Environmental Technology Council v. Sierra Club , 98 F.3d 774 ( 1996 )


Menu:
  • PUBLISHED
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
    ENVIRONMENTAL TECHNOLOGY
    COUNCIL, formerly known as
    Hazardous Waste Treatment
    Council, on behalf of itself and its
    members,
    Plaintiff-Appellee,
    v.
    SIERRA CLUB; ENERGY RESEARCH
    FOUNDATION; CITIZENS FOR CLEAN AIR
    AND WATER; CITIZENS ASKING FOR A
    SAFE ENVIRONMENT, INCORPORATED
    (CASE); ENVIRONMENTALISTS,
    INCORPORATED,                          No. 95-2008
    Defendants-Appellants,
    and
    STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA; DAVID
    M. BEASLEY, Governor;
    COMMISSIONER, SOUTH CAROLINA
    DEPARTMENT OF HEALTHAND
    ENVIRONMENTAL CONTROL; SOUTH
    CAROLINA DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH
    AND ENVIRONMENTAL CONTROL;
    SOUTH CAROLINA BOARD OF HEALTH
    AND ENVIRONMENTAL CONTROL,
    Defendants.
    ENVIRONMENTAL TECHNOLOGY
    COUNCIL, formerly known as
    Hazardous Waste Treatment
    Council, on behalf of itself and its
    members,
    Plaintiff-Appellee,
    v.
    STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA; DAVID
    M. BEASLEY, Governor;
    COMMISSIONER, SOUTH CAROLINA
    DEPARTMENT OF HEALTHAND
    ENVIRONMENTAL CONTROL; SOUTH
    CAROLINA DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH                      No. 95-2245
    AND ENVIRONMENTAL CONTROL;
    SOUTH CAROLINA BOARD OF HEALTH
    AND ENVIRONMENTAL CONTROL,
    Defendants-Appellants,
    and
    SIERRA CLUB; ENERGY RESEARCH
    FOUNDATION; CITIZENS FOR CLEAN AIR
    AND WATER; CITIZENS ASKING FOR A
    SAFE ENVIRONMENT, INCORPORATED
    (CASE); ENVIRONMENTALISTS,
    INCORPORATED,
    Defendants.
    Appeals from the United States District Court
    for the District of South Carolina, at Columbia.
    Matthew J. Perry, Jr., Senior District Judge.
    (CA-90-1402-3-0)
    Argued: March 5, 1996
    Decided: October 15, 1996
    2
    Before MURNAGHAN and MOTZ, Circuit Judges, and
    YOUNG, Senior United States District Judge for the District of
    Maryland, sitting by designation.
    _________________________________________________________________
    Affirmed by published opinion. Judge Murnaghan wrote the opinion,
    in which Judge Motz and Senior Judge Young joined.
    _________________________________________________________________
    COUNSEL
    ARGUED: Charles Frederick Lettow, CLEARY, GOTTLIEB,
    STEEN & HAMILTON, Washington, D.C.; James Stuart Chandler,
    Jr., SOUTH CAROLINA ENVIRONMENTAL LAW PROJECT,
    Pawleys Island, South Carolina, for Appellants. Stuart Henry New-
    berger, CROWELL & MORING, Washington, D.C., for Appellee.
    ON BRIEF: Robert Guild, Columbia, South Carolina; Michael A.
    Mazzuchi, CLEARY, GOTTLIEB, STEEN & HAMILTON, Wash-
    ington, D.C.; Charles Molony Condon, Attorney General of South
    Carolina, Treva G. Ashworth, Deputy Attorney General, Kenneth P.
    Woodington, Senior Assistant Attorney General, Cameron B. Little-
    john, Jr., Assistant Attorney General, Columbia, South Carolina; Car-
    lisle Roberts, Jr., General Counsel, Jacquelyn S. Dickman, Assistant
    General Counsel, Columbia, South Carolina, for Appellants. Howard
    B. Crystal, CROWELL & MORING, Washington, D.C.; Jeter E.
    Rhodes, Jr., MCCUTCHEN, BLANTON, RHODES & JOHNSON,
    Columbia, South Carolina; David Case, General Counsel, ENVIRON-
    MENTAL TECHNOLOGY COUNCIL, Washington, D.C., for
    Appellee.
    _________________________________________________________________
    OPINION
    MURNAGHAN, Circuit Judge:
    The appeal before the court concerns South Carolina's attempt to
    limit the amount of hazardous waste generated out-of-state and buried
    within its borders by promulgating a series of executive orders, stat-
    3
    utes, and one regulation (collectively "the South Carolina laws")
    which, as compared to treatment of waste generated within South
    Carolina, burden out-of-state waste. The discriminating state laws
    would impact the operations of three commercial hazardous waste
    facilities owned and operated by members of the appellee-plaintiff
    Environmental Technologies Council ("ETC"). 1 ETC filed a lawsuit
    challenging South Carolina's laws under the Commerce Clause of the
    United States Constitution, art. I, § 8, cl.3, the Supremacy Clause, art.
    VI, cl. 2, and the Privileges and Immunities Clause, art. IV, § 2 cl.1,
    and 42 U.S.C. § 1983 (1988). The question before the court on appeal
    is whether South Carolina's laws violate the Commerce Clause.2
    We previously considered a motion by ETC for a preliminary
    injunction in this same lawsuit based on a Commerce Clause viola-
    tion. Hazardous Waste Treatment Council v. State of South Carolina,
    
