Office of Administrative Law Judges
http://www.epa.gov/oalj/orders/salbury.htm
UNITED STATES ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
BEFORE THE ADMINISTRATOR
IN THE MATTER OF: )
)
CITY OF SALISBURY, MARYLAND, ) Docket No. CWA-III-219
)
Respondent )
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ORDER DENYING RESPONDENT'S MOTION FOR RECONSIDERATION
By Order issued July 31, 1999, Complainant's Motion for Accelerated Decision as to Liability was granted for counts
one and three of the Complaint and Respondent's Motion to Dismiss was denied. Respondent, by Motion filed August
4, 1999 seeks reconsideration of that Order. Complainant's response opposing Respondent's Motion was filed August
19, 1999. For the reasons discussed below, Respondent's Reconsideration Motion will be DENIED.
Respondent seeks reconsideration of the Court's Order on three grounds. Respondent challenges the decision to
deny Respondent's Motion to Dismiss as to counts one, two and three, and to grant Complainant's Motion for
Accelerated Decision as to counts one and three on grounds that the monitoring and reporting requirements which
Respondent is charged with violating were not made applicable to Respondent until May 1997, after the dates of the
alleged violations. Respondent also separately challenges the Court's decision to grant Complainant accelerated
decision on liability as to count three. The decision as to count three, Respondent maintains, was incorrectly based, in
part, on the applicability of 40 C.F.R. § 122.41(l)(4)(ii) to Respondent and, further, embraces two inconsistent
interpretations of the reporting requirement.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
The Rules of Practice governing this proceeding make no specific provision for a motion for reconsideration of an
accelerated decision. The Environmental Appeals Board ("EAB"), which does have a provision in the Consolidated
Rules of Practice for reconsideration of its decisions at 40 C.F.R. § 22.32 has stated that:
A motion for reconsideration should not be regarded as an opportunity to reargue the case in a more convincing
fashion. It should only be used to bring to the attention of this office clearly erroneous factual or legal conclusions.
Reconsideration is normally appropriate only when this office has obviously overlooked or misapprehended the law or
facts or the position of one of the parties.
Southern Timber Prods., Inc., RCRA (3008) Appeal No. 89-2, 3 E.A.D. 880, 889 (Order on Motion for
Reconsideration,1992)(quoting City of Detroit, TSCA Appeal No. 89-5 (Order, CJO Feb. 20, 1991)).
Administrative Law Judges addressing this issue have employed different standards than that enunciated by the EAB
for reconsideration of its decisions. In a recent case where the respondent sought reconsideration of an order
granting accelerated decision on liability the presiding officer, after finding that "a partial accelerated decision is an
interlocutory order that may be modified or vacated prior to final judgment," held that a somewhat lower standard for
reconsideration than that employed by the EAB ought to apply to a motion for reconsideration of a partial accelerated
decision. Pepperell Assocs. Docket No. CWA-2-I-97-1088, 1999 EPA ALJ Lexis 16, at *15, 16 (Initial Decision, Feb.
26, 1999)(citing 40 C.F.R. § 22.20(b)(2)). In another case in which a respondent sought reconsideration of an order
grating accelerated decision as to liability, the presiding officer held that, in the absence of a specific rule providing for
reconsideration, the proponent of the motion must "demonstrate that a variance from the rules will further the public
interest." Oklahoma Metal Processing Co., Inc., TSCA Docket No. VI-659C, 1997 EPA ALJ LEXIS 16 at *2 (Order
Denying Motion for Reconsideration, June 4, 1997).
For the reasons discussed below, it is hereby found that Respondent has not presented legal or factual issues
sufficient to warrant, under any of the standards discussed above, reconsideration of the Order granting
Complainant's Motion for Accelerated Decision as to counts one and three, and denying Respondent's Motion to
Dismiss.
DISCUSSION
Respondent asserts that the rules codified at 40 C.F.R. § 503 were not made applicable to it until May of 1997, when
its provisions were incorporated into Respondent's NPDES permit. Respondent's original permit, which was issued in
1985, had an expiration date of 1990.(1) Because the permit predates the promulgation of the Part 503 rules in 1993,
Respondent maintains it does not impose those regulations on Respondent.
Respondent argues further that the Part 503 regulations are not, as Complainant has asserted, self-implementing or
directly enforceable pursuant to CWA § 405(e) as to generators of sludge. Rather, Respondent asserts that pursuant
to section 405(e), the Part 503 rules are directly enforceable only against users and disposers of sludge, whereas
pursuant to section 405(f), which applies to generators of sludge, the Part 503 rules are to be imposed exclusively
through NPDES permits. According to Respondent, this parsing of section 405 is logical because generators could be
regulated all along through their NPDES permits; section 405, which was amended in 1987 to bring users and
disposers within reach of the statute, was designed to be self-implementing to provide EPA a way to regulate users
and disposers without requiring them to obtain permits. For these reasons, Respondent requests reconsideration of
the Order denying its Motion to Dismiss all three counts of the Complaint, or, in the alternative, reconsideration of the
decision to grant Complainant's Motion for Accelerated Decision as to liability for counts one and three of the
complaint.
While Respondent is correct that CWA § 405(e) was amended in order to bring users and disposers within the reach
statute, Respondent's reading of section 405(f) as presenting permits as the only means by which the sludge rules
may be imposed on POTWs is refuted by a reading of section 405, the sludge rules at 40 C.F.R. § 503, and the
preamble to the final part 503 rules.
