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Case Docket
Biotech Mills Permit Application
Catskill
Mountains Chapter, Trout Unlimited v. City of New York
Clinton Point Quarry
Crossroads
Ventures
Dewey Loeffel
Landfill
Indian Point
New
York City Sewage Treatment Plant Permit Modification Proceeding
No
Spray Coalition v. New York City
Peconic
Baykeeper, Inc. v. Suffolk County
Raritan Baykeeper, Inc. v. DEC, Wildlife Conservation Society
Riverkeeper v. Crotty
Riverkeeper v.
Entergy Indian Point
Riverkeeper v. Mirant Lovett, LLC
Riverkeeper
v. Town of New Windsor
Riverkeeper
v. Exxon-Mobil
Spring
Creek Compost Facility
Town of Dover v. Salvatore Cascino
Ulster County
Wetlands
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Biotech
Mills Permit Application
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Biotech Mills has filed an application to
reactivate a paper mill and discharge wastewater into the
Battenkill Creek, a fabled trout stream.
The applicant has a history of permit violations under a
previous permit. Pace
Environmental Litigation Clinic is representing the Battenkill
Conservancy before the New York State Department of Environmental
Conservation in opposition to the permit application.
Although the Clinic filed its intervention papers several
years ago, the applicant has not completed its application and no
hearings have been scheduled yet.
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Catskill
Mountains Chapter, Trout Unlimited v. City of New York |
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The Shandaken tunnel carries water from the
Schoharie Reservoir to the Esopus Creek in the Catskills, which
then flows into the Ashoken Reservoir. New York City DEP operates
this tunnel as part of its water supply system. Esopus Creek is a
renowned trout fishing stream. Unfortunately, the water that is
piped in from Schoharie Creek is of much lower quality than the
natural flow in the Esopus, and contains high amounts of suspended
solids, clouding the clear waters of the Esopus, and ruining the
Esopus for trout fishing. DEP has no Clean Water Act permit for
this discharge of contaminated water into the Esopus Creek.
Pace Environmental Litigation Clinic filed a
notice of intent to sue DEP on behalf of Riverkeeper and several
other Catskill sportsmen’s organizations. During February, 1999,
through March, 2000, Clinic lawyers and interns have held a series
of meetings with New York City DEP, New York State DEC, and the
Attorney General’s office to determine if a negotiated resolution
was possible.
These negotiations proved unsuccessful when
New York City announced it felt no obligation to clean up the
discharge, and the Clinic filed a complaint under the Clean Water
Act on March 31, 2000. The City moved to dismiss, claiming that
discharge of already polluted water from one watershed into
another could not be the “addition” of a pollutant in violation of
the Clean Water Act. Clinic student Michelle Land briefed the
case over the Summer, and Clinic student Basil Seggos argued the
motion before the Northern District of New York in September.
Despite recent First Circuit precedent holding that the Clean
Water Act applied in exactly these circumstances, the court
granted the City’s motion to dismiss.
The Clinic appealed the dismissal, and the
appeal was argued on May 25, 2001. On October 23, 2001, the
Second Circuit reversed the District Court’s dismissal and
reinstated Trout Unlimited’s claims. In June, 2002, the District
Court granted plaintiffs’ motion for summary judgment declaring
liability.
The Clinic conducted the penalty and relief
trial of this matter on January 8 – 16, 2003. Clinic students
presented opening statements and conducted witness examinations
and cross examinations. The trial resulted in a $5.7 million
penalty being assessed against the City of New York, along with
injunctive relief requiring New York City to obtain a permit for
the discharge within 18 months.
New York City filed an appeal from this
judgment, which was adjourned pending the Supreme Court’s
determination of South Florida Water Management District v.
Miccosukee Indian Tribes. Following the Supreme Court’s decision
in that case, the appeal was fully briefed during the Summer of
2004. However, despite repeated communication with the Second
Circuit Court of Appeals urging the Court to set a date for oral
argument, the Clinic received an Order dated April 18, 2005
adjourning oral argument (which had been set for May 26, 2005) to
an unspecified later date.
