Waste Management of Wisconsin, Inc. v. State of Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources

376 N.W.2d 345, 126 Wis. 2d 76, 1985 Wisc. LEXIS 2735
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 29, 1985
Docket83-2356, 83-2446, 84-600
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 376 N.W.2d 345 (Waste Management of Wisconsin, Inc. v. State of Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Waste Management of Wisconsin, Inc. v. State of Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources, 376 N.W.2d 345, 126 Wis. 2d 76, 1985 Wisc. LEXIS 2735 (Wis. 1985).

Opinion

WILLIAM A. BABLITCH, J.

Waste Management Inc. (Waste Management) appeals decisions of three circuit courts, all of which held that Waste Management has no due process or statutory right to a hearing before the Department of Natural Resources (DNR) at which to challenge certain actions by the DNR involving two solid waste disposal sites which Waste Management owns. In the first case, the DNR denied Waste Management’s request for a modification of a “feasibility determination” for a site known as the “Metro site.” In the other cases, the DNR imposed certain requirements on Waste Management’s “plan of operation” for a site known as the “Omega Hills site.” In all three cases, the DNR denied Waste Management’s subsequent requests for hearings on its actions.

Waste Management also appeals the courts’ holdings that the DNR’s actions were not judicially reviewable *80 and that the DNR’s actions were not arbitrary or capricious.

Because we conclude that Waste Management does not have an interest in its feasibility determination or its conditionally approved plan of operation which is protected by the fourteenth amendment, and because we conclude that neither ch. 144, Stats., nor sec. 227.064 gives Waste Management a right to a hearing, we hold that Waste Management does not have a constitutional or statutory right to a hearing before the DNR to challenge these actions. However, we also hold that Waste Management has a right to judicial review of the DNR’s actions on requirements to its plan of operation on which Waste Management and the DNR reach an impasse. Finally, we hold that the DNR is required to issue such actions in conformance with the requirements of sec. 227.10.

Inasmuch as these cases involve the statutory screening process which precedes licensing of solid and hazardous waste disposal sites, we begin with an overview of that statutory process. The screening process established by sec. 144.44, Stats., consists of two distinct phases. In the first phase, the DNR reviews plans for construction and operation of waste disposal sites submitted by persons seeking to license new facilities. In some circumstances the DNR must require an applicant for a license to prepare an environmental impact statement or to submit its plan to a public hearing. Section 144.44 (1) — (4). One key requirement in the first phase is that the license applicant submit a feasibility report to the DNR and obtain a decision from the DNR that its site is feasible for the proposed use; that decision is known as the “site feasibility determination.” Section 144.44(2). When the DNR issues a favorable feasibility determination, the applicant is then qualified to submit a “plan of operation,” which the DNR must also approve, disapprove, or approve with conditions within *81 90 days of submission. Section 144.44(3) (c), cited in full below. Although sec. 144.44(3) (c) does not use the words “conditional approval,” that section states in part that “[a]n approval may be conditioned upon any requirements necessary to comply with the standards.” The standards referred to are those “established under s. 144.435 or, in the case of hazardous waste facilities, with the rules and standards established under s. 144.62.” Section 144.44(3) (c).

In the second phase, which begins after approval of a plan of operation, the DNR retains authority to make modifications to the plan under certain specified circumstances. Section 144.44(3) (d), Stats. However, unless the special circumstances listed in sec. 144.44(3) (d) exists, an applicant with an approved plan of operation may construct a facility according to the plan up to a specified design capacity. Section 144.44(3) (d). Nonetheless, the DNR’s approval of a plan of operation does not automatically entitle the applicant to be licensed. Section 144.44(3) and (4). Unless the applicant constructs in accordance with the plan, the DNR may not initially license the facility. Section 144.44(4) (d). In addition, the DNR may deny, suspend or revoke an operating license based on grievous or continuous failure of an operator to comply with the plan of operation. Section 144.44(4) (a).

Rights of applicants for an operator’s license are also affected by sections of ch. 227, Stats., which provide for judicial review of some administrative agency actions and which require an agency to hold hearings on others. Sections 227.15 and 227.064.

In the Metro site case, no. 84-600, Waste Management began the screening process in 1976. On June 4, 1980, the DNR issued a favorable feasibility determination for its proposed site. On July 18, 1980, Waste Management orally requested that the DNR modify the feasibility determination to permit it to remove an additional *82 thirty feet of clay soils from the. site to be used as cover material. Removal of the soils would have lowered the base grade of the area, approximately 40 acres in size, by an additional thirty feet. According to Waste Management, its request was based on new information which indicated that the base grade could be lowered without violating criteria on which the DNR had based its feasibility determination.

The DNR denied the request. It took the position that the request was inconsistent with Waste Management’s original proposal, had not been presented to the public in an environmental impact statement or at a hearing and would be an expansion of the site under ch. 377, Stats., and NR 180, Wisconsin Administrative Code. It therefore indicated that a modification of this magnitude would require an entirely new feasibility determination.

By letter on September 12, 1980, Waste Management requested a contested case hearing on the denial of its request. On September 23, 1980, the DNR denied the request.

Waste Management petitioned the circuit court of Milwaukee county for judicial review of the DNR’s denial of its requests. It asked the court to nullify the DNR’s requirement for a full review prior to a modification of the feasibility determination and to order the DNR to make the requested change or, alternatively, to order the DNR to grant it a hearing on its request. The circuit court affirmed the DNR’s actions.

Cases no. 83-2356 and 83-2446 involve the Omega Hills site. In these cases the DNR had already issued a favorable feasibility determination. The center of the controversy is the plan of operation which Waste Management submitted to the DNR and to which the DNR formally responded on June 15, 1978. In that response, the DNR “tentatively” approved the plan of operation, with the condition that Waste Management meet a number of specific requirements.

*83 These requirements became the subject of considerable interchange between the DNR and Waste Management in 1980,1981, and 1983, which led to some changes in the requirements. Nevertheless, the DNR and Waste Management never reached full agreement on all requirements in the plan and the 1978 requirements, with some modifications, remained in force in 1980. On September 10, 1980, April 6 and 30, 1981, and March 23, 1983, the DNR issued letters to Waste Management changing some requirements to the plan and affirming others. On all four dates Waste Management disagreed with some or all of the DNR’s changes.

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376 N.W.2d 345, 126 Wis. 2d 76, 1985 Wisc. LEXIS 2735, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/waste-management-of-wisconsin-inc-v-state-of-wisconsin-department-of-wis-1985.