In Re the City of Owatonna's NPDES/SDS Proposed Permit Reissuance

672 N.W.2d 921, 2004 Minn. App. LEXIS 9, 2004 WL 26579
CourtCourt of Appeals of Minnesota
DecidedJanuary 6, 2004
DocketA03-331, A03-333
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 672 N.W.2d 921 (In Re the City of Owatonna's NPDES/SDS Proposed Permit Reissuance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re the City of Owatonna's NPDES/SDS Proposed Permit Reissuance, 672 N.W.2d 921, 2004 Minn. App. LEXIS 9, 2004 WL 26579 (Mich. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

OPINION

KALITOWSKI, Judge.

Relator Minnesota Center for Environmental Advocacy (MCEA) challenges the decision of respondent Minnesota Pollution Control Agency (MPCA) to reissue National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (NPDES) permits to wastewater treatment facilities in respondents Fari-bault and Owatonna without requiring removal of phosphorus from the facilities’ discharge to a limit of 1 mg/L.

FACTS

This consolidated appeal arises out of the MPCA’s issuance of NPDES permits for the Faribault and Owatonna wastewa-ter treatment facilities without phosphorus effluent limits. Relator contends that because (1) phosphorus discharges from the two facilities affects Lake Byllesby; and (2) the facilities are not removing phosphorus “to the fullest practicable extent,” the MPCA was required to impose a phosphorus limit pursuant to Minn. R. 7050.0211, subp. la (2001) (the phosphorus rule). In the alternative, relator contends that the evidence demonstrates a dispute of material fact such that contested case hearings on issuance of the facilities’ permits are warranted.

The phosphorus rule states in relevant part: “Where the discharge of effluent is directly to or affects a lake or reservoir, phosphorus removal to one milligram per liter shall be required.... ” Minn. R. 7050.0211, subp. la. The rule goes on to state: “In addition, removal of nutrients from all wastes shall be provided to the fullest practicable extent wherever sources of nutrients are considered to be actually or potentially detrimental to preservation or enhancement of the designated water uses.” Id.

In March 2000 the MPCA developed a phosphorus guidance document entitled the Phosphorus Strategy. The Phosphorus Strategy states that “affects” in the *924 phosphorus rule is “measured in terms of actual or predicted increases in chlorophyll-a concentration, increased frequency of nuisance algae blooms, reduced transparency, reduced dissolved oxygen concentrations (attributable to decaying algae), or related adverse responses to phosphorus.” The Phosphorus Strategy further defines “measurable impact” as “the individual contribution of the discharge in causing any of the adverse changes [discussed in the definition of ‘affects’].”

Phosphorus is an important measure of water quality of a lake or reservoir because excessive phosphorus results in adverse changes in water quality. These changes have a negative impact on fish, vegetation, and oxygen levels. Responses to phosphorus in the system can be determined by measuring chlorophyll-a and water transparency. In 1996, the MPCA reported that Lake Byllesby’s phosphorus levels far exceeded the natural levels for its applicable ecoregions. At that time, Lake Byllesby’s average summer in-lake phosphorus levels were 258 micrograms per liter (gg/L). According to the MPCA, the target phosphorus levels for Lake Byllesby’s ecoregions are 40-90 ¡xg/L. The MPCA also noted that Lake Byllesby is suffering a variety of adverse effects from the high phosphorus levels. And Lake Byllesby has recently been included on the state’s Impaired Waters List as being impaired by excess nutrients.

Both Faribault and Owatonna operate wastewater treatment facilities that discharge to the Straight River, which flows into the Cannon River, and finally to Lake Byllesby. The Faribault wastewater facility is located approximately 26-27 miles upstream from Lake Byllesby; the Owa-tonna facility is located approximately 45-46 miles upstream from Lake Byllesby. Both cities are required to hold a NPDES permit, which is reviewed and reissued by the MPCA approximately every five years. Currently, Owatonna discharges phosphorus at 2.6 mg/L and Faribault discharges phosphorus at 4.0 mg/L.

In July and September 2002, the MPCA published notice, of intent to reissue NPDES permits for the Faribault and Ow-atonna wastewater treatment facilities, respectively. In response, relator submitted comments and a request for contested case hearings under Minn.Stat. §§ 14.57, 14.58, and Minn. R. 1400.5010 et seq., on the need for a phosphorus effluent limit of 1 mg/L based upon the MPCA’s modeled effects to Lake Byllesby and the application of the phosphorus rule.

The MPCA conducted water quality modeling analyses to determine whether Faribault and Owatonna, separately, have a measurable impact on the adverse conditions present in Lake Byllesby. The MPCA’s modeling showed that reducing the Owatonna facility’s phosphorus effluent discharge to 1 mg/L would result in reductions of in-lake phosphorus of 9%, and reducing the Faribault facility’s phosphorus effluent discharge to 1 mg/L would result in reductions of in-lake phosphorus of 15.86%.

But according to the MPCA, the modeling results indicated that reducing the cities’ phosphorus effluent discharge to 1 mg/L would not have a measurable impact on the chlorophyll-a concentration or water transparency in Lake Byllesby, despite the fact that the modeling predicted that a 1 mg/L effluent limit for Owatonna would reduce chlorophyll-a by 4% and a 1 mg/L effluent limit for Faribault would reduce chlorophyll-a by 7%. The MPCA modeling analysis indicated that these predicted changes in chlorophyll-a and water transparency fell within the model’s statistical margin of error. But relator’s experts testified that (1) the model had a high margin of error and the actual reductions *925 in chlorophyll-a might in fact be higher; and (2) the MPCA model was inadequate because it was better calibrated to predict changes in the amount of phosphorus than changes in chlorophyll-a and water transparency. Finally, the MPCA analysis concluded that “[i]mprovements in lake water quality will likely only result from a combination of point and nonpoint source activities that dramatically reduce inflow phosphorus concentrations.”

Relator’s experts prepared a report and testified at the MPCA board meeting. Relator did not conduct any new modeling on the issue; instead, the report relied on the modeling done by the MPCA. Relator presented expert testimony that a 1 mg/L effluent limit for Faribault and Owatonna would have a measurable impact on Lake Byllesby because it would likely alter the in-lake dynamics, and it would alter the response that the lake will have to future decreases in the phosphorus load. Relator’s experts also stated that the modeling technique used by the MPCA had a high margin of error, and that the modeling results did not support the MPCA’s conclusions.

The MPCA board, following the recommendation of its staff who reviewed the documents produced by relator, concluded that none of the articles, memos, or other documents on which relator relied indicated any evidence of individual measurable effects by the cities’ wastewater treatment facilities on Lake Byllesby. The MPCA further concluded that relator did not show a reasonable basis for its position that the facilities’ discharges affect Lake Byllesby such that contested case hearings would aid the MPCA in resolving the matter.

Despite its stated concern regarding phosphorus levels in Lake Byllesby, and its modeling that indicated a 1 mg/L phosphorus limit for both facilities would result in an almost 25% reduction of phosphorus in the lake, the MPCA concluded that the individual discharge of phosphorus from each facility does not affect Lake Byllesby.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
672 N.W.2d 921, 2004 Minn. App. LEXIS 9, 2004 WL 26579, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-city-of-owatonnas-npdessds-proposed-permit-reissuance-minnctapp-2004.