In late Summer 2005, the City filed a motion
with the Second Circuit to submit a supplemental brief in the
appeal. It also submitted its brief, which argued that a recent
“interpretation” by the Environmental Protection Agency supported
its construction of the Clean Water Act. In light of the delay in
oral argument, the Clinic filed a Motion to Expedite the Appeal
with the Second Circuit in late September. Though the motion was
denied, oral argument was finally scheduled for November 21,
2005. Before oral argument, the Clinic submitted its Responsive
Supplemental Brief to the Second Circuit, which argued that the
EPA “interpretation” was not entitled to deference and was a
flawed construction of the Clean Water Act. The Court accepted
the supplemental briefs and oral argument was heard as scheduled.
We are still awaiting the decision of the Second Circuit.
Also in late Summer 2005, the City had filed
a motion with the Northern District of New York, seeking a stay
and injunction of the District Court’s order pending appeal. The
Clinic filed responsive papers with the District Court in
September, and the District Court has not ruled on the City’s
motion. Thus, the state permitting proceedings progressed as
scheduled. Clinic student Craig Michaels conducted the
administrative hearing on behalf of the Trout Unlimited parties.
Post hearing briefs were filed in January 2006, and in July 2006
the Commissioner issued a decision allowing for the issuance of
the draft SPDES permit. In September 2006 the Clinic filed an
Article 78 proceeding on behalf of the Trout Unlimited parties.
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Crossroads
Ventures |
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Crossroads Ventures has proposed a huge two hotel, two golf course
resort development at the headwaters of the Esopus Creek in the
Catskills. Riverkeeper has joined a coalition of environmental
organizations opposing the massive development. The Clinic has
assisted in the preparation of comments on the Draft Environmental
Impact Statement for the project and has also assisted with the
preparation of an issues petition challenging the proposed
issuance of various DEC permits required by the development. The
issues conference was held before a DEC Administrative Law Judge
Richard L. Wissel. Following the issues conference, the coalition
of environmental organizations submitted a post-issues conference
brief. The coalition received an issues ruling by the DEC
Administrative Law Judge Richard L. Wissel that was largely in our
favor. Judge Wissel found 12 adjudicable issues. The clinic
received the appeals to the issue ruling on November 23rd. The
reply to the appeals was submitted on January 17.
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Indian
Point |
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In
2001, the Clinic filed a petition on behalf of Riverkeeper to
close down Indian Point Nuclear Power Facility pending a review of
security concerns and evacuation planning in the wake of the
September 11 attacks on the United States.
The Executive Director of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission
issued a decision denying the relief requested.
The Clinic appealed this decision to the Second Circuit
Court of Appeals, under the caption Riverkeeper v. Collins.
The Second Circuit dismissed the petition for review,
finding that although Riverkeeper raised "grave
concerns" about the safety of operating Indian Point, the
NRC's decision on Riverkeeper's petition was a matter committed to
agency discretion and not subject to judicial review.
The Clinic has begun to research the legal standards and
opportunities for intervention that will apply when Entergy seeks
thirty-year extensions of the operating licenses for Indian Point
units 2 and 3. Entergy's
application is expected to be filed sometime between the summer of
2005 and 2008, at least five years before the plant's license
expires in 2013. Professor
Coplan and Clinic intern Phillip Musegaas attended a roundtable
meeting with Attorney General Eliot Spitzer on April 26, 2005, to
discuss the availability of alternative sources of electricity for
New York State, were Indian Point shut down.
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New
York City Sewage Treatment Plant Permit Modification Proceeding
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DEC has proposed modifications to the
SPDES permits for New York City’s 14 sewage treatment plants as
part of a “full technical review” of these permits under DEC’s
so-called “Environmental Benefit Permitting Strategy.” New York
City challenged these modifications, claiming that provisions
requiring full implementation of the Total Maximum Daily Load for
nitrogen in the Long Island Sound Watershed exceeded the
permissible scope of the permit. In September, 2003, the Clinic
filed a petition for intervention and an issues petition, seeking
further modification of the permit to completely implement the
requirements of EPA’s combined sewer overflow control strategy,
and also to implement the nitrogen total maximum daily load for
Combined Sewer Overflows. Clinic student Kirstin Etela appeared
in Fall 2003 at the issues conference before Administrative Law
Judge Kevin Cassutto. Judge Cassutto deferred the issues ruling
pending consideration of an Administrative Consent Order between
DEC and New York City governing Combined
Sewer Overflow planning and mitigation measures. DEC has now
issued that proposed Administrative Consent Order, and Clinic
student Kelly Bray submitted extensive comments on the proposed
Consent Order.
