UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT NORTHERN DISTRICT OF GEORGIA ATLANTA DIVISION THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA AND ) CIVIL ACTION FILE THE STATE OF GEORGIA, ) 1:98-CV-1956-TWT Plaintiffs, ) ) v. ) THE CITY OF ATLANTA, ) Defendant. ) MEMORANDUM IN SUPPORT FOR THE RECONSIDERATION OF THE UNDERGROUND INJECTION CONTROL PROGRAM COME NOW , NOCRAP (Newly Organized Citizens Requesting Aquifer Protection); the Little Mountain Water Association, Inc.; and the South River Watershed Alliance, Inc.; previously before this Court on September 20, 2012, as “Commenters” in Federal Register Notice for this Court to consider the approval of the Second Amendments to the First Amended Consent Decree (hereinafter referred to collectively as "the Commenters"), and pursuant to the Court's grant of the Commenters' request to brief the Court on the issue of Georgia's Safe Drinking Water Act/Underground Injection Control program, submit this Memorandum. I. Introduction . This Court entered the First Amended Consent Decree between the United States of America, the State of Georgia and the City of Atlanta on December 20, 1999, acknowledging the parties' agreement to undertake certain comprehensive remedial measures to bring the City's sewer system into compliance with the Clean Water Act and 1
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October 16, 2012-BRIEF submitted to Judge Thomas W. Thrash
This is the brief that attorney Hal Wright submitted to Judge Thomas W. Thrash.
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UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURTNORTHERN DISTRICT OF GEORGIA
ATLANTA DIVISION
THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA AND ) CIVIL ACTION FILETHE STATE OF GEORGIA, ) 1:98-CV-1956-TWT
Plaintiffs, ))
v. )THE CITY OF ATLANTA, )
Defendant. )
MEMORANDUM IN SUPPORT FOR THE RECONSIDERATION OF THE
UNDERGROUND INJECTION CONTROL PROGRAM
COME NOW, NOCRAP (Newly Organized Citizens Requesting Aquifer
Protection); the Little Mountain Water Association, Inc.; and the South River Watershed
Alliance, Inc.; previously before this Court on September 20, 2012, as “Commenters” in
Federal Register Notice for this Court to consider the approval of the Second
Amendments to the First Amended Consent Decree (hereinafter referred to collectively
as "the Commenters"), and pursuant to the Court's grant of the Commenters' request to
brief the Court on the issue of Georgia's Safe Drinking Water Act/Underground Injection
Control program, submit this Memorandum.
I. Introduction.
This Court entered the First Amended Consent Decree between the United States
of America, the State of Georgia and the City of Atlanta on December 20, 1999,
acknowledging the parties' agreement to undertake certain comprehensive remedial
measures to bring the City's sewer system into compliance with the Clean Water Act and
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the Georgia water Quality Control Act.
By letter dated July 20, 2001, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
and the Georgia Environmental Protection Division (EPD) authorized the City of
Atlanta's Remedial Measures Plan subject to several comments. Letter attached as
Exhibit “A”. First and foremost, the EPA/EPD stated “[t]he tunnels shall be sited,
designed and constructed to minimize the infiltration of groundwater into the tunnels
and the ex filtration of combined sewage out of the tunnels.” Moreover, EPA/EPD
clearly directed the City that its “[d]ecisions regarding the choice of routes, tunnel
boring activities (including ground water withdrawal and discharge), lining,
maintenance, and operation of the tunnels must ensure that these actions do not pose
an endangerment to public health through the introduction and emplacement of
contaminants into underground sources of drinking water. Emphasis supplied.
This letter was copied to the U.S. Dept. of Justice, the Dept. of Law for the State of
Georgia, and to the Upper Chattahoochee Riverkeeper and its legal counsel.
On August 14, 2002, a consultant (named redacted by US- DOJ in FOIA request)
“opposed to tunnels as a means to store and treat wastewater effluent” wrote the
Assistant Attorney General concerning the Proposed Amendments to First Amended
Consent Decree related to the proposed change of the Nancy Creek Tunnel from a force
main to a tunnel. Amid the extensive comments addressing why “this proposed change
from the Force Main to the tunnel option is a severe environmental liability that must be
fully investigated prior to approving it as a means to attain the goals of the Clean Water
Act” , the commenter clearly states that “one of two other aspects of the Water Quality
Control Act that should be looked into is Section 391-3-6-.13, Underground Injection
Control. This tunnel may fall under the conditions and definitions of that section.” The
commenter concludes by asking the Attorney General to postpone the construction of the
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tunnel for the sake of the community and the environment until “[a]n investigation by
this office into the potential inclusion of the tunnels as an Injection Well [pursuant to the
rules and regulations of the Georgia Water Quality Control Act], the impacts of that
regulation on the environment, and the comparison of the US EPA's Underground
Injection Control Program.”
