THE PHILADELPHIA REGIONAL PORT AUTHORITY v. UNITED STATES ARMY CORPS OF ENGINEERS

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 28, 2024
Docket2:24-cv-01008
StatusUnknown

This text of THE PHILADELPHIA REGIONAL PORT AUTHORITY v. UNITED STATES ARMY CORPS OF ENGINEERS (THE PHILADELPHIA REGIONAL PORT AUTHORITY v. UNITED STATES ARMY CORPS OF ENGINEERS) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
THE PHILADELPHIA REGIONAL PORT AUTHORITY v. UNITED STATES ARMY CORPS OF ENGINEERS, (E.D. Pa. 2024).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA

GREENWICH TERMINALS LLC and : CIVIL ACTION GLOUCESTER TERMINALS LLC : : v. : NO. 23-4283 : UNITED STATES ARMY CORP OF : ENGINEERS, DISTRICT : COMMANDER FOR THE : PHILADELPHIA DISTRICT OF THE : ARMY CORPS OF ENGINEERS, : JEFFREY BEEMAN, and THE CHIEF : OF THE REGULATORY BRANCH : FOR THE PHILADELPHIA : DISTRICT OF THE ARMY CORP OF : ENGINEERS, TODD A. SCHAIBLE :

THE PHILADELPHIA REGIONAL : CIVIL ACTION PORT AUTHORITY : : v. : NO. 24-1008 : UNITED STATES ARMY CORPS OF : ENGINEERS, DISTRICT : COMMANDER FOR THE : PHILADELPHIA DISTRICT OF THE : ARMY CORPS OF ENGINEERS, : JEFFREY BEEMAN, CHIEF OF THE : REGULATORY BRANCH FOR THE : PHILADELPHIA DISTRICT OF THE : ARMY CORPS OF ENGINEERS, : TODD A. SCHAIBLE :

MEMORANDUM KEARNEY, J. October 28, 2024 Our community relies upon the national government and its federal agency experts to carefully study applications which may affect large cargo ships safely passing through our interstate rivers to deliver products from around the World to riverside ports for our eventual use. Congress and those experts set standards to ensure exhaustive analysis of applications seeking to alter the present waterways. The experts must consider a variety of factors including the public interest of ensuring ships can safely pass on the river and the economic effects of changes to our rivers. We do not second guess the experts’ technical expertise, but Congress requires we must ensure the experts fulfill their crucial mission by studying all factors. And we ask experts to again

study applications if citizens with standing persuade us the experts did not meet the standards. Our case today involves applications affecting the Delaware River on the eastern boundary of our District. Congress authorized the deepening of the Delaware River Main Channel over thirty years ago. The Deepening Project involves initial and maintenance dredging of the Delaware River Main Channel to a depth of forty-five feet. This important public work allows large cargo vessels to navigate upriver to deliver products to previously inaccessible riverside ports from the Delaware Bay to Philadelphia. The United States partnered with the Philadelphia Regional Port Authority to fund the Deepening Project. This considered idea of deepening the Delaware River inspired Diamond State Port

Corporation, a corporate entity of the state of Delaware, to develop a new port along the Delaware River at Edgemoor, Delaware—a few miles south of the Pennsylvania/Delaware border. Delaware hopes this new port will generate hundreds of millions of dollars in economic benefit for her citizens. All agree the Edgemoor site poses logistical and size challenges. The site is located at a tight turn where the Delaware River Main Channel comes close to the shoreline. The anticipated problem is the large vessels need enough deep water and room to turn around at the Edgemoor site to deliver their cargo before heading back to the Atlantic Ocean. Diamond State proposed to overcome this obstacle through a planned combination of a forty-five-foot-deep berthing area connecting the proposed port at Edgemoor to the Main Channel and using the Main Channel as a turning basin for large vessels delivering products to the Edgemoor port. Congress requires Diamond State apply to the United States Army Corps of Engineers to obtain the District Commander’s: (1) approval of a dredging and construction permit under section 404 of the Clean Water Act and section 10 of the Rivers and Harbors Act, and (2) authorization