Judge Cassutto lifted the stay on the issue
ruling when the Combined Sewer Overflow Administrative Consent
Order became effective in January 2005. In April, 2005, the
Clinic filed a supplemental issues petition, seeking compliance
with the Clean Water Act and the requirements of EPA’s Combined
Sewer Overflow Control Policy. Clinic Student Kelly Bray appeared
on May 4, 2005 at the issues conference before Judge Cassutto.
Following the issues conference, the Clinic and Riverkeeper filed
a joint Supplemental Petition for Full Party Status with
Soundkeeper, Inc., and New York/New Jersey Baykeeper. The petition
addressed three issues identified by Judge Cassutto: (1) Is the
January 2005 CSO-ACO the appropriate mechanism for CSO regulation,
or must the terms and conditions of the ACO compliance schedule be
explicitly set forth in the draft SPDES permit; (2) Must any
proposed changes to the ACO be subjected to an opportunity for
full adjudicatory hearing, pursuant to 6 NYCRR Part 624, including
the applicability or relevance of 6 NYCRR 750-1.18 and the former
750-1.18; and (3) Interpretation of the phrase "shall conform to
Combined Sewer Overflow Policy" as that phrase appears in Section
402(q)(1) of the Clean Water Act.
Judge Cassutto issued a Ruling on Proposed Adjudicable CSO Issues
and Party Status following the May 2005 issues conference on
November 9, 2005. The issues ruling addressed ten separate issues
for adjudication. Judge Cassutto concluded that an adjudicable
issue was raised “as to whether DEC staff must incorporate the
compliance schedule in permits, or in the alternative, include a
statement in each permit that the compliance schedule represents
the ‘shortest reasonable time’ within which to achieve water
quality for that WPCP’s receiving waters.” He also held in
abeyance an issue as to “[w]hether the six Long Island Sound WPCP
draft SPDES permits should include numeric limitations for CSO
event nitrogen loading, in order to achieve compliance with the
nitrogen total maximum daily load (TMDL) for Long Island Sound”
pending the potential appeal of other issues relating nitrogen
issues. The briefing schedule for this appeal has been suspended,
as DEC has changed its staffing of the case and has submitted a
newly revised draft permit.
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No
Spray Coalition v. New York City |
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The Clinic represents several groups that are
opposed to the application of pesticides for mosquito control
purposes related to the West Nile Virus outbreak. A notice of
intent to sue was previously filed by the client organizations in
October 1999 for unpermitted discharge of pesticides into waters
without a Clean Water Act (CWA) permit. The Clinic filed a Clean
Water Act and Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA) case
against the City of New York in the Southern District of New York
in July 2000, seeking immediate injunctive relief against the
spraying. Clinic students examined witnesses at the preliminary
injunction hearing before District Judge John S. Martin in
September 2000. The hearing attracted favorable press attention,
including the playing of a videotape showing New York City
pesticide spray trucks spraying crowds of people on street corners
in northern Manhattan. Although Judge Martin denied the
preliminary injunction and dismissed the RCRA case, the clients’
CWA case survived. The Second Circuit rejected the Clinic’s
appeal of the dismissal of its RCRA claim and the denial of a
preliminary injunction in June 2001.
Both parties moved for summary judgment on the
CWA claims in 2002. In November of that year, District Court Judge
John Martin granted the City’s motion, dismissing the remaining CWA
claims. Judge Martin reasoned that citizen suit enforcement of the
CWA cannot occur where the application of pesticides is performed in
compliance with the requirements of Federal Insecticide, Fungicide,
and Rodenticide Act (FIFRA). According to Judge Martin, the
“incidental” spraying of pesticides into New York City water bodies
does not sustain a CWA case because only a “non-technical” violation
of the FIFRA-regulated pesticide labels would support a claim under
the CWA. In May 2003, the Clinic appealed the District Court’s
ruling to the Second Circuit Court of Appeals, which vacated the
District Court’s dismissal and remanded for further proceedings, on
December 9, 2003. The Second Circuit concluded that the District
Court misinterpreted the relationship between compliance with FIFRA
and compliance with the CWA, holding that citizens can sue under the
CWA to enforce the requirements of that Act regardless whether or
not a violation of FIFRA had occurred. The case was re-assigned to
District Court Judge George B. Daniels, who established a schedule
for re-briefing of the cross-motions for summary judgment and set a
date for oral arguments.