Subsequently, on or about January 30, 2003, the Plaintiffs, United States of
America and the State of Georgia submitted their Plaintiffs' Memorandum in Support of
Proposed Amendments to First Amended Consent Decree. The genesis of the
amendments was the Plaintiffs' belief that the proposed new tunnel projects offered
“superior approaches” to the previously planned diversion projects. The parties urged
the Court to adopt the proposed amendments as a better approach for protecting the
public health and the environment while advancing the objectives of the Clean Water
Act specifically the chief objective of the Clean Water Act, 33 U .S .C . § 1251, “to
restore and maintain the chemical, physical and biological integrity of the Nation's
waters ." The State of Georgia and the United States concluded that the Proposed
Amendments are “fair, reasonable, consistent with the mandate of the Clean Water Act
and the Georgia Water Quality Control Act, and protective of public health, welfare, and
the environment.”
Plaintiffs' Memorandum affirms the goal in administering the Consent Decree is
to assure “that the City of Atlanta achieve compliance with the Clean Water Act and the
Georgia Water Quality Control Act” consistent with applicable federal and state laws
and regulations as is required in Section XV of the Decree. In their primary response to
the public comments, Plaintiffs incorrectly opine “As will be shown, the comments do
not suggest that the tunnel proposal will not achieve compliance with the Clean Water
Act and the Georgia Water Quality Control Act.” In fact, Plaintiffs fail to address the
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above referenced August 14, 2002, comments of “whether the tunnel falls under the
purview of the underground injection control provisions of the Water Quality Control
Act” by summarily misrepresenting to this Court that “this is not an underground
injection well and therefore the comment does not fall within this purview.”
Beginning in June, 2007, Robert Schreiber contacted the U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency and this Court seeking clarification regarding EPA's policies relating
to waste water conveyance tunnels as underground injection wells subject to regulation
under the Safe Drinking Water Act. From this early date Mr. Schreiber was informed by
EPA simply that “because such tunnels are not intended to emplace fluids below the
surface of the ground water through a well [but] rather they are distribution systems
intended to convey waste water . . . [such] tunnels are not required to be permitted
under the UIC program.” Letter EPA Region 4, Giattina to Schreiber, Oct. 18, 2007.
On subsequent occasions Mr. Schreiber and others (including a twenty two
member citizens group, and NOCRAP) submitted to this Court, the U.S. EPA, and the
Georgia EPD a detailed legal opinion from this attorney dated November 24, 2008, to
the effect that the activity of emplacing waste water through a shaft into subsurface
tunnels is underground injection for which a permit is required under the Safe Drinking
Water Act and the Georgia Water Quality Control Act and its implementing rules and
regulations. See, e.g. Letter from Schreiber to Hon. Judge Thomas V. Thrash dated
December 10, 2008; Letter from twenty-two citizens to Hon. Judge Thomas V. Thrash
date June 14, 2009; and Letter from Schreiber to Hon. Judge Thomas V. Thrash dated
August 3, 2009.
On two occasions, the U.S. EPA, through Mr. Weinischke with the U.S.- DOJ,
offered but a tacit response to Mr. Wright's legal opinion; See Letter from Weinischke to
Hon. Judge Thomas V. Thrash dated January 9, 2009 (“After again reviewing Mr.
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Schreiber's December 10, 2008 letter and the attached letter from Attorney Hal F.
Wright, EPA's position as set forth in its October 18, 2007 letter [from Giattina to
Schreiber] remains the same.”); letter from Weinischke to Hon. Judge William V. Thrash
dated July 29, 2009 (“[A]s we pointed out in our January 9 letter to your Honor, . . . EPA
went further by writing directly to Mr. Schreiber . . . to address the specific concerns he
raised concerning the tunnels.”); this, despite the fact that on each of the above
occasions, the EPA and DOJ were requested to specifically respond to the issues
addressed by Mr. Wright's legal analysis with a substantive legal response (i.e. ,
something more than the semantic, tautological, and evasive legal conclusion being
offered through the Giattina letter and being parroted by EPA, DOJ and others).
On August 10, 2012, Plaintiffs filed their Plaintiffs' Memorandum in Support of
Entry of Second Amendment to First Amended Consent Decree, affirming [t]he chief
objective of the Clean Water Act,33 U.S.C. § 1251, is 'to restore and maintain the
chemical, physical and biological integrity of the Nation's waters.'" In their memo, the
State of Georgia and the United States again affirmed the Proposed Amendments “are
fair, reasonable, consistent with the mandate of the Clean Water Act and the Georgia
Water Quality Control Act, and protective of public health, welfare, and the
environment” repeating “that the Proposed Amendments are appropriate under the
circumstances and consistent with the goal of achieving compliance with the Clean
Water Act and the Georgia Water Quality Control Act.”
NOCRAP (Newly Organized Citizens Requesting Aquifer Protection), the Little
Mountain Water Association, Inc., and the South River Watershed Alliance, Inc.
submitted comments to the DOJ on the Second Amendment to First Amended Consent
Decree through their attorney, Hal Wright. The essence of these comments were: in
approving the proposed Second Amendments, the Court must first assure that both the
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amendments and the underlying consent decree are lawful, specifically in keeping with
the Safe Drinking Water Act; because the City of Atlanta's waste water storage and
conveyance activities are considered "underground injection" activity it is subject to
regulation under the SDWA's Underground Injection program as specifically interpreted
by the 11th Circuit in LEAF I; EPA's opinion that because tunnels are not “intended” to
emplace fluids below ground they do not qualify as “underground injection” requiring a
permit is erroneous and not in keeping with the plain meaning of the statute; and the
Court owes EPA no deference on this matter because the statutory language is clear and
unambiguous in establishing that the subsurface emplacement of waste water into
cavities or passages in the ground through a well is “underground injection” for which a
permit is required under SDWA/UIC. Plaintiffs' response to Commenters (and to this
Court) was again the conclusory evasive (and false) phrase: “The Plaintiffs have already
responded in detail to all of those arguments and have not changed their position that the
commenters are wrong.”
