In re Appeal of Clyde River Hydroelectric Project

2006 VT 11, 895 A.2d 736, 179 Vt. 606, 62 ERC (BNA) 1252, 2006 Vt. LEXIS 25
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedJanuary 17, 2006
DocketNo. 04-101
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 2006 VT 11 (In re Appeal of Clyde River Hydroelectric Project) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Appeal of Clyde River Hydroelectric Project, 2006 VT 11, 895 A.2d 736, 179 Vt. 606, 62 ERC (BNA) 1252, 2006 Vt. LEXIS 25 (Vt. 2006).

Opinion

¶ 1. This appeal arises from the issuance of a water quality certification by the Vermont Water Resources Board for operation of the Clyde River Hydroelectric Project in northern Vermont. The Vermont Natural Resources Council and the Northeast Kingdom Chapter of Trout Unlimited (appellants) contend the Board’s decision: (1) violates provisions of the Vermont Water Quality Standards; (2) is unsupported by the evidence; and (3) contravenes the Public Trust Doctrine and the Common Benefits Clause of the Vermont Constitution. We affirm.

¶ 2. In support of its request to the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) for relicensure of the Clyde River Hydroelectric Project, applicant Citizens Communications Company submitted a water quality certification application to the Agency of Natural Resources. See 10 V.S.A. § 1004 (designating the Agency of Natural Resources as the state’s certifying agency for purposes of § 401 of the Federal Clean Water Act). The Agency granted the certification, which was then appealed to the Board for de novo review. The Board received extensive prefiled testimony, conducted a site visit, and held an evidentiary hearing over several days in April 2003. In July 2003, the Board issued a written decision, granting the certification with certain added conditions. In response to appellants’ subsequent motion to alter, the Board amended its decision but otherwise denied the motion. This appeal followed.

I.

¶ 3. To better understand and evaluate the underlying facts and claims on appeal, a brief preliminary review of the regulatory backdrop is useful. Vermont’s Water Quality Standards (hereafter “Standards”) were enacted under the authority of the Federal Water Pollution Control Act, 33 U.S.C. §§1251-1387, commonly known as the Clean Water Act (Act), to implement the Act’s principal goal of “restor[ing] and maintaining] the chemical, physical, and biological integrity of the Nation’s waters,” id. § 1251(a), including the attainment of “water quality which provides for the protection and propagation of fish, shellfish, and wildlife.” Id. § 1251(a)(2). The Act permits each state, subject to federal approval, to adopt comprehensive water quality standards establishing designated uses and water quality criteria for all navigable intrastate waters. Id. §§ 1311(b)(1)(C), 1313(c)(2)(A); PUD No. 1 of Jefferson County v. Wash. Dep’t of Ecology, 511 U.S. 700, 704 (1994); In re Town of Sherburne, 154 Vt. 596, 601, 581 A.2d 274, 277 (1990). Under § 401 of the Act, an applicant for a federal permit to conduct activities that may result in a discharge into state waters must present to the federal agency (in this case the FERC) a certifi[607]*607cation from the state “that any such discharge will comply with the applicable provisions of” the state’s water quality standards. 33 U.S.C. § 1341(a). Thus, Citizens, as an applicant for relicensure of its hydroelectric facility on the Clyde River, was required to obtain a § 401 certificate from the state.1

¶ 4. Consistent with its mandate under the Act, the State of Vermont has adopted comprehensive water quality standards under which all waters above 2500 feet and all waters used for public drinking water are Class A waters, 10 V.S.A. § 1253(a), and all other waters are Class B unless otherwise reclassified by the Board. Id. § 1253(b). The Clyde River has been designated as Class B under the Standards. Vermont Water Quality Standards § 4-17(B). Designated uses for Class B waters include “aquatic biota and wildlife sustained by high quality aquatic habitat,” id. § 3-04(A)(l), water character, flows, level, and bed and channel characteristics “exhibiting good aesthetic value,” id. § 3-04(A)(2), and “[b]oating, fishing, and other recreational uses.” Id. § 3-04(A)(6). Criteria that must be met for such uses include the following: “No change from the reference condition that would prevent the full support of aquatic biota, wildlife, or aquatic habitat uses. Biological integrity is maintained and all expected functional groups are present in a high quality habitat. All life-cycle functions, including overwintering and reproductive requirements are maintained and protected.” Id. § 3-04(B)(4). In addition, the Standards require “no change from reference conditions that would have an undue adverse effect on the composition of the aquatic biota, the physical or chemical nature of the substrate or the species composition or propagation of fishes.” Id. § 3-04(B)(4)(d).

II.

¶ 5. With this regulatory framework in mind, we turn to consideration of the certification on appeal. Applicant’s project consists of an existing hydroelectric facility located on the Clyde River, a river that meanders for some thirty miles in a northwesterly direction through northern Vermont to empty into Lake Memphremagog in the City of Newport. The Clyde has been harnessed for waterpower since the early nineteenth century, and contains numerous historic mill sites and dams. The hydroelectric facility at issue in this case was originally licensed in 1963, and consists of four separate dams, although the instant appeal is solely concerned with the dam known as Newport 1,2,3 in the Town of Derby and the related powerhouse located downstream in the City of Newport. The Newport 1,2,3 dam was originally constructed in 1918, but has since been modified and repaired on several occasions, most recently in 1990.

¶ 6. The Newport 1,2,3 facility bypasses approximately 1800 feet of the river in order to channel water from the dam to the powerhouse, at which point the water is discharged back into the river at the tailrace. A key issue during the certification process before the Agency and Board concerned the minimum stream flow necessary to comply with water quality standards by restoring and maintaining fish habitat in the bypass reach. Studies had indicated that [608]*608salmon, which had been periodically stocked in the Clyde River since the 1860’s, and other cold water fish had historically returned from colder and deeper waters in Quebec to spawn in the Clyde and other Vermont streams and rivers. At the time of the relieensure application, however, the number of fish returning to spawn in the Clyde had decreased dramatically.2

¶ 7. Since the project’s inception, the bypass had been largely dry, generally receiving very small amounts of water from leakage over the dam for a measured flow of about 2.0 cubic feet per second (cfs). To restore fish habitat in the bypass, applicant proposed to maintain a minimal flow of 5 cfs in the bypass channel. However, based on stream flow studies of the Newport 1,2,3 bypass and the Agency’s general guidelines for minimum stream flows at hydroelectric projects, the Agency concluded that applicant’s proposal for 5 cfs would not provide adequate habitat for cold water fish. Instead, the Agency determined that a minimum flow of 30 cfs was necessary and sufficient to support aquatic habitat and comply with water quality standards.

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2006 VT 11, 895 A.2d 736, 179 Vt. 606, 62 ERC (BNA) 1252, 2006 Vt. LEXIS 25, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-appeal-of-clyde-river-hydroelectric-project-vt-2006.