    945 F.2d 781
    (4th Cir. 1991) ("HWTC"). While remanding to the dis-
    trict court, we, for the most part, affirmed the district court's grant of
    a preliminary injunction in favor of ETC.3 On remand, the district
    court has granted summary judgment in favor of ETC, issuing a per-
    manent injunction as to all the challenged provisions. Environmental
    Technologies Council v. South Carolina, 
    901 F. Supp. 1026
    (D.S.C.
    1995) ("ETC"). South Carolina and several intervenors have appealed.
    For the following reasons, we affirm.
    _________________________________________________________________
    1 ETC was formerly known as the Hazardous Waste Treatment Council
    ("HWTC"). ETC is a non-profit association of commercial firms that
    provide services for the treatment, recycling, and disposal of hazardous
    wastes.
    2 Because the district court addressed only the Commerce Clause ques-
    tion and our ruling on the Commerce Clause renders the challenged laws
    invalid, we do not reach the validity of the laws under the Supremacy
    Clause, Privileges and Immunities Clause, or 42 U.S.C. § 1983.
    3 We instructed the district court on remand "(1) to modify the order by
    striking the words that confusingly imply a declaration of invalidity, (2)
    to modify the order to apply only to the specific portions of the executive
    orders and statutes challenged as violating the Commerce Clause, and (3)
    to consider explicitly the balance of hardships with respect to Regulation
    61-99." 
    HWTC, 945 F.2d at 795
    .
    4
    I
    Disposing of hazardous wastes is a national problem which raises
    complex technological and political issues.4 South Carolina is one of
    few states which contain commercial hazardous waste treatment, stor-
    _________________________________________________________________
    4 The Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976 ("RCRA")
    defines "hazardous waste" as
    a solid waste, or combination of solid wastes, which because of
    its quantity, concentration, or physical, chemical, or infectious
    characteristics may --
    (A) cause, or significantly contribute to an increase in mor-
    tality or an increase in serious irreversible, or incapacitating
    reversible, illness; or
    (B) pose a substantial present or potential hazard to human
    health or the environment when improperly treated, stored,
    transported, or disposed of, or otherwise managed.
    42 U.S.C. § 6903(5).
    The increasing problem of disposing of solid wastes--hazardous and
    non-hazardous--is evidenced by the number of recent lawsuits involving
    states' or localities' attempts to limit wastes entering their borders. See,
    e.g., C & A Carbone, Inc. v. Town of Clarkstown, New York, 
    511 U.S. 383
    (1994) (local solid waste flow control ordinance requiring all nonha-
    zardous waste to be deposited at locally-owned facility); Oregon Waste
    Sys., Inc. v. Department of Envtl. Quality of Oregon , 
    511 U.S. 93
    (1994)
    (Oregon statute imposing additional fee on solid waste generated outside
    the state and disposed of within the state); Fort Gratiot Sanitary Landfill,
    Inc. v. Michigan Dep't of Natural Resources, 
    504 U.S. 353
    (1992)
    (Michigan law prohibiting private landfill operators from accepting solid
    waste that originates outside county in which facilities are located unless
    specifically authorized by the receiving county's plan); Chemical Waste
    Management, Inc. v. Hunt, 
    504 U.S. 334
    (1992) (Montana statute impos-
    ing additional fee on all hazardous waste generated out of state and dis-
    posed of within state); City of Philadelphia v. New Jersey, 
    437 U.S. 617
    (1978) (New Jersey statute prohibiting importation of most solid or liq-
    uid waste generated out of state); National Solid Wastes Management
    Ass'n v. Alabama Dep't of Envtl. Management, 
    910 F.2d 713
    (11th Cir.
    1990), as modified upon denial of reh'g, 
    924 F.2d 1001
    (11th Cir.), cert.
    denied, 
    501 U.S. 1206
    (1991) (Alabama statute blacklisting certain haz-
    ardous wastes generated out of state). In each case listed above a state
    or locality attempted to discriminate against waste generated out-of-state,
    and in each case the discriminatory action was ruled a violation of the
    Commerce Clause.
    5
    age, and disposal facilities. Thus, South Carolina absorbs a large
    amount of the hazardous waste that other states export.
    South Carolina's attempt to limit the level of out-of-state hazardous
    waste entering its borders occurs against a backdrop of congressional
    legislation addressing the national hazardous waste problem. Con-
    gress has enacted three sets of laws which are relevant here: (1) the
    Resource Conservation and Recovery Act of 1976 ("RCRA"), as
    amended, 42 U.S.C. §§ 6901-6992k (1988); (2) the Comprehensive
    Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act of 1980
    ("CERCLA"), as amended, 42 U.S.C. §§ 9601-75 (1988); and (3) the
    Superfund Amendments and Reauthorization Act of 1986 ("SARA"),
    Pub.L. No. 99-499, 100 Stat. 1613 (1986). We briefly describe each
    law in so far as it is relevant to the question before us.
    A. RCRA
    RCRA establishes a cradle-to-grave regulatory program for hazard-
    ous waste management administered by the Environmental Protection
    Agency ("EPA"). It attempts to deal with hazardous waste before it
    becomes a problem by establishing minimum federal standards for the
    generation, treatment, storage, transportation, and disposal of hazard-
    ous waste, and the permitting of facilities to treat hazardous waste.
    
    HWTC, 945 F.2d at 783
    . RCRA also allows a state to implement its
    own program in lieu of the federal program if the state's program is
    "equivalent to" and "consistent with" the federal or state programs
    applicable in other states and provides for "adequate enforcement of
    compliance." 42 U.S.C. § 6926(b).
    Congress delegated to EPA the task of reviewing and authorizing
    state programs as consistent with the federal program. The EPA's reg-
    ulation explaining how a state's program must be consistent with the
    federal program is of particular relevance to the present controversy.
    It requires that a state program not unreasonably impede interstate
    commerce.5
    _________________________________________________________________
    5 40 C.F.R. § 271.4. provides:
    To obtain approval, a State program must be consistent with the
    Federal program and State programs applicable in other States
    and in particular must comply with the provisions below . . .
    6
    B. CERCLA and SARA
    Passed by Congress in 1980, CERCLA establishes a cleanup pro-
    gram for hazardous waste which has already been disposed of
    improperly. CERCLA created a fund of federal money available for
    state cleanup efforts ("Superfund").
    Finding that more was still needed to address the hazardous waste
    problem, Congress amended CERCLA in 1986 by enacting SARA.
    SARA requires that each state submit a proposal to EPA demonstrat-
    ing that over a 20-year period the state will have either: (1) adequate
    capacity available to dispose of hazardous wastes generated within
    the state; or (2) arrange for the disposal of wastes generated in-state
    in other states through interregional agreements. 42 U.S.C.
    § 9604(c)(9) (1995).6 The required plans are referred to as Capacity
    _________________________________________________________________
    (a) Any aspect of the State program which unreasonably
    restricts, impedes, or operates as a ban on the free movement
    across the State border of hazardous wastes from or to other
    States for treatment, storage, or disposal at facilities autho-
    rized to operate under the Federal or an approved State pro-
    gram shall be deemed inconsistent.
    6 42 U.S.C. § 9604(c) provides:
    (9) Siting
    Effective 3 years after October 17, 1986, the President shall not
    provide any remedial actions pursuant to this section unless the
    State in which the release occurs first enters into a contract or
    cooperative agreement with the President providing assurances
    deemed adequate by the President that the State will assure the
    availability of hazardous waste treatment or disposal facilities
    which--
    (A) have adequate capacity for the destruction, treatment,
    or secure disposition of all hazardous wastes that are reason-
    ably expected to be generated within the State during the 20-
    year period following the date of such contract or coopera-
    tive agreement and to be disposed of, treated, or destroyed,
    (B) are within the State or outside the State in accordance
    with an interstate agreement or regional agreement or
    authority,
    7
    Assurance Plans ("CAPs"). Failure to submit an acceptable CAP
    results in the state becoming ineligible to receive Superfund money
    for remedial cleanup of hazardous waste within the state. Congress
    promulgated no other sanctions or incentives for states to submit CAPs.7
    C. South Carolina's Restrictions on the Interstate Flow of
    Hazardous Waste
    Because South Carolina is one of the few states which has large
    existing hazardous waste treatment and disposal facilities, it contends
    that it has borne an unfair share of the national hazardous waste bur-
    den. As a result, South Carolina has attempted, through a series of
    measures, to reduce the amount of hazardous waste entering its bor-
    ders. South Carolina's legislature passed two statutes, its Governor
    signed two Executive Orders, and the South Carolina Department of
    Health and Environmental Control ("DHEC") promulgated one
    regulation--all of which were designed to limit the level of out-of-
    state hazardous wastes entering South Carolina for burial within the
    state.
    The first measure enacted was a blacklisting provision, prohibiting
    entry into the state of certain out-of-state wastes. Section 9 of Act No.
    196 of 1989 prohibits "any person who owns or operates a waste
    treatment facility within" South Carolina from accepting
    any hazardous waste generated in any jurisdiction which
    prohibits by law the treatment of that hazardous waste
    within that jurisdiction or which has not entered into an
    interstate or regional agreement for the safe treatment of
    hazardous waste pursuant to the federal [CERCLA].
    _________________________________________________________________
    (C) are acceptable to the President, and
    (D) are in compliance with the requirements of subtitle C
    of the Solid Waste Disposal Act.
    7 The court refers the reader to its prior opinion in this litigation,
    
