Northwest Environmental Defense Center v. Environmental Quality Commission

223 P.3d 1071, 232 Or. App. 619, 2009 Ore. App. LEXIS 2089
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedDecember 23, 2009
DocketA129732; A130703
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 223 P.3d 1071 (Northwest Environmental Defense Center v. Environmental Quality Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Northwest Environmental Defense Center v. Environmental Quality Commission, 223 P.3d 1071, 232 Or. App. 619, 2009 Ore. App. LEXIS 2089 (Or. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

SERCOMBE, J.

This case involves dueling challenges under ORS 183.400 to a rule adopted by the Oregon Environmental Quality Commission (EQC) relating to small suction dredge mining operations. The rule at issue is actually a general discharge permit, known as the “700-PM permit,” which places certain conditions on the operation of small suction dredges in the waters of the state; miners can then seek authorization under the 700-PM permit to operate their suction dredges in accordance with the permit conditions. OAR 340-045-0033(1l)(d). On one side of the debate, an environmental interest group, Northwest Environmental Defense Center (NEDC), contends that the 700-PM permit is invalid because EQC failed to follow certain procedural requirements and because the permit violates aspects of the Clean Water Act, 33 USC §§ 1251-1376,1 and Oregon water pollution control laws. On the other side, a mining interest group, Eastern Oregon Mining Association (EOMA), contends that the permit exceeds EQC’s authority because the discharge at issue is the discharge of “dredged material,” a matter within the exclusive authority of the Army Corps of Engineers under the Clean Water Act. EQC, meanwhile, contends that it had statutory authority to adopt the rule, followed all applicable procedural requirements, and satisfied the requisites of the Clean Water Act and Oregon law. We conclude that the permit exceeded EQC’s statutory authority. For that reason, we hold the permit invalid.

As noted above, the rule before us is a general permit. The permit was adopted by EQC in 2005 as part of its implementation of the federal Clean Water Act — more specifically, as part of the National Pollution Discharge Elimination System (NPDES) permit pro^am. See ORS 468B.035 (providing for state implementation of the Clean Water Act). In general, under the Clean Water Act, the discharge of any pollutant into the navigable waters of the United States is unlawful. 33 USC § 1311(a). The critical exception is that the discharge of pollutants is allowed under certain permitting schemes, one of which is the NPDES permit program. See 33 [623]*623USC § 1342. The Clean Water Act contemplates that states be delegated authority to issue permits under the NPDES system, and Oregon has assumed that responsibility. ORS 468B.035; OAR 340-045-0005 to 340-045-0080.

The permit at issue in this case — the 700-PM permit — is an NPDES permit, which EQC adopted pursuant to ORS 468B.035.2 The permit regulates a practice known as small suction dredge mining. Small suction dredge mining

“involves using a high pressure pump driven by a gasoline powered motor to create suction through a flexible intake hose with a fixed inside diameter. There are variable sized dredges ranging from 2"-12" in diameter. While operating, streambed sediments and water are vacuumed through the intake nozzle and passed over a sluice tray mounted on floats. Dense particles, including gold, are trapped in the sluice box tray. The remainder of lighter entrained material is discharged back into the stream as tailings. Those tailings accumulate to form piles after hours of operation. Rocks and boulders too large to pass through the intake hose are often moved by hand.”3

Over the years, miners and environmental groups have debated the individual and cumulative environmental effects of the practice, particularly as a result of the waste-water and tailings that are discharged back into the stream. In April 1997, DEQ began regulating small suction dredge mining under a general permit known as the 700-J permit, the predecessor to the permit at issue in this case. The 700-J permit was itself the subject of litigation and expired by its terms in March 2002. In 2004, DEQ notified miners, environmentalists, and others that it intended to revise the 700-J [624]*624permit. EOMA and NEDC participated in a public comment process and hearings concerning the revised permit, which was eventually adopted by EQC as the 700-PM permit.

Permit 700-PM “covers suction dredges not to exceed 30 horsepower with an inside diameter suction hose no greater than 6 inches that are used for recovering precious metals or minerals from stream bottom sediments.” It provides a number of “discharge limitations,” including the requirement that “[n]o wastes may be discharged and no conductivities may be conducted that will violate Water Quality Standards as adopted in OAK. Chapter 340, Division 41.” The water quality standards in division 41 include “turbidity’ standards. OAR 340-041-0036. “Turbidity,” in that context, refers to cloudiness of water caused by suspended particles, sometimes measured by “nephelometric turbidity units.”4

The 700-PM permit regulates turbidity in terms of “background turbidity’ and “visible turbidity’:

“1. Background Turbidity means turbidity that represents the ambient, undisturbed turbidity as measured or observed at least 10 feet upstream from the suction dredge operation at the time dredging occurs.
“2. Visible Turbidity means turbidity that is distinctly visible when compared to background turbidity.”

The permit then provides certain “discharge limitations” with respect to turbidity: “Suction dredges with suction hoses that have an inside diameter of 4 inches or greater must not create visible turbidity beyond 300 feet downstream from a working dredge.” However, a “single operating suction dredge equipped with a suction hose with an inside diameter less than 4 inches has no turbidity discharge limitation.” Similarly, the permit requires operators of larger suction [625]*625dredges (those with suction hoses that have an inside diameter of 4 inches or greater) to visually monitor on a daily basis to determine whether turbidity is visible beyond 300 feet downstream, whereas “[s]uction dredges with suction hoses that have an inside diameter less than 4 inches do not have to monitor for turbidity.”

Neither NEDC nor EOMA was satisfied with permit 700-PM, and both groups filed petitions for judicial review in which they assert challenges to the validity of the permit under ORS 183.400. NEDC, for its part, contends that EQC did not comply with applicable rulemaking requirements— namely, that the final permit was so different from the proposed permit in the rulemaking notice that NEDC had no meaningful opportunity to comment on it. As to the substance of the permit, NEDC contends that the permit does not comport with the requirements of the Clean Water Act and Oregon water pollution laws. EOMA, meanwhile, submits that the rule exceeds the agency’s statutory authority because it purports to regulate the “discharge of dredged material,” which EOMA contends is a matter that is regulated by the Army Corps of Engineers and not

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Related

E. Or. Mining Ass'n v. Dep't of Envtl. Quality
445 P.3d 251 (Oregon Supreme Court, 2019)
Eastern Oregon Mining Ass'n v. Department of Environmental Quality
398 P.3d 449 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2017)
Nedc v. Eqc
223 P.3d 1071 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2009)

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Bluebook (online)
223 P.3d 1071, 232 Or. App. 619, 2009 Ore. App. LEXIS 2089, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/northwest-environmental-defense-center-v-environmental-quality-commission-orctapp-2009.