Iowa League of Cities v. EPA, No. 11-3412 (8th Cir. 2013)
Annotate this CaseThe League sought direct appellate review of two letters sent by the EPA to Senator Charles Grassley, arguing that these letters effectively set forth new regulatory requirements with respect to water treatment processes at municipally owned sewer systems. The League argued that the EPA lacked statutory authority to impose these regulations and violated the Administrative Procedures Act (APA), 5 U.S.C. 500 et seq., by implementing them without first proceeding through the notice and comment procedures for agency rulemaking. The court concluded that the case was ripe for judicial review and the League had standing to assert its claims; the court vacated both the mixing zone rule in the June 2011 letter and the blending rule in the September 2011 letter as procedurally invalid; and the court vacated the blending rule as an excess of statutory authority insofar as it would impose the effluent limitations of the secondary treatment regulations internally, rather than at the point of discharge into navigable waters. The court remanded to the EPA for further consideration.
Court Description: Petition for Review - Order of the EPA. Court finds it has jurisdiction over a petition for review seeking direct appellate review of two letters sent by the EPA to Senator Charles Grassley with respect to bacteria mixing zones and blending in wastewater treatment facilities as the EPA's letters constituted binding promulgations and effluent limitations under Section 509(b)(1)(E) of the Clean Water Act; the matter was ripe for judicial review because the dispute was not abstract and presented an actual hardship to the petitioners; petitioners had Article III standing to bring the claim; proper standard for review for these challenges to agency procedural compliance under Sec. 706(2)(D) of the Administrative Procedures Act was de novo review; the EPA violated the APA when it bypassed notice and comment procedures and announced new rules banning bacteria mixing zones in all waters designated for primary contact recreation, and the rule is vacated; similarly, the EPA violated the APA when it announced a new legislative rule with respect to blending peak wet water flows, and that rule is also vacated; EPA's new mixing zone rule is not obviously precluded by the plain meaning of any applicable Clean Water Act regulations and should the EPA wish to implement the rule, it may seek to do so using the appropriate procedures; however, the blending rule clearly exceeds the EPA's statutory authority and insofar as the rule imposes secondary treatment regulations on flows within facilities it must be vacated as exceeding the agency's statutory authority; petitioners' request for an award of litigation costs under Clean Water Act Sec. 509(b)(3) is denied.
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