STATE OF MAINE v. MCCARTHY

CourtDistrict Court, D. Maine
DecidedJanuary 16, 2020
Docket1:14-cv-00264
StatusUnknown

This text of STATE OF MAINE v. MCCARTHY (STATE OF MAINE v. MCCARTHY) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
STATE OF MAINE v. MCCARTHY, (D. Me. 2020).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT DISTRICT OF MAINE

STATE OF MAINE, et al., ) ) Plaintiffs, ) ) v. ) ) ANDREW WHEELER, in his ) capacity as Administrator, ) U.S. Environmental Protection ) Agency, et al., ) 1:14-cv-00264-JDL ) Defendants, and ) ) HOULTON BAND OF MALISEET ) INDIANS and PENOBSCOT ) NATION, ) ) Intervenor-Defendants. )

ORDER DENYING MOTION TO STAY REMAND ORDER

On December 3, 2018, the Court granted the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s (“EPA”) motion for voluntary remand (ECF No. 162). EPA had sought a remand so that it could reconsider its February 2015 disapproval of several of Maine’s Water Quality Standards for being insufficiently protective of tribal sustenance fishing rights in tribal waters. In the year since the remand order was issued, the Maine Legislature and EPA have taken actions affecting the interests of the parties to this case. The Intervenor-Defendants Houlton Band of Maliseet Indians and Penobscot Nation (collectively, “the Tribes”) now move for a stay of the Court’s order of remand, arguing that a stay will enable the parties to carefully sequence each of their actions so as to avoid creating unnecessary legal and/or administrative disputes. Gerald D. Reid, in his capacity as Commissioner of the Maine Department of

Environmental Protection (“DEP”), the State of Maine (collectively with DEP, “Maine”), and EPA oppose the Tribes’ motion, maintaining that a stay will only temporarily forestall—not avoid—the legal disputes that the Tribes refer to. For the reasons discussed below, I deny the Tribe’s motion to stay the remand order (ECF No. 182). I. BACKGROUND The remand order in this case sets forth the history of the parties’ dispute, and I repeat relevant portions of it before discussing more recent developments. See

Maine v. Wheeler, No. 1:14-CV-00264-JDL, 2018 WL 6304402, at *1–2 (D. Me. Dec. 3, 2018). A. Relevant History Prior to the December 3, 2018 Remand Order The Clean Water Act requires states to review their water quality standards at least once every three years and to submit the results of their reviews to EPA. See 33 U.S.C.A. § 1313(c)(1) (West 2018). In July 2014, Maine brought this action against

EPA, claiming that EPA had failed to timely approve or disapprove Maine’s revised surface water quality standards. In February 2015, EPA issued a formal decision in which it approved some of Maine’s water quality standards and disapproved others. Relevant to this litigation, EPA disapproved several of Maine’s standards affecting tribal lands because EPA concluded that the standards did not ensure water quality sufficient for the tribes to take fish from tribal waters for sustenance and therefore did not adequately protect tribal sustenance fishing rights. Maine sought judicial review of EPA’s decision under the Administrative

Procedure Act, 5 U.S.C.A. §§ 701-706 (West 2018), and a declaratory judgment under the Declaratory Judgment Act, 28 U.S.C.A. §§ 2201-02 (West 2018). Maine disputed EPA’s interpretation of the Clean Water Act, the Maine Act to Implement the Indian Land Claims Settlement, 30 M.R.S.A. §§ 6201, et. seq. (West 2018) (the “Maine Implementing Act”), and the Maine Indian Claims Settlement Act of 1980, 25 U.S.C.A. §§ 1721, et. seq. (West 2018) (together with the Maine Implementing Act,

the “Settlement Acts”). Thereafter, EPA promulgated replacement water quality standards (the “Maine Rule”) for the purpose of protecting tribal sustenance fishing rights in Maine. EPA’s Maine Rule filled the regulatory gap created when EPA disapproved some of Maine’s proposed water quality standards in February 2015 and Maine did not propose any replacements. The Maine Rule became effective on January 18, 2017, and remains in effect today. 40 C.F.R. § 131.43 (2018). In February 2017, in the wake of the 2016 presidential election and the change

of administrations, Maine petitioned EPA to reconsider its 2015 decision. This led to the Court ordering this case stayed from May to December 2017. In December 2017, EPA informed the Court that it had “determined not to withdraw or otherwise change any of the decisions that are challenged in this case.” ECF No. 109 at 2. With the stay terminated, Maine filed its Motion for Judgment on the Administrative Record and its opening brief on the merits of its Second Amended Complaint on February 16, 2018. In June 2018, and before EPA responded to Maine’s opening brief, Maine and EPA filed a joint motion for a 30-day stay to engage in settlement talks, which was granted. The parties did not reach a settlement, and on July 27, 2018, EPA filed its

motion for voluntary remand. In its motion, EPA represented that it intended to make substantive changes to the original agency decision at the heart of this case, and it identified several intervening events, including the replacement of three key EPA officials; a letter from the Department of the Interior revising its earlier letter upon which EPA’s February 2015 decision was partially based; and the substance of Maine’s opening brief for judgment on the administrative record, which EPA claimed

helped “crystalize[] the issues.” See ECF 162 at 4–5 (citing ECF Nos. 139 at 2–3; 157 at 13). B. The Remand Order and Subsequent Relevant History On December 3, 2018, I issued an order granting EPA’s motion for remand which is the subject of the Tribes’ current motion seeking a stay. The order noted that courts generally grant motions for remand where an agency makes clear that it intends to substantively reevaluate its original decision. Thereafter, the Maine

Legislature passed L.D. 1775, “An Act to Protect Sustenance Fishing,” which was developed by DEP in consultation with EPA and the Tribes. Governor Janet Mills signed the bill into law on June 21, 2019. P.L. 2019, ch. 463 (effective Sept. 19, 2019). The Act creates a new, expressly defined “sustenance fishing designated use” within Maine’s water classification program. See id. at §§ 4–5. It requires DEP to adopt rules no later than March 1, 2020, that calculate and establish water quality criteria protective of human health for toxic pollutants and the sustenance fishing designated use. Id. at § 16. In response to Maine’s adoption of the Act, on November 6, 2019, EPA

approved Maine’s sustenance fishing designated use subcategory and the waters to which it applies. Simultaneously, EPA issued a notice announcing its intention to withdraw its 2015 decisions under the Clean Water Act. The notice explained: EPA has now determined that it lacked statutory authority to recharacterize the State’s general fishing designated use to mean sustenance fishing. Even if EPA had this authority—which EPA now concludes that it did not—the Agency now believes that it was inappropriate and unnecessary to reinterpret the State’s fishing use to mean sustenance fishing in an attempt to “harmonize” the Settlement Acts and the [Clean Water Act]. Contrary to [] EPA’s 2015 statement that it “must interpret the fishing use to include sustenance fishing,” the Settlement Acts do not expand EPA’s [Clean Water Act] authority, nor do they require Maine to designate a general fishing use with a sustenance component or EPA to recharacterize a designated use to mean sustenance fishing.

ECF No. 184-2 at 10. EPA’s notice also indicated, moving forward, that EPA would not treat the Maine Implementing Act’s provision of certain sustenance fishing rights as a “water quality goal use” which EPA must review under the Clean Water Act, and that it had previously erred by interpreting the Maine Implementing Act to represent a sustenance fishing designated use for reservation waters. Id. at 10–11.

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STATE OF MAINE v. MCCARTHY, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-maine-v-mccarthy-med-2020.