CWA § 405(f) directs that permits shall include requirements for use and disposal of sludge; it does not preclude
imposition of sludge requirement directly through the Part 503 rules. That the sludge rules were to be directly
enforceable against POTWs was made clear in the preamble to the final rule revising the Part 122 rules where the
Agency states that "the statute compels compliance with the Part 503 standards by set deadlines without exception. At
the same time, the statute requires that the Part 503 standards be included in permits." 54 Fed. Reg. 18,716, 18,740
(1989).(2)
Further, the Part 503 regulations explicitly place generators like Respondent within their scope. Section 503.1(b)(1),
40 C.F.R. states that the rules apply, inter alia, "to any person who prepares sewage sludge." A preparer of sewage
sludge, in turn, is defined at 503.9(r) as "either the person who generates sewage sludge during the treatment of
domestic sewage in a treatment works or the person who derives a material from sewage sludge" (emphasis added).
Finally, §503.3(b), "Direct Enforceability," provides that "[n]o person shall use or dispose of sewage sludge through
any practice for which requirements are established in this part except in accordance with such requirements." 40
C.F.R. § 503.3(b).
EPA emphasizes throughout the preamble(3) to the final Part 503 rules that the rules are directly enforceable and that
it will rely heavily on the self-implementing nature of the Part 503 standards in the early period of implementation. 58
Fed. Reg. 9248, 9364, 9366. The Agency explains that "the standards are directly enforceable against any user or
disposer of sewage sludge. POTWs and other generators of sewage sludge are users and disposers of sewage even
if final use or disposal is provided by some other party." Id. at 9359. The Agency elaborates further on this point,
stating that:
EPA has determined that, when Congress amended section 405(e) to extend the obligation to comply with the sludge
standards to each person using or disposing of sewage sludge, Congress did not intend to limit or transfer the
responsibility of the generating POTW for ensuring compliance with the standards except insofar as the generating
POTW sends the sewage sludge to another treatment works treating domestic sewage.
Id. at 9361.(4)
Respondent's arguments that the statute and regulations at issue have been misapplied are unpersuasive.
Accordingly, Respondent's Motion for Reconsideration of the Order denying its Motion to Dismiss the Complaint for
failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted, and granting Complainant's Motion for Accelerated Decision
as to counts one and three on this basis is DENIED.
Respondent also seeks reconsideration of the decision to grant Complainant's Motion for Accelerated Decision as to
count three on grounds that 40 C.F.R. § 122.41(l)(4)(ii), which was not incorporated into Respondent's NPDES permit
until 1997, was improperly applied to the facts of this case. Respondent misconstrues the reference to this rule in the
prior Order. It was not "applied" to the facts of the case as Respondent asserts, but rather was referenced to
emphasize that as a POTW Respondent should have been aware that the requirements at issue applied to it and to
illustrate the point that reporting all the information developed regarding pollutant concentrations was in keeping with
the overall scheme of the CWA and its regulations concerning POTWs. In that this regulation was not applied to
Respondent, the fact that this provision was not included in Respondent's permit until 1997 is irrelevant.
Finally, Respondent's argument that the Accelerated Decision Order incorporates two inconsistent interpretations of
the reporting requirements is difficult to understand. In that Order it was found that Part 503.18 requires a POTW to
submit all data developed about pollutant concentrations in its sludge; it was found further that Region III had issued a
letter to the effect that the Region would be satisfied if regulated entities reported certain specified data. Region III's
letter did not represent a second, inconsistent, interpretation of the rule, but rather served effectively to limit the
Region's capacity to seek enforcement to those entities that supplied information that did not satisfy the minimum
standards set out in the letter. Moreover, as Complainant points out, Respondent's submissions did not satisfy even
the lower requirements set out in Region III's letter and Complainant has asserted violations only where Respondent
did not satisfy these minimum data reporting requirements.
Accordingly, Respondent's Motion for Reconsideration of the Order granting Complainant's Motion for Accelerated
Decision as to Liability for count three of the Complaint is DENIED.
____________________
Susan L. Biro
Chief Administrative Law Judge
Dated: August 23, 1999
Washington, D.C.
1. This permit was administratively continued pursuant to condition 5 on page 17 of the permit. See, Complainant's
Prehearing Exchange Exh. 7.
2. This point is reiterated later in the same section where it is noted that while the part 503 standards must be
incorporated into new and reissued permits, "permittees would still be liable for compliance with Part 503 regulations
by the statutory deadline" whether or not their existing permits have been modified to incorporate those regulations.
54 Fed. Reg. 18716, 18740.
3. Courts frequently look to the preamble to a final rule when construing the meaning of a rule. See, Nat'l Mining
Assoc., et al. v. United States E.P.A, 59 F.3d 1351, 1355 n.7 (D.C. Cir. 1995) ("We consider EPA's preamble to the
final rule in construing its definition of 'major source.'"); Wiggins Bros. v. Dep't of Energy, 667 F.2d 77, 88 (Temp.
Emer. Ct. App. 1981), cert. denied, 456 U.S. 905 (1982) ("It is well settled by decisions of this Court that the preamble
to a regulation of DOE . . . should be considered in construing the regulation and determining the meaning of the
regulation.").
4. See also id. at 9360: "Subpart B of today's regulation applies to a person who applies sewage sludge to the land,
[and] to a person who prepares sewage sludge for application to the land . . . [Further,] as the generator of sewage
sludge, the treatment works cannot limit its responsibility for the use and disposal of the sewage sludge in compliance
with the standards merely by transferring the sludge to a commercial applier."