    HWTC, 945 F.2d at 783
    -85, for further background on RCRA, CERCLA,
    and SARA.
    8
    The Act codified a prior executive order, No. 89-17.
    The second measure, Act No. 590 of 1990, established a limit on
    all waste buried within the state.8 The limit reduces the existing statu-
    tory authorization for hazardous waste disposal by burial from
    135,000 tons within the state in a year to 120,000 tons from July 1,
    1990 to July 1, 1991. After July 1, 1991, the authorization drops to
    110,000 tons per year. The limit on waste burial can be lifted, how-
    ever, upon certification that the burial of more waste is necessary to
    protect the health and safety of the citizens of South Carolina or that
    110,000 tons of the waste buried in South Carolina during the relevant
    time period was generated in South Carolina only.
    The same Act also discriminates between waste generated in-state
    versus out-of-state by establishing a floor for in-state wastes and a
    ceiling for out-of-state wastes. All hazardous waste facilities must
    reserve for waste generated in-state at least the same capacity used
    during the previous year. On the other hand, no more hazardous waste
    may be buried from out-of-state than the amount buried in the previ-
    ous year.
    The third measure, executive order No. 89-25, promulgated on July
    6, 1989, imposes quota preferences for in-state wastes. It requires in-
    state facilities to reserve at least 54,000 tons per year of the then-
    current statutory maximum of 135,000 tons for waste generated
    within South Carolina. It also limits the waste generated from any one
    state to 35,000 tons per year, and 10,000 tons per quarter.
    The fourth and final measure, DHEC Regulation 61-99, effective
    January 12, 1990, imposes a needs requirement for all permits to
    establish or expand hazardous waste treatment and storage facilities.
    Need may be demonstrated by reference to only in-state need.
    _________________________________________________________________
    8 The limit is most often referred to as a cap. We have used the term
    "limit" here in order to prevent confusion between "cap" and the acro-
    nym for Capacity Assurance Plan, "CAP."
    9
    D. EPA's Response
    In 1985, EPA approved South Carolina's hazardous waste program
    under RCRA despite the presence of a discriminatory fee imposed on
    waste generated out of state. 50 Fed.Reg. 46437 (1985); 
    HWTC, 945 F.2d at 785
    & n.2.9 In 1989, EPA expressed concern that the blacklist-
    ing provision (Act No. 196 and Exec. Order No. 89-17) could render
    South Carolina's hazardous waste management program inconsistent
    with RCRA. Thus, the EPA requested an opinion from the South Car-
    olina Attorney General and certification by the state that the provision
    was consistent with RCRA. The South Carolina Attorney General
    responded with an opinion that the provision was"consistent." The
    record contains no response by EPA or further EPA action.
    Shortly thereafter, on October 17, 1989, South Carolina submitted
    to EPA its proposed CAP. EPA approved the CAP in May 1990, with
    certain conditions. That approval was granted in the context of an
    EPA policy of using the CAP process as its first step in addressing
    state actions which may be inconsistent with RCRA. 10
    Subsequently, in 1995, EPA issued a notice that it had made a final
    decision, subject to public review and comment, that the agency
    intended to find that South Carolina's hazardous waste program revi-
    sions satisfied all of the requirements necessary for final authorization
    under RCRA. 60 Fed.Reg. 42046 (Aug. 15, 1995). While the notice
    does not directly address the provisions at issue here, the notice does
    indicate that the EPA continues to approve South Carolina's hazard-
    ous waste program under RCRA.11
    _________________________________________________________________
    9 That fee is not challenged in the instant lawsuit.
    10 Memorandum from Lee M. Thomas to Regional Administrators,
    "Policy Regarding Hazardous Waste Management Capacity and RCRA
    Consistency Issues" (December 23, 1988).
    11 At oral argument, South Carolina asserted that the EPA 1995 RCRA
    approval specifically addressed one of the challenged provisions at 60
    Fed.Reg. 42048, checklist item 17E. Checklist item 17E addresses the
    federal requirement for "location standards for salt domes, salt beds,
    underground mines and caves." The federal RCRA regulations addressed
    were promulgated by EPA on July 15, 1985. The state authority to
    10
    II
    We review the district court's summary judgment ruling under a de
    novo standard of review. Henson v. Liggett Group, Inc., 
    61 F.3d 270
    ,
    274 (4th Cir. 1995); Jackson v. Kimel, 
    992 F.2d 1318
    , 1322 (4th Cir.
    1993). Under Rule 56(c) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure,
    summary judgment is appropriate only where there are no genuine
    issues of material fact. In conducting our analysis, we review the
    record in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party.
    South Carolina and the intervenors appeal on several grounds.
    First, South Carolina argues that the district court erred by applying
    a dormant Commerce Clause analysis because RCRA, CERCLA, and
    SARA override the dormant Commerce Clause, rendering the Clause
    inapplicable. Second, South Carolina asserts that even assuming a
    dormant Commerce Clause analysis applies, there were genuine
    issues of material fact and, therefore, summary judgment was prema-
    ture. Third, South Carolina argues that even assuming its laws violate
    the dormant Commerce Clause, two portions of the laws--the overall
    limit on in-state waste burial and the needs requirement for new
    permits--are neutral nondiscriminating provisions and, therefore,
    should be severed from the invalid provisions and upheld. Finally,
    _________________________________________________________________
    administer the federal requirements is found at South Carolina Code
    §§ 44-56-30, 44-56-60(a-c), and 44-56-120. We surmise that South Caro-
    lina is referring to § 44-45-60 as being specifically authorized by EPA.
    Act No. 590 amended § 44-45-60 in 1990 to include the overall limit on
    waste disposed of by land burial, a ceiling on out-of-state waste, and a
    floor on in-state waste. From the information before the court, however,
    we do not presume that EPA specifically addressed and authorized the
    discriminatory provisions in question here, which were enacted in 1990
    and not addressed specifically to the location standards for salt domes,
    salt beds, underground mines and caves. We do not view the EPA find-
    ing as to the particular federal regulation governing location standards
    for salt domes, salt beds, underground mines and caves as specifically
    addressing and authorizing the overall limit on hazardous waste burial
