McEa v. Comr. of Mpca

696 N.W.2d 398
CourtCourt of Appeals of Minnesota
DecidedMay 24, 2005
DocketA04-1323
StatusPublished

This text of 696 N.W.2d 398 (McEa v. Comr. of Mpca) 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
McEa v. Comr. of Mpca, 696 N.W.2d 398 (Mich. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

696 N.W.2d 398 (2005)

MINNESOTA CENTER FOR ENVIRONMENTAL ADVOCACY, Relator,
v.
COMMISSIONER OF MINNESOTA POLLUTION CONTROL AGENCY, Respondent,
City of St. Cloud, Respondent.

No. A04-1323.

Court of Appeals of Minnesota.

May 24, 2005.

*400 Janette K. Brimmer, Minnesota Center for Environmental Advocacy, St. Paul, MN, for relator.

Mike Hatch, Attorney General, Robert B. Roche, Assistant Attorney General, St. Paul, MN, for respondent Commissioner of Minnesota Pollution Control Agency.

Christopher M. Hood, Steven W. Nyhus, Flaherty & Hood, P.A., St. Paul, MN, for respondent City of St. Cloud.

Considered and decided by WILLIS, Presiding Judge, STONEBURNER, Judge, and CRIPPEN, Judge.

OPINION

CRIPPEN, Judge.[*]

This appeal challenges administrative approval of a wastewater treatment permit by respondent Minnesota Pollution Control Agency (the agency). Relator Minnesota Center for Environmental Advocacy argues that (1) the agency changed its construction of Minn. R. 7050.0211, subp. 1a (2003) (phosphorus removal rule), in a manner that is arbitrary, resulting in the Coon Rapids Dam Pool not being protected as a reservoir; (2) the agency's test for determining whether allowing the treatment plant would affect the reservoir is too narrow; and (3) the agency improperly put the burden of proof on those opposing the permit rather than on the applicant, and the applicant did not carry that burden. We affirm.

FACTS

Excessive amounts of algae can decrease water quality, and phosphorus can prompt the growth of algae. In the 1970's, the agency adopted a rule stating that "[w]here the discharge of effluent is directly to or affects a lake or reservoir, phosphorus removal to one milligram per liter [1mg/L] shall be required." Minn. R. 7050.0211, subp. 1a (2003). The rule does not define "affect," nor does it define "reservoir." In its initial applications of the phosphorus rule, the agency (1) interpreted "affect" to require a measurable impact on the water in question; and (2) used a 50-mile rule of thumb, under which bodies of water more than 50 miles downstream from a wastewater discharge site were deemed not affected by the discharge.

*401 Also in the 1970s, respondent City of St. Cloud (the city) obtained a permit to operate a water treatment plant that discharges wastewater into the Mississippi River. The discharge occurs more than 50 miles upstream from the Coon Rapids Dam Pool, a pool created by a dam on the Mississippi River at Coon Rapids. The city's permit must be renewed every five years, and the phosphorus rule is involved in the repermitting process. Lake Pepin and Spring Lake, other water bodies involved in these proceedings, are downstream from Coon Rapids.

As the result of the agency's 1996 study of the impact of phosphorus on the state's water systems, a 1997 task force report recommended that the phosphorus rule be modified to address the impact of phosphorus on rivers. The agency board did not vote on whether to adopt, as agency policy, the task force's recommendations. Although the agency has not formulated a policy on discharge affects on flowing river water, in March 2000, after various public meetings and comment periods, the agency promulgated a strategy that governs other specified affects (the phosphorus strategy).

The 2000 strategy (1) states that the agency will, under the phosphorus rule, require a 1 mg/L limit on phosphorus in wastewater discharge if the discharge affects a lake or reservoir and, under certain other circumstances, require a permit applicant to provide a phosphorus management plan; (2) defines "affects" and "measurable impact" in terms of the detrimental response to phosphorus in a body of water and the individual contribution of the discharge in causing any of certain defined adverse changes; (3) defines "lake" as a water body with a lake identification number supplied by the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources (DNR) in the DNR's Bulletin 25, "with some exceptions"; (4) recommends using water residence time (the amount of time water will spend within a given geographic feature) to determine whether navigational pools would be treated as a lake or as a river for purposes of the phosphorus rule; and (5) notes that the lake/navigational pool/residence-time aspects of the phosphorus strategy mean that the agency adopts the DNR list of lakes in Bulletin 25, with certain exceptions.

In the 2000 proceedings to renew the city's discharge permit, the agency made a preliminary determination to reissue the city's permit without a 1mg/L limit on the city's phosphorus discharge, requiring, instead, that the city submit a phosphorus management plan, with its next (2005) permit-renewal application. Relator sought, and the agency granted, a contested-case hearing on whether the city's discharge triggered the 1 mg/L limit on phosphorus discharge by affecting a lake or reservoir under the phosphorus rule. Relator essentially argued that (1) the city's discharge affects the Coon Rapids Dam Pool and Lake Pepin, among other downstream waters; (2) the dam pool is a reservoir under the phosphorus rule; and therefore (3) the phosphorus rule requires a 1mg/L limit on the phosphorus in the water discharged by the city's plant.

After discovery, the city moved for a summary determination, arguing that the phosphorus rule's discharge limit does not apply because, under the rule, the Coon Rapids Dam Pool is not a reservoir, and relator did not show that the city's discharge affects downstream waters. An administrative law judge (ALJ) then proposed a summary disposition in the city's favor. The proposed ruling assumed that the dam pool was a reservoir under the phosphorus rule for purposes of the motion but indicated that relator had not shown that the city's discharge affects downstream waters. The agency adopted the *402 proposed order. On relator's initial appeal, this court ruled that (1) the agency had partially misinterpreted the phosphorus rule, and a contested-case hearing was required to determine whether, under a correct reading of the rule, the city's discharge "affects" downstream waters; and (2) the contested-case hearing should also address whether the Coon Rapids Dam Pool is a reservoir for purposes of the phosphorus rule because that fact would impact whether the phosphorus rule is applicable to the pool. In Re City of St. Cloud Wastewater Treatment Facility, No. C3-03-75, 2003 WL 22136314, at *5 (Minn. App. Sept.12, 2003) (St. Cloud I).

On remand, the parties disagreed on who had the burden of proof. The ALJ issued a prehearing order stating relator had the burden of proof under Minn. Rules 1400.7300, subp. 5 (2003). After a hearing on the merits, the ALJ issued a proposed ruling that reaffirmed its prehearing ruling that relator had the burden of proof; ruled that, for purposes of the phosphorus rule, Coon Rapids Dam Pool is not a reservoir; and ruled that relator had not traced to the city's discharge any effects of phosphorus in downstream waters. With minor alterations, the agency adopted the proposed order.

ISSUES

1. Did the agency correctly rule that the Coon Rapids Dam Pool is not a reservoir?

2. Did the agency incorrectly place the burden of proof on relator?

3. Did the agency misapply the phosphorus rule in determining that relator failed to show that the city's wastewater discharge affects downstream waters?

ANALYSIS

I.

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696 N.W.2d 398, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcea-v-comr-of-mpca-minnctapp-2005.