A motion hearing was held on September 20, 2012, for this Court to consider the
approval of the Second Amendments to the First Amended Consent Decree. At the
conclusion of the the comments by the attorneys representing both Plaintiffs and the
Defendant City, Mr. Wright was allowed by the Court to speak. Mr. Wright's comments
were directed at the public interest component of the Court's approval of the consent
decree and the necessity that the Court assure the terms of the decree, including the
amendments thereto, do not violate the law.
At the conclusion of Mr. Wright's remark's, counsel for Plaintiffs were allowed to
respond and this Court gave its opinion as well.
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MR. WEINISCHKE: Your Honor, just with respect to Mr. Wright's comments, the Court has seen our responses to those comments previously. . . .
We also don't believe that procedurally Mr. Wright is properly before this Court. The case that they relied on frequently is the LEAF case before the 11th Circuit, and in that case the issue that was presented to the Court was whether EPA properly denied a petition to withdraw the State's – I think it was the State of Alabama's Safe Drinking Water Act authority. And that's how that case got before the 11th Circuit.If there are parties that want to challenge the State of Georgia's authority to regulate under the Safe Drinking Water Act and specifically the UIC program that's part of the Safe Drinking Water Act, there are mechanisms to do that.
William Weinischke, U.S. Dept. of Justice, Counsel to the U.S. EPA,Transcript of the Motion Hearing Before the Honorable Thomas W. Thrash, U.S. District Court Judge; N. Dist. GA. ; Case No. 1:98-CV-1956-TWT; September 20,2012; p. 27.
THE COURT: Well, I consider the safe drinking water issue completely separate from the issue that's before us today which is do I approve or do I disapprove the proposed amendments to the First Amended Consent Decree.
Transcript at p. 28.
MR. HENNELLY: All of those entities [state regulatory agencies] have reviewed the issue and determined that the position of Mr. Schreiber is not supportable under the existing law.
John Hennelly, Office of the Attorney General, State of Georgia, Counsel to Ga. EPD; Transcript at 28.
THE COURT: Well, again, I'm not going to comment on whether Mr. Schreiber and Mr. Wright's position is correct or incorrect. I'm simply going to say it's a separate issue from what I'm here today to decide in my opinion.
Transcript at 28.
THE COURT: It was the biggest case on my docket 15 years ago in terms of the impact on the community and impact on the environment, remains the biggest case on my docket 15 years later. And so I'm not going to be a rubber stamp. But I am
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going to give appropriate deference to the expertise of theagencies, the EPA and others.
Transcript at 31-32.
THE COURT: And,finally, I agree with the State of Georgia and the United States' position that the proposed amendments are fair, reasonable, consistent with the mandate of the Clean Water Act and the Georgia Water Quality Control Act and protect public health, welfare and the environment.
Transcript at 32-33.
The above comments from the hearing highlight three issues which are addressed
below. 1. Is the Safe Drinking Water Act a separate issue from the approval of the
consent decree and amendments thereto? 2. Is the case Legal Envtl. Assistance
Found., Inc. v. EPA, 118 F.3d 1467(11th Cir. 1997) (“LEAF-I”) applicable to the current
case? 3. What effect will not deciding the issue of “underground injection” have on the
legacy of the Riverkeeper v City of Atlanta case?
II. The Safe Drinking Water Act (SDWA), Underground Injection Control program, is an essential tool for achieving the purposes of the Clean Water Act and the Georgia Water Quality Control Act and therefore should be considered by the Court in approving the second amendments to the Consent Decree.
This Court granted Plaintiffs' motion affirming the amendments in part because it
“agree[d] with the State of Georgia and the United States' position that the proposed
amendments are fair, reasonable, consistent with the mandate of the Clean Water Act and
the Georgia Water Quality Control Act and protect public health, welfare and the
environment.” Transcript at 32-33. The Court expressed its view that the review and
approval of the proposed amendments was a separate and distinct matter from the issue
Commenters raise before the court of the applicability of the Underground Injection
program of the Safe Drinking Water Act to the City of Atlanta's activity of emplacing
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wastewater in subsurface tunnels.
It is argued below, with all due respect to this Court, that because the UIC
program is a key component of protecting the public health, welfare and environment
under the GWQCA, that the City's non-compliance with the UIC program is not only
relevant, but serves as a legitimate basis for this Court to declare that the amendments
and the consent decree are unreasonable, not legal, and not consistent with the mandate
of the GWQCA.
The federal Clean Water Act (CWA) (33 USC § 1251 et seq.) and the
corresponding Georgia Water Quality Control Act (GWQCA) (OCGA § 12-5-20 et seq.)
including the implementing Georgia Comprehensive Rules and Regulations (Ga. Comp.