    and the ceilings and floors in question. Thus, based upon the record
    before the court, we disagree with South Carolina's contention that EPA
    has specifically addressed and authorized some of the challenged provi-
    sions.
    11
    South Carolina argues that the district court should not have ruled on
    the constitutionality of the laws, but instead referred the entire lawsuit
    to the EPA under the doctrine of primary jurisdiction. We address
    each argument in turn.
    We caution at the beginning of our discussion that, as we recog-
    nized in our previous opinion in this case, "whatever our own view
    may be about the effectiveness of what Congress or[South Carolina]
    has done [and the seriousness of the hazardous waste management
    problem that plagues our nation], we can only apply the law." 
    HWTC, 945 F.2d at 783
    (citing National Solid Wastes Management Ass'n v.
    Alabama Dep't of Envtl. Management, 
    910 F.2d 713
    , 715-16 (11th
    Cir. 1990), as modified upon denial of reh'g, 
    924 F.2d 1001
    (11th Cir.
    1991), cert. denied, 
    501 U.S. 1206
    (1991)).
    A. The Dormant Commerce Clause
    The Commerce Clause provides that "[t]he Congress shall have
    Power . . . [t]o regulate Commerce . . . among the several States."
    U.S. Const. art. I, § 8, cl. 3. Although "phrased as a grant of regula-
    tory power to Congress, the Clause has long been understood to have
    a ``negative' aspect that denies the States the power unjustifiably to
    discriminate against or burden the interstate flow of articles of com-
    merce." Oregon Waste Sys., Inc. v. Department of Envtl. Quality, 511
    U.S. ___, ___, 
    114 S. Ct. 1345
    , 1349 (1994). Thus, with certain
    exceptions, the negative or dormant Commerce Clause prohibits
    states from discriminating against the free flow of interstate commerce.12
    Where Congress has acted in an area specifically authorizing state
    or local government action, the dormant Commerce Clause is, how-
    ever, inapplicable, even if the state action interferes with interstate
    commerce. Northeast Bancorp, Inc. v. Board of Governors of the Fed.
    Reserve Sys., 
    472 U.S. 159
    , 174 (1985); White v. Massachusetts
    Council of Constr. Employers, Inc., 
    460 U.S. 204
    , 213 (1983). South
    Carolina contends that through enacting RCRA, CERCLA, and
    SARA, Congress created a federal scheme to address the disposal of
    _________________________________________________________________
    12 The Commerce Clause applies to the interstate flow of hazardous
    waste. Chemical Waste 
    Management, 504 U.S. at 340
    n.3.
    12
    hazardous wastes which authorized the state laws challenged here,
    thus displacing the dormant Commerce Clause.
    In order for a state law to be removed from the reach of the dor-
    mant Commerce Clause, however, congressional intent to authorize
    the discriminating law must be either "unmistakably clear" or "ex-
    pressly stated." South-Central Timber Dev., Inc. v. Wunnicke, 
    467 U.S. 82
    , 91-92 (1984). Congress need not state that it intends to over-
    ride the dormant Commerce Clause, but it must affirmatively have
    contemplated the otherwise invalid state legislation. 
    Id. South Carolina
    contends that Congress did just that on a number
    of levels. First, South Carolina insists that under RCRA, Congress has
    expressly authorized any state law or program addressing hazardous
    wastes which meets EPA's consistency standard of"reasonableness."
    40 C.F.R. § 271.4. Second, South Carolina argues that through dele-
    gating the authorization of state programs to the EPA under RCRA
    and CERCLA, Congress created a system of checkpoints for a state's
    hazardous waste program. South Carolina contends that by providing
    the checkpoints, Congress has "affirmatively" authorized the state
    laws because they are contained in an EPA-approved RCRA program
    and CAP. See Merrion v. Jicarilla Apache Tribe , 
    455 U.S. 130
    , 155
    (1982). Finally, South Carolina argues that the CAP requirement
    affirmatively contemplates and sanctions states discriminating against
    other states' wastes. Regional agreements, South Carolina asserts,
    will require that states set aside capacity for states party to the agree-
    ment, thus necessitating discrimination among the states. Further-
    more, South Carolina contends it must favor its own wastes in order
    to assure the capacity for in-state wastes it has demonstrated in its
    CAP.
    We previously found at the preliminary injunction stage that
    RCRA, CERCLA, and SARA did not contain any language indicating
    "an unmistakably clear congressional intent to permit states to burden
    interstate commerce." 
    HWTC, 945 F.2d at 792
    . Neither South Caro-
    lina, nor the intervenors have come forward with any further persua-
    sive evidence indicating that Congress intended to permit the states,
    13
    directly or by EPA authorization, to engage in actions otherwise vio-
    lative of the Commerce Clause. Id.13
    More specifically, we reject, as we did before, South Carolina's
    argument that EPA's reasonableness standard should displace a con-
    stitutional dormant Commerce Clause analysis. The EPA's position
    on what constitutes "reasonableness" has changed over time.14 While
    EPA may change its position on what "consistency" entails, the Con-
    stitution has not changed and, in the absence of a clear Congressional
    _________________________________________________________________
    13 The Supreme Court has not yet addressed this question. In Chemical
    Waste Management, Inc. v. Hunt, 
    504 U.S. 334
    (1992), the Supreme
    Court pretermitted the issue raised by the amici curiae in that case of
    whether Congress had authorized a discriminatory fee Alabama imposed
    on out-of-state hazardous wastes disposed of at commercial facilities
    located in Alabama. 
    Id. at 346
    n.9. Applying the dormant Commerce
    Clause, the Supreme Court held that the discriminatory fee violated the
    Commerce Clause and declared the law unconstitutional. The Court
    refused to consider the question of whether the Commerce Clause did not
    apply at all because that issue had not been a basis for the lower court's
    decision or briefed and argued by the parties.
    14 EPA has taken seemingly contradictory positions at different times
    on how it will apply and interpret the consistency requirement. In 1980,
    EPA adopted the approach taken in a then- recent Supreme Court opin-
    ion, City of Philadelphia v. New Jersey, 
    437 U.S. 617
    (1978), which
    applied the dormant Commerce Clause to strike down state statutes dis-
    criminating against out-of-state liquid or solid wastes. The Court's
    approach rested on the premise that state regulations which discriminated
    facially, in effect or in purpose, were virtually per se invalid. City of
    
