Utah Power & Light Company v. Environmental Protection Agency
This text of 553 F.2d 215 (Utah Power & Light Company v. Environmental Protection Agency) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
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Utah Power & Light Company (UP&L) petitioned this Court for direct review of a decision by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), subjecting three of UP&L’s steam electric generating plants under construction to new source review under agency regulations regarding “significant deterioration of air quality.”1 In its petition for review filed September 20, 1976, UP&L predicated this Court’s jurisdiction upon Section 307(b)(1) of the 1970 amendments to the Clean Air Act.2
On November 2,1976, EPA filed a motion to dismiss for lack of jurisdiction in this Court. Specifically, EPA contended that UP&L was not challenging “the Administrator’s action in approving or promulgating” a state implementation plan,3 within the meaning of Section 307(b)(1). On December 23, 1976, after considering the motion and the response thereto, this Court entered an order granting EPA’s motion to dismiss.
I
On December 5, 1974, respondent EPA promulgated regulations designed to prevent “significant deterioration” of air quality.4 The regulations, effective January 6, 1975, were made applicable to any new stationary source “which has not commenced construction or modification prior to June 1, [217]*2171975 . . . .”5 The regulations were incorporated into all state implementation plans. 6
In a letter dated September 2, 1975, Region 8 of the EPA requested that UP&L supply certain information on its plans to construct new power plants. UP&L responded by letter dated September 12,1975, noting, inter alia, that it had begun construction on three new plants in Utah, aftér having obtained new source construction permits from the Utah Air Conservation Committee (“Committee”). In accordance with the then existing Utah Air Conservation regulations, these permits were based upon plans that included for each plant a flue gas desulfurization unit (“scrubber”), designed to remove 80 percent of the sulfur dioxide from the flue gases emitted by each plant. Construction on all three plants commenced prior to June 1, 1975, the cutoff date under the EPA significant deterioration regulations.
The Utah Air Conservation regulations were amended on July 9,1975. On September 15, 1975, three days after its letter to EPA, UP&L applied to the Utah Committee for a determination that under the amended state regulations, the scrubbers were no longer required. In early 1976, the Utah Committee approved the elimination of the scrubbers from the plans for UP&L's three Utah plants.
On February 4, 1976, UP&L filed a request for an EPA ruling that the significant deterioration regulations do not apply to the three Utah plants. On March 25, 1976, EPA’s Region 8 notified UP&L that the elimination of the scrubbers constituted a “modification” of the plants, occurring after June 1, 1975, and that such modification would bring the three plants within the ambit of the regulations.7 Region 8 instructed UP&L to submit an application for permission to modify, pursuant to 40 C.F.R. § 52.21(d) (2)-{3). UP&L requested reconsideration on May 7,1976. In a letter dated August 23, 1976, Region 8 reaffirmed its earlier opinion and notified UP&L that its decision was “a final determination in the case.” Thereupon UP&L filed with this Court a petition for review, which EPA seeks to dismiss on jurisdictional grounds.
II
This Court has previously noted that the jurisdictional provisions of the Clean Air Act “have been sources of periodic confusion”8 and that therefore “proper disposition of a motion to dismiss, for lack of jurisdiction requires precise characterization of the action sought to be reviewed.” District of Columbia v. Train, supra note 8, 533 F.2d at 1252. Section 307(b)(1) grants exclusive jurisdiction to courts of appeals “to hear challenges to a limited class of actions taken by the Administrator.”9 In the present case, the Court must decide whether the challenged action — i.e., the EPA’s decision as to the applicability of the significant deterioration regulations — can [218]*218fairly be characterized as “action in approving or promulgating any [state] implementation plan" under Section 307(b)(1).10 If so, the court of appeals has exclusive jurisdiction to hear UP&L’s claim.11 If not, this Court is without jurisdiction and must grant the motion to dismiss.12
Characterization of the challenged action depends in turn on the nature of petitioner’s challenge. Specifically, the court must determine whether the petitioner is attacking the validity of an agency regulation or, instead, is attacking a particular interpretation or application of that regulation.13 Both the language of Section 307(b)(1) and the policy considerations underlying that provision compel the conclusion that challenges to the validity of certain agency regulations are directly reviewable by courts of appeals, whereas challenges to interpretations of those regulations are not.14 As with most general rules, an exceptional case may defy easy classification. In our opinion, this is not such a case.
UP&L’s challenge cannot fairly be characterized as impugning the validity of 40 C.F.R. sections 52.21(d)(1) and 52.01(d), which, respectively, make the significant deterioration regulations applicable to stationary sources modified (as well as constructed) on or after June 1, 1975, and define “modification” to include “any physical change in or change in the method of operation of” the polluting source. First, UP&L’s petition for review does not, on its face, attack the validity of the significant deterioration regulations.15 Second, as [219]*219EPA notes, this Court has already sustained the validity of those regulations.16 Finally, any further facial challenge would seem to be time-barred under Section 307(b)(1).17
Consequently, unless UP&L seeks to chailenge the EPA’s interpretation of the new regulations, the statute provides that petitioner will not be entitled to judicial review in any federal court.18 And, as previously indicated, that kind of challenge is not cognizable under Section 307(b) (l).19 Although we need not reach the question in this case, we note that if federal review of the action challenged here is available at all, it should be sought in the district court.20
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553 F.2d 215, 180 U.S. App. D.C. 70, 9 ERC 1873, 7 Envtl. L. Rep. (Envtl. Law Inst.) 20197, 9 ERC (BNA) 1873, 1977 U.S. App. LEXIS 14656, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/utah-power-light-company-v-environmental-protection-agency-cadc-1977.