On July 28, 2004, Clinic Student Daniel
Yohannes argued the renewed summary judgment motions on behalf of
the plaintiffs. This past summer, Judge Daniels issued a Memorandum
Decision denying both parties’ summary judgment motions. In his
June 7, 2005 Decision, Judge Daniels found that the spraying of
pesticides over navigable water can constitute an addition of
pollutant into navigable water. Judge Daniels further found that if
City helicopters and trucks conveyed pollutants from their original
source to the navigable water, they could constitute point sources
under the CWA. The Decision creates favorable law from the Clinic’s
perspective because the Decision suggests if the plaintiffs can
prove New York City sprayed pesticides directly into water, then the
plaintiffs will have established a CWA violation.
Although Judge Daniels’ decision creates good
law, this case is progressing against the backdrop of an evolving
regulatory position with regard to the CWA’s applicability to
municipal vector control programs. Recent Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA) guidance suggests that the spraying of pesticides for
purposes of mosquito control should be exempt from the requirements
of the Clean Water Act. In April 2005, EPA proposed a rule that
would allow the application of pesticides used for mosquito-control
purposes to waters of the United States without a Clean Water Act
permit so long as these pesticides are applied “consistent with
FIFRA labeling requirements.” The Clinic assisted Waterkeeper
Alliance in submitting comments to EPA, arguing that the rule
violates both the CWA and FIFRA.
The parties began pursuing possibilities for
settlement of this case in the summer of 2005. In early October
2005, the plaintiffs presented a series of settlement demands to the
City of New York. After making little progress in their
discussions, the parties appeared before Southern District
Magistrate Judge Ronald Ellis for a pretrial settlement conference
on November 16, 2005. The parties have met on several occasions
with Judge Ellis and Clinic Students Robyn Hanson and Justin Kimple
have drafted a settlement proposal. At this point, the parties have
agreed to a settlement. We are awaiting final approval from the New
York City Comptroller’s Office and will lodge the consent decree
immediately upon receipt of such approval.
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Peconic
Baykeeper, Inc. v. Suffolk County |
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In April 2002, the Clinic filed an Article 78
petition challenging Suffolk County’s approval of a mosquito
control program using extensive pesticides and wetlands ditching
without undergoing an environmental impact review as required
under the State Environmental Quality Review Act (“Peconic I”).
Although the Supreme Court, Suffolk County dismissed the petition
sua sponte as moot in March 2003, the Clinic commenced a second
Article 78 proceeding challenging the 2003 continuation of the
mosquito control program, again without any environmental review
(“Peconic II”). Suffolk County extended its mosquito program into
2004 and the Clinic filed a third Article 78 proceeding against
the County (“Peconic III”). In January 2005, the Clinic filed its
fourth Article 78 petition against the County for its extension of
the mosquito control program into yet another year (“Peconic IV”).
Although Supreme Court issued a decision granting the petition in
this matter, it did not issue judgment, despite timely submission
a proposed judgment by the Clinic.
On April 16, 2004, the Supreme Court, Suffolk County granted the
petition in Peconic II, and enjoined the County of Suffolk from
implementing its vector control program until it had properly
complied with the environmental review procedures of SEQRA. On
October 4, 2004, the Supreme Court granted the petition in Peconic
III. In April 2005, the County perfected an appeal from the grant
of the petition in Peconic III.
In April 2004, the Clinic perfected an appeal of Peconic I’s
dismissal as moot by the Supreme Court to the Appellate Division:
Second Department. In September 2004, Suffolk County perfected an
appeal of the Court’s decision granting the petition in Peconic
II. On April 4, 2005 the Appellate Division dismissed both Peconic
I and Peconic II as moot.
The Clinic, working with co-counsel and Clinic Alumnus Matthew
Atkinson, filed a federal Clean Water Act citizen suit against the
County of Suffolk in November 2004, as their pesticide spraying
and wetlands ditching activities lack required Clean Water Act
permits. The case has proceeded through discovery, including
several discovery motions. Discovery has now closed and the
parties have filed cross-motion for summary judgment.