R. & Regs.)( r. 391-3-6-.01 et seq.) regulate the discharge of pollutants into the waters of
the state of Georgia.
A. The purpose of the SDWA is to protect public health by protecting underground sources of drinking water from contamination.
The Safe Drinking Water Act was passed in 1974 as part of the overall attempt of
the federal government to protect the nation's waters. The Act delegates primary
enforcement responsibility to the states. Each state was required to submit for approval
by the EPA an "underground injection control program" designed "to assure that
underground injection will not endanger drinking water sources." 42 U.S.C. § 300h-1(a)-
(b). U.S. v. Overholt, 307 F.3d 1231 (10th Cir., 2002).
The SDWA establishes a regulatory mechanism to insure the overall quality of
publicly supplied drinking water. Part C of the SDWA (the underground injection
control program section) establishes a regulatory program designed to prevent the
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endangerment of underground drinking water sources, now and in the future. As in the
Clean Water Act itself, Part C envisions a joint federal-state system to regulate the
discharge of pollutants by injection wells into underground water systems. The EPA is
directed to promulgate regulations establishing the minimum requirements for state
underground injection control programs. Section 1421, 42 U.S.C. Sec. 300h. The states
may impose requirements more stringent than the federal requirements.
The 10th Circuit Court of Appeals in Phillips Petroleum Co. v. U.S. E.P.A., 803
F.2d 545, 555 (C.A.10, 1986) provides a succinct analysis of the purpose of this
legislation by citing to the report of the House Committee on Interstate and Foreign
Admin.News 1974, p. 6454 which stated: "[T]he purpose of the legislation is to assure
that the water supply systems serving the public meet minimum national standards for
protection of public health.”
“Indeed, the legislative history indicates that the phrase "underground injection
which endangers drinking water sources" was to have the broadest applicability:
It is the Committee's intent that the definition be liberally construed so as to effectuate the preventative and public health protective purposes of the bill. The Committee seeks to protect not only currently-used sources of drinking water, but also potential drinking water sources for the future....
The Committee was concerned that its definition of 'endangering drinking water sources'
also be construed liberally. Injection which causes or increases contamination of such
sources may fall within this definition even if the amount of contaminant which may
enter the water source would not by itself cause the maximum allowable levels to be
exceeded. The definition would be met if injected material were not completely
contained in the well, and if it may enter either a present or potential drinking water
source, and if it (or some form into which it might be converted) may pose a threat to
human health or render the water source unfit for human consumption.” Natural
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Resources Defense Council, Inc. v. U.S.E.P.A., 824 F.2d 1258, 1271 (C.A.1, 1987) citing
B. The Georgia Water Quality Control Act is specifically meant to protect Georgia's ground water resources including underground sources of drinking water.
“Congress has shown its high regard for the states' environmental concerns by
providing that the CWA, through the NPDES permit system, will enforce state water
quality standards stricter than the minimums required by the CWA.” Chevron U.S.A.,
Inc. v. Hammond, 726 F.2d 483, 490 (C.A.9 (Alaska), 1984). The CWA, 33 U.S.C. Sec.
1311(b)(1)(C), requires that “there shall be achieved [within state waters] ... any more
stringent limitation, including those necessary to meet water quality standards ...
established pursuant to any state law or regulation ….”. Similarly, under the
underground injection control program of the SDWA, the state may impose requirements
more stringent than the federal requirements. Indeed the regulatory scheme of the CWA
and the SDWA merges federal water pollution control requirements with state water
quality standards and policy. Within this framework, the Georgia Water Quality
Control Act (GWQCA) was passed “to restore and maintain water purity and supplies
within the state and require reasonable treatment of sewage, industrial wastes, and other
wastes prior to their discharge into the waters of the state.” O.C.G.A. 12-5-21(a);
Franklin County v. Fieldale Farms Corp., 270 Ga. 272, 276, 507 S.E.2d 460 (Ga.,
1998).
1. Georgia specifically intends to protect its “subsurface waters” for the well-being of the people of Georgia.
Establishing that the well-being of “[t]he people of the State of Georgia are
dependent upon the rivers, streams, lakes, and subsurface waters of the state for public
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and private water supply and for agricultural, industrial, and recreational uses” the
Georgia General Assembly adopted the GWQCA for the expressed purposes that the
“water resources of the state shall be utilized prudently for the maximum benefit of the
people, in order to restore and maintain a reasonable degree of purity in the waters of the
state and an adequate supply of such waters, and to require where necessary reasonable
usage of the waters of the state and reasonable treatment of sewage, industrial wastes,
and other wastes prior to their discharge into such waters.” GWQCA, O.C.G.A. 12-5-
21(a).
"Water" or "waters of the State" are defined broadly to mean “any and all rivers,
streams, creeks, branches, lakes, reservoirs, ponds, drainage systems, springs, wells,
wetlands, and all other bodies of surface or subsurface water, natural or artificial, lying
within or forming a part of the boundaries of the State which are not entirely confined
and retained completely upon the property of a single individual, partnership, or
corporation.” GWQCA; Ga. Comp. R. & Regs. r. 391-3-6-.03(3)(n).
