State ex rel. Lucas Cty. Bd. of Commrs. v. Ohio Environmental Protection Agency

2000 Ohio 282, 88 Ohio St. 3d 166
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 7, 2000
Docket1998-2549
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 2000 Ohio 282 (State ex rel. Lucas Cty. Bd. of Commrs. v. Ohio Environmental Protection Agency) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Lucas Cty. Bd. of Commrs. v. Ohio Environmental Protection Agency, 2000 Ohio 282, 88 Ohio St. 3d 166 (Ohio 2000).

Opinion

[This opinion has been published in Ohio Official Reports at 88 Ohio St.3d 166.]

THE STATE EX REL. LUCAS COUNTY BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS v. OHIO ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY ET AL. [Cite as State ex rel. Lucas Cty. Bd. of Commrs. v. Ohio Environmental Protection Agency, 2000-Ohio-282.] Public records—Mandamus to compel Ohio Environmental Protection Agency to provide relator access to commercial hazardous-waste landfill company’s complete, unredacted internal, informal record that provides a comprehensive list of the company’s current solid and hazardous-waste customers and their specific relation to the company’s treatment of waste—Trade secrets—Writ and request for attorney fees denied. (No. 98-2549—Submitted January 11, 2000—Decided March 8, 2000.) IN MANDAMUS. __________________ {¶ 1} Respondent Envirosafe Services of Ohio, Inc. (“Envirosafe”) owns and operates a licensed, commercial hazardous-waste landfill in the city of Oregon, Lucas County, Ohio. At this site, Envirosafe treats, stores, and disposes of solid and hazardous waste that is transported to it from Envirosafe’s customers, who generate this waste. A substantial portion of the waste that is handled by Envirosafe is electric arc furnace (“EAF”) dust, which is a by-product of steel production. The management of EAF dust is highly competitive, and numerous treatment and recycling options exist for steel mills that generate EAF dust. {¶ 2} In order to properly dispose of the EAF dust, Envirosafe must test the treated waste to verify that it meets the land disposal restrictions contained in Part 268, Title 40, C.F.R. and Ohio Adm.Code 3745-59-40. EAF dust is required to meet Toxicity Characteristic Leaching Procedure, i.e. TCLP, standards. Under the testing procedure implemented by Envirosafe to ensure compliance with these SUPREME COURT OF OHIO

environmental land disposal restrictions, Envirosafe “grabs” a sample of hazardous waste generated by its customers and “holds” the sample until it tests whether the treated waste meets the applicable land disposal restrictions, including the TCLP standards. As part of the waste treatment and testing process, Envirosafe created a “1997 Grab and Hold Tracker,” which compiled information concerning its treatment of waste from various waste generators from June 1997 to July 1998. The tracker was an internal, informal company record used by Envirosafe’s laboratory personnel for several purposes, including tracking their treatment and results for different waste streams. The tracker was not generated to meet any standard of accuracy or legal requirement and could not be used to determine compliance with the land disposal restrictions. In other words, a test result listed as a failure in the tracker did not necessarily mean a failure to meet the land disposal restrictions; it could have simply referred to an elective failure relating to Envirosafe’s research and development work. {¶ 3} The 1997 tracker contains the following thirteen informational fields: (1) Date; (2) Generator Name (identity of generator of waste); (3) H.R. (whether the waste treated and tested arrived at the Envirosafe landfill by highway or rail); (4) Load # (Envirosafe number identifying a shipment or portion brought to the landfill); (5) WSID (Waste Stream Identification Number assigned to certain waste streams from certain generators); (6) Waste Code (primary United States Environmental Protection Agency Hazardous Waste number); (7) Grab and Hold Type (event causing test to be performed); (8) Treat # Type (sequence of treatment events for entry); (9) P/F (pass or fail evaluation of test results); (10) Mix Design Code (code referring to amounts of stabilizing ingredients that must be added to safely treat different hazardous waste streams); (11) Off Spec (whether the hazardous waste stream was physically different from other waste streams coming from the same generator); (12) Mix Time (length of time the hazardous waste is

2 January Term, 2000

mixed with the treatment ingredients); and (13) Comments (Envirosafe laboratory operator remarks). {¶ 4} Sometime before July 1998, an on-site inspector employed by respondent Ohio Environmental Protection Agency (“Ohio EPA”) became aware of the existence of the 1997 tracker and requested a printed copy of it. After conferring with the Ohio EPA, Envirosafe coded the mix design informational field and then provided a copy of the tracker to the Ohio EPA in July 1998. At the same time it submitted the tracker to the Ohio EPA, Envirosafe requested that eleven of the thirteen informational fields, i.e., all of the data fields except for the date and WSID, remain confidential, in accordance with Ohio Adm.Code 3745-50-30(B).1 {¶ 5} In October 1998, Lucas County officials requested that the Ohio EPA provide them with a copy of the tracker, which they claimed to be a public record. Within the same week, the Ohio EPA advised Lucas County that before the agency could make the tracker available for inspection, it had to resolve Envirosafe’s claim that most of the tracker constituted confidential trade secrets. On the same date, the Ohio EPA requested that Envirosafe submit additional information in order to substantiate its trade secrets claim. Shortly thereafter, Envirosafe withdrew its claim of trade secret protection to six more informational fields in the tracker, but continued to claim confidentiality for the generator name, H.R., mix design code, mix time, and related comments fields. {¶ 6} On November 23, 1998, the Director of the Ohio EPA upheld Envirosafe’s trade secrets claim for the generator name, mix time, and that portion of the comments relating to these data fields. In so holding, the director reasoned that “[l]istings of generator identifications submitted to the Ohio EPA by hazardous waste treatment, storage or disposal facilities historically have been considered by

1. Ohio Adm.Code 3745-50-30(B) provides that “[a] request for confidentiality shall be submitted to the Ohio EPA simultaneously with submission of the specific record, report or other information, and such request shall be accompanied by sufficient supporting documentation.”

3 SUPREME COURT OF OHIO

this Agency to be confidential as customer lists” and that “[t]he Mix Time entries that are provided will be considered trade secrets of E[nvirosafe] as knowledge of mix times associated with various waste loads is information regarding E[nvirosafe]’s treatment processes that may be of value to competitors.” However, the director denied trade secret protection for the H.R. and mix design code data fields. In his decision, the director notified Lucas County that his action was final and that the decision could be appealed within thirty days to the Environmental Review Appeals Commission under R.C. 3745.04. The director specified that the tracker, except for the data fields that he had determined to be confidential trade secrets, would be available for public inspection on December 9, 1998. {¶ 7} Instead of appealing the director’s decision to the Environmental Review Appeals Commission, on December 3, 1998, relator Lucas County Board of Commissioners, filed a complaint in this court for a writ of mandamus to compel the Ohio EPA to provide the board with access to the complete, unredacted tracker. On December 9, the Ohio EPA provided the board a copy of the tracker that had been redacted in accordance with the director’s November 23 decision. We granted Envirosafe’s motion to intervene as an additional respondent and, after mediation failed to resolve the case, we granted an alternative writ, issued a schedule for the presentation of evidence and briefs, and ordered the Ohio EPA to submit an unredacted copy of the tracker under seal. We also dismissed the board’s mandamus claims insofar as they related to portions of the tracker it had then received.

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Bluebook (online)
2000 Ohio 282, 88 Ohio St. 3d 166, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-lucas-cty-bd-of-commrs-v-ohio-environmental-protection-ohio-2000.