Clean Water Current
Ninth Circuit: No Jurisdiction to Review EPA’s Formal Objections to State Permits
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit dismissed litigation April 12 filed on behalf of wastewater treatment plants arguing that EPA exceeded its authority when it objected to draft NPDES permits issued by the state of California, finding no final agency action subject to judicial review.
In Southern California Alliance of Publicly Owned Treatment Works (SCAP) v. EPA, a group of municipal clean water agencies sought to challenge an EPA letter objecting to state-issued NPDES permits (“Objection Letter”). The letter came after Los Angeles Water Board (“the Board”) submitted draft permits to EPA for review, to which EPA Region 9 responded with the Objection Letter in September 2014. SCAP contends that the original permits proposed by the Board were consistent with the Clean Water Act (CWA) and that EPA exceeded its authority in requiring water quality-based effluent limitations for WET, numeric effluent limitations, and daily maximum effluent limitations.
The Ninth Circuit did not address the merits of SCAP’s arguments, but instead held that the Objection Letter was not subject to judicial review. The court explained that, pursuant to the principles of Cooperative Federalism, when a state assumes responsibility for administering the NPDES program, the state becomes the permit-issuing authority, and an objection by EPA to a draft state permit is merely an interim step in the state permitting process.
The court further opined that EPA’s Objection Letter was not a binding order, because the Board had the option of either adopting EPA’s required changes or ceding permitting jurisdiction to EPA, and that in either case the permit could be challenged once it was issued as final.
While NACWA was not involved in this challenge, the Association has been tracking this closely. There is now precedent from the Seventh, Eighth, and Ninth Circuits holding that EPA’s objections to proposed state permits are not functionally similar to denying a permit, and that the CWA “does not contemplate federal court review of state-issued permits.” Accordingly, in these circuits it is well established that federal courts may not review EPA’s objections to state-drafted permits.