2. Georgia protects all state waters, including subsurface waters, from contamination from materials associated with municipal sewage.
In order to meet the mandate in the GWQCA to restore and maintain the
“reasonable degree of purity” in the waters of the state so that these waters may be
“utilized prudently for the maximum benefit of the people”, Georgia, through the
GWQCA, has developed certain criteria deemed necessary and applicable to all waters
of the State:
(a) All waters shall be free from materials associated with municipal or domestic sewage, industrial waste or any other waste which will settle to form sludge deposits that become putrescent, unsightly or otherwise objectionable.(c) All waters shall be free from material related to municipal, industrial or other discharges which produce turbidity, color, odor or other objectionable conditions
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which interfere with legitimate water uses.
GWQCA; Ga. Comp. R. & Regs. r. 391-3-6-.03(5)(a)&(c); See also. O.C.G.A. 12-5-29 (a).
3. The UIC program is an integral part of Georgia Water Quality Control Act.
In 1974, Congress enacted the Safe Drinking Water Act (“SDWA”), Pub. L. No.
93-523, 88 Stat. 1660 (codified as amended at 42 U.S.C. §§ 300f et seq. (1988)), which
empowers the Environmental Protection Agency (“EPA”) to regulate the underground
injection of wastewater. The SDWA established a regulatory program to be administered
by the EPA or a state if the EPA approves the state underground injection control
(“UIC”) program. Congress established several minimum requirements for state UIC
programs, including the requirement that underground injection be prohibited unless
authorized by permit.
The Georgia UIC program was approved by EPA on April 19, 1984. 49 Fed. Reg.
15553 (1984). See 40 C.F.R. § 147.550 (2007). Included in Georgia’s approved UIC
program is Ga. Comp. R. & Regs. r. 391-3-6-.13., a part of the rules and regulations
promulgated in furtherance of the purposes of the Georgia's Water Quality Control Act,
Ga. Comp. R. & Regs. r. 391-3-6-.01 et seq.
Georgia's UIC program, consistent with the purposes and scope of the GWQCA,
is a program to protect the subsurface waters of the State from contamination including
from municipal sewage. OCGA 12-5-21(a); Ga. Comp. R. & Regs. r. 391-3-6-.13; Ga.
Comp. R. & Regs. r. 391-3-6-.03(3)(n); Ga. Comp. R. & Regs. r. 391-3-6-.03(5)(a)&(c).
Indeed, the State of Georgia's UIC program is one method or tool for achieving “the
“mandate of the Clean Water Act and the Georgia Water Quality Control Act and [to]
protect public health, welfare and the environment.”
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C. The protection of underground sources of drinking water from the subsurface emplacement of wastewater through a shaft (well) is a matter which this Court should consider as part of its review of the proposed second amendments to the First Amended Consent Decree.
Prior to approving the proposed Second Amendment the Court should first assure
that the settlement the parties have reached is legal and the actions to be taken pursuant
to the decree are consistent with federal law.
In deciding whether to approve a consent decree, the district court mustevaluate whether the decree is fair, reasonable, and lawful.” Stovall v. City ofCocoa, Fla., 117 F.3d 1238, 1244 (11th Cir. 1997). In other words, districtcourts should approve consent decrees so long as they are notunconstitutional, unlawful, unreasonable, or contrary to public policy. Inmaking this determination the district court must first determine whether theconsent decree "represent[s] a reasonable factual and legal determinationbased on the record, and ensure that it [does] not violate federal law.
Howard v. McLucas, 871 F.2d 1000, 1008 (11th Cir.1989).
As established above, Georgia's UIC program which purpose is to “prevent
underground injection which endangers drinking water sources” is germane to the
Court's determination that the terms of the amendments (as well as the underlying
consent decree) are not “unconstitutional, unlawful, unreasonable, or contrary to public
policy.”
This Court is certainly able to further review whether the UIC rules and
regulations require the City of Atlanta to obtain a permit for the activity of emplacing
wastewater in subsurface tunnels. However, it is respectfully suggested that the Court's
position that its review and approval of the proposed amendments is a separate and
distinct matter from the applicability of the Underground Injection program of the Safe
Drinking Water Act to the City of Atlanta's activity of emplacing wastewater in
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subsurface tunnels is erroneous.
Likewise, and with the same level of respect, Commenters urge the Court to
reconsider its conclusion “that the proposed amendments are fair, reasonable, consistent
with the mandate of the Clean Water Act and the Georgia Water Quality Control Act and
protect public health, welfare and the environment” as not in keeping with spirit or
substance of the relevant laws.
III. The LEAF I case controls the analysis for determining whether the City of Atlanta's activities of emplacing waste water through a shaft into subsurface tunnels is “underground injection” regulated under the UIC program.
In responding to Mr. Wright's comments to this Court, U.S. EPA's counsel, Mr.
Weinischke, stated in part:
The case that they relied on frequently is the LEAF case before the 11th Circuit, and in that case the issue that was presented to the Court was whether EPA properly denied a petition to withdraw the State's – I think it was the State of Alabama's Safe Drinking Water Act authority.
If there are parties that want to challenge the State of Georgia's authority to regulate under the Safe Drinking Water Act and specifically the UIC program that's part of the Safe Drinking Water Act, there are mechanisms to do that.
