Amer Forest & Paper v. EPA ( 1998 )


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  •                            REVISED, April 23, 1998
    IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT
    _______________
    No. 96-60874
    _______________
    AMERICAN FOREST AND PAPER ASSOCIATION,
    Petitioner,
    VERSUS
    UNITED STATES ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY,
    Respondent.
    _________________________
    Petition for Review of an Order of
    the Environmental Protection Agency
    _________________________
    March 30, 1998
    Before JONES and SMITH, Circuit Judges, and FITZWATER,* District
    Judge.
    JERRY E. SMITH, Circuit Judge:
    Pursuant to the Clean Water Act (“CWA”), 
    33 U.S.C. § 1251
    et seq., the Environmental Protection Agency (“EPA”) delegated to
    Louisiana     the    responsibility    for    administering    the    Louisiana
    Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (“LPDES”).             In exchange for
    its approval, EPA required Louisiana to consult with the Fish and
    Wildlife Service (“FWS”) and the National Marine Fisheries Service
    (“NMFS”) before issuing permits.             If FWS or NMFS determines that
    *
    District Judge of the Northern District of Texas, sitting by designation.
    the proposed permit threatens endangered speciesSSand if Louisiana
    refuses to modify the permitSSEPA will veto the permit under its
    continuing     oversight     authority.          American          Forest    and   Paper
    Association (“AF&PA”) challenges this rule as exceeding EPA's
    authority    under     the   CWA.     Because        we    agree    that     EPA   lacked
    statutory authority, we grant the petition for review and vacate
    and remand the portion of the rule that imposes the consultation
    requirement and declares that EPA will veto any permit to which FWS
    or NMFS objects.
    I.
    Under the CWA, one needs a permit to discharge a pollutant.
    At least as an initial matter, permitting authority is vested in
    EPA through the National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System
    (“NPDES”).     EPA may, however, delegate permitting authority to a
    state if the state demonstrates that it will comply with a list of
    enumerated requirements and that it will monitor and enforce the
    terms   of   the   permits.         See   CWA    §    402(b)(1)-(9),         
    33 U.S.C. § 1342
    (b)(1)-(9).        EPA does not enjoy wide latitude in deciding
    whether to approve or reject a state's proposed permit program.
    “Unless the Administrator of EPA determines that the proposed state
    program does not meet [the specified] requirements, he must approve
    the proposal.”     Save the Bay, Inc. v. EPA, 
    556 F.2d 1282
    , 1285 (5th
    Cir. 1977).
    EPA     retains    oversight     authority           even   when   it    delegates
    permitting authority to a state.              Should the agency determine that
    2
    a state is not complying with the CWA, it may withdraw its approval
    of the state program.     EPA also retains oversight authority over
    individual permits issued under approved state programs.        States
    are required to submit permit applications and proposed permits to
    EPA; the agency may veto a proposed permit if it concludes that the
    permit violates the CWA.    See CWA § 402(d), 
    33 U.S.C. § 1342
    (d).
    Until recently, EPA administered the permitting program in
    Louisiana through the NPDES. Before issuing a permit, EPA chose to
    consult with FWS and NMFS to ensure that endangered species would
    not be threatened by the discharges contemplated in the permit.
    When EPA announced plans to delegate the permitting program to
    Louisiana, environmental groups cried foul, pointing out that
    because the Endangered Species Act (“ESA”) does not apply to the
    states, nothing would prevent the issuance of permits that might
    harm endangered species.
    EPA then devised the following scheme:            In exchange for
    approving   Louisiana's    program,   EPA   directed    the   Louisiana
    Department of Environmental Quality (“LDEQ”) to submit proposed
    permits to FWS and NMFS for review.    If the federal agencies agree
    that the proposed permit does not threaten endangered species, the
    permit may be issued.     But if the federal agencies conclude that
    the permit does threaten endangered speciesSSand if LDEQ refuses to
    modify the permit to the agencies' satisfactionSSEPA will exercise
    its veto power and formally object to the permit.             Louisiana
    consented to this arrangement, and EPA issued its final rule.      See
    Approval of Application by Louisiana To Administer the National
    3
    Pollutant Discharge Elimination System Program, 
    61 Fed. Reg. 47,932
    (1996).
    EPA invoked CWA § 304(i), 
    33 U.S.C. § 1314
    (i), as authority
    for   attaching   this   condition   to     its    approval   of    Louisiana's
    program.      That   section   allows      EPA    to   promulgate    guidelines
    “establishing the minimum procedural and other elements” for state
    permitting programs.     The agency also pointed to ESA § 7(a)(2) as
    justifying its action.     That section provides:
    Each Federal agency shall, in consultation with and with
    the assistance of the Secretary [of the Interior,
    Commerce, or Agriculture], insure that any action
    authorized, funded, or carried out by such agency . . .
    is not likely to jeopardize the continued existence of
    any endangered species or threatened species or result in
    the destruction or adverse modification of habitat of
    such species . . . .
    
