Concerned Citizens for Nuclear Safety v. N.M. Water Quality Control Comm'n

CourtNew Mexico Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 19, 2025
StatusUnpublished

This text of Concerned Citizens for Nuclear Safety v. N.M. Water Quality Control Comm'n (Concerned Citizens for Nuclear Safety v. N.M. Water Quality Control Comm'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Concerned Citizens for Nuclear Safety v. N.M. Water Quality Control Comm'n, (N.M. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

The slip opinion is the first version of an opinion released by the Clerk of the Court of Appeals. Once an opinion is selected for publication by the Court, it is assigned a vendor-neutral citation by the Clerk of the Court for compliance with Rule 23-112 NMRA, authenticated and formally published. The slip opinion may contain deviations from the formal authenticated opinion. 1 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO

2 Opinion Number: __________

3 Filing Date : May 19, 2025

4 No. A-1-CA-41226

5 CONCERNED CITIZENS FOR NUCLEAR 6 SAFETY and HONOR OUR PUEBLO 7 EXISTENCE,

8 Petitioners-Appellants,

9 v.

10 NEW MEXICO WATER QUALITY 11 CONTROL COMMISSION,

12 Respondent-Appellee

13 and

14 TRIAD NATIONAL SECURITY, LLC and 15 NEW MEXICO ENVIRONMENT 16 DEPARTMENT,

17 Intervenors-Appellees,

18 IN THE MATTER OF THE PETITION FOR 19 REVIEW OF THE DECISION OF THE NEW 20 MEXICO ENVIRONMENT DEPARTMENT 21 ISSUING GROUND WATER DISCHARGE 22 PERMIT NO. DP-1132.

23 APPEAL FROM THE NEW MEXICO ENVIRONMENT DEPARTMENT 24 Bruce M. Thomson, Administrative Hearing Officer 1 Lindsay A. Lovejoy, Jr. 2 Santa Fe, NM

3 for Appellants

4 Raúl Torrez, Attorney General 5 Santa Fe, NM 6 Emily Bowen, Assistant Attorney General 7 Alexander W. Tucker, Assistant Solicitor General 8 Albuquerque, NM

9 for Appellee New Mexico Water Quality Control Commission

10 Gloria I. Lucero, Deputy General Counsel 11 Albuquerque, NM

12 for Appellee N.M. Environment Department

13 Montgomery & Andrews, P.A. 14 Jeffrey J. Wechsler 15 Kari E. Olson 16 Santa Fe, NM

17 Los Alamos National Laboratory 18 Maxine M. McReynolds 19 Christopher C. Stoneback 20 Los Alamos, NM

21 for Intervenors-Appellees Triad National Security, LLC 1 OPINION

2 BUSTAMANTE, Judge, sitting by designation.

3 {1} This case arises from a decades-long effort by the Los Alamos National

4 Laboratory (the Laboratory), its various managing entities—Triad National

5 Security, LLC (Triad), the current managing entity for the Laboratory—and the

6 United States Department of Energy (DOE) (collectively, the Permitees) to receive

7 a ground water discharge permit from the New Mexico Environmental Department

8 (NMED) for the Laboratory’s radioactive liquid waste treatment facility (RLWTF).

9 NMED issued Permit No. DP-1132 (the Permit) on May 5, 2022. In accordance with

10 NMSA 1978, Section 74-6-5(O) (2009), Appellants Concerned Citizens for Nuclear

11 Safety and Honor Our Pueblo Existence (collectively, Citizens) timely filed a

12 petition for review with Appellee, the Water Quality Control Commission (WQCC).

13 The petition for review was granted on August 30, 2022. The WQCC subsequently

14 dismissed Citizens’ petition for “lack of standing” after it decided that Citizens were

15 not “adversely affected” by issuance of the Permit as required by Section 74-6-5(O).

