Opinion No. Oag 31-79, (1979)

68 Op. Att'y Gen. 83
CourtWisconsin Attorney General Reports
DecidedMarch 14, 1979
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 68 Op. Att'y Gen. 83 (Opinion No. Oag 31-79, (1979)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Attorney General Reports primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Opinion No. Oag 31-79, (1979), 68 Op. Att'y Gen. 83 (Wis. 1979).

Opinion

ANTHONY S. EARL, Secretary Department of Natural Resources

You have requested my opinion on several matters which relate to the capacity of a joint sewerage commission under Wisconsin law to meet federal requirements for the discharge of pollutants from a publicly owned treatment work (POTW). Most of the requirements of concern have their analog in Wisconsin law. ch. 147, Stats.

Under this chapter the discharge of certain pollutants is prohibited. Discharge of those pollutants which are not expressly prohibited may be undertaken if the discharger first receives a Wisconsin Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (WPDES) permit. Thereafter, lawful discharge is conditioned upon compliance with the terms and conditions of the permit. In Wisconsin such a permit must be *Page 84 approved by the United States Environmental Protection Agency (U.S. EPA); the U.S. EPA issues no permit of its own.

The fundamental working premise of the WPDES permit program is that some mode of technology will be employed to either eliminate the discharge altogether or to reduce by separate treatment those types of pollutants which are discharged. POTW's rely on wastewater treatment as their method of compliance.

The actual minimum level of treatment is expressed and enforced through effluent limitations which are required by federal and state law to be at least as stringent as the Clean Water Act Amendments of 1977 and the federal regulations adopted pursuant thereto.

Within these constraints a WPDES permittee, such as a POTW, which receives wastes from more than one source, is required to insure that one or more of the sources does not by the type or quantity of waste conveyed for treatment damage the treatment facility or impair the treatment process. These protective requirements are known collectively as pretreatment standards. Their enforcement depends initially on the POTW's ability to require the source to monitor the type and strength of the waste it conveys. This data is then used to determine, among other things, the charge back to each tributary source for wastewater treatment.

Regarding the enforceability of these related requirements by a joint sewerage commission, you ask:

1. Is a joint sewerage commission formed under sec. 144.07, Stats., empowered to enact and enforce ordinances consistent with the mandates of the Clean Water Act Amendments of 1977 (P.L. 95-217) and the federal regulations adopted pursuant thereto, most particularly 40 C.F.R. 403, dealing with pretreatment requirements of permit holders?

2. Is a joint sewerage commission empowered to enact and enforce ordinances consistent with the requirements of the Wisconsin Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (WPDES) permit program, specifically secs. 147.02 (4), 147.07 (2), 147.08 and 147.15, Stats'?

These two questions can be answered together. *Page 85

I am of the opinion that joint sewerage commissions are empowered to enact and enforce regulations which would be required of them under the mandates of the Clean Water Act Amendments of 1977 (P.L. 95-217; hereinafter CWA), the federal regulations adopted pursuant thereto, and the parallel statutory and administrative law of Wisconsin. The bases upon which I have reached these conclusions are set forth below.

As a preliminary matter, it should be noted that state law empowers a multiplicity of units of local government to construct, operate and maintain sewage treatment systems. For those treatment systems which are themselves special units of local government and which go beyond the territorial limits of a single city, village or town, state law provides for the formation of a metropolitan sewerage district or a joint sewerage district. Secs. 66.067 and 144.07, Stats. Both types of districts are administered by a commission. The powers of the metropolitan commission are set forth in general terms in sec. 144.07, Stats., and in more detail in secs. 66.22 through 66.26, Stats. In the case of the joint commission the general powers are set forth in sec. 144.07 and, by reference, in sec. 62.11 (5). The relevant portions of sec. 144.07, Stats., provide:

(4)(a) Any 2 or more governmental units, including cities, villages, town sanitary districts or town utility districts not wishing to proceed under sub. (2) may jointly construct, operate and maintain a joint sewerage system, inclusive of the necessary intercepting sewers and sewerage treatment works . . . .

. . . .

(4) (c) The sewerage commissioners shall project, plan, construct and maintain . . . intercepting and other main sewers . . . [and] disposal works . . . . The sewerage commissioners may also project, plan, construct and maintain intercepting and other main sewers for the collection and disposal of storm water which shall be separate from the sanitary sewerage system. . . . The sewerage commissioners may employ and fix compensation . . . or do such other things as may be necessary for the due and proper execution of their duties . . . .

Under sec. 144.07 (4), Stats., these powers are to be exercised within the following bounds and in the following manner: *Page 86

(d) Such sewerage commission shall constitute a body corporate by the name of "(Insert name of governmental units or area) Sewerage Commission," by which in all proceedings it shall thereafter be known. It may purchase, take and hold real and personal property for its use and convey and dispose of the same. This grant of power shall be retroactive to September 13, 1935 for commissions formed prior to January 1, 1972. Except as provided in this subsection the sewerage commissioners shall have the power and proceed as a common council and board of public works in cities in carrying out the provisions of par. (c). All bond issues and appropriations made by said sewerage commission shall be subject to the approval of the governing bodies of the respective governmental units.

By reference to the common council, the Legislature has empowered a joint sewerage commission to function as follows:

Powers. Except as elsewhere in the statutes specifically provided, the council shall have the management and control of the city property, finances, highways, navigable waters, and the public service, and shall have power to act for the government and good order of the city, for its commercial benefit, and for the health, safety, and welfare of the public, and may carry out its powers by license, regulation, suppression, borrowing of money, tax levy, appropriation, fine, imprisonment, confiscation, and other necessary or convenient means. The powers hereby conferred shall be in addition to all other grants, and shall be limited only by express language.

Sec. 62.11 (5), Stats. In other words, where the commission has a duty to operate and maintain sewage treatment facilities, it has the power to act through regulation and to seek appropriate civil remedies.

Subsection 147.015 (2), Stats., provides that an owner or operator of a treatment facility may be a permittee.

As the operator of a sewerage treatment system, a joint commission is a discharger of pollutants and can serve as the permittee for a WPDES permit.

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