Fern Hill Farm, Ltd, Work Plan ( 2008 )


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  •                                            STATE OF VERMONT
    ENVIRONMENTAL COURT
    }
    In re Fern Hill Farm, Ltd., Work Plan                     }             Docket No. 121-6-07 Vtec
    }
    Decision on Motion for Summary Judgment
    Appellant Fern Hill Farm, Ltd., appealed from a determination of the Secretary of the
    Vermont Agency of Natural Resources (“ANR” or “Agency”) rejecting a work plan (“Work
    Plan”) submitted by Fern Hill Farm for the remediation of waste illegally disposed of at a farm
    dump. In July 2006, Fern Hill Farm submitted the Work Plan to ANR pursuant to this Court’s
    January 20, 2006 Decision and Order in Docket Number 129-8-03 Vtec (“January 20, 2006
    Order”), which modified the Agency’s Administrative Order for the solid waste illegally buried
    on Fern Hill Farm.
    Fern Hill Farm was previously represented by John D. Hansen, Esq., and is now
    represented by John R. Ponsetto, Esq., and Heather Rider Hammond, Esq. The Agency has been
    represented by Gary S. Kessler, Esq.
    Fern Hill Farm has moved for summary judgment on all issues raised in its Statement of
    Questions, which generally asks whether ANR summarily denied the Work Plan without
    considering its merits, which Fern Hill Farm contends is in contravention of the Court’s
    directives, as announced in the January 20, 2006 Order. ANR opposes the pending summary
    judgment motion and asserts that the Work Plan was rejected because it failed to comply with
    ANR policy and the language from the 2006 Order.
    Factual Background
    Rather then repeat the factual history surrounding the farm dump on Fern Hill Farm, we
    incorporate by reference the Findings already made by this Court, following a merits hearing, in
    the January 20, 2006 Order. See Agency Natural Res. v. Fern Hill Farm, Ltd., No. 129-8-03
    Vtec (Vt. Envtl. Ct. Jan. 20, 2006) (Wright, J.).1 Against this background, we need only add the
    following facts, which we understand to be undisputed unless otherwise noted below:
    1
    The January 20, 2006 Order was amended on April 28, 2006 in response to a motion to reconsider or alter filed by
    ANR. See Agency Natural Res. v. Fern Hill Farm, Ltd., No. 129-8-03 Vtec (Vt. Envtl. Ct. April 28, 2006) (Wright,
    J.). However, the revised decision did not implicate the Work Plan, but rather clarified a penalty provision unrelated
    to this appeal.
    1
    1.        On July 13, 2006, in response to the January 20, 2006 Order, Fern Hill Farm submitted its
    Work Plan to the ANR Waste Management Division. The Work Plan was prepared by an
    engineering firm retained by Fern Hill Farm. The Work Plan provided a framework for
    investigating possible environmental contaminants that may be leaching from the farm dump
    site, via either ground or surface waters.
    2.        Because the pre- and post-1991 waste was buried in the same vertical column and was
    located along the same groundwater flow path, the Work Plan proposed to evaluate the entire
    body of buried solid waste as one risk element.          The Work Plan proposed to install four
    monitoring wells at varying depths near the boundary of the farm dump and then to conduct
    groundwater sampling at the four wells.
    3.        The groundwater sampling plan had various parameters to detect a variety of possible
    contaminants, including heavy metals, volatile organic compounds, semi-volatile organic
    compounds, polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, and other contaminant indicators. Also, the
    Work Plan proposed to conduct a “Sensitive Receptor Survey” in order to evaluate any
    contamination based on the groundwater flow direction, nearby potable wells, the basements of
    nearby structures, and the nearby surface waters.
    4.        After the collection of data, the Work Plan proposed the submission of a comprehensive
    report describing the results of this preliminary evaluation and recommendations for appropriate
    follow-up steps. The Work Plan did not exclude the possibility that its operation may result in a
    requirement that some or all of the buried waste be removed and disposed of in an off-site
    certified waste disposal facility.
    5.        On October 2, 2006, the ANR Waste Management Division reviewed the proposed Work
    Plan and concluded that it “cannot approve the proposed work plan for clean-up since it does not
    propose any clean-up of illegally disposed solid waste.”         Letter from Barb Schwendtner,
    Compliance Specialist, ANR Solid Waste Program, to Anthony Stout, Senior Planner, Heindel &
    Noyes, at 1 (Oct. 2, 2006). Ms. Schwendtner stated that “[w]aste—except for IWMEA2 eligible
    wastes such as concrete and brick—cannot remain in place without a solid waste certification
    (required by 10 V.S.A. § 6605(a)(1)). . . . The site does not meet the standards of the Solid
    Waste Management Rules required for approval of a discrete disposal facility.” Id. ANR then
    2
    Insignificant Waste Management Event Approval.