    Philadelphia, 437 U.S. at 624-27
    . Following that precedent, EPA pro-
    nounced that under its consistency regulation, § 271.4, any state program
    which "operates as a ban on the interstate movement of hazardous waste
    is automatically inconsistent." 
    HWTC, 945 F.2d at 793
    (citing 45
    Fed.Reg. 53395 (1980)).
    In 1985, EPA "altered" its approach to the consistency requirement.
    That year, EPA ruled that under its consistency regulation, the agency
    would apply a "reasonableness" test to interstate commerce restrictions.
    
    HWTC, 945 F.2d at 794
    (citing 50 Fed.Reg. 46439 (1985)). Thus, EPA
    announced that it did "not agree that any disparity in treatment between
    in-state and out-of-state wastes is per se unreasonable" seemingly aban-
    doning its prior constitutional standard. 
    Id. 14 statement
    authorizing discrimination by the states with respect to haz-
    ardous wastes, we must apply the Constitution's dictates. See C & A
    Carbone, 511 U.S. at ___, 114 S. Ct. at 1691-92 (O'Connor, J. con-
    curring) (emphasizing high degree of specificity with which Congress
    must "explicitly" authorize state law otherwise violating the Com-
    merce Clause).15
    We also find that Congress has not provided a series of checkpoints
    which authorize discrimination by South Carolina against other states'
    hazardous wastes. South Carolina relies on Merrion v. Jicarilla
    Apache Tribe, 
    455 U.S. 130
    (1982), for the proposition that a series
    of congressionally created checkpoints for a state's law authorizes the
    _________________________________________________________________
    15 The instant case is distinguishable from the opinion on which South
    Carolina places a great deal of reliance, White v. Massachusetts Council
    of Constr. Employers, 
    460 U.S. 204
    (1983), for its proposition that Con-
    gress has authorized the State's laws through RCRA and CERCLA. In
    White, the Mayor of Boston, Massachusetts issued an executive order
    requiring all construction projects funded by the city to be performed by
    workers at least half of whom were bona fide residents of Boston. The
    order was challenged as violating the Commerce Clause. The Supreme
    Court upheld the Mayor's order, finding that Boston acted as a market
    participant in spending the city's money. There is a well-settled excep-
    tion to the dormant Commerce Clause for states or cities acting as market
    participants as opposed to government regulators of the market. 
    Id. at 206-08.
    Additionally, the Court noted that although federal funds were
    also implicated, Congress had specifically contemplated and directed that
    those funds be used in a similar manner to the city's money: to stimulate
    economic recovery; to create permanent jobs; to retain jobs that would
    be lost; to provide jobs to lower income persons and minorities, includ-
    ing the unemployed; and to retrain workers. See, e.g., 42 U.S.C. §§ 3131,
    5318. Furthermore, the regulations implementing Congress's directives
    contained similar mandates, affirmatively permitting the type of paro-
    chial favoritism contained in the Mayor's executive order. 
    White, 460 U.S. at 213-14
    n.11. Thus, the preference for local employment had been
    expressly contemplated and authorized by Congress. In contrast, here,
    Congress merely contemplated that state RCRA programs be consistent
    with the federal and other states' approved programs. Congress did not
    contemplate nor direct that state RCRA programs implement economic
    barriers to hazardous waste from other states. Nor do the EPA's regula-
    tions affirmatively and expressly authorize economic barriers to the
    interstate movement of hazardous wastes.
    15
    state to discriminate against interstate commerce. The facts of
    Merrion, however, are distinguishable.
    In Merrion, the Court upheld, in the face of a Commerce Clause
    challenge, a tax imposed by the Jicarilla Apache Indian Tribe on oil
    and gas extracted from tribal reservation land. The Court found that
    the Tribe had the power as an independent sovereignty to impose the
    tax. 
    Id. at 136-52.
    The Court also noted that the tax would survive
    dormant Commerce Clause scrutiny, if applied, because Congress had
    displaced the Commerce Clause by providing a series of precise fed-
    eral checkpoints that must be cleared before such a tax could be
    implemented. 
    Id. at 154-56.
    Congress required that under the Indian
    Reorganization Act, 25 U.S.C. §§ 476, 477, "a tribe . . . obtain
    approval from the Secretary [of the Interior] before it adopts or
    revises its constitution to announce its intention to tax nonmembers."
    
    Id. at 155.
    Congress was also aware that Indian tribes impose taxes
    of the sort in question. 
    Id. at 156.
    Furthermore, the tax had been
    expressly approved by the Secretary through the checkpoints estab-
    lished for such taxes. 
    Id. at 155-56.
    Thus, Congress expressly autho-
    rized such taxes being implemented by Indian Tribes if approved by
    the Secretary of the Interior.16
    In contrast, here, one cannot say that Congress expressly contem-
    plated or authorized violations of the dormant Commerce Clause by
    states limiting access to their hazardous waste facilities when it
    enacted RCRA, CERCLA, and SARA. Thus, no congressionally
    established "checkpoints" expressly anticipate or authorize the chal-
    lenged state laws. Furthermore, the EPA has not expressly approved
    any of the contested South Carolina laws.17
    _________________________________________________________________
    16 The Court further concluded that the tax would survive Commerce
    Clause scrutiny because it did not discriminate against interstate com-
    merce in violation of the Commerce Clause. 
    Merrion, 455 U.S. at 156
    -
    58. The tax had a substantial nexus with the taxing Tribe, was fairly
    apportioned, related to the services provided by the Tribe, and was non-
    discriminatory because it was imposed on minerals sold on the reserva-
    tion and minerals transported off the reservation before sale. 
    Id. 17 Even
    if EPA had expressly approved the laws in question, we could
    not do so without express congressional authorization.
    16
    We also reject South Carolina's argument that the CAPs require-
    ment contemplates and requires that South Carolina discriminate
    against out-of-state waste in order to assure capacity for its in-state
    waste and to fulfill its interregional agreements. In our prior opinion,
    