    16 U.S.C. § 1536
    (a)(2).        The spirit of this general mandate is
    echoed in the statement of congressional purpose underlying the
    ESA, 
    16 U.S.C. § 1531
    (c)(1), which declares it “the policy of
    Congress that all Federal departments and agencies shall seek to
    conserve    endangered   species   and     threatened     species    and   shall
    utilize their authorities in furtherance of the purposes of this
    chapter.”
    II.
    AF&PA did not participate in the agency proceedings belowSSa
    silence that EPA says precludes AF&PA from raising its objection in
    this court.    The CWA grants the federal courts of appeals original
    jurisdiction over challenges to determinations regarding state
    permitting programs under § 402(b).               Although any “interested
    4
    person” may seek review of EPA's permitting decisions, see CWA
    § 509 (b)(1), 
    33 U.S.C. § 1369
    (b)(1), EPA argues that a party that
    fails to participate during the public comment period waives its
    claims.   The agency points to its extensive newspaper advertising
    as evidence that AF&PA was on notice of EPA's intent to approve
    Louisiana's program.
    EPA has failed to identify any provision in the CWA that
    suggests a party's failure to comment waives its right to seek
    judicial review.       The statute allows “any interested person” that
    promptly files an objection to seek review in this court.                 Other
    statutes allowing judicial review of agency decisions sweep far
    less broadly, requiring the petitioner to have been a party.               See,
    e.g., 
    28 U.S.C. § 2344
     (limiting right of review to “aggrieved
    parties”).    We see nothing in the text of the statute that warrants
    the narrow reading EPA urges.
    Moreover,    we    have    never    held   that   failure    to   raise   an
    objection during the public notice and comment period estops a
    petitioner from raising it on appeal.                 EPA presented the same
    argument to us long ago, but we rejected it, observing that “EPA
    has cited no authority for the proposition that an argument not
    raised during the comment period may not be raised on review.”
    City of Seabrook, Tex. v. EPA, 
    659 F.2d 1349
    , 1360 n.17 (Former 5th
    Cir. Oct. 1981).       In that case, EPASSas it does again hereSSrelied
    on   United     States     v.     L.A.       Tucker    Truck     Lines,   Inc.,
    
    344 U.S. 33
     (1952), involving a challenge to an Interstate Commerce
    Commission action by a party that participated in a hearing and
    5
    could   have    appealed     the     hearing      officer's    decision   to   the
    Commission.     We characterized EPA's reliance on L.A. Tucker as
    “badly misplaced.”       City of Seabrook, 
    659 F.2d at
    1360 n.17.
    We conclude that AF&PA's failure to participate during the
    public comment period does not rob this court of jurisdiction. Our
    decision in City of Seabrook remains valid:
    The rule urged by EPA would require everyone who wishes
    to protect himself from arbitrary agency action not only
    to become a faithful reader of the notices of proposed
    rulemaking published each day in the Federal Register,
    but a psychic able to predict the possible changes that
    could be made in the proposal when the rule is finally
    promulgated. This is a fate this court will impose on no
    one.
    
    Id. at 1360-61
     (internal footnotes omitted).               Estopping AF&PA from
    pursuing its claims would be especially unfair in that EPA modified
    its rule.      The version initially proposed did not contain the
    consultation requirement; that provision was added only after
    environmental groups demanded additional protection for endangered
    species.       AF&PA's     failure    to       monitor   the   rule's   evolution
    throughout the public comment period does not constitute waiver.
    Finally, we note that the concerns underlying the exhaustion
    doctrine are not implicated here.              That doctrine restrains courts
    from ruling on objections not considered by the agency by requiring
    a party to exhaust its administrative remedies before pursuing
    judicial review.     See Unemployment Compensation Comm'n v. Aragon,
    
