within the FTC. In the course of these proceedings, the Complainant Counsel, a staff attorney employed by the Bureau of Competition of the FTC, proposed as a remedy, should liability be found, divestiture of assets of the cereal companies, establishment of new “spin-off” cereal firms from those assets and licensure of brand names of the newly-established companies. This relief was originally proposed in an order accompanying the complaint, again in a pre-trial brief of Complainant Counsel dated February 17, 1976, and finally proposed on the record in the administrative proceeding on September 28 and 29, 1977.

Kellogg maintains its corporate headquarters, research and development facilities, production facilities and packaging and shipping facilities in Battle Creek. General Foods Corporation and General Mills Corporation have production facilities also located in Battle Creek.

The plaintiffs, the City of Battle Creek and the County of Calhoun, have filed this suit asking that the administrative proceedings be enjoined and that the Commission be directed by this court to prepare an environmental impact statement in compliance with the National Environmental Policy Act (42 U.S.C. 4321, et seq.). The plaintiffs allege in their complaint and have supported by affidavits accompanying the complaint, that the proposal of divestiture of assets, if ordered by the Commission and implemented would result in production slow-down, which would necessarily include serious unemployment in the Battle Creek *540 community and threaten the financing of the construction and maintenance of improvements to the City’s sewage collection and treatment facilities. The plaintiffs estimate, based on a job impact study which has been alluded to in affidavits but not introduced, that the employees of Kellogg, General Mills and General Foods would suffer the loss of 2,650 jobs as a direct impact of divestiture. The expectation is that 1,000 of these jobs would be reinstated within two years as production capacity is re-established. Directly related to this forecasted unemployment is the expectation in the opinion of experts in the community, that the City would experience an increase in criminal activities, marital instability and divorce, family violence and child abuse, a reduction in the City’s tax base, general economic blight and a necessary reduction •in the funding of existing social services designed to deal with the very behavior problems that would be exacerbated by wide-spread unemployment.

The City of Battle Creek has recently embarked on additional construction and improvement of the City’s sewage collection and treatment facilities. In a somewhat speculative and tenuous line of causation, the plaintiffs allege that a decrease in production at the cereal plants will jeopardize the financial feasibility of this construction and impact adversely on the environment. There are two aspects to this allegation. Substantial reduction in the contribution of waste from Kellogg, General Mills and General Foods will reduce their financial contribution to the construction of this system and proportionately increase the unit costs of other property owners, thereby discouraging many property owners from hooking up to the sewage system. Those property owners who do not hook up to the system will continue to discharge waste in individual septic tank systems, a method of sewage treatment that has been determined to be inadequate in that it does not adequately prevent pollutants from seeping into the ground water. In addition, it is alleged that the reduction of wastes from cereal companies would result in serious reduction in flow of effluent through the trunk lines of the sewage collection system, to the extent that solid wastes would accumulate in the trunk line. On decomposition, the solid waste deposits would produce pollutants that would escape and create air pollution. Increased cost of maintenance to control this potential air pollution problem would frustrate the City’s ability to finance the system. In addition, the City projects that reduction in the City’s tax base will necessitate severe cuts in financing of parks and recreation.

Given these allegations of fact and expert opinion as to the foreseeable results of implementation of a divestiture order, the plaintiffs maintain that the FTC must comply with Section 102(2)(C) of the NEPA (42 U.S.C. 4332(2)(C)), 2 and prepare and issue an environmental impact Statement, because these effects amount to a significant adverse impact upon the quality of the human environment in Battle Creek, within the meaning of that section of the Act.

The defendants contend that the FTC has not unreasonably refused to prepare an environmental impact statement. They rely on several arguments to support this position. First of all, the FTC regulations exempt all adjudicatory proceedings from compliance with that section of the NEPA which requires an environmental impact statement. (16 C.F.R. 1.82(d)). 3 This blan *541 ket exemption, the defendants maintain, is valid, having been approved by the Council on Environmental Quality in their Advisory Memorandum of January 31, 1975, 4 and in their most recent guidelines (40 C.F.R. 1508.18) and, therefore, is entitled to great deference, Andrus v. Sierra Club, 442 U.S. 347, 99 S.Ct. 2335, 60 L.Ed.2d 943 (1979).

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Bluebook (online)
481 F. Supp. 538, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-battle-creek-v-federal-trade-commission-miwd-1979.