Sierra Club, Inc. and Conservation Law Foundation, Inc. v. Granite Shore Power LLC; GSP Merrimack LLC; and Public Service Company of New Hampshire d/b/a Eversource Energy

2020 DNH 205P
CourtDistrict Court, D. New Hampshire
DecidedNovember 25, 2020
Docket19-cv-216-JL
StatusPublished

This text of 2020 DNH 205P (Sierra Club, Inc. and Conservation Law Foundation, Inc. v. Granite Shore Power LLC; GSP Merrimack LLC; and Public Service Company of New Hampshire d/b/a Eversource Energy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sierra Club, Inc. and Conservation Law Foundation, Inc. v. Granite Shore Power LLC; GSP Merrimack LLC; and Public Service Company of New Hampshire d/b/a Eversource Energy, 2020 DNH 205P (D.N.H. 2020).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT DISTRICT OF NEW HAMPSHIRE

Sierra Club, Inc. and Conservation Law Foundation, Inc.

v. Civil No. 19-cv-216-JL Opinion No. 2020 DNH 205P

Granite Shore Power LLC; GSP Merrimack LLC; and Public Service Company of New Hampshire d/b/a Eversource Energy

ORDER

This environmental case concerns the operation of Merrimack Station, a coal-fueled

power plant on the Merrimack River in Bow, New Hampshire. Since 1992, the Station has

operated under the same EPA-issued National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System permit

(“1992 Permit”), which regulates the Station’s discharge of pollutants into the Merrimack River.

In 2019, the plaintiffs, Sierra Club, Inc. and Conservation Law Foundation, Inc., filed a

complaint alleging that the owners of Merrimack Station violated three conditions in the 1992

Permit. In 2020, the EPA issued a new permit (“2020 Permit”) for Merrimack Station, and,

weeks later, the plaintiffs and the defendants filed petitions for review before the Environmental

Appeals Board (“EAB”) contesting various conditions within the 2020 Permit.

The defendants Granite Shore Power LLC and GSP Merrimack LLC (collectively,

“Granite Shore”)—the two remaining defendants in this case—have moved for summary

judgment on two bases. First, they argue that the plaintiffs’ claims are all moot because the 2020

Permit removes or replaces the portions of the 1992 Permit that formed the basis of the plaintiffs’

complaint. Under the new conditions, the defendants argue, there is no possibility of continued or future violations, so the issues raised in the complaint are no longer live. The defendants also

move for partial summary judgment on Count 5 of the complaint. In Count 5, the plaintiffs

allege that the defendants violated a reporting requirement within the 1992 Permit by failing to

report all the continuous temperature and dissolved oxygen data they collected, providing

statistical summaries instead. The defendants argue that they have consistently complied with

the reporting requirement, based on their indisputable interpretation of it.

The court has subject-matter jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1331 (federal question). The

court denies both motions for summary judgment. Mootness does not require summary

judgment because the portions of the 1992 Permit featured in the plaintiffs’ complaint remain in

effect under EPA regulations until the parties’ administrative appeals of the 2020 Permit are

resolved. Since the relevant 1992 Permit conditions are still in effect, the issuance of the 2020

Permit alone cannot moot the case. The defendants have also failed to meet the burden for

summary judgment on Count 5 of the complaint because genuine disputes of material fact remain

as to the meaning of the reporting requirement and, thus, the defendants’ record of compliance

with it.

I. Applicable legal standard

“The court shall grant summary judgment if the movant shows that there is no genuine

dispute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Fed. R.

Civ. P. 56(a). The moving party must “assert the absence of a genuine issue of material fact and

then support that assertion by affidavits, admissions, or other materials of evidentiary quality.”

Mulvihill v. Top-Flite Golf Co., 335 F.3d 15, 19 (1st Cir. 2003). “A genuine issue is one that

could be resolved in favor of either party, and a material fact is one that has the potential of

2 affecting the outcome of the case.” Vera v. McHugh, 622 F.3d 17, 26 (1st Cir. 2010) (internal

quotation omitted).

Where, as here, the nonmovants—the plaintiffs—bear the ultimate burden of proof, once

the movant has made the requisite showing, they can no longer “rely on an absence of competent

evidence, but must affirmatively point to specific facts that demonstrate the existence of an

authentic dispute.” Torres–Martínez v. P.R. Dep't of Corr., 485 F.3d 19, 22 (1st Cir. 2007). That

is, the plaintiffs “‘may not rest upon the mere allegations or denials of [the] pleading, but must

set forth specific facts showing that there is a genuine issue’ of material fact as to each issue

upon which [they] would bear the ultimate burden of proof at trial.” Santiago-Ramos v.

Centennial P.R. Wireless Corp., 217 F.3d 46, 53 (1st Cir. 2000) (quoting Anderson v. Liberty

Lobby, Inc., 477 U.S. 242, 256 (1986)).

As it is obligated to do in the summary judgment context, the court “rehearse[s] the facts

in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party (here, the plaintiff[s]), consistent with record

support,” and gives them “the benefit of all reasonable inferences that those facts will bear.”

Noviello v. City of Boston, 398 F.3d 76, 82 (1st Cir. 2005) (internal citation omitted).

II. Background

a. Issuance of the 1992 and 2020 NPDES permits

During operations, the Merrimack Station withdraws water from the Merrimack River

and discharges heated water into a relatively shallow, impounded section of the river called the

Hooksett Pool. This discharge can affect the temperature of the Hooksett Pool and, thus, the

health and survival of the marine life within the Pool.

The Clean Water Act grants the EPA the authority to issue National Pollutant Discharge

Elimination System (“NPDES”) permits to regulate the discharge of pollutants into the nation’s

3 water.1 In 1992, the EPA issued an NPDES permit for Merrimack Station, which limits the

Station’s thermal discharges and requires regular monitoring and reporting of, among other

things, the river water temperature and dissolved oxygen content. The EPA issued the 1992

Permit to the then-owners of Merrimack Station, the Public Service Company of New

Hampshire. The 1992 Permit was set to expire after five years, in 1997. PSNH timely applied

for renewal, however, and the EPA administratively continued the 1992 Permit.2 Under EPA

regulations, permits that are administratively continued under these circumstances remain “fully

effective and enforceable.”3 Years passed, and the 1992 Permit remained in effect.

In 2011, the EPA issued a draft of a new NPDES permit for Merrimack Station. In its

draft determinations for a new permit, the EPA noted that thermal discharge from Merrimack

Station had “caused, or contributed to, appreciable harm to Hooksett Pool’s balanced, indigenous

community of fish.”4 Public comment periods and revisions of the draft permit followed, and the

EPA extended its own estimate of the permit’s final issuance date at least three times.5 In its

response to comments submitted during three public comment periods spanning from 2011 to

2017, the EPA attributed these delays in part to “factual and legal developments that altered

1 33 U.S.C. § 1342. 2 Pls.’ Opp’n (doc. no.

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2020 DNH 205P, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sierra-club-inc-and-conservation-law-foundation-inc-v-granite-shore-nhd-2020.