for use of a federal project under section 408 of the Rivers and Harbors Act because of the proposed location of the turning basin. We rely upon experts within the Corps to study applications and recommend actions to its District Commander. The Corps studied the applications, sought public comment, and recommended approval. Its District Commander issued the permit and the authorization. Three upriver port entities sued asking us to evaluate the Corps’ scrutiny of Diamond State’s applications. The Philadelphia Port Authority and two other upriver ports challenge the Corps’ decision making process under the Administrative Procedure Act. Our scope of review is narrow to avoid substituting our judgment for the Corps’ expertise. We consider whether the Corps

articulated a satisfactory explanation for its actions, including a rational connection between the facts found and the recommendation to the District Commander. We study the quality of the Corps’ decision making process, not the wisdom of the decision. We find the Corps did not engage in reasoned decision making as to the section 404/10 permit because it failed to consider the impact of the turning basin and dredging activities on the public interest in navigation and safety. We today vacate the section 404/10 permit in accompanying Orders. We also find the Corps arbitrarily and capriciously departed from its own procedures in recommending the 408 approval by not requiring Diamond State obtain a Statement of No Objection from the Philadelphia Port Authority as the sole non-federal sponsor of the Deepening Project. We vacate the section 408 authorization in the accompanying Orders. I. Factual Background! We study approvals necessary to expand ports along the Delaware River, which stretches from the Delaware Bay to Philadelphia and beyond in our District. Three states (Delaware, New Jersey, and Pennsylvania) border this important waterway in or near our District. The Delaware River connects ports in these states to World commerce. The Ports before us operate in and around Philadelphia. They naturally compete for shipping business with other ports along the Delaware River. ‘OAvondale r ULinwoow dirden oe coe Ardentownf |S" 2 Qvinterthur An af, i Choster OF Gockiond. m res □ County dflockessin St JoMentchanin Ae Phill i i giorth Star a 4 fi - fandenbers ' I é feunville ss A 3 i □□ stent he , oa Sy ce a me & ismare f : Vad _— a SO A Al □□ oPenns Grove fo | é nen \ wport. a J pf’ we an wt ‘ort of | pine cope tke Coton Cameys, oat New Castlé SX | ae SB 4 r le hain 7 yf at Ge 1 ne, a Wilhington Se ee ; ganer . = ee jiewark ne i. ad ; | . {f bls 1 onkside l, Sal em~, : \ J ‘ Cun | 7 _— f Gennsvil 10 05 1 15 2 25 Miles A \ PA erent oe, ae 7 f NS □□ Sale| Glasgow MD” if oy ; | it | O&

Ports on the Delaware River are of economic importance to the border states. The Commonwealth of Pennsylvania established the Philadelphia Port Authority in 1989 to manage and operate Philadelphia’s ports. The State of Delaware through its General Assembly established Diamond State Port Corporation in 1995 to manage and operate the Port of Wilmington.3 Greenwich Terminals LLC operates the Packer Avenue Marine Terminal in

Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.4 Gloucester Terminals LLC operates the Gloucester Marine Terminal in Gloucester City, New Jersey and the Paulsboro Marine Terminal in Paulsboro, New Jersey.5 Congress authorized the Delaware River Main Channel Deepening Project in 1992 with the goal of deepening the Main Channel to forty-five feet.6 Congress, in directing the Corps to develop the Delaware River Main Channel Deepening Project, intended to allow larger vessels to travel north to ports in Camden, New Jersey and Philadelphia.7 The Philadelphia Port Authority and the Corps’ Philadelphia District signed a Project Partnership Agreement for the Deepening Project.8 The Philadelphia Port Authority became a non-federal sponsor of the Deepening Project under this Agreement by agreeing to pay a percentage of the costs of construction and maintenance including the construction of new dredged material disposal facilities.9

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THE PHILADELPHIA REGIONAL PORT AUTHORITY v. UNITED STATES ARMY CORPS OF ENGINEERS, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-philadelphia-regional-port-authority-v-united-states-army-corps-of-paed-2024.