In Re Belle Co., LLC

809 So. 2d 225, 2001 WL 727000
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 27, 2001
Docket2000 CA 0504
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 809 So. 2d 225 (In Re Belle Co., LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Belle Co., LLC, 809 So. 2d 225, 2001 WL 727000 (La. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

809 So.2d 225 (2001)

In the Matter of: BELLE COMPANY, L.L.C. Type I and II Solid Waste Landfill Permit.

No. 2000 CA 0504.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, First Circuit.

June 27, 2001.

*228 James L. Ellis, Edwin W. Fleshman, James C. Carver, Taylor, Porter, Brooks & Phillips, L.L.P., Baton Rouge, for Intervenors-Appellee-Appellant Belle Company, L.L.C.

Suzanne S. Dickey, Tulane Environmental Law Clinic, New Orleans, for Appellant-Appellee Assumption Parish People's Environmental Action League.

Herman Robinson, Jackie M. Marve, Andrea' Z. Jones, Louisiana Department of Environmental, Quality Legal Affairs Division, Baton Rouge, for Appellee Louisiana Department of Environmental Quality.

Before: PARRO, GUIDRY, and WEIMER, JJ.

PARRO, Judge.

This is an appeal by a citizens' group from a decision of the Louisiana Department of Environmental Quality (DEQ) to grant a permit for the construction and operation of a Type I and Type II nonhazardous solid waste landfill to Belle Company, L.L.C. (Belle).

Factual Background and Procedural History

In October 1994, Belle filed an application with the Solid Waste Division of DEQ for a permit for the construction and operation of a Type I (industrial) and Type II (sanitary) solid waste landfill. The proposed solid waste disposal facility would be built on a 340-acre tract owned by Belle located approximately six miles north of the intersection of Louisiana Highway 70 and Louisiana Highway 1 in Assumption Parish. The waste to be disposed at this proposed facility would be generated in Louisiana from industrial, commercial, and residential sites. The permit application was deemed technically complete and accepted for public review on September 29, 1995. A public review/comment period was allowed from October 18, 1995, to November 19, 1995, with a public hearing taking place on November 9, 1995; the time for public comments was extended through December 9, 1995. Following a second public hearing at the public's request on March 12, 1996, public comments were accepted through April 11, 1996.

After considering public comments, the administrator of the Solid Waste Division issued a "Briefing Sheet" directed to DEQ's assistant secretary concerning the staffs review of Belle's permit application. The briefing sheet disclosed concern regarding the following issues: the need for the landfill, the site selection process, the emergency response capabilities, and the landfill's slope design. Regarding need, the administrator noted that the solid waste disposal needs of Assumption Parish and the surrounding communities were currently being met. He also noted that the granting of a height increase to a nearby landfill provided for several years of available airspace. The administrator concluded that, because there was no reference in its application as to which existing area landfills would be closing, Belle had failed to establish need. The manner in which the siting process was conducted and the final site was selected were also noted as points of conflict. Opponents objected to the fact that the Belle site was selected before the process was complete and complained that the search area was limited to three parishes within the then-designated, nine-parish service area. The *229 issue as to which, if any, fire department could serve as the first response unit in the event of an emergency was also unresolved. Personnel within the identified fire department district maintained that their department would be unable to respond to emergencies on the site due to a lack of equipment and training. A report prepared by Louis J. Capozzoli and Associates, Inc. (LJC&A) shortly after Belle submitted its permit application questioned the stability of the slopes during construction, operation, and post-closure. Solid Waste Division engineers discovered that some of the calculations presented in the permit application concerning the design of the landfill were skewed.

In early 1997, personnel from LJC&A and the environmental consultant firm hired by Belle, G&E Engineering Environmental Consultants (G&E), re-evaluated slope stability and resolved the issues raised in LJC&A's report. Based on opponents' complaints that a 1994 alternative site study was too limited,[1] Latter & Blum, Inc. Realtors (L&B) updated the alternative site study in March 1997 by searching a fourteen-parish area for available real estate suitable for development as a solid waste landfill.[2] L&B located property that met the minimum physical criteria and other specified constraints. Of the sites investigated by L&B, only twenty properties in the fourteen-parish service area fit the stated criteria and were available for sale in March 1997. The identified properties were located in the following eight parishes: St. James, Iberville, West Baton Rouge, Ascension, Assumption, St. John the Baptist, Lafourche, and Terrebonne.[3] The site evaluation process performed by G&E in preparing the updated study, like the original study, consisted of three screening levels. In the first two levels, available sites were evaluated against criteria[4] established to eliminate sites with obviously undesirable characteristics. Five of the sites[5] were eliminated from consideration in the second level of screening. In the third level, the remaining sites were ranked according to the following attributes, which were prioritized, considered, and factored based on relative importance: confining geological layers, depth to potable aquifer, nonresidential receptors within three miles, residences within one mile, access and highway safety, acreage, flood zone, jurisdictional wetlands, location, coastal management zone, and existing land usage. G&E concluded that Belle's property ranked best among all the sites *230 identified with respect to providing protection to the environment.

In addressing the need for the Belle landfill in its April 29, 1997 letter to DEQ's assistant secretary, G&E revealed that eight solid waste disposal facilities were then currently operating within the service area or in the reasonably immediate vicinity. These were:

Colonial (BFI) Landfill (Ascension Parish) —service area included five (Ascension, Assumption, Iberville, St. James, and St. John the Baptist Parishes) of the fourteen parishes in Belle's proposed service area and had an estimated closure date of August 2014;
Kelvin Landfill (Jefferson Parish)—authorized to accept only waste generated in Jefferson Parish and had an estimated closure date of August 2006;
North East Baton Rouge Parish Landfill (NEBRPL)—service area included three (Ascension, Iberville East, and West Baton Rouge Parishes) of the fourteen parishes in Belle's proposed service area and had an estimated closure date of November 2013;
Harold "Babe" Landry Reduction and Resource Landfill (St. Mary Parish)— had an estimated closure date of December 1998;
Terrebonne Parish (Ashland) Landfill— had an estimated closure date of December 1999;
Reliable (USA Waste) Landfill (Pointe Coupee Parish)—had an unrestricted service area and an estimated closure date of July 2008;
Woodside Landfill (Livingston Parish)— had an estimated closure date of November 2001; and
Greater New Orleans Landfill (GNOL)(Jefferson Parish)—was scheduled for closure in June 1999.

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809 So. 2d 225, 2001 WL 727000, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-belle-co-llc-lactapp-2001.