    2
    directed Fern Hill Farm to “submit a clean-up and disposal plan that complies with the Agency’s
    interpretation of the Judge’s [January 20, 2006 Order].” Id.
    6.     On October 31, 2006, Fern Hill Farm—through its consulting engineers—sent a letter to
    ANR, requesting reconsideration of the denial of the proposed Work Plan. Fern Hill Farm
    indicated that under its interpretation of the January 20, 2006 Order, “leaving waste in place may
    be an acceptable remedial action, based on proper scientific analysis, without the need to obtain a
    Solid Waste Certification.” Letter from Anthony Stout, Senior Planner, Heindel & Noyes, to P.
    Howard Flanders, Dir., Waste Mgmt. Div., ANR, at 1 (Oct. 31, 2006).
    7.     On December 22, 2006, in response to Fern Hill Farm’s request for reconsideration, ANR
    denied the request and reiterated its policy requiring all non-IWMEA eligible materials to be
    removed and disposed of at a certified disposal facility.
    8.     On January 17, 2007, Fern Hill Farm—through its consulting engineers—sent a letter to
    the Commissioner of the Department of Environmental Conservation (“DEC”) to serve as an
    informal appeal of the earlier decisions from the ANR Waste Management Division. The letter
    generally reiterated many of the same arguments that Fern Hill Farm posited previously.
    9.     On May 11, 2007, the DEC Deputy Commissioner responded to Fern Hill Farm’s letter
    by again rejecting its Work Plan, based on ANR policy. The Deputy Commissioner stated that
    “[t]he Solid Waste Program Compliance Procedure . . . requires that ‘[s]olid waste stored or
    disposed outside of a certified solid waste management facility shall be removed and disposed
    [of] at a certified facility, and evidence of disposal at an approved facility is required to be
    submitted.’”   Letter from Justin Johnson, DEC Deputy Comm’r, to Anthony Stout, Senior
    Planner, Heindel & Noyes, at 1 (May 11, 2007).
    10.    Meanwhile, Fern Hill Farm had been working on completing the sensitive receptor
    investigation as described in the Work Plan. In March 2007, Fern Hill Farm’s consulting
    engineers presented their client with a report of the sensitive receptor investigation. The report
    described the methods used and data gathered on and around the farm dump and concluded that
    there were no current air quality or ground or surface water quality impacts from the farm dump.
    Discussion
    Fern Hill Farm moved for summary judgment on all of the issues raised in its Statement
    of Questions, which generally asks whether ANR summarily denied the Work Plan without
    considering its merits, in contravention of the January 20, 2006 Order. The Agency opposed the
    3
    motion and asserted that the Work Plan was rejected because it failed to comply with ANR
    policy and the January 20, 2006 Order.
    In this de novo appeal, summary judgment under V.R.C.P. 56(c) is appropriate only
    “when there are no genuine issues of material fact and, viewing the evidence in a light most
    favorable to the non-moving party, the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.”
    In re Carter, 
    2004 VT 21
    , ¶ 6, 
    176 Vt. 322
     (citing Sabia v. Neville, 
    165 Vt. 515
    , 523 (1996)).
    We review the pending motion in this light.
    We view the main issue in this de novo appeal as not being a broad substantive question,
    but rather a narrow procedural question. That is, we are not evaluating whether the Work Plan is
    an appropriate vehicle to remove illegal waste from the farm dump, but rather whether ANR
    acted appropriately when it declined to review the substance of the Work Plan. The issue, as
    framed in this new docket, is fully cognizant of the directives of the January 20, 2006 Order.
    We first note that the January 20, 2006 Order was not appealed and became final.3 Thus,
    that decision is binding insofar as the doctrine of collateral estoppel (now known as issue
    preclusion) applies. Issue preclusion prevents re-litigation of a factual or legal issue that was
    decided in earlier litigation that is now final, was necessary to the disposition of that litigation,
    and included the party against whom preclusion is sought. See, e.g., In re T.C., 
    2007 VT 115
    ,
    ¶ 20, 
    182 Vt. 467
     (citing Scott v. City of Newport, 
    2004 VT 64
    , ¶ 8, 
    177 Vt. 491
     (2004)). The
    doctrine applies when all five of the following criteria are met:
    (1) preclusion is asserted against one who was a party . . . in the earlier action; (2)
    the issue was resolved by a final judgment on the merits; (3) the issue is the same
    [in both actions]; (4) there was a full and fair opportunity to litigate the issue in
    the earlier action; and (5) applying preclusion . . . is fair.
    Trepanier v. Getting Organized, Inc., 
    155 Vt. 259
    , 265 (1990).
    All five factors are met in this case: the parties are the same; the earlier decision resulted
    in a final judgment on the merits; both actions involve the same enforcement action against Fern
    Hill Farm; both parties had a full and fair opportunity to litigate the issue in the earlier merits
    hearing; and it is fair to bind the parties to the terms of the unappealed January 20, 2006 Order.
