Minnesota Center for Environmental Advocacy v. Commissioner of Minnesota Pollution Control Agency

696 N.W.2d 95, 2005 Minn. App. LEXIS 525, 2005 WL 1153755
CourtCourt of Appeals of Minnesota
DecidedMay 17, 2005
DocketA04-1324
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 696 N.W.2d 95 (Minnesota Center for Environmental Advocacy v. Commissioner of Minnesota Pollution Control Agency) 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
Minnesota Center for Environmental Advocacy v. Commissioner of Minnesota Pollution Control Agency, 696 N.W.2d 95, 2005 Minn. App. LEXIS 525, 2005 WL 1153755 (Mich. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

OPINION

STONEBURNER, Judge.

Relator Minnesota Center for Environmental Advocacy (MCEA) challenges respondent Minnesota Pollution Control Agency’s (MPCA) grant of a permit to the City of Princeton- allowing the city to triple the capacity of its current wastewater treatment facility by constructing a waste-water treatment plant (WWTP) that will discharge 1,905,000 gallons of waste per day into an outstanding resource value water, the Rum River. MCEA argues that (1) the finding that there are no prudent and feasible alternatives to the proposed discharge is not supported by substantial evidence in the record because Princeton failed to analyze the alternative of downsizing plus decentralized treatment to reduce the amount of discharge into the Rum River and (2) MPCA’s failure to require available, affordable technology to reduce pollutants in the discharge permitted is contrary to the law requiring protection of the existing, high quality of the water in the Rum River, not supported by substantial evidence in the record, and arbitrary and capricious. MCEA argues in the alternative that it raised factual disputes on these issues requiring a contested-case hearing.

FACTS

Princeton, whose existing wastewater treatment facility is close to capacity and near the end of its useful life span, applied to MPCA for a National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System/State Disposal System permit (NPDES/SDS permit) allowing it to construct a new wastewater treatment plant (WWTP) that will triple the capacity of the current wastewater treatment method and discharge 1,905,000 gallons of wastewater per day directly into the Rum River. 1

The affected portion of the Rum River has been classified as Outstanding Resource Value Water-Restricted (ORVW-R) since 1984. Minn. R. 7050.0180, subps. 6(D), 6a (G) (2003). An ORVW is a body of water that has “high water quality, wilderness characteristics, unique scientific or ecological significance, exceptional recreational value, or other special qualities which warrant stringent protection from pollution.” Minn. R. 7050.0180, subp. 2(A). It is undisputed that the Rum River’s classification is due to its scenic characteristics, recreational value, and high water quality. MPCA’s nondegradation-of-ORVW policy explains that high water quality and recreational value go hand-in-hand: “the maintenance of existing high quality in some waters of outstanding resource value to the state is essential to their function as exceptional recreational, cultural, aesthetic, or scientific resources.” Minn. R. 7050.0180, subp. 1. The applicable restriction on discharges to ORVWs provides in relevant, part that “[n]o person may cause or allow a new or expanded discharge of any sewage ... [into an ORVW] unless there is not a prudent and feasible alternative to the discharge,” and *99 if a new discharge is permitted, the MPCA “shall restrict the discharge to the extent necessary to preserve the existing high quality, or to preserve the wilderness, scientific, recreational, or other special characteristics that make the water an [ORVW].” Minn. R. 7050.0180, subp. 6.

As part of the permit application, the city was required to perform a nondegra-dation study that included an analysis of various alternatives to determine whether any of the alternatives provided a prudent and feasible alternative to the city’s proposal. One of the alternatives that the city was required to study was “[downsizing the project and/or implementing water conservation practices so that a land disposal method might be used.” The city rejected all of the alternatives it was required to analyze as not prudent or feasible. Downsizing was rejected as inconsistent with Princeton’s planned growth over the next twenty years. Evidence in the record indicates that Princeton’s population could possibly expand from its current 4,200 to 12,500 by 2024.

After reviewing Princeton’s application, including its study of alternatives, plus some additional information requested by MPCA, MPCA staff recommended approval of a permit for Princeton’s proposed WWTP. MPCA staff drafted and circulated for public comment an Environmental Assessment Worksheet (EAW). MCEA voiced concerns about the proposal, asserting that the alternative of downsizing had not been sufficiently analyzed as a feasible and prudent alternative, MPCA’s recommended restrictions on the proposed discharge were only designed to preserve minimal water quality standards, and MPCA failed to require available, affordable technology necessary to protect the higher quality of this river. The Department of Natural Resources also requested that MPCA consider requiring additional, technological upgrades, such as sand filters, to control mercury and CBOD. 2 Neither MCEA nor the DNR requested an Environmental Impact Statement (EIS).

MPCA does not dispute that the use of treatment upgrades such as sand filters and the addition of alum would reduce phosphorus, CBOD, and total suspended solids (TSS) in the discharge, but rejected these upgrades based on its determination that the benefit would be so minimal in comparison to the cost that this alternative is not necessary to protect the quality of the water. MPCA and the city, without considering downsizing in conjunction with decentralized treatment to meet some of Princeton’s projected growth, rejected downsizing on the basis that it would not allow the city to grow at the rate it anticipated.

Concluding that an EIS was not required, MPCA drafted a NPDES/SDS permit for the project that includes a limit on the discharge of phosphorus and a more-stringent-than-minimal limit on TSS, but does not require use of sand filters or alum as proposed by MCEA to further reduce these pollutants as well as CBOD. MPCA circulated the proposed permit for public comment. MCEA requested a contested-case hearing, reiterating its concerns that (1) Princeton failed to adequately consider downsizing in conjunction with decentralized treatment as a feasible and prudent alternative and (2) MPCA failed to require the effluent .restrictions necessary to protect existing high water quality.

*100 In a hearing before the MPCA Citizen’s Board, MPCA staff and MCEA representatives presented the proposed permit and MCEA raised its objections to the permit and requested a contested-case hearing. The board denied MCEA’s request for a contested-case hearing and granted the NPDES/SDS permit with the restrictions proposed by MPCA staff. MCEA appeals the grant of the permit by writ of certiora-ri, arguing that MPCA’s decision to reject downsizing as a feasible and prudent alternative is arbitrary, capricious, and unsupported by substantial' evidence, and MPCA’s failure to require the use of sand filters and alum is contrary to law, unsupported by substantial evidence, and arbitrary and capricious. In the alternative, MCEA argues that MPCA erred by denying a contested-case hearing.

ISSUES

1. Should the city have been required to analyze whether the alternative of downsizing its proposed WWTP and using decentralized treatment methods to accommodate additional anticipated population growth is a prudent and feasible alternative to its proposed discharge of 1,905,000 gallons of wastewater per day into a river classified as ORVW-R?

2.

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Related

Sayer v. Minnesota Department of Transportation
769 N.W.2d 305 (Court of Appeals of Minnesota, 2009)
In Re Request for Issuance of the SDS General Permit MNG300000
769 N.W.2d 312 (Court of Appeals of Minnesota, 2009)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
696 N.W.2d 95, 2005 Minn. App. LEXIS 525, 2005 WL 1153755, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/minnesota-center-for-environmental-advocacy-v-commissioner-of-minnesota-minnctapp-2005.