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Riverkeeper
v. Crotty |
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The Danskammer Electric Generation Plant at
Danskammer Point in the Town of Newburgh has been operating under
an expired Clean Water Act permit since 1992. The plant uses
obsolete “once through” cooling water technology that requires the
withdrawal of huge quantities of Hudson River water, and kills
millions of Hudson River fish annually. Despite federal and state
law requirements which mandate that Clean Water Act permits expire
after five years and be subject to public notice and comment
renewal proceedings, the NY DEC has allowed Danskammer to operate
on “administrative renewal” without public review since 1992,
simply by taking no action on Central Hudson’s permit renewal
application. The Clinic filed a demand letter on behalf of
Riverkeeper in 2001 seeking public notice and comment, and an
adjudicatory hearing, on the permit renewal. DEC denied this
request after another 18 months of delay, in a decision that
claimed that environmental organizations had no standing to
enforce the timing requirements and public notice requirements of
DEC’s uniform procedures.
The Clinic then filed an Article 78 petition
in Albany County Supreme Court seeking mandamus to force DEC to
hold the required notice and comment hearing proceedings. After
hearing oral argument, Albany County Supreme Court Justice
Kavanagh issued an interim order requiring DEC to publish a draft
renewal permit for public comment by July 1, 2003.
The DEC issued a draft renewal permit for the
Danskammer Plant by the July 1, 2003 deadline, but failed to
require the best technology available, which is closed cycle
cooling. The Clinic assisted Riverkeeper attorneys in an issues
petition and intervention in the permitting proceeding.
Administrative Judge O’Connell handed down an issues ruling that
provides for formal adjudication of Riverkeeper’s demand that the
permit incorporate closed cycle cooling.
Because of the delays in the administrative
proceedings for the renewal of the Danskammer permit, the Clinic
asked Judge Kavanagh to rule on the remaining issues in
Riverkeeper’s case against DEC for failure to amend the Danskammer
permit. On September 2, 2004, Judge Kavanagh issued a decision
and judgment granting the petition, declaring that Riverkeeper has
standing to challenge DEC’s failure to act, and declaring DEC’s
ten years of inaction on the permit renewal to be an arbitrary and
capricious delay. Judge Kavanagh also declared that Dynegy no
long could rely on the continued effectiveness of the expired
permit. Dynegy and DEC have appealed to the Appellate Division,
Third Department.
On April 20, 2006, the Appellate Division
issued a decision reversing Judge Kavanaugh’s judgment granting
the petition, solely on the grounds that the remaining causes of
action were barred by the four month statute of limitations of
CPLR Article 78. Petitioners have not yet determined whether to
seek leave to appeal, as the administrative proceedings for the
permit have concluded and a revised permit is expected to be
issued shortly.
During the Fall of 2005 the DEC conducted an
adjudicatory hearing relating to the determination of BTA for the
Danskammer facility. The Clinic did not participate in this
hearing, which was conducted by outside and in-house counsel for
Riverkeeper. ALJ O’Connell subsequently issued a hearing report
recommending that BTA for the Danskammer facility did not require
the installation of closed-cycle cooling, and Riverkeeper
appealed. In May 2006, the DEC Commissioner issued a decision
approving the ALJ’s findings and allowing for the issuance of the
draft SPDES permit, which was issued effective June 1, 2006. In
July 2006, the Clinic filed an Article 78 proceeding seeking to
overturn the commissioner’s decision, void the permit and remand
to DEC for further proceedings. This article 78 is currently
pending.
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Riverkeeper
v. Town of New Windsor
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The Town of New Windsor
operates a sewage treatment plant with a permitted outfall at the
very mouth of Moodna Creek where it flows into the Hudson River.
The pipeline leading to this outfall travels through the bed of
Moodna Creek, and a concrete standpipe in this effluent pipeline
has been damaged for a long time, allowing treatment plant
effluent to flow into the clear upstream waters of the Moodna
Creek. Although the DEC has been aware of this violation since the
1990s, nothing has been done to remedy it.
Over the Summer of 2003, the Clinic filed a
60 day notice letter under the Clean Water Act on behalf of Riverkeeper. The Clinic commenced a lawsuit for the discharge of
this polluted sewage plant effluent at a non-permitted location.
During discovery, we identified two additional unpermitted
discharge points. Riverkeeper filed a new notice letter concerning
these additional discharge points, and the Clinic filed a second
action in November, 2004 to require remediation of these discharge
points as well.
As discovery progressed in the first
action, the parties began settlement negotiations. Plaintiffs
submitted a Proposed Settlement to Defendants on July 20, 2004.
The negotiations proceeded slowly, however, and Riverkeeper
deposed several Town of New Windsor officials in the fall of 2004.
Dr. Bruce Bell also prepared an expert report on the sewage leaks
on November 11, 2004.
