City of Waco v. Texas Natural Resource Conservation Commission

83 S.W.3d 169, 2002 WL 924192
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 21, 2002
Docket03-01-00217-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by69 cases

This text of 83 S.W.3d 169 (City of Waco v. Texas Natural Resource Conservation Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Waco v. Texas Natural Resource Conservation Commission, 83 S.W.3d 169, 2002 WL 924192 (Tex. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinions

BEA ANN SMITH, Justice.

This appeal concerns whether a dispute about the Texas Natural Resource Conservation Commission’s (the TNRCC’s) permit-issuing process is ripe for judicial review by the district court. The Bosque River, a tributary of the Brazos River, is located northwest of the city of Waco. Segments 1226 and 1255 of the North Bosque River have been listed as having impaired water quality due to high levels of nutrients. See 30 Tex. Admin. Code §§ 307.1-.10 (2001) (Tex. Natural Res. Conservation Comm’n, Tex. Surface Water Quality Standards). Near its point of confluence with the Brazos River, the Bosque River forms Lake Waco, which provides the sole source of drinking water for approximately 150,000 people in and around Waco; the lake is also used extensively for recreational activities. The water quality of Lake Waco, which is a “sink” for any dissolved pollutants in the Bosque River, has been affected. Numerous dairy operations are located northwest of Waco in Erath County in the Bosque River watershed. The dairies must seek confined animal feeding operation (CAFO) permits from the TNRCC because the agricultural waste from their operations, which becomes dissolved in runoff or is otherwise discharged, ultimately discharges into the river.

This dispute arose when the TNRCC promulgated an order in February 2000 regulating future permits for CA-FOs. Both the City of Waco (the City) and the Texas .Association of Dairymen (the Dairymen) filed actions for declaratory judgments attacking the order. The TNRCC responded by withdrawing the order and moving to dismiss both actions as moot and not ripe. The City amended its petition to seek declaratory relief that the TNRCC’s interim policy of continuing to issue any permits violates state regulations. The district court dismissed the actions. Both the Dairymen and the City appealed the dismissal of their suits for declaratory relief. However, following oral argument, the Dairymen voluntarily dismissed their appeal.1 The only remaining issue before us is the ripeness of the City’s suit for declaratory relief.2

Specifically, the City seeks a declaration that the TNRCC may not grant any addi[173]*173tional permits for CAFOs in the Bosque River watershed until it complies with certain federal regulations that have been incorporated into state law. See 30 Tex. Admin. Code § 305.538 (1999) (Tex. Natural Res. Conservation Comm’n, Prohibitions for TPDES Permits) (“no permit may be issued under the conditions prohibited in 40 Code of Federal Regulations § 122.4, as amended”). The City maintains that it seeks resolution of a pure question of law: whether section 122.4(i) operates to bar all new permits until the TNRCC has developed an implementation scheme to reduce pollution in the two impaired segments of the Bosque River. The TNRCC contends that its compliance with the regulations can only be determined in the context of a permit application on the facts presented by a particular application. Because we agree with the City that its request for declaratory relief presents a determination of law, we reverse the district court’s order of dismissal and remand this cause for consideration on the merits.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

During the 1980s, the dairy industry expanded greatly in the North Bosque River watershed. Erath County became the leading county in the state for milk production. This reflects a trend in the dairy industry away from small, geographically scattered dairies toward large-scale, clustered dairy operations. In early 2001, the TNRCC estimated that there were 41,000 milk cows concentrated along the Bosque River watershed. The waste produced by these concentrated operations has impaired the water quality of the adjacent stretches of the North Bosque River. The TNRCC has identified the primary source of the pollution to be phosphorus, which is a nutrient found in animal waste. The large amounts of phosphorus in the water have caused excessive growth of algae and other aquatic plants, which in turn potentially cause distaste and odor in drinking water and, under certain circumstances, contribute to the depletion of dissolved oxygen.

Under the federal Clean Water Act, a state is required to “identify those waters within its boundaries for which the effluent limitations required by [the Act] are not stringent enough to implement any water quality standard applicable to such waters.” 33 U.S.C. § 1313(d)(1)(A) (2001). In 1998, the TNRCC listed two segments of the Bosque River as “impaired under narrative water quality standards related to nutrients and aquatic plant growth.” Once the TNRCC identified the water segments as impaired, it was required to develop a Total Maximum Daily Load (TMDL), which is a plan for assimilation of the pollutants that are present in the water. See id. § 1313(d)(1)(C).3 The TNRCC describes a TMDL as

a quantitative plan that determines the amount of a particular pollutant that a water body can receive and still meet its applicable water quality standards. In other words, TMDLs are the best possible estimates of the assimilative capacity of the water body for a pollutant under [174]*174consideration. A TMDL is commonly expressed as a load, with units of mass per time period, but may be expressed in other ways also. TMDLs must also estimate how much the pollutant load needs to be reduced from current levels in order to achieve water quality standards.

More than three years after the TNRCC identified the watershed as impaired, the TNRCC had still not established a TMDL plan. Although the agency “anticipated” in late 1999 that it would be able to submit a proposed TMDL to the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) by the spring of 2000, the TNRCC did not complete a TMDL until early 2001. The TNRCC has now sent a TMDL to the EPA for approval; at the time the parties submitted their briefs in this cause, however, the TMDL had not been approved by that agency.

The TMDL confirms that a major controllable source of the phosphorus in the water comes from the dairy farms concentrated in the watershed. It recommends that forty to sixty percent reductions in phosphorus loadings in some areas and fifty percent overall will be needed to reduce the potential for problematic algae growth. The City notes various problems with the proposed TMDL. The City argues that its recommendations are based on now outdated information; the number of permits currently pending with the TNRCC, if approved, would increase the number of authorized cows by 20,000, so the previously recommended levels of the TMDL will not achieve attainment of water quality standards.4 In addition, the TMDL does not establish the amount of phosphorus loadings, allocated among the dairies and other dischargers, that could be tolerated without violating water quality standards for pathogens and nutrients. Nor does it implement compliance schedules for the dairies and other dischargers to reduce the pathogens in the two impaired water segments.

Compounding these failures with respect to existing dischargers, the City asserts that the TNRCC has worsened the situation by approving new applications for additional discharges of waste into the already polluted river. With the exception of certain small operations, the dairies in the watershed are required to obtain CAFO permits from the TNRCC that allow them to discharge waste from their operations.

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Bluebook (online)
83 S.W.3d 169, 2002 WL 924192, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-waco-v-texas-natural-resource-conservation-commission-texapp-2002.