Town of Ellery v. New York State Department of Environmental Conservation

54 Misc. 3d 482, 40 N.Y.S.3d 877
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 20, 2016
StatusPublished

This text of 54 Misc. 3d 482 (Town of Ellery v. New York State Department of Environmental Conservation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Town of Ellery v. New York State Department of Environmental Conservation, 54 Misc. 3d 482, 40 N.Y.S.3d 877 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2016).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Frank A. Sedita, III, J.

The ultimate question before the court is whether the most recently sanctioned expansion of the Chautauqua County Landfill (CCLF), as it stands and without further municipal approval, is legally permissible.

Factual Summary and Procedural History

The CCLF is a waste management facility located in the Town of Ellery, New York. The Town, with a population of approximately 4,500, is located in Chautauqua County, which has a population of approximately 135,000.

The County opened the CCLF in 1981, in accordance with County Law § 226-b. Prior to its opening, there were over 40 [484]*484“dumps” spread throughout the County, including at least one in the Town. It is unclear whether this patchwork of dumps was ever regulated. The CCLF, by contrast, has been regulated by federal and state agencies since its inception. The most notable of these regulatory agencies—the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC)—has since authorized several expansions of the facility.

The current CCLF sits on a portion of an 800-acre-plus plot of land owned by the County. It lays within an agricultural zone (the least restrictive zoning category) and is in a sparsely populated, rural area. The landfill and its adjacent structures sit on approximately 83 acres (or a little over 10% of the site) and are surrounded by over 700 uninhabited acres that are, in turn, bordered by farmland.

The CCLF provides state-of-the-art waste management technology, including a power plant that converts methane gas (a natural by-product of waste decaying inside an enclosed landfill) into electricity. It is a not-for-profit entity and is fiscally sound. A major source of its revenue are “tipping fees” from waste haulers and others, which alleviates the financial burden that would otherwise be faced by county taxpayers in paying for waste disposal.

The CCLF is the primary destination for the waste of all municipalities in Chautauqua County. The CCLF also accepts waste, on a limited basis, from two other counties in Western New York and three other counties in Northern Pennsylvania. Such a practice further subsidizes operational costs and reduces the regional market price for these essential services. One or two private companies would otherwise fill the void, and more handsomely charge the public for the privilege, should the CCLF curtail its operations.

Mindful of the length, purpose and scope of its operation, the CCLF has had a remarkably negligible impact on the environment. Initial complaints about dust, debris and odor were addressed years ago. Unavoidable truck traffic on the roads leading to and from the CCLF continues to be the chief complaint of a small number of citizens who live nearby. The CCLF has addressed this concern by minimizing the extent of its operations, i.e., it takes in only that amount of non-county waste needed to break even. There have been no environmental incidents—such as leakage of hazardous toxins into the groundwater or the release of dangerous pollutants into the air—by the facility. In short, the CCLF provides a safe, [485]*485environmentally sound and cost-effective means of managing waste.

The CCLF will exhaust its capacity to bury and process solid waste next year. Future options for waste disposal include contracting with nearby privately owned landfills to accept it, relocation and reconstruction of a new county facility at a different location, construction of an incineration facility at the present location, and expansion at the present location.

Contracting with privately owned nearby landfills would result in new, significant and recurring costs to the County. Such costs would necessitate increases in taxes or fees and/or cuts in government services, so as to balance the County’s already strained annual budget. It could also triple the regional market rate for these necessary services.

Relocation and reconstruction of a new facility within the county would necessitate site studies, an environmental review process and a construction process that would take up to 20 years to complete. The non-transportable infrastructure at the current site—which costs approximately $25,000,000 to purchase and install—would need to be replicated at any new site and would cost another $50,000,000.

Construction of an incineration facility at the current site would cost at least $80,000,000. It would also require the CCLF to take in additional waste from other counties if it wished to maintain a balanced operating budget. This, in turn, would increase truck traffic which, as previously noted, is the chief nuisance associated with the CCLF.

The foregoing options are not only financially prohibitive in and of themselves, but would also result in an additional cost upon county taxpayers because the current landfill, when filled to capacity, would require monitoring for many years to come.

The CCLF opted for expansion. Such an alternative is easily the most cost-effective option, especially since it would seek to expand an already existing use of the land and facility. It is important to note that the CCLF would only be “expanded” in the sense that its lifetime would be extended. In other words, expansion would not increase its scope of operations or result in increased truck traffic; rather, it would enable the facility to provide its current services for another 20 to 30 years.

In March 2010, the County filed an application with the DEC to extend the life of the CCLF beyond 2017. The so-called “Phase IV expansion” is a proposal for a lateral extension, i.e., [486]*486new landfill cells would be constructed adjacent to, as opposed to on top of, ones already in use. The new cells would be spread over approximately 53 acres and would not increase the height of the landfill.

In October 2010, the DEC designated itself as the lead agency under the State Environmental Quality Review Act (SEQRA) and declared the expansion to be a Type I action, meaning that Phase IV had the potential for adverse environmental impacts. The DEC then undertook a lengthy environmental review process, which included reviewing draft and/or supplemental environmental impact statements (EIS) and public scoping of the same. The DEC also held a public statement hearing on March 4, 2015. DEC staff reviewed the comments submitted after the hearing—including claims made by the Town that the CCLF is located in a seismically sensitive area and is in dangerously close proximity to a principal aquifer and/or primary water supply aquifer—to determine whether substantive and significant issues were raised within the meaning of regulations that implement the Environmental Conservation Law.

The DEC accepted the County’s final supplemental EIS in August 2015 and concluded its SEQRA review—a process which took five years to complete and which resulted in an administrative record in excess of 5,000 pages—by issuing a findings statement on October 7, 2015. The eight-page findings statement discusses the salient points of the final EIS, including potential impacts to land, wetlands, fish, storm and surface waters, wildlife and habitat, groundwater, air quality, noise, traffic, historic sites and public health. The findings statement also describes the range of alternatives that were considered. The DEC concluded that environmental impacts identified in the final EIS would be minimized or avoided by the conditions imposed by its eight permits and approved the Phase IV expansion.

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Bluebook (online)
54 Misc. 3d 482, 40 N.Y.S.3d 877, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/town-of-ellery-v-new-york-state-department-of-environmental-conservation-nysupct-2016.