Transcript at 28.
Because, Legal Envtl. Assistance Found., Inc. v. EPA, 118 F.3d 1467(11th Cir.
1997) (“LEAF-I”) is the foundation for the Wright legal opinion that the City of Atlanta's
activity of emplacing wastewater through a shaft (injection well) into subsurface
excavated tunnels or caverns is considered “underground injection” activity for which a
permit is required under the SDWA/UIC program, the veracity of EPA's representations
to this Court needs testing.
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A. LEAF I betray's EPA's veracity.
Contrary to EPA's representation to this Court that the issue addressed in LEAF I
dealt with LEAF's petition for withdrawing approval of the Alabama UIC program, the
Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals stated at the very outset of its opinion:
The issue in this petition for review is whether the United States EnvironmentalProtection Agency ("EPA") is legally required to regulate hydraulic fracturing, a production enhancement technique used by the oil and gas industry, under the underground injection control ("UIC") programs established pursuant to Part C of the Safe Drinking Water Act ("SDWA"), 42 U.S.C. §§ 300h to 300h-8. EPAdetermined that hydraulic fracturing does not fall within the statutory or regulatory definition of "underground injection." Because we find EPA's interpretation inconsistent with the language of the statute, we grant the petition for review and remand for further proceedings.
Clearly, EPA and its counsel could not misread this case. Indeed, as
acknowledged by Mr. Weinischke, the LEAF I case is so heavily cited in the Wright
legal opinion in support of the statutory interpretation of “underground injection” within
the context of the UIC rules that for EPA to not acknowledge that the LEAF I case
addresses the regulatory definition of “underground injection” is disingenuous.
B. The LEAF I case is central to the comments previously submitted to this Court that the City of Atlanta's activity of emplacing waste water underground is “underground injection” for which a permit is required under the UIC program.
As set forth in the Introduction, Part I, Commenters have previously raised the
question of whether the activity of emplacing wastewater through a shaft (injection well)
into subsurface excavated tunnels or caverns is considered “underground injection”
activity for which a permit is required under the SDWA/UIC program.
There are two positions put forth to answer this question. The first, held by the
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Commenters, holds that because the activity is “underground injection” a permit is
required. This position tracks the statutory language as interpreted by the 11th Circuit
Court of Appeals in its decision as set forth in Legal Envtl. Assistance Found., Inc. v.
EPA, 118 F.3d 1467(11th Cir. 1997) (“LEAF-I”) . The second position is that held by
EPA which holds that because tunnels are not intended to emplace wastewater
underground, it is not underground injection and therefore a permit is not required under
the UIC program.
Reviewing both these positions leaves no doubt that the clear statutory language
of the SDWA/UIC program requires a permit for emplacing wastewater through a shaft
(“injection well”) into a subsurface excavated tunnel (cavity).
1. A Permit is required for “Underground Injection”: the Wright AtlantaOpinion/LEAF-I.
The case for why the City of Atlanta's waste water storage activities is considered
"underground injection" activity and subject to the SDWA's UIC program is detailed in
the formal legal opinion by Hal Wright, Esq., hereinafter the “Wright Atlanta Opinion”.
As previously stated, the Wright Atlanta Opinion is substantially based in the controlling
opinion of the 11th Circuit in Legal Envtl. Assistance Found., Inc. v. EPA, 118 F.3d
1467, 1474 (11th Cir. 1997)(“LEAF-I”) (“Thus, it is clear that Congress dictated that all
underground injection be regulated under the UIC programs.”) The Wright Atlanta
Opinion concludes in part:
Untreated wastewater will be injected through the dropshafts into thesubsurface excavated tunnels. Thus, fluids will be emplaced in thesubsurface, either temporarily or permanently, by well injection.Accordingly, the owners/operators of the dropshafts are engaged in“underground injection” activities1.
1The dropshafts are also “injection wells.” Ga. Comp. R. & Regs. r.391-3-6-
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2. EPA’s erroneous opinion: tunnels are not intended to emplace fluids belowground and therefore do not qualify as “underground injection” requiring a permit.
An official of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has opined that the
emplacement of untreated wastewater in the sewer tunnels is not “underground
injection.” He wrote:
The UIC program regulates the subsurface emplacement of fluids by wellinjection. Regulations promulgated under Part C of the Safe Drinking WaterAct (SDWA) prevent underground injection from endangering undergroundsources of drinking water. Tunnels that convey sewage to a Publicly OwnedTreatment Works (POTW) for treatment do not fall within the scope of thedefinitions set forth in the regulations promulgated under Part C of theSDWA. This is because the tunnels are not intended to emplace fluids belowthe surface of the ground through a well; rather, they are distribution systemsintended to convey wastewater to POTWs from intake sites that collect bothsewer flow and flow from a treatment plant during high usage times.Therefore, wastewater conveyance tunnels are not required to be permittedunder the UIC program.
Letter from James D. Giattina, Director, Water Management Division, EPA-R4, to Robert Schreiber (Oct. 18, 2007) (emphasis added).
3. The Chevron Doctrine applied to uphold the emplacement of wastewater as “underground injection”.
“When issues of statutory construction are raised, a court must first determine
whether Congress has "directly spoken to the precise question at issue. If the intent of
Congress is clear, that is the end of the matter." Chevron, U.S.A., Inc. v. Natural Res.
