Environmental Control Comm'n v. BROWNING-FERRIS INDUSTRIES, CHEMICAL SERV., INC.

450 So. 2d 1292, 1984 La. LEXIS 8823
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedApril 2, 1984
Docket83-C-2654
StatusPublished

This text of 450 So. 2d 1292 (Environmental Control Comm'n v. BROWNING-FERRIS INDUSTRIES, CHEMICAL SERV., INC.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Environmental Control Comm'n v. BROWNING-FERRIS INDUSTRIES, CHEMICAL SERV., INC., 450 So. 2d 1292, 1984 La. LEXIS 8823 (La. 1984).

Opinion

450 So.2d 1292 (1984)

ENVIRONMENTAL CONTROL COMMISSION
v.
BROWNING-FERRIS INDUSTRIES, CHEMICAL SERVICES, INCORPORATED.

No. 83-C-2654.

Supreme Court of Louisiana.

April 2, 1984.
Rehearing Denied May 3, 1984.

*1294 Herschel L. Abbott, Jr., Harry S. Hardin, III, Samuel O. Buckley, III, Michael A. Chernekoff, Jones, Walker, Waechter, Poitevent, Carrere & Denegre, New Orleans, for applicant.

William J. Guste, Jr., Atty. Gen., Peter M. Arnow, John B. Sheppard, Jr., Gary L. Keyser, Asst. Attys. Gen., Counsel for respondent.

Leonard Knapp, Dist. Atty., amicus curiae.

DIXON, Chief Justice.

Browning-Ferris Industries, Chemical Services, Inc. (hereinafter "BFI"), defendant, owns and operates a hazardous waste treatment, storage and disposal facility near Willow Springs in Calcasieu Parish. On the facility, BFI has secure landfill cells into which BFI deposits solid wastes. The Environmental Control Commission conducted extensive public hearings concerning the possible effects the facility had on the environment and on the health of nearby residents. At the conclusion of the hearings, the commission issued an order, which it styled "Compliance Order and Schedule for Closure." In the order the commission ordered BFI, in regard to its landfill operations, to "cease the receipt of all hazardous materials by December 31, 1983." BFI appealed the closure order. The court of appeal affirmed the order on December 28, 1983. Environmental Control Commission v. Browning-Ferris Industries, Chemical Services, Inc., 446 So.2d 755 (La.App.1983). On the application of BFI, this court stayed the execution of the closure order, 444 So.2d 1213, and, on January 18, 1984, granted BFI's writ *1295 application. 447 So.2d 1064. The judgment of the court of appeal is reversed, and ¶ X of the order of the commission of May 12, 1983 is vacated.

Beginning in 1968, the former owner of the Willow Springs site began accepting waste oils and petrochemical refinery wastes for storage. These liquid wastes were stored in surface lagoons which had been created by building eight feet high ring levees. In 1972 BFI acquired the site, as well as some contiguous land, all of which comprises the present eighty acre site. BFI converted an abandoned, on-site oil well into a deep injection disposal well. The well was permitted by the Department of Conservation in 1976, at which time BFI voluntarily began a dewatering operation to remove the liquids from the existing lagoons. The sludges and oils that remained were solidified by mixing them with kiln dust, and the resulting products either were stored in place and capped with clay, or transferred to new secure landfill cells.[1] This landfilling operation was permitted by the Louisiana Department of Health and Human Resources in 1977.

In 1979 the legislature, finding that "[t]he maintenance of a healthful and safe environment for the people of Louisiana is a matter of critical state concern," R.S. 30:1052(A)(1), enacted the comprehensive Louisiana Environmental Affairs Act. La. Acts 1979, No. 449; R.S. 30:1051-:1147, and consolidated the state's environmental control program in the newly created Office of Environmental Affairs and the Environmental Control Commission, both created within the Department of Natural Resources. The statute defined the powers of these agencies, as well as the procedures needed to implement those powers. Substantively, the act was subdivided into several parts, each of which controlled a special area of environmental concern: Air Control Law, Water Control Law, Nuclear and Radiation Control Law, Solid Waste Management and Resource Recovery Law, Hazardous Waste Control Law, and the creation of the Louisiana Resource Recovery and Development Authority.

By special provision of the Hazardous Waste Control Law, BFI was allowed to continue, and is presently continuing, its operations pursuant to its pre-existing permits. R.S. 30:1146; Order of the Environmental Control Commission, Finding of Fact I (November 16, 1982). Following § 1137 of Title 30 and the existing regulations, (Hazardous Waste Management Plan, Rules and Regulations (1979) ["HWMP"], Rule 5.3.1(A)), BFI filed notice of its operations, and submitted an application for a new permit in February, 1980, which application BFI supplemented in May, 1980. In July, 1980, the Department of Natural Resources requested additional information. BFI responded, and also included an amendment to its application, requesting permission to expand its operations to contiguous lands. On December 30, 1980 the commission issued a "Compliance Schedule and Performance Guidelines," which ordered BFI to resubmit its application in light of the state's receipt of Phase I authority under the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act, 42 U.S.C. § 6901, et seq., and further to comply with the new standards promulgated by the commission in light of that new status. BFI complied with the order. The commission, at the request of a Calcasieu Parish citizens' group, postponed any further hearings on the BFI permit application, pending the completion of a report on hazardous wastes in the parish, to be prepared by the group.

No further action was taken on the application for the permit, and BFI continued its *1296 operations at the site. Late in 1982, BFI's monitoring program detected some possible contamination of the soils and shallow waters under the site. BFI reported this contamination to the Office of Environmental Affairs. In response to this notice, the commission convened a public hearing on the matter, in November, 1982. After the meeting, the commission issued an order which compelled BFI to conduct further testing of the site and surrounding area. Pursuant to the November order, BFI hired an independent consultant to conduct these tests. In February, 1983 BFI, after reassessing its needs, notified the office that it withdrew its application to expand its facilities, and that it would cease its landfilling operations on the site when the final secure landfill cell was completed and filled, estimated to be within two years.

In March, 1983 the commission reconvened the public hearings on the reported contamination.[2] The hearings were conducted without strict adherence to any formalities. The order of the presentations each day was determined by the convenience of some of the participants. No burden of proof ever was established, no witnesses were sworn, no formal discovery techniques were used, and no rules of evidence were followed. Members of the audience and public officeholders were allowed to make their speeches and to question members of the commission.

However informal the proceedings, the seriousness of the matter could not be questioned. The commission, BFI and the citizens' group presented their expert witnesses and detailed, highly technical reports. Exhaustive examination was made of the witnesses and other evidence. During the course of the meetings, testing on the BFI site continued, all the parties hoping that concrete evidence could be found to prove one side's position or the other.

At the conclusion of these public hearings, on May 12, 1983, the commission voted and issued an order to BFI. It ordered, among other things, that BFI continue monitoring its site, and that BFI would "cease the receipt of all hazardous materials by December 31, 1983

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Related

Environmental Control Commission v. Browning-Ferris Industries
446 So. 2d 755 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1983)

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