    329 U.S. 143
    , 155 (1946).          During the public comment period, EPA
    was presented with detailed objections concerning the scope of
    6
    endangered species protection under Louisiana's proposed program.2
    (To be sure, these objections came from environmental groups
    seeking expanded protections, so it is ironic that AF&PA now seeks
    to preserve its claim on the basis of its opponents' complaints.)
    In any event, because the public comments regarding the ESA were
    sufficiently    specific     to   prompt    EPA    to   adopt    the   provision
    contested here, the agency cannot reasonably claim that it has been
    denied the opportunity to consider the issue.
    III.
    Before we can reach the merits of its claim, AF&PA must
    demonstrate that it has standing to sue.            It must first show that
    it has suffered an “injury in fact”SSthat is, an actual and
    imminent    injury,    not    one    that    is     merely      conjectural   or
    hypothetical.     It also must show a causal connection between its
    injury and the complained-of conduct.             Finally, it must establish
    that its injury is likely to be redressed by a favorable decision.
    Bennett v. Spear, 
    117 S. Ct. 1154
    , 1163 (1997).                 EPA claims that
    AF&PA cannot meet any of these requirements.
    A.
    AF&PA's members include permit holders in Louisiana. Although
    AF&PA has not alleged that any of its members has applied for a new
    permit or sought to modify an existing one, it argues that injury
    2
    For example, an environmental group from Tulane Law School specifically
    charged that “the Endangered Species Act will become unavailable to citizens if
    [the Louisiana] DEQ becomes the administrator of the NPDES program.”
    7
    is imminent, in the form of costs of compliance with EPA's new
    rule, including delays in permitting and the added risk that an
    application will be denied.          EPA says AF&PA's alleged injury is
    purely hypothetical, because it rests on a chain of speculation.
    In EPA's view, this chain is linked by a series                    of dubious
    assumptions about the circumstances under which EPA might exercise
    its veto power.
    We do not find the permit holders' injuries speculative.                As
    an initial matter, permits are not eternal:             They must be renewed
    every five years.      Modifications to existing permits must also be
    cleared with FWS and NMFS.          Moreover, EPA has already identified
    the circumstances under which it will veto a proposed permit.                See
    61 Fed. Reg. at 47,934 (“EPA will formally object to the issuance
    of the draft permit if FWS determines that the action is likely to
    jeopardize the continued existence of a listed or proposed species
    or destroy designated critical habitat.”) (emphasis added). Permit
    holders'    imminent    need   to   comply,    coupled    with    EPA's   frank
    announcement of its intentions, belies the agency's claim that any
    injury is speculative.3
    B.
    EPA next launches a redressability challenge, contending that
    Louisiana's voluntary commitment to cooperate with the federal
    agencies would withstand a court decision striking down the rule's
    3
    EPA's claim that AF&PA has not shown causationSSa link between the
    agency's decision and the permit holders' injury-in-factSSis also premised on the
    allegedly speculative nature of the injury. It fails for the same reason.
    8
    consultation requirement.           EPA correctly points out that Louisiana
    is   free    to   consult    with     FWS   and        NMFS    in    making    permitting
    decisions. But this argument misses the real question: whether EPA
    may promulgate a rule requiring Louisiana to obtain the federal
    government's blessing before issuing a permit.                       In this instance,
    a permissible end does not validate impermissible means.                            EPA's
    redressability challenge, accordingly, is meritless.
    IV.
    The final threshold issue is ripeness. In determining whether
    an issue is ripe for review, we must balance the fitness of the
    issues for judicial decision with the hardship to the parties of
    withholding review.          Chevron U.S.A., Inc. v. Traillour Oil Co.,
    
    987 F.2d 1138
    , 1153-54 (5th Cir. 1993) (“[T]he ripeness inquiry
    focuses      on   whether   an   injury         that    has    not    yet     occurred   is
    sufficiently likely to happen to justify judicial intervention.”).
    Ordinarily we wait until a rule has been applied before granting
    review; this prudential concern loses force, however, when the
    question presented is purely legal.                 New Orleans Pub. Serv., Inc.
    v. Council of City of New Orleans, 
    833 F.2d 583
    , 587 (5th Cir.
    1987).
    The instant case concerns a purely legal issue: whether EPA
    enjoys the statutory authority to require Louisiana, before it may
    issue    a   discharge      permit,    to       consult       with   federal     agencies
    regarding the impact on endangered species.                          Contrary to EPA's
    assertion, there are no facts awaiting development that would aid
    9
    our decision; to the extent any factual questions even exist, they
    are overshadowed by the legal question that towers over this case.
    Because deferring review will impose an immediate, significant
    burden on the petitionerSSand because we are confronted with a pure
    question of lawSSthis dispute is ripe for review.
    V.
    EPA contends that its rule is authorized by CWA § 304(i),
    