    HWTC, 945 F.2d at 794
    -95, we stated that CERCLA requires only
    an "assurance" of twenty-year availability of arranged ade-
    quate capacity. It does not [require] that the state must
    ensure that hazardous waste actually is treated and disposed
    of either in-state or pursuant to an interstate or regional
    agreement. CERCLA § 104(c)(9) contemplates that ade-
    quate national capacity will exist if each state can assure that
    it has adequate capacity for in-state generated waste after
    taking into consideration out-of-state waste that it has
    agreed to import and in-state waste that it has agreed to
    export. However, no part of § 104(c)(9) appears to permit or
    require a state to limit its actual in-state capacity to in-state
    waste to receive Superfund money. See OSWER Directive
    9010.00a at 4, 6. In fact, it appears that, if a state refuses to
    build in-state facilities or make alternate arrangements, it
    will be denied Superfund money, even if, in reality, all in-
    state generated waste is safely exported. If congressional
    intent had been to subject citizens of recalcitrant states to
    environmental danger by barring export of otherwise
    untreated and undisposed of hazardous waste, it could have
    been easily made clear: "A state not in compliance with this
    section may not export any waste." In the absence of such
    intent, we suspect that Congress believed the penalty of no
    access to federal Superfunds for waste cleanup would be
    sufficient.
    South Carolina has not presented any evidence sufficient to dis-
    suade us of our prior thinking. Furthermore, as the Eleventh Circuit
    noted in response to a similar argument, if the state's CAP depends
    on capacity provided by a commercial, privately owned management
    facility, the state can contract with that private facility for that capac-
    ity, instead of blocking the private facility from accepting wastes
    from other states. National Solid Wastes Management 
    Ass'n, 910 F.2d at 720-21
    (rejecting similar argument that SARA expressly authorized
    state law discriminating against out-of-state hazardous waste);
    17
    Alabama v. EPA, 
    871 F.2d 1548
    , 1555 n.3 (11th Cir.) (finding that
    Congress had not overridden Commerce Clause through enacting
    CERCLA), cert. denied, 
    493 U.S. 991
    (1989). Thus, we apply a dor-
    mant Commerce Clause analysis to South Carolina's laws.
    B. Application of Dormant Commerce Clause
    We apply a two-tiered analysis to state actions allegedly violating
    the dormant Commerce Clause. The first tier, "a virtually per se rule
    of invalidity," applies where a state law discriminates facially, in its
    practical effect, or in its purpose. Wyoming v. Oklahoma, 
    502 U.S. 437
    , 454-55 (1992) (quoting City of Philadelphia , 437 U.S. at 624).
    In order for a law to survive such scrutiny, the state must prove that
    the discriminatory law "is demonstrably justified by a valid factor
    unrelated to economic protectionism," New Energy Co. of Ind. v.
    Limbach, 
    486 U.S. 269
    , 274 (1988), and that there are no "nondis-
    criminatory alternatives adequate to preserve the local interests at
    stake," 
    Hunt, 504 U.S. at 342
    (quoting Hunt v. Washington State
    Apple Advertising Comm'n, 
    432 U.S. 333
    , 353 (1977)). To date, the
    Supreme Court has upheld such discriminatory laws only where the
    discrimination was justified by the threat of death or disease. See, e.g.,
    Maine v. Taylor, 
    477 U.S. 131
    (1986) (upholding Maine's prohibition
    on importing live baitfish because of the potential for destruction of
    Maine's fisheries); Clason v. Indiana, 
    306 U.S. 439
    (1939) (uphold-
    ing Indiana's restrictions on transporting dead animals without a
    license because of the potential for disease).
    The second tier applies if a statute regulates evenhandedly and only
    indirectly affects interstate commerce. In that case, the law is valid
    unless the burdens on commerce are "clearly excessive in relation to
    the putative local benefits." Pike v. Bruce Church, Inc., 
    397 U.S. 137
    ,
    142 (1970).
    The line between the per se rule and the Pike balancing test is not
    clear. Nonetheless, most of the provisions at issue here are not close
    calls--they clearly discriminate against out-of-state waste either
    facially, in effect, or in purpose. The blacklisting provision, floor for
    in-state wastes, ceiling for out-of-state wastes, and quotas for out-of
    state and in-state wastes facially discriminate against out-of-state
    wastes by refusing admittance into South Carolina of certain wastes
    18
    and giving express preference over South Carolina capacity to in-state
    wastes. Their effect, if implemented, would also clearly discriminate
    against out-of-state wastes. As for purpose, we have no reason to
    reverse the district court's finding that the laws in question constitute
    "an integrated and interconnected discriminatory program," 
    ETC, 901 F. Supp. at 1029
    , whereby South Carolina has"attempted ``to isolate
    itself from a problem common to [the nation] by erecting a barrier
    against the movement of interstate trade'," 
    HWTC, 945 F.2d at 791
    (quoting City of 
    Philadelphia, 437 U.S. at 628
    ).18
    A state cannot achieve a legitimate economic goal through "the
    illegitimate means of isolating the State from the national economy."
    
    Wyoming, 502 U.S. at 456-57
    (quoting City of 
    Philadelphia, 437 U.S. at 627
    ). The relevant economic unit is the nation, and the Commerce
    Clause prohibits states from balkanizing into separate economic units.
    H.P. Hood & Sons, Inc. v. Du Mond, 
    336 U.S. 525
    , 537-38 (1949).
    Thus, South Carolina faces a heavy burden in justifying its discrimi-
    natory practices. To survive summary judgment, South Carolina must
    demonstrate issues of fact regarding whether the laws are justified by
    a valid factor unrelated to economic protectionism and, if so, that
    there are no neutral alternatives available.
    While South Carolina failed to articulate precisely its purpose in
    discriminating against out-of-state waste, the district court found sev-
    eral motivating concerns. The district court first found that South Car-
    olina was motivated by the state's concern for the"health, safety, and
    welfare of its citizens." 
    ETC, 901 F. Supp. at 1033-34
    . There is "no
    basis to distinguish out-of-state waste from domestic waste" over con-
    cern for citizens' health, safety, and welfare, however. Hazardous
    waste is equally dangerous whether generated within South Carolina
    or out-of-state. See Chemical Waste Management , 504 U.S. at 344-45
    (holding that hazardous waste's danger to the health and safety of
    Alabama's citizens "does not vary with the point of origin of the
    waste"); 
    HWTC, 945 F.2d at 792
    (citing City of 
    Philadelphia, 437 U.S. at 629
    ).
    _________________________________________________________________
    18 For example, the stated purpose of Act No. 196 (blacklisting provi-
    sion) is to "give preference to hazardous waste generators within" South
    Carolina. Act No. 590 gives the same preference to hazardous waste gen-
    erators within the state.
    19
    The State's second concern was with preserving existing disposal
    capacity for waste generated within South Carolina. 
    ETC, 901 F. Supp. at 1034
    . Natural resources, however, may not be hoarded
    under the Commerce Clause. "[A] State may not accord its own
    inhabitants a preferred right of access over consumers in other States
    to natural resources located within its borders." City of 
    Philadelphia, 437 U.S. at 627
    ; see also New England Power Co. v. New Hampshire,
    
    455 U.S. 331
    , 338 (1982). Thus, "[t]he burden. . . of conserving the
    State's remaining landfill space should not fall disproportionately on
    out-of-state interests." 
    HWTC, 945 F.2d at 792
    (citing City of
    