Def. Council, Inc., 467 U.S. 837, 842, 104 S.Ct. 2778, 2781, 81 L.Ed.2d 694 (1984). If
Congress did not express its intent unambiguously, we defer to the agency's
.13(2)(bb) (“ a well into which fluids are being, or intended to be, injected”). Seealso 40 C.F.R. § 144.3 (“a ‘well’ into which ‘fluids’ are being injected”).
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interpretation if it "is based on a permissible construction of the statute." Legal Envtl.
Assistance Found., Inc. v. EPA, 118 F.3d 1467, 1473 (11th Cir.1997) (quoting Chevron,
467 U.S. at 843, 104 S.Ct. at 2782).” Miami Dade County v.EPA, 529 F.3d 1049, 1062
(11th Cir.1997).
a. Congressional Intent is clear and Unambiguous.
As the Court emphasized in LEAF-I, and as detailed in the Wright Atlanta
Opinion, the UIC regulations establish in clear and unambiguous language that
“‘underground injection’ means the subsurface emplacement of fluids by forcing them
into cavities and passages in the ground through a well.” Legal Envtl. Assistance
Found., Inc. v.EPA, 118 F.3d at 1474.
As set forth in detail in the Wright Atlanta Opinion, the regulatory language
provides the dropshafts by which the City emplaces waste water into the subsurface
excavated tunnels are “injection wells” within the meaning of the UIC program.
Therefore, the clear statutory language of the SDWA/UIC program requires a permit for
emplacing wastewater through a shaft (“injection well”) into a subsurface excavated
tunnel (cavity). This interpretation is reinforced given the UIC program’s “statutory
purpose of ‘prevent[ing] underground injection which endangers drinking water
sources,’ 42 U.S.C. § 300h(b)(1)” Id. together with “[t]he statute's precautionary purpose
[which] is clear [that] the 'actual contamination of drinking water is not a prerequisite
either for the establishment of regulations or permit requirements or for the enforcement
thereof.' See H.R. Rep No. 93-1185, at 32 (1974), reprinted in 1974 U.S.C.C.A.N. 6454,
6484.” Miami Dade County v. EPA, 529 F.3d at 1064.
b. EPA’s interpretation is unreasonable and otherwise contradicted by theclear statutory language.
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Even if the UIC regulations were to be deemed less than clear on what constituted
“underground injection” EPA’s proferred interpretation of the statutory language is
contrary to clear wording of the statute and is otherwise arbitrarily contrived. An
agency's construction of a statute is "deemed reasonable if it is not arbitrary, capricious,
or clearly contrary to law." Ala. Power Co. v. FERC, 22 F.3d 270, 272 (11th Cir.1994).
EPA contends that the term “underground injection” and hence the UIC
regulations does not apply to the emplacement of wastewater through a shaft into
subsurface excavated tunnels “...because the tunnels are not intended to emplace fluids
below the surface of the ground through a well; rather, they are distribution systems
intended to convey wastewater...”. EPA’s opinion is ill-conceived on several levels.
i. EPA's attempt to argue for a narrow definition for “underground injection” is rejected by the Court in LEAF I.
Foremost, it should be pointed out that a very similar argument was attempted by
EPA in LEAF-I. EPA unsuccessfully argued in LEAF-I that because the statutory
definition of “underground injection” was allegedly ambiguous its interpretation of
“underground injection” should be accepted by the Court. (EPA suggesting hydraulic
fracturing should be excluded from the definition of "underground injection" because the
well by which the fluid was emplaced was used primarily as a gas production well and
not to inject the hydraulic fracturing liquid). The Court, finding such argument to be
“spurious” held:
Congress directed EPA to regulate ‘underground injection’ activities, not‘injection wells'. In view of clear statutory language requiring the regulationof all such activities, they must be regulated, regardless of the other uses ofthe well in which these activities occur.
Legal Envtl. Assistance Found., Inc. v. EPA, 118 F.3d at 1475.
Similarly, in the present case, EPA attempts to avoid the mandates of the clear
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language of the UIC regulations by attempting to reinterpret the same unambiguous term
addressed in LEAF-I, the term “underground injection”. EPA’s present attempt to
disregard the clear language of the UIC regulations and to reinterpret “underground
injection” is equally as spurious.
ii. EPA's interpretation of “underground injection” ignores LEAF-I.
EPA did not take the LEAF-I court’s admonition to heart. “Congress directed EPA
to regulate ‘underground injection’ activities, not ‘injection wells’”. EPA still is not
focusing on underground injection activities. Substituting “tunnels” for “injection wells”
does not change the overall thrust of the UIC program to regulate underground injection
activities so as to protect underground sources of drinking water. Moreover, the fact that
the focus of EPA’s argument is a “tunnel” rather than a “well” is of no effect on the
ultimate outcome of the discussion. That is simply to say, EPA’s reasoning avoids the
question, "Is the activity of emplacing wastewater through a shaft (“injection well”) into
a subsurface excavated tunnel 'underground injection' requiring a permit?". The answer
is yes, it is underground injection which requires a permit.