    33 U.S.C. § 1314
    (i), which directs EPA to promulgate guidelines
    governing state permitting programs under CWA § 402(b), 
    33 U.S.C. § 1342
    (b).    EPA also suggests that its decision is not only
    authorized but compelled by ESA § 7(a)(2), 
    16 U.S.C. § 1536
    (a)(2).
    That section directs federal agencies to consult with FWS and NMFS
    before undertaking any “agency action,” to ensure that the action
    will not threaten an endangered species.
    A.
    We review EPA's interpretation of the CWA in two steps.
    Chevron U.S.A., Inc. v. Natural Resources Defense Council, 
    467 U.S. 867
     (1984).   We first ask whether Congress has directly spoken to
    the precise question at issue.   If so, we must defer to the clearly
    expressed congressional intent.    If notSSif the statute is silent
    or ambiguousSSwe ask whether the agency's interpretation is based
    on a permissible construction of the statute.    Id. at 842-43.   We
    do not, however, accord Chevron deference to EPA's interpretation
    of the ESA, because the ESA is not a statute that EPA is charged
    10
    with administering.      See Adams Fruit Co. v. Barrett, 
    494 U.S. 638
    ,
    649-50 (1990).
    B.
    Specifically, CWA § 402(b), 
    33 U.S.C. § 1342
    (b), provides that
    the EPA Administrator “shall approve” proposed state permitting
    programs that meet nine specified requirements.              The key question
    is whether EPA may deny a state's proposed program based on a
    criterionSSthe     protection     of   endangered     speciesSSthat     is   not
    enumerated in § 402(b).
    EPA calls our attention to CWA § 304(i), 
    33 U.S.C. § 1314
    (i),
    construing that section as authorizing the agency to regard the
    nine requirements § 402(b) as minimum, not exhaustive, criteria.4
    EPA further contends that because nothing in § 402(b) prohibits EPA
    from adding additional criteria, its interpretation of the statute
    is reasonable and worthy of deference under Chevron.
    We cannot agree.        The language of § 402(b) is firm:               It
    provides that EPA “shall” approve submitted programs unless they
    fail to meet one of the nine listed requirements.              We interpreted
    this language as non-discretionary in Save the Bay, Inc. v. EPA,
    
    556 F.2d 1282
     (5th Cir. 1977), noting that “[t]he Amendments [to
    the CWA] set out the full list of requirements a state program must
    meet . . . .     Unless the Administrator of EPA determines that the
    4
    Section 304(i) provides: “The Administrator shall . . . promulgate
    guidelines establishing the minimum procedural and other elements of any State
    program under Section 1342 of this title which shall include . . . monitoring
    requirements . . . reporting requirements . . . enforcement provisions; and . . .
    funding, personnel qualifications, and manpower requirements . . . .”
    11
    proposed state program does not meet these requirements, he must
    approve the proposal.”           
    Id.
     at 1285 & n.3.         See also Natural
    Resources Defense Council v. EPA, 
    859 F.2d 156
    , 174 (D.C. Cir.
    1988); Citizens for a Better Env't v. EPA, 
    596 F.2d 720
    , 722 (7th
    Cir. 1979).
    EPA's claim is further weakened by CWA § 402(b)(6), 
    33 U.S.C. § 1342
    (b)(6), which grants EPA veto power over a proposed permit if
    the   Secretary       of   the   Army   concludes    that    the   discharges
    contemplated by the permit would substantially impair anchorage and
    navigation.      Congress could have, but did not, grant EPA an
    analogous veto power to protect endangered species.
    Nothing    in    §   304(i)   undermines   this   conclusion.        That
    subsection simply directs EPA to issue regulations governing the
    approval process for state programs.                There is no hint that
    Congress intended to grant EPA authority to erect additional
    hurdles to the permitting process beyond those expressly noted in
    § 402(b).       Moreover, neither section even mentions endangered
    species or the ESA.5        The statute's plain language directs EPA to
    approve proposed state programs that meet the enumerated criteria;
    particularly in light of the command “shall approve,” § 304(i)
    cannot be construed to allow EPA to expand the list of permitting
    requirements.      Applying Chevron, we conclude that Congress has
    spoken directly to the precise question at issue: EPA's discretion
    lies not in modifying the list of enumerated criteria, but simply
    5
    EPA's own regulations identifying the grounds on which the agency might
    object to state permits are similarly silent: They make no mention of protection
    of endangered species. See 
    40 C.F.R. § 123.44
    (c).
    12
    in ensuring that those criteria are met.
    C.
    In American Iron & Steel Inst. v. EPA, 
    115 F.3d 979
     (D.C. Cir.
    1997) (“AISI”), the court concluded that EPA may require states to
    include provisions in certain permitting programs to ensure the
    protection of endangered species.            EPA argues that AISI's logic is
    applicable to the instant case.
    AISI is distinguishable, however, in that the case arose under
    a   different    provision     of     the    CWASS§    118(c)(2),       
    33 U.S.C. § 1268
    (c)(2).      That section directs EPA to promulgate “water
    quality    guidance”   for   the     Great    Lakes.     But   §    118(c)(2)   is
    structured quite differently from § 402:               The former grants EPA
    authority to specify pollutant limits for the Great Lakes and
    develop “guidances” to which state programs must conform; the
    section does not direct the agency to approve state programs that
    meet certain requirements.
    In    addition   to    this    far     broader   grant       of   authority,
    §   118(c)(2)   specifically        mentions   that    EPA's   development      of
    pollutant limits should aim to protect aquatic life and wildlife in
    the Great Lakes.       The AISI court relied on this language in
    concluding that EPA did not exceed its statutory authority under
    § 118(c):
    We uphold this portion of the Guidance, but not because
    of the ESA. Section 118(c)(2) provides that the Guidance
    “shall specify numerical limits on pollutants in ambient
    Great Lakes waters to protect human health, aquatic life,
    and wildlife, and shall provide guidance to the Great
    Lakes States on minimum water quality standards . . . .”
    13
    (emphasis added)   This is all the authority the EPA
    needed to promulgate regulations designed to protect
    endangered, threatened and other species in the Great
    Lakes System.
    
