City of Gary v. Indiana Department of Environmental Management

967 N.E.2d 1053, 2012 WL 1768063, 2012 Ind. App. LEXIS 231
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 17, 2012
Docket49A02-1106-MI-553
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 967 N.E.2d 1053 (City of Gary v. Indiana Department of Environmental Management) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Gary v. Indiana Department of Environmental Management, 967 N.E.2d 1053, 2012 WL 1768063, 2012 Ind. App. LEXIS 231 (Ind. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

OPINION

MATHIAS, Judge.

The City of Gary and the Gary Sanitation District (collectively "Gary") appeal the Marion Superior Court's order affirming the order of the Office of Environmental Adjudication, which upheld the Indiana Department of Environmental Management's ("IDEM") decision to issue a permit to the City of Hobart to operate a new wastewater treatment plant. Gary appeals and raises several issues, which we consolidate into the following two:

I. Whether IDEM's interpretation of 327 Indiana Administrative Code section 5-2-11.7 is reasonable; and,
II. Whether IDEM's decision to issue the permit was arbitrary, capricious, and otherwise not in accordance with the law or is unsupported by substantial evidence.

We affirm.

Facts and Procedural History

The City of Hobart's wastewater is currently treated both at Gary's wastewater treatment facility and at its own, aging Nob Hill wastewater treatment facility. Hobart pays Gary for its use of Gary's facility. Hobart's Nob Hill facility discharges into a tributary of the Deep River and consistently struggles to stay within its permit limits. Deep River is an impaired water source for mercury.

Gary utilizes a collection system of stormwater and sanitary sewers that are combined in part. The system is designed with a number of combined sewer overflows which routinely discharge untreated wastewater into the Grand Calumet and Little Calumet rivers during wet weather. Both rivers are tributaries to Lake Michigan, as is the Deep River.

On some date prior to April 1, 2004, Hobart requested a permit to construct a new 4.8 million gallon per day wastewater treatment plant. The proposed plant would allow it to shut down the Nob Hill facility and disconnect from the Gary facility. On April 1, 2004, IDEM issued the requested National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System Permit ("the Hobart permit") 1 granting Hobart permission to operate a new wastewater treatment plant to be constructed along the Deep River.

The permitted mereury limits for the proposed Hobart facility are a daily maximum limit of 3.2 parts per trillion ("ppt") *1055 and a monthly average of 1.3 ppt per day. These limits are substantially less than the limits currently permitted at the Gary facility. Because the new Hobart facility will not utilize combined sewer overflows, it would completely avoid the discharge of untreated sewage.

Shortly after IDEM issued a permit for the construction of the Hobart facility, Gary filed a petition for administrative review of the Hobart permit with the Indiana Office of Environmental Adjudication. On January 19, 2010, the environmental law judge issued its findings of fact, conclusions of law, and final order in favor of IDEM and Hobart. The environmental law judge concluded that the mercury discharge limits in the Hobart permit would result in an overall improvement in water quality, and IDEM's decision to issue the permit complied with applicable law.

Gary then filed a verified petition for Judicial review in Marion Superior Court. After briefing and oral argument, the trial court issued its findings of fact and conclusions of law on March 26, 2011. As is noted in the trial court's findings and conclusions, the paramount issue in this case is the parties' interpretation of IDEM's anti-degradation requirement for outstanding state resource waters ("OSRWs") 2 found in 327 Indiana Administrative Code 5-2-11.7(a)(2):

(2) For a new or increased discharge of a pollutant or pollutant parameter from a new or existing Great Lakes dischar-ger into a tributary of an OSRW for which a new or increased permit limit would be required:
(A) section 11.38(a) and 11.3(b) of this rule (827 IAC 5-2-11.3) apply to the new or increased discharge of a pollutant or pollutant parameter into the tributary; and
(B) the discharge shall not cause a significant lowering of water quality in the OSRW.
(C) The requirements of this subdivision will be considered to have been met when:
(i) one (1) or more of the items listed in section 11.8(b)(1)(C)(), 11.3(b)(Q1)(C)(ii{)(BB), 11.3(b(1)(OGR)(FF), or 11.3(b)(1)(C)(iii)(II) of this rule (827 IAC 5-2-11.3) apply; or (if) all three (8) of the following are met:
(AA) one (1) or more of the subitems in section 11.3(b)(1)(C)(fi)(AA), 11.3(b)(1)(C)Gii)(CC), 11.3(b)(1)(C){iii)(EE), 11.3(b)(1)(C)G(GG), 11.3(b)(1)(C)(i)(HH), or 11.3(b)(1)(C)(G@)(LL) of this rule (827 IAC 5-2-11.3) apply;
(BB) the applicant demonstrates that the increase is necessary; and
(CC) the public notice requirements in subsection (c)(6) are met; or
(iii) all four (4) of the following are met: ~
. (AA) one (1) or more of the subi-tems in section 11.3(b)(1)(C)@ii)(DD), or 11.3(b)(1)(C)GiD)(KK) of this rule (827 IAC 5-2-11.3) apply;
(BB) the applicant demonstrates that the increase is necessary;
(CC) the applicant demonstrates that it will result in a net environmental improvement; and
(DD) the public notice requirements in subsection (c)(6) are met.
*1056 (D) As used in this subdivision, "tributary of an OSRW" includes the upstream segments of a receiving wa-terbody when some or all of the downstream segments of the receiving waterbody are designated as an OSRW.

Throughout these proceedings, Gary has argued that subsections 11.7(a)(2)(A), (B), and (C) must be read in the conjunctive, but IDEM and Hobart have argued that clause 2(C) should be read independently of 2(A) and (B).

The trial court affirmed the environmental law judge's final order, and in doing so, issued its own conclusions of law concerning the parties' interpretations of the regulation. Specifically, the court concluded:

12. 827 IAC 5-2-11.7(a)(2) is written to ensure that the water quality of an OSRW is maintained and protected by applying certain requirements on new or increased discharges into the tributary of the OSRW. It states that for such discharges for which a new or increased permit limit would be required, clauses (A) and (B) will apply.
13. The "and" between (A) and (B) clearly reflects that for such discharges for which a new permit limit would be required both (A) and (B) will apply. There is no "and" connecting clauses (C) and (D) to clauses (A) and (B). Therefore, clauses (C) and (D) must be read independently of (A) and (B).
14. 827 IAC 5-2-11.7(@q)@)(C) simply states that the requirements of subdivision (2) will be considered met by the items listed in clause (C). The items in clause (C) are not the exclusive means for meeting the requirements of subdivision (2). Clause (C) refers to subdivision (2), not to clause (B).

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Bluebook (online)
967 N.E.2d 1053, 2012 WL 1768063, 2012 Ind. App. LEXIS 231, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-gary-v-indiana-department-of-environmental-management-indctapp-2012.