Pine v. Narragansett Bay Water Quality Mgmt. Dist. Comm, 94-4686 (1995)

CourtSuperior Court of Rhode Island
DecidedFebruary 8, 1995
DocketC.A. No. 94-4686
StatusPublished

This text of Pine v. Narragansett Bay Water Quality Mgmt. Dist. Comm, 94-4686 (1995) (Pine v. Narragansett Bay Water Quality Mgmt. Dist. Comm, 94-4686 (1995)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pine v. Narragansett Bay Water Quality Mgmt. Dist. Comm, 94-4686 (1995), (R.I. Ct. App. 1995).

Opinion

DECISION
In this civil action the Attorney-general seeks declaratory and injunctive relief, which would prevent the defendants, The Narragansett Bay Water Quality Management District Commission (hereinafter simply "the Commission") and NETCO Energy Recovery Limited Partnership (hereinafter generally "NETCO-ER"), from executing and implementing a sludge management services agreement. The Attorney-general, who brings this action through his statutory environmental advocate, invokes this Court's jurisdiction under G.L. 1956 (1985 Reenactment) § 9-30-1, etseq. (Uniform Declaratory Judgments Act) and § 10-20-6. Neither the Court's jurisdiction nor the Attorney-general's standing is contested by the defendants.

The Commission
The Commission was established by P.L. 1980, ch. 342, § 1 as a public corporation of the state, "for the purposes of acquiring, planning, constructing, extending, improving, and operating and maintaining publicly owned sewage treatment facilities in the district." The district includes the City of Providence and those portions of the City of Cranston and portions of the Towns of Johnston, North Providence and Lincoln formerly served by the City of Providence sewage treatment plant as well as the Cities of East Providence, Pawtucket, and Central Falls, the Towns of Lincoln and Cumberland, and certain portions of the Town of Smithfield. The Commission was originally created pursuant to a legislative finding in § 46-25-2(e)," that the most effective and efficient method to combat the discharge of pollutants in the Narragansett Bay is to create (the Commission), to be charged with the acquisition, planning, construction, financing, extension, improvement, and operation and maintenance of publicly owned sewage treatment facilities in (the district), with appropriate provision for a portion of the financing of the activities to be undertaken by the pledging of the full faith and credit of the State of Rhode Island."

"Sewage treatment facility" is defined in § 46-25-3(m) as "any sewage treatment plant, structure, combined sewer overflows, equipment, interceptors, mains, and pumping stations, or other property, real, personal, or mixed, for the treatment, storage, collection, transporting, or disposal of sewage, or any property or system to be used in whole or in part for any of the aforesaid purposes, or any other property or system incidental to, or which has to do with, or the end purpose of which is any of the foregoing." The Commission currently operates the two largest such facilities in the State. The Commission took over the operation of the Field's Point wastewater treatment facility from the City of Providence in 1982. In 1991 the General Assembly ordered the Blackstone Valley District Commission to be merged with and into the Commission. P.L. 1991, ch. 309, § 2. As a result, the Commission acquired the Bucklin Point facility in 1992.

The Field's Point facility is located on approximately 26 acres of land in the City of Providence and serves approximately 360,000 residences and between 5000 and 6000 businesses in Providence, Johnston, North Providence and portions of Cranston and Lincoln.

The Field's Point facility consists of the structures and equipment used for preliminary treatment, primary treatment, secondary treatment and disinfection of wastewater from the district's sewers. Sewage sludge, either primary sludge or waste activated sludge, is a residue from the treatment processes and must be disposed of in some manner through sludge processing. At Bucklin Point, which serves users in East Providence, Cumberland, Lincoln, Pawtucket, Central Falls, and part of Smithfield, the residual sewage sludge had been deposited for forty years in a landfill site located along the shore of the Seekonk River in the Rumford section of East Providence. The landfill is nearing its capacity and can no longer be used as a permanent disposal site for sewage sludge. The Commission currently plans to dispose of sewage sludge from the Bucklin Point facility at the Field's Point facility. It must plan at once to terminate its use of the on-site landfill.

There are two sludge incinerators at the Field's Point facility, but only one is in current use. The Commission plans to dismantle the older incinerator, originally constructed in 1948, and not presently in service. The Commission has been incinerating sewage sludge in a multiple hearth unit incinerator, originally constructed in 1963, since August 1990, pursuant to approvals received from the State Department of Environmental Management and the United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) in 1989.

The Commission's sewage sludge incineration at Field's Point is closely monitored and regulated by the Wastewater Management Branch of the United States EPA under the Federal sludge management program, authorized by 33 U.S.C. § 1251, et seq. (Clean Water Act) and regulated under 40 C.F.R. Part 503 ("the 503 program"). In addition, another branch of the EPA monitors the testing of the air emissions from the Commission's incinerator under 42 U.S.C. § 7414 (Clean Air Act). On August 30, 1994 the Commission received a final permit to operate the multiple hearth incinerator at Field's Point from the EPA.

The two facilities generate approximately 30 to 35 dry tons of sludge per day every day. Of that total, 20 to 25 tons is currently incinerated at Field's Point each day. Any excess is deposited either at the Bucklin Point landfill, temporarily, or, eventually, at the central landfill operated by the Solid Waste Management Corporation. The ash from the incineration process is slurried, dried and deposited at the central landfill as a cover.

NETCO-ER
NETCO-ER is a Delaware limited partnership. Its sole general partner is NETC Energy Recovery Systems, Inc. Both of these entities are affiliates of New England Treatment Company, Inc. ("the Company"), a Rhode Island corporation, which claims to provide non-hazardous sludge disposal services to municipal wastewater treatment plants and certain industries. The Company owns and operates a sludge disposal facility in Woonsocket, which is identified as a back-up site for disposal of the Commission's sludge under the proposed agreement. NETCO-ER has no experience in developing sludge treatment services and will rely on the expertise of its "affiliates," which include the Company, in the execution of the proposed agreement.

The Proposed Agreement
The requirement to dispose of the combined sewage sludge output from Field's Point and Bucklin Point required that the Commission seek a long-term solution to its sludge disposal problems. The Commission needed a guaranteed ability to dispose of at least 30 dry tons per day, a design average of 45 dry tons and a peak capacity of 58 dry tons per day. The Commission had not initially decided between a "public" approach, whereby a contractor would plan, design, permit and construct a facility, which would be purchased and operated by the Commission, after the facility was up and running and satisfied the Commission's requirements, and a "privatized" approach, whereby the contractor would finance, plan, design, permit and construct the facility, which it would own and operate under a long term service agreement with the Commission.

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Pine v. Narragansett Bay Water Quality Mgmt. Dist. Comm, 94-4686 (1995), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pine-v-narragansett-bay-water-quality-mgmt-dist-comm-94-4686-1995-risuperct-1995.