Columbus & Franklin County Metropolitan Park District v. Shank

600 N.E.2d 1042, 65 Ohio St. 3d 86, 36 ERC (BNA) 1628, 1992 Ohio LEXIS 3370
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 10, 1992
DocketNo. 91-1721
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 600 N.E.2d 1042 (Columbus & Franklin County Metropolitan Park District v. Shank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Columbus & Franklin County Metropolitan Park District v. Shank, 600 N.E.2d 1042, 65 Ohio St. 3d 86, 36 ERC (BNA) 1628, 1992 Ohio LEXIS 3370 (Ohio 1992).

Opinion

Sweeney, J.

I

The present controversy centers on the application of the state antidegradation rule embodied in Ohio Adm.Code 3745-1-05. However, a thorough understanding of this regulation is impossible without considering the history of federal and state efforts to reduce widespread water pollution, the current statutory approach to the elimination of pollution and the role of the federal antidegradation standard in furthering this national policy. For a detailed history of federal legislation in this area, see Appendix.

The Water Quality Act of 1965, Pub.L. No. 89-234, 79 Stat. 903, required states to establish water quality standards, and authorized federal enforcement against polluters. Pollution control based on water quality standards was difficult due to the need to show that a particular source of pollution had reduced water quality below the standard.

Therefore, in 1972 Congress directly controlled the discharge of pollutants. Federal Water Pollution Control Act Amendments of 1972, Pub.L. No. 92-500, 86 Stat. 816. The 1972 Amendments established a fundamentally different approach to prevention and abatement of water pollution. Rather than relying on water quality standards, the 1972 Act established effluent limits for all point sources of pollution. The effluent limits were incorporated into National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (“NPDES”) permits issued to point sources.

Effluent limits were based on levels of technology. For existing private , industrial point sources, the least stringent level, to be attained by 1977, was the best practicable control technology currently available (“BPTCA”). Section 1311(b)(1)(A), Title 33, U.S.Code. The next level, to be achieved by 1983, was the best available technology economically achievable (“BATEA”). Section 1311(b)(2)(A), Title 33, U.S.Code.

In contrast to existing sources, new sources of pollution are required to use a higher level of technology, the best available demonstrated control technology (“BADCT”). Section 1316(a)(1), Title 33, U.S.Code. Unlike BPTCA and BATEA, BADCT is not determined by the best performer (BATEA) or the average of best performers (BPTCA) in an industrial category. Instead, it may be based on innovative processes on the forefront of science, engineering and technology.

Publicly owned treatment works (“POTWs”) are required by Sections 1311(b)(1)(B) and (C), Title 33, U.S.Code to use secondary treatment technologies, which are tantamount to the BPTCA. See Congressional Research Service, A Legislative History of the Water Pollution Control Act Amend[97]*97ments of 1972 (Comm.Print 1973), at 169-170, cited in Am. Frozen Food Inst. v. Train (C.A.D.C.1976), 539 F.2d 107, 119.

In addition to these technology-based direct limits on effluents, water quality standards remain as a basis for pollution control under the 1972 Amendments. If the required level of technology is insufficient to meet the applicable water quality standard, additional pollution control strategies must be employed. See Arkansas v. Oklahoma (1992), 503 U.S. -, 112 S.Ct. 1046, 117 L.Ed.2d 239.

Ohio water quality standards, as required by Section 1313(a), Title 33, U.S.Code, and R.C. 6111.041, are prescribed in Ohio Adm.Code Chapter 3745-1. Quantitative criteria state the maximum permissible concentrations of particular pollutants, or maximum mortality rates of waterborne organisms. Narrative criteria state actual and desired uses for bodies of water (such as warmwater habitats), and limit effluents to levels that protect these uses.

Federal law also requires states to adopt an antidegradation policy that protects high quality waters. In this regard, Section 131.12, Title 40, C.F.R. states as follows:

“(a) The State shall develop and adopt a statewide antidegradation policy and identify the methods for implementing such policy pursuant to this subpart. The antidegradation policy and implementation methods shall, at a minimum, be consistent with the following:

“(1) Existing instream water uses and the level of water quality necessary to protect the existing uses shall be maintained and protected.

“(2) Where the quality of the waters exceeds levels necessary to support propagation offish, shellfish, and wildlife and recreation in and on the water, that quality shall be maintained and protected unless the State finds, after full satisfaction of the intergovernmental coordination and public participation provisions of the State’s continuing planning process, that allowing lower water quality is necessary to accommodate important economic or social development in the area in which the waters are located. In allowing such degradation or lower water quality, the State shall assure water quality adequate to protect existing uses fully. Further, the State shall assure that there shall be achieved the highest statutory and regulatory requirements for all new and existing point sources and all cost-effective and reasonable best management practices for nonpoint source control.

“(3) Where high quality waters constitute an outstanding National resource, such as waters of National and State parks and wildlife refuges and waters of exceptional recreational or ecological significance, that water quality shall be maintained and protected.” (Emphasis added.)

[98]*98On April 4, 1985, the OEPA promulgated its current antidegradation policy. Ohio Adm.Code 3745-1-05 provides as follows:

“(A) Existing instream water uses as defined in rule 3745-1-07 of the Administrative Code and designated in rules 3745-1-08 to 3745-1-32 of the Administrative Code, shall be maintained and protected. No further water quality degradation which would interfere with or become injurious to existing designated uses is allowable.

“(B) Waters in which existing water quality is better than the criteria prescribed in these rules and exceeds those levels necessary to support propagation of fish, shellfish and wildlife and recreation in and on the water shall be maintained and protected. However, the director of Ohio environmental protection agency may, after compliance with public notice and intergovernmental coordination requirements listed at 40 CFR part 25 and part 29, and after due consideration of such technical, economic, social and other criteria as provided by sections 301 and 302 of the act, 33 U.S.C. sections 1311 and 1312, choose to allow lower water quality. Degradation of water quality shall not interfere with or become injurious to existing or planned uses, and the director shall require that the most stringent statutory and regulatory controls for waste treatment be employed by all new and existing point sources, and that feasible management or regulatory programs pursuant to sections 208 and 303 of the act, 33 U.S.C. sections 1288 and 1313, be applied to nonpoint sources.

“(C) ‘State resource waters’ are surface waters of the state that lie within national, state and metropolitan park systems,

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Bluebook (online)
600 N.E.2d 1042, 65 Ohio St. 3d 86, 36 ERC (BNA) 1628, 1992 Ohio LEXIS 3370, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/columbus-franklin-county-metropolitan-park-district-v-shank-ohio-1992.