In the meantime, the Town had installed a
new cover on the manhole in the Creek in June of 2004. Plaintiff
submitted a revised draft consent order to Defendants on December
23, 2004, which added remediation of the damage caused by the
additional discharges cited in the second complaint. The actions
were finally consolidated in January, 2005. By this time, both
parties agreed a settlement was imminent, forestalling further
discovery. A final version of the consent order was agreed upon
and executed by all parties on February 25, 2005. The final
consent order included a provision granting Riverkeeper the right
to recover its attorney's fees and costs from the Town.
Riverkeeper and the Town also submitted a Stipulation Settling
Attorney's Fees to the Court. Pursuant to this agreement, the Town
paid the Pace Environmental Litigation Clinic approximately thirty
thousand dollars for attorney's fees, and Riverkeeper ten thousand
dollars for costs incurred, including Dr. Bell's expert report.
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Riverkeeper
v. Exxon-Mobil; Riverkeeper v. Chevron-Texaco; Riverkeeper v.
Peerless Importers (Newtown Creek)
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On January 20, 2004
and acting on behalf of Riverkeeper, Inc. and six named
plaintiffs, Pace Environmental Litigation Clinic, Inc. filed
letters of intent to sue ExxonMobil Corporation (“ExxonMobil”),
Chevron Texaco Corporation (“Chevron”), and Peerless Importers,
Inc. (“Peerless”) in the Eastern District of New York for
violations of the Clean Water Act, 33 U.S.C. §§ 1251-1387 (“CWA”),
and the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act, 42 U.S.C. 42 U.S.C.
§§ 6901-6992 (“RCRA”). The violations stem from various
underground spills and leaks of more than seventeen million
gallons of petroleum products over the past five decades. These
pollutants have contributed to the contamination of the
Brooklyn-Queens aquifer, discharge into Newtown Creek, and create
a substantial and imminent endangerment to the residents and
ecosystem of Greenpoint, Brooklyn. In May 2004, the Clinic filed
a complaint on behalf of Plaintiffs against ExxonMobil. Over the
course of the next eighteen months, Riverkeeper granted ExxonMobil
a series of stays to the litigation to encourage the company to
remediate the pollution and its hazards. Earlier this year,
ExxonMobil entered into a confidential agreement with Chevron
whereby Chevron would actively remediate the seep of petroleum
products into Newtown Creek from a bulkhead owned by Peerless.
However, as a result of ExxonMobil’s continued non-responsiveness
to Riverkeeper’s cleanup requests and the company’s apparently
dilatory settlement tactics, Riverkeeper allowed the litigation
suspension to lapse on November 4, 2004. As a result, ExxonMobil
finally answered Plaintiffs’ May 2004 complaint.
In December, 2005,
the Court accepted the parties’ proposed discovery schedule, with
fact discovery continuing through March 2007, and expert discovery
concluding in July, 2007. ExxonMobil produced over 120,000 pages of
documents in response to plaintiffs initial document requests, which
has required every student enrolled in the Clinic during Spring 2006
to help review. ExxonMobil has filed a motion to join Chevron and
BP-Amoco as additional parties. This motion was argued before
Magistrate Judge Levy on July 13, 2006 by Legal Intern Eric Annes.
In August 2006, Magistrate Judge Levy issued an order delaying the
Joinder Motion.
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Spring
Creek Compost Facility
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New York City Department of Sanitation has closed off 23 acres of a
public park in the New Lots section of Brooklyn in order to operate
a composting facility for yard waste from all over the City,
including private yard waste. The City failed to seek the proper
legislative approval for converting public trust park land into
non-park use. The Clinic has sought to intervene in opposition to
the City’s application for a DEC solid waste management permit for
the facility, and is also investigating other ways to challenge the
City’s improper use of public trust land. DEC Administrative Law
Judge Susan DuBois accepted the Clinic’s proposal to adjudicate
issues concerning non-park use, satisfaction of variance
requirements, and New York City’s record of compliance issues. In
February 2005, Susan J. DuBois issued a Supplemental Ruling on
Issues stating that following issues are also adjudicable: the
project’s consistency with the New York City’s Waterfront
Revitalization Program and compliance with noise standards for solid
waste management facilities. This issues ruling was appealed to
Deputy Commissioner Lynette Stark, who issued a decision in June
2006 rejecting ALJ DuBois’s recommendation that alienation of
parkland was an adjudicable issue. The Clinic has since commenced
an Article 78/Declaratory Judgment action challenging the
Commissioner’s decision.