    Thus, although ANR correctly argues here that the Court does not have the authority in this
    proceeding to modify ANR policies and regulations, the Court is charged here with determining
    3
    Although the Agency filed a motion to reconsider a penalty provision of the January 20, 2006 Order, the Agency’s
    motion did not ask this Court to reconsider the language addressing the Work Plan. See footnote 1, above.
    4
    whether the ANR determination that gave rise to this appeal conformed with the January 20,
    2006 Order. We conclude that the ANR determination conflicts with the 2006 Order.
    Because the January 20, 2006 Order is binding upon the parties to this dispute, our first
    step in this inquiry is to look at the language of that Order. In the January 20, 2006 Order, this
    Court generally affirmed the ANR Administrative Order issued against Fern Hill Farm relating
    to its illegal dump. However, the Court did modify the Administrative Order in some respects.
    Specifically, due to the practical difficulty of distinguishing between waste dumped before July
    1, 1991 (exempted waste), and waste dumped after July 1, 1991 (non-exempted waste),4 the
    Court amended Paragraph C of the Administrative Order so that it read as follows (with the
    underlined sections representing the Court additions):
    No later than sixty (60) consecutive calendar days following the effective date of
    this Order, Respondent Fern Hill Farm, LTD shall require the hired consultant to
    submit a work plan for clean up of the site including proposals for any appropriate
    removal of material placed in the site after July 1, 1991, and including proposals
    for approval of burial of any of the material in the site to the Solid Waste
    Management Program (SWMP) for approval. The submitted plan should provide
    for proper disposal of all solid waste removed from the site at a Vermont certified
    disposal or treatment facility, or an out of state disposal and treatment facility
    approved by the SWMP, and for the inspection and documentation of the clean up
    by the consultant. Reasons shall be stated for disapproval of any element of the
    proposed plan, and Respondents may apply to the Secretary for review of any
    such decision under the Agency’s internal administrative procedures.
    January 20, 2006 Order at 17.
    Implicit in this Court’s decision to modify the original ANR Administrative Order is a
    determination that further provisions were needed to satisfy the obligation that “the remedial
    provisions of the order must allow the consultant to distinguish between household waste
    disposed legally at the site during the period in which farm dumps were exempt, prior to July 1,
    1991, and other waste that may be required to be removed.” 
    Id.
     at 12 (citing Agency of Natural
    Res. v. Towns, 
    173 Vt. 552
    , 555–57 (2001)). “Similarly, the remedial provisions of the order
    should allow the consultant to analyze whether any of the waste in the site may qualify to be left
    in place or buried.” 
    Id.
     (citing 10 V.S.A. § 8012(b)(2)). As noted earlier, these portions of the
    4
    Vermont Solid Waste Management Rules § 301(b)(1) exempted from regulation non-hazardous residential solid
    waste (generated by the owner at the site) that was already in the ground in 1989, and that exemption continued for
    two years. Thus, pre-1991 non-hazardous residential waste is exempt from regulation, and post-1991 non-hazardous
    residential waste is subject to regulation. The Fern Hill Farm dump site received waste for roughly fifty years
    before 1991 and for around ten years after 1991 (meaning through 2001). See January 20, 2006 Order at 3–4.
    5
    January 20, 2006 Order were not appealed and became final. Fern Hill Farm viewed this
    language as a mandate requiring an appropriate work plan be submitted that distinguishes
    between exempt and non-exempt waste and the remediation plan for that waste.
    Conversely, ANR argues that the above passages are ambiguous because they “refer[] to
    th[e] fact that a determination was to be made regarding whether any of the wastes had been
    deposited prior to 1991, and whether that pre-1991 waste could QUALIFY to be left in place or
    buried.” Agency Mem. at 3 (emphasis in original). ANR’s assertion of ambiguity in the 2006
    Order is based on a strict adherence to Agency policy: that the obligation to remove illegally
    disposed wastes is unconditional and that such waste must be removed and properly disposed of
    off-site, rather than simply buried in place. The Agency cites first to its Solid Waste Program
    Compliance Procedures that have been in place since 1997 and then to 10 V.S.A. § 6605, which
    generally requires that waste, except insignificant waste, may not be disposed of or remain in
    place at a site that does not have a solid waste management facility certification.
    While we certainly appreciate and respect the precedential authority of ANR’s
    established policies and technical judgment, and will follow applicable state statutes, we cannot
    simply defer to ANR, especially in light of this Court’s well-reasoned 2006 Order, by which the
    Court modified the applicable ANR Administrative Order. The January 20, 2006 Order made a
    specific finding that the “site had been used as a farm dump for approximately fifty years prior to
    July 1, 1991.” In light of this finding, we do not see the conflict between the 2006 Order and
    ANR policy, as any non-hazardous waste dumped before July 1, 1991 was not illegal.