    115 F.3d at 1003
    .        AISI's reasoning, insofar as it concerns a
    section of the CWA that materially differs in language and purpose,
    is inapplicable here.
    D.
    Finally,    EPA   argues   that    ESA   §   7(a)(2),     when   construed
    alongside the Court's broad reading of the statute in Tennessee
    Valley Auth. v. Hill, 
    437 U.S. 153
    , 173 (1978), compels EPA to do
    everything    reasonably    within    its    power   to   protect      endangered
    species.    The flaw in this argument is that if EPA lacks the power
    to add additional criteria to CWA § 402(b), nothing in the ESA
    grants the agency the authority to do so.              Section 7 of the ESA
    merely requires EPA to consult with FWS or NMFS before undertaking
    agency action; it confers no substantive powers.6
    The District of Columbia Circuit construed ESA § 7(a)(2) in
    Platte River Whooping Crane Trust v. Federal Energy Regulatory
    Comm'n, 
    962 F.2d 27
     (D.C. Cir. 1992), holding that the statute
    “does not expand the powers conferred on an agency by its enabling
    act,” but rather directs the agencies to “utilize” their existing
    powers to protect endangered species.              
    Id. at 34
    .    In that case,
    6
    Whether EPA's approval of Louisiana's permitting program constitutes
    “agency action” for ESA purposes is largely beside the point. Even if EPA were
    required to consult with the agencies before approving Louisiana's program, EPA
    lacks authority to modify the plain language of the CWA by adding to the list of
    enumerated requirements.
    14
    the petitioner, Whooping Crane Trust, pressed virtually the same
    argument EPA advances here.        The court observed:
    The Trust reads section 7 essentially to oblige the
    [Federal Energy Regulatory Commission] to do “whatever it
    takes” to protect the threatened and endangered species
    that inhabit the Platte River basin; any limitations on
    FERC's authority contained in the [Federal Power Act] are
    implicitly superseded by this general command. . . . We
    think the Trust's interpretation of the ESA is far-
    fetched.
    
    Id.
       We agree that the ESA serves not as a font of new authority,
    but as something far more modest:            a directive to agencies to
    channel their existing authority in a particular direction.                The
    upshot is that EPA cannot invoke the ESA as a means of creating and
    imposing requirements that are not authorized by the CWA.
    Accordingly, we GRANT the petition for review and VACATE the
    portion of the rule that imposes the consultation requirement and
    declares that EPA will reject any proposed permit to which FWS or
    NMFS objects.      This matter is REMANDED to the EPA for further
    appropriate proceedings.7
    7
    The Motion of Amici Curiae for Clarification or Partial Reconsideration
    is denied as moot.
    15