16 Citizens appeal from the WQCC order dismissing their petition for review. We

17 conclude that the WQCC erroneously imposed an unduly narrow interpretation of

18 the statutory concept of “adversely affected.” We reverse and remand the matter to

19 the WQCC, ordering it to consider and resolve Citizens’ petition on its merits. 1 FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

2 I. History of the Permit’s Permitting Process

3 {2} The administrative record in this matter exceeds 20,000 pages. The majority

4 of the record is not relevant to the narrow statutory interpretation issue we address

5 in this opinion, and there is no need to canvas the entire record. It is useful, however,

6 to summarize certain portions of the record to provide historical and procedural

7 context for our discussion.

8 {3} Construction of the RLWTF started in 1961 and processing of liquid waste

9 began in 1963. The record does not reveal any other activity until April 1996, when

10 NMED notified the Laboratory that a discharge permit was required. The first

11 application for a permit was filed in August 1996. The application has been

12 periodically amended since then as the design and function of the RLWTF evolved.

13 Drafts of the permits were periodically issued for public comment from 2003 to

14 2017. Though NMED determined as early as 2000 that a public hearing would be

15 required, no hearing was held until April 2018. Following the 2018 public hearing,

16 the hearing officer recommended issuance of the Permit. NMED agreed and filed its

17 final order approving and issuing the Permit in August 2018. In June 2019, however,

18 the WQCC “ruled that the former [h]earing [o]fficer’s job application and

19 subsequent hiring by one of the parties created an improper appearance of bias

20 potentially affecting the Secretary [of NMED’s (the Secretary)] deliberation and

2 1 issuance of [the Permit].” The WQCC accordingly vacated the Secretary’s order and

2 remanded the matter to the NMED “for a new hearing with a newly appointed

3 [h]earing [o]fficer.”

4 {4} A second public hearing before the new hearing officer was held in November

5 2019. After receiving written closing arguments and proposed findings of fact and

6 conclusions of law from Citizens, NMED, Triad, and DOE, the hearing officer filed

7 his report recommending that the Permit be issued in the form proposed by NMED

8 and Triad. The Secretary’s June 24, 2020 order, filed in response to the hearing

9 officer’s report concluded that “[m]atters related to the appropriate regulatory

10 treatment of the RLWTF, . . . including the practicality of enforcement of the

11 applicable [Hazardous Waste Act (HWA), NMSA 1978, §§ 74-4-1 to -14 (1977, as

12 amended through 2021),] permit conditions, are properly raised before the

13 [Hazardous Waste Board] and not in this proceeding.” Interestingly, the Secretary’s

14 2020 order did not constitute final approval of the hearing officer’s report or result

15 in issuance of a permit. Instead, it remanded the matter to the Ground Water Quality

16 Bureau for further consideration of financial assurances regarding closure and post-

17 closure care of the facilities at RLWTF. The record is not clear how or when the

18 remand issue was resolved. In any event, the permit was finally issued on May 5,

19 2022.

3 1 {5} Citizens are organizations composed of persons living downstream and in

2 close proximity to the point of discharge—or outfall—of wastewater from the

3 RLWTF. NMED and Triad recognize that Citizens have actively participated in the

4 public review of the Permit’s permitting process since at least 2013. NMED and

5 Triad also recognize that Citizens have consistently argued that the HWA should be

6 applied to the RLWTF rather than the Water Quality Act (WQA), NMSA 1978,

7 §§ 74-6-1 to -17 (1967, as amended through 2019).

8 {6} Among other pleadings, Citizens filed three formal motions asserting that it

9 was unlawful for NMED to issue a discharge permit for the RLWTF under the

10 authority of the WQA. The first motion—filed March 16, 2018—sought dismissal

11 of the “DP-1132 Proceeding” entirely. The first hearing officer denied the motion

12 one month later in a five-line order that provided no analysis of the issues briefed by

13 the parties. The second motion to dismiss the “DP Proceeding” was filed October 8,

14 2019. The second hearing officer denied the second motion solely on the basis that

15 the matter was to be heard anew after the first hearing officer’s report was vacated.

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Concerned Citizens for Nuclear Safety v. N.M. Water Quality Control Comm'n, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/concerned-citizens-for-nuclear-safety-v-nm-water-quality-control-commn-nmctapp-2025.