    Furthermore, that 2006 Order expressly authorized submission of a work plan that recommended
    leaving certain waste buried on site, and directed ANR to give such a recommendation, if made,
    substantive consideration and to provide notice of the grounds for “disapproval.” ANR had the
    authority to appeal the January 20, 2006 Order, but instead chose not to, which we regard as a
    tacit acknowledgement that ANR is bound by the final terms of the 2006 Order.
    We do not find the January 20, 2006 Order ambiguous with respect to the possibility of
    leaving unregulated or exempt solid waste where it currently is—buried in the ground. Indeed,
    the January 20, 2006 Order noted the possibility that in this particular case (based on a number of
    factors), even the illegally dumped waste might be allowed to remain buried, if done in accord
    with an approved and environmentally sound work plan, after ANR’s substantive review and
    approval. We understand that use of the phrase “appropriate removal” in the January 20, 2006
    6
    Order implies that such removal might not be appropriate—that leaving certain materials buried
    might be sound—depending on what other safeguards are proposed in the Work Plan. See
    January 20, 2006 Order at 17.5 The January 20, 2006 Order also made it clear that ANR had an
    obligation to provide its reasoning for rejecting any portion of the proposed Work Plan submitted
    by Fern Hill Farm.
    We therefore conclude that ANR had a duty to evaluate the merits of the Work Plan in
    light of the 2006 Order, and then proceed accordingly. Rather than carry out this duty, ANR
    summarily denied the Work Plan because it did not adhere to established ANR policy. ANR’s
    categorical rejection might be appropriate when ANR is evaluating other work plans, but it was
    inappropriate here because it ignored this Court’s explicit amendment of the original
    Administrative Order. That is, in this particular case, the Court provided Fern Hill Farm with
    flexibility to formulate a work plan that would determine the appropriate measures to remediate
    the possible environmental degradation from the farm dump, to achieve the intended result of
    protecting Vermont’s environment, while at the same time not saddling Fern Hill Farm with the
    expense of extracting materials that were not illegally disposed or that are not appropriate for
    removal.     If the Work Plan was not likely to achieve this intended result, ANR has the
    opportunity to review it and make reasoned explanations and modifications to the Work Plan.
    Nothing in our Decision here should be read as foreclosing ANR’s right, after substantive
    review, to require that certain portions of the farm dump be excavated so that illegally disposed
    waste can be removed.            Nor does the present ruling foreclose ANR from requiring other
    remediation activities to be undertaken if the need for such activities is shown. However, given
    this Court’s January 20, 2006 ruling, ANR needs a material foundation in order to make such
    directives, and must provide reasons for rejecting any portion of the proposed Work Plan. In this
    particular case, where this Court has already issued a ruling, ANR does not have the discretion to
    reject the Work Plan out of hand solely because it is not consistent with established ANR policy.
    The January 20, 2006 Order specifically required “[r]easons [to] be stated for disapproval of any
    5
    We note that our Decision here is based upon this Court’s fact-specific ruling on the merits, as memorialized by the
    January 20, 2006 Order. Outside of the facts of this particular case, nothing in this Decision should be seen as
    setting a general precedent of allowing illegally dumped waste to remain buried, and nothing in this Decision should
    be seen as overturning any ANR policy that categorically requires such waste to be removed. Rather, this Decision
    is limited to the specific facts that were previously evaluated by this Court on January 20, 2006 Order, and to our
    interpretation of that Order in light of the parties’ actions since then.
    7
    element of the proposed plan.” To ignore the modifications this Court made to the original
    Administrative Order appears unjustified on the record now before us.
    This Court previously exercised its discretion and authority under 10 V.S.A. § 8012 to
    modify the original ANR Administrative Order; that January 20, 2006 Order was not appealed
    and is now binding on the parties’ further actions, rights, and responsibilities. Because we
    conclude, as a matter of law, that ANR failed to review Fern Hill Farm’s Work Plan in
    accordance with the January 20, 2006 Order, we remand this matter back to ANR, with the
    directive that it evaluate the merits of the Fern Hill Farm Work Plan.
    Conclusion
    For all the reasons more fully discussed above, we GRANT Fern Hill Farm’s motion for
    summary judgment, as we have concluded that, even when viewing the material facts in a light
    most favorable to ANR, the Work Plan was categorically rejected without a review of its
    substance.
    This concludes the proceedings before this Court in this appeal. A Judgment Order
    accompanies this Decision.
    Done at Berlin, Vermont this 12th day of December 2008.
    ______________________________________
    Thomas S. Durkin, Environmental Judge
    8
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 121-06-07 Vtec

Filed Date: 12/12/2008

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 4/24/2018