    Philadelphia, 437 U.S. at 628
    ).
    The third concern the district court found was South Carolina's
    worries about "transportation risks." ETC , 901 F. Supp. at 1034. Just
    as with the State's concern with health and safety, there is little to dis-
    tinguish out-of-state waste from in-state waste in this regard. Further-
    more, neutral alternatives exist for regulating transportation of all
    hazardous waste regardless of origin. Chemical Waste 
    Management, 504 U.S. at 345-46
    .
    Finally, there was South Carolina's concern that it is shouldering
    an unfair burden of the nation's hazardous wastes. 
    ETC, 901 F. Supp. at 1034
    . The Commerce Clause does not purport to require fairness
    among the states in interstate commerce. The "apparent Congressional
    intent of RCRA and SARA would seem" to be "that hazardous waste
    be treated and disposed of somewhere, even if spread disproportion-
    ately among the states." 
    HWTC, 945 F.2d at 792
    .
    On appeal, South Carolina reframes its purposes as: (1) complying
    with the CAP by guaranteeing capacity; and (2) addressing "orphan"
    wastes--hazardous waste from a state which prohibits its disposal and
    has failed to enter into a CAP for its disposal. As previously
    explained, the CAP requirement does not require or contemplate that
    a state discriminate against out-of-state waste in order to comply. Nor
    does the Commerce Clause allow states to punish other states for not
    disposing of their wastes through a CAP or otherwise. That task is left
    exclusively to Congress.
    In briefing its appeal, South Carolina pointed to no specific issue
    of fact as to any potential purpose for discriminating against out-of-
    20
    state waste. Rather, the State merely argued that it is entitled to pres-
    ent evidence that it has no alternative but to differentiate among out-
    of-state wastes to protect its citizens' health and safety and to comply
    with CERCLA.
    At the summary judgment stage, South Carolina has a burden to
    demonstrate disputed issues of material fact. South Carolina has failed
    to meet its burden. None of the affidavits South Carolina submitted
    even purport to justify South Carolina's discriminatory treatment of
    out-of-state wastes. 
    ETC, 901 F. Supp. at 1030
    .19 Nor do any of the
    affidavits purport to demonstrate that no neutral alternatives exist to
    discrimination.
    C. Limit on Waste Buried In-State and Needs Requirement
    As for two portions of the South Carolina laws, it is not so obvious,
    however, that they discriminate either facially, in effect, or in pur-
    pose, such that the per se test applies. South Carolina therefore argues
    that even if we find that the dormant Commerce Clause applies and
    that the laws are invalid, portions of the laws--the overall limit
    imposed by Act No. 590 and the needs requirement imposed by
    DHEC regulation 61-99--do not discriminate against interstate com-
    merce. Therefore, South Carolina contends, the valid portions should
    be severed from the invalid portions and remain in effect. We dis-
    agree.
    1. Limit
    An evenhanded cap or limit uniformly burdens both in-state and
    out-of-state interests. See, e.g., Chambers Medical Technologies of
    S.C. v. Bryant, 
    52 F.3d 1252
    , 1258 (4th Cir. 1995). Thus, the Supreme
    Court has held that the dormant Commerce Clause allows a state to
    impose "an evenhanded cap on the total tonnage landfilled" with haz-
    ardous waste when it "curtail[s] volume from all sources." Chemical
    Waste 
    Management, 504 U.S. at 345
    . South Carolina contends that its
    reduction of the statutory authorization of 135,000 tons per year to
    _________________________________________________________________
    19 South Carolina merely presents a series of affidavits that describe its
    hazardous waste program; the amount of wastes buried in state, broken
    down by in-state and out-of-state wastes; and similar statistics.
    21
    120,000 tons and then 110,000 tons is an evenhanded neutral limit
    that does not burden interstate commerce any more than intrastate
    commerce.20
    The limit South Carolina seeks to have upheld, however, is not as
    evenhanded and neutral as the state would have the court believe. The
    limit does not have the same effect on in-state as out-of-state wastes
    because the limit can be lifted upon certification that it is necessary
    to protect South Carolina's citizens, S.C. Code Ann.§ 44-56-
    60(a)(3)(A) (Law Co-op Supp. 1995), or that the entire statutory
    authorization of buried waste during the relevant 12-month period
    was generated in South Carolina, S.C. Code Ann.§ 44-56-60(a)(3)(B)
    (Law Co-op Supp. 1995). The same exceptions are not granted to out-
    of-state interests. The Supreme Court has declared that "[t]he com-
    merce clause forbids discrimination, whether forthright or ingenious.
    In each case it is our duty to determine whether the statute under
    attack, whatever its name may be, will in its practical operation work
    discrimination against interstate commerce." West Lynn Creamery,
    Inc. v. Healy, 511 U.S. ___, ___, 
    114 S. Ct. 2205
    , 2215-16 (1994)
    (citing Best & Co. v. Maxwell, 
    311 U.S. 454
    , 455-56 (1940);
    Maryland v. Louisiana, 
    451 U.S. 725
    , 756 (1981); Exxon Corp. v.
    Governor of Maryland, 
    437 U.S. 117
    , 147 (1978)). Here, the excep-
    tion favors in-state interests over out-of-state interests. Thus, the over-
    all limit is not facially neutral, but rather discriminatory and,
    therefore, subject to the same per se test applied to the other discrimi-
    natory provisions of Act 590. The limit fails to survive such scrutiny
    for the same reasons that the floors and ceilings in Act 590 failed.21
    _________________________________________________________________
    20 South Carolina also contends that we expressly excluded the overall
    limit as one of the items properly enjoined in our previous opinion
    addressing the preliminary injunction. 
    HWTC, 945 F.2d at 787
    n.9.
    While we referenced the statutory section containing the limit in our list
    of sections to be enjoined, we specifically referred to another subsection.
    Today, however, for the reasons set forth below, we clarify that the limit
    is included as one of the items that violates the Commerce Clause.
    21 Even if the limit were nondiscriminatory, it would not be severable.
    State law governs the severability of a state statute. Muller v. Curran,
    