Second, also in an argument similar to the one raised in LEAF-I, EPA suggests
that because the tunnels are used for the “conveyance” of wastewater and not for the
“emplacement” of wastewater they should not be considered “underground injection”
subject to regulation under the UIC regulations. This interpretation is nonsensical as
well. Merely because the intended purpose of the injection of untreated wastewater is
not permanent emplacement in the subsurface, but rather to convey the wastewater to
treatment facilities, does not alter the fact that the untreated wastewater is emplaced in
the subsurface by well injection. Accordingly, it is “underground injection.”
To summarize: as detailed in LEAF-I by the Court in interpreting the statutory
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language defining “underground injection”, because the intent of Congress as expressed
in the statutory and regulatory language of the SDWA and the UIC regulations is clear
and unambiguous, the emplacement of wastewater through a shaft into subsurface
excavated tunnels is “underground injection” for which a permit is required. EPA’s
offered interpretation should be discounted as contrived and unreasonable. “[I]t is clear
that Congress dictated that all underground injection be regulated under the UIC
programs.” Legal Envtl. Assistance Found., Inc. v. U.S. Envtl. Prot. Agency, 118 F.3d at
1475.
IV. The legacy of Upper Chattahoochee RiverKeeper v. City of Atlanta could well be determined by whether Atlanta's underground waters are protected by the UIC program.
The Agencies may assert several jurisprudential reasons why these Commenters
should not be in front of this Court. In fact, Commenters NOCRAP, South River
Watershed Alliance, and Little Mountain Water Association are not parties to this action.
Commenters are more in the nature of Amicus Curiae, having both this Court's and the
public's interest in clean water and public health at heart.
As widely recognized by the parties, these Commenters, and the greater public,
this Court has performed an exemplary task over the past 15 years in addressing
Atlanta's combined waste water and storm water management system woes. This
Court's firmness, leadership, and fairness to all involved parties have been pivotal to
addressing this critical problem.
As a multi-generational citizen of this community who literally grew up playing in
the streams and tributaries of the Chattahoochee River, this attorney can particularly
appreciate the need to protect these valuable water resources. Moreover, as a trained
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water economist as well as a lawyer , it is agreed that the RiverKeeper case is truly a
threshold case in the history of the City of Atlanta.
It is precisely for this reason that the issue associated with the UIC program is so
critical. The effective implementation of the Consent Decree to date has arguably been a
success with but one notable exception, the City's failure to comply with the UIC
regulations. For whatever reason, the Agencies (EPA and EPD) have chosen to
figuratively “kick the can down the road” when dealing with future violations of the
SDWA. The present failure by this Court to address the UIC regulations will sometime
in the future allow a third party to threaten the entire wastewater and stormwater
management infrastructure system which this Court has labored so strenuously to
implement.
As the Court will acknowledge, the costs of constructing the underground
wastewater storage and conveyance systems have been large and controversial. Delay
in implementing the UIC program and in assuring the wastewater infrastructure
currently under construction is not threatening the area's ground water resources will
result in an increased financial burden in the future. The Court will recall that one of
the criticisms of the City of Atlanta prior to the RiverKeeper litigation was that the City
was guilty of simply “putting off to future generations” the necessary investment to
safeguard the area's water resources. The Court should not allow the same to be said in
connection with implementing the safeguards of the UIC program.
Finally, the legacy of this case, and indeed of this Court, may be determined by
how this Court handles the UIC program issue. The issue of whether to enforce the
measures to protect current and future drinking water supplies is not a matter that can
await some future harm or catastrophic event. It is best handled now and by this Court.
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The Court in Natural Resources Defense Council, Inc. v. U.S.E.P.A., 824 F.2d
1258, 1271 (C.A.1, 1987), addressing the threat to underground sources of drinking
water from the disposal of the growing amounts of radioactive wastes under the 1982
Nuclear Waste Act stated it best:
We cannot accept the Agency's claim that it may close its eyes to the possible and very likely future violations of the SDWA that will result from these design criteria, while blithely asserting that in the future the SDWA's regulations will still apply so as to protect drinking water. Enforcing the SDWA sometime in the future might well be too late since Congress's intent in enacting Part C of the SDWA was to prevent the endangerment of drinking water sources and thus ensure that there will be sufficient quantities of usable groundwater for future generations. Once those drinking water resources are contaminated, the other regulations under the SDWA may guard against improper use of this water for drinking, but the SDWA will not restore the drinking water sources to their original quality.
As friends of this Court and of this community, Commenters urge the close review and
enforcement of the Underground Injection Control program of the Safe Drinking Water
Act.
REQUEST FOR ACTION
Commenters respectfully request this Court to declare the rules and regulations
implementing Georgia's Underground Injection Control program, Ga. Comp. R. &
Regs. r. 391-3-6-.13, are applicable to the City of Atlanta's activities of emplacing
wastewater through a shaft (“injection well”) into subsurface excavated tunnels and
caverns (cavities).
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Respectfully submitted, this day of October, 2012.
Howell Franklin Wright, Jr., Esq.Bar No. 778109
Hal Wright, Esq., P.C.3781 Parian Ridge Rd.Atlanta, Ga 30327404-694-7789