    889 F.2d 54
    , 57 (4th Cir. 1989), cert. denied , 
    493 U.S. 1074
    (1990).
    Thus, in determining whether the overall limit can be severed, we turn
    to South Carolina law. Under South Carolina law,"[t]he test for sever-
    22
    2. Needs Requirement
    The needs regulation requires that a permit application for new or
    expanded hazardous waste facilities demonstrate need by reference to
    the level of waste generated in South Carolina only. South Carolina
    contends that the needs requirement is neutral, functioning similarly
    to an evenhanded cap and therefore valid. In our earlier opinion, we
    found that "[o]n its face [the needs requirement] appears not to regu-
    late evenhandedly. It permits South Carolina to refuse to allow new
    construction if all of its waste can be disposed of by exportation. The
    ``practical effect' . . . of the regulation may be to favor in-state inter-
    ests over out-of-state interests." 
    HWTC, 945 F.2d at 791
    n.14 (citation
    omitted). Indeed, currently, the practical effect may be to establish a
    ban on building new capacity.
    We find that the needs requirement is not similar to an evenhanded
    cap with the same effect on both in-state and out-of-state interests.
    The effect on out-of-state interests is to prohibit facilities from
    expanding to meet out-of-state needs, but to allow expansion to meet
    in-state needs. Thus, just as with the overall limit in question, the
    needs requirement contains an exception for in-state needs allowing
    expansion or a raise in the limit where in-state needs dictate such a
    _________________________________________________________________
    ability is whether the constitutional portion of the statute remains ``com-
    plete in itself, wholly independent of that which is rejected, and is of
    such a character as that it may fairly be presumed that the Legislature
    would have passed it independent of that which is in conflict with the
    Constitution.'" Thayer v. South Carolina Tax Comm'n, 
    413 S.E.2d 810
    ,
    814-15 (S.C. 1992) (citing Shumpert v. South Carolina Dep't of High-
    ways & Public Transp., 
    409 S.E.2d 771
    (1991)) (footnote omitted).
    We cannot fairly presume that the South Carolina legislature would
    have passed the overall limit without the provision allowing the limit's
    increase if South Carolina wastes exceeded the cap. Nor can we assume
    that the limit would have been passed without the remaining provisions
    of the statute, which include floors for in-state-wastes and ceilings for
    out-of-state wastes. By protecting capacity for in-state interests, the leg-
    islature may have quelched in-state political interests that might other-
    wise have lobbied against the overall limit. Thus, we conclude that the
    limit provision is not severable.
    23
    rise. While the limit once imposed applies equally to out-of-state and
    in-state wastes, in effect, it guarantees in-state generators of waste
    space because the limit can always be raised in order to meet in-state
    needs.
    Therefore, we apply the per se test to Regulation 61-99.22 The
    needs regulation does not survive the per se test for the same reasons
    the remainder of the challenged South Carolina laws failed to survive.
    South Carolina has raised no issue of fact as to a state rationale unre-
    lated to the origin of the waste for its needs requirement.
    D. Primary Jurisdiction
    Finally, South Carolina attempts to persuade us that the district
    court erred by failing to defer under the doctrine of primary jurisdic-
    tion to the EPA in the first instance as to whether South Carolina's
    laws are constitutional.23 "No fixed formula exists for applying the
    _________________________________________________________________
    22 South Carolina's reliance on Chambers Medical Technologies of
    South Carolina v. Bryant, 
    52 F.3d 1252
    (4th Cir. 1995), does not aid its
    cause. South Carolina seeks to establish that the needs regulation is simi-
    lar to South Carolina's fluctuating cap for infectious waste based on the
    amount of waste generated in South Carolina alone. In Chambers, we
    held that the fluctuating cap for infectious waste might pass Commerce
    Clause scrutiny if it regulated in an evenhanded fashion and had only
    incidental effects on interstate commerce; whereas it would not be con-
    stitutional if it discriminated facially, in effect, or in purpose, thus neces-
    sitating that the per se test be applied. 
    Id. at 1262.
    Here, the regulation
    discriminates in effect. Thus, the per se test applies.
    Furthermore, significantly, we noted that the fluctuating cap in
    Chambers did not operate as a ban on the expansion of 
    facilities. 52 F.3d at 1262
    . It merely limited the amount of infectious waste any one facility
    could process. While the South Carolina Code required that a permit be
    obtained in order to build a new facility and that infectious waste gener-
    ated out-of-state could only be considered in the needs calculations with
    DHEC approval, the Chambers court assumed that the DHEC would not
    deny a permit on a basis violating the Commerce Clause. 
    Id. at 1262
    n.15. Thus, in dicta, we suggested in Chambers that outright bans on
    expansion based on in-state needs only will most likely not survive dor-
    mant Commerce Clause scrutiny.
    23 As conceded in oral argument, however, South Carolina has not
    requested that the EPA intervene in this case as an amicus curiae, nor has
    the EPA sought intervention.
    24
    doctrine of primary jurisdiction." United States v. Western Pac. R.R.
    Co., 
    352 U.S. 59
    , 64 (1956). Generally speaking, the doctrine is
    designed to coordinate administrative and judicial decision-making by
    taking advantage of agency expertise and referring issues of fact not
    within the conventional experience of judges or cases which require
    the exercise of administrative discretion. 
    Id. ; Commonwealth
    of Mas-
    sachusetts v. Blackstone Valley Elec. Co., 
    67 F.3d 981
    , 992 (1st Cir.
    1995); Mashpee Tribe v. New Seabury Corp., 
    592 F.2d 575
    , 580 (1st
    Cir.), cert. denied, 
    444 U.S. 866
    (1979), and cert. denied, 
    464 U.S. 866
    (1983).
    The district judge refused to refer the instant lawsuit to the EPA
    under the doctrine of primary jurisdiction because he found that there
    were no issues of fact. Primary jurisdiction, he held, applied only to
    the referral of factual, not legal, issues. He further reasoned that the
    "constitutional issues . . . [at stake were more] properly within the tra-
    ditional purview of an Article III court, and are not those to which
    EPA could conceivably lend some degree of expertise." ETC, 901 F.
    Supp. at 1029. We review the district court's decision declining to
    refer the lawsuit to the EPA under the doctrine of primary jurisdiction
    for abuse of discretion. In re Lower Lake Erie Iron Ore Antitrust
    Litig., 
    998 F.2d 1144
    , 1162 (3d Cir. 1993), cert. denied, 
    114 S. Ct. 921
    (1994).24
    The district court did not abuse its discretion. The EPA's special
    _________________________________________________________________
    24 South Carolina contends that the district court's refusal to apply the
    doctrine of primary jurisdiction was based wholly on erroneous conclu-
    sions of laws and should therefore be reviewed de novo. "[D]espite what
    the term [primary jurisdiction] may imply,[it] does not speak to the
    jurisdictional power of the federal courts. It simply structures the pro-
    ceedings as a matter of judicial discretion, so as to engender an orderly
    and sensible coordination of the work of agencies and courts." In re
    Lower Lake Erie Iron Ore Antitrust 
    Litig., 998 F.2d at 1162
    (quoting
    United States v. Bessemer & Lake Erie R.R. Co., 
    717 F.2d 593
    , 599
    (D.C. Cir. 1983)). Thus, the decision not to refer a lawsuit to an agency
    under the doctrine of primary jurisdiction is a discretionary matter which
    we review for abuse of discretion. Furthermore, because the matter at
    issue is a constitutional question which lies within this court's expertise,
    the district court correctly applied the law.
    25
    expertise is not needed to decide a question of law in a constitutional
    matter.
    Accordingly, the district court's judgment is
    AFFIRMED.
    26
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 95-2008, 95-2245

Citation Numbers: 98 F.3d 774

Judges: Murnaghan, Motz, Young

Filed Date: 10/15/1996

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 11/5/2024

Authorities (24)

Merrion v. Jicarilla Apache Tribe , 102 S. Ct. 894 ( 1982 )

Maine v. Taylor , 106 S. Ct. 2440 ( 1986 )

national-solid-wastes-management-association-and-chemical-waste , 924 F.2d 1001 ( 1991 )

New Energy Co. of Indiana v. Limbach , 108 S. Ct. 1803 ( 1988 )

Fort Gratiot Sanitary Landfill, Inc. v. Michigan Department ... , 112 S. Ct. 2019 ( 1992 )

West Lynn Creamery, Inc. v. Healy , 114 S. Ct. 2205 ( 1994 )

alfred-muller-md-friendship-heights-village-council-v-j-joseph-curran , 889 F.2d 54 ( 1989 )

Crystal R. Jackson v. Randy Kimel at & T Technologies, Inc. , 992 F.2d 1318 ( 1993 )

chambers-medical-technologies-of-south-carolina-incorporated-and , 52 F.3d 1252 ( 1995 )

Clason v. Indiana , 59 S. Ct. 609 ( 1939 )

Shirley S. Henson v. Liggett Group, Incorporated, D/B/A ... , 61 F.3d 270 ( 1995 )

H. P. Hood & Sons, Inc. v. Du Mond , 69 S. Ct. 657 ( 1949 )

Hunt v. Washington State Apple Advertising Commission , 97 S. Ct. 2434 ( 1977 )

C & a Carbone, Inc. v. Town of Clarkstown , 114 S. Ct. 1677 ( 1994 )

Best & Co. v. Maxwell , 61 S. Ct. 334 ( 1940 )

Commonwealth of Massachusetts v. Blackstone Valley Electric ... , 67 F.3d 981 ( 1995 )

Thayer v. South Carolina Tax Commission , 307 S.C. 6 ( 1992 )

state-of-alabama-etc-cross-appellants-v-the-united-states-environmental , 871 F.2d 1548 ( 1989 )

in-re-lower-lake-erie-iron-ore-antitrust-litigation-mdl-no-587 , 998 F.2d 1144 ( 1993 )

Exxon Corp. v. Governor of Maryland , 98 S. Ct. 2207 ( 1978 )

View All Authorities »