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Raritan Baykeeper, Inc. v. Department of Environmental Conservation,
Wildlife Conservation Society |
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On March 7, 2005, the Department of Environmental Conservation
issued a Clean Water Act permit for the discharge of filter backwash
water from the New York Aquarium into the ocean waters off of Coney
Island. This discharge interferes with the use of these waters by
long distance swimmers who train there, and who are disturbed by the
odors, turbidity, and solids discharged by the aquarium. During the
comment period on the permit, these swimmers, as well as Raritan
Baykeeper, submitted comments concerning these violations of water
quality standards. Nevertheless, the DEC failed to hold a public
hearing on the permit, and in fact modified the permit to weaken its
effluent limitations without providing further public notice and
comment. On July 7, 2005, the Clinic filed an Article 78 proceeding
on behalf of Raritan Baykeeper (d/b/a NY/NJ Baykeeper) seeking
nullification of the permit on the grounds that DEC violated
procedure requirements for a public hearing on the permit, and
violated notice requirements by changing the draft permit without
allowing an opportunity for public notice and comment on the
changes. The proceeding is currently before Justice Arnold N. Price,
Supreme Court, Queens County. Both parties submitted all briefs and
supporting documents to the court on November 1, 2005. On January
24, 2006, Justice Price issued a decision rejecting the petition and
dismissing the proceeding. Baykeeper has determined not to appeal
this decision, but to investigate bringing a permit enforcement
proceeding instead.
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Clinton Point Quarry |
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Tilcon, Inc. owns and operates the Clinton Point stone quarry on the
east bank of the Hudson River, about 2 miles south of Poughkeepsie,
New York. Quarry operations necessitate the frequent pumping of
stormwater runoff, quarry pumpout, and process wastewater, which is
discharged from pipes into the Hudson River. (One outfall discharges
into Casper Creek, a tributary of the Hudson). These discharges
consist mainly of suspended and settleable solids, oil & grease, and
pH. Tilcon is operating under a current SPDES permit. Clinic
students, along with Riverkeeper boat captain John Lipscomb, are
continuing to investigate potential water quality violations caused
by the Quarry operation.
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Riverkeeper v. Mirant-Lovett, LLC |
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This case concerns the violations of Mirant’s SPDES permit by not
timely deploying the Gunderboom Marine Life Exclusion System in
accordance with its Clean Water Act permit. The Gunderboom is a
device installed in the Hudson River to prevent entrainment of fish
and other organisms in the cooling water intake structures of the
Lovett Power Generating Station. Entrainment is lethal to fish.
Lovett requires a SPDES permit because of the thermal pollution it
discharges. According to the permit, the Gunderboom must be
installed by February 23, or ice out, whichever is later. Installing
the Gunderboom by late February is important to many ecologically
important and abundant fish species, like the tomcod, white perch,
striped bass, river herring, and bay anchovy. These species all have
appreciable numbers of young stages in the river around that time so
the Gunderboom is vital to protecting them. The Gunderboom has as a
target an 80% exclusion rate, measured by monitoring the above
species. However, there have been setbacks to determining the
effectiveness of the Gunderboom and protecting the fish species,
which is the concern of this action.
Both this year and last year, Mirant has consistently violated its
permit. In 2004, Mirant did not install the Gunderboom till the end
of April, citing unexpected difficulties and complications. This
year, the Gunderboom still has not been installed. There was no
reason not to install the Gunderboom by February 23 this year
because, as United States Coast Guard ice reports indicate the river
was free from ice that would have prevented safe deployment of the
Gunderboom. Due to these violations, the Clinic filed a complaint on
March 11, 2005.
Mirant filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection on July 16, 2003.
The bankruptcy order requires compliance with 11 U.S.C. § 362, which
is the automatic stay provision of Chapter 11. Due to these
bankruptcy proceedings, this action has been stayed and transferred
to the Court’s Suspense Docket until 60 days after an order
confirming Mirant Lovett’s Plan of Reorganization is entered by the
United States Bankruptcy Court for the Northern District of Texas
becomes final and non-appealable. This stipulation and order was
entered by the court on April 22, 2005 and signed by Judge McMahon
on April 20, 2005.
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Dewey Loeffel Landfill |
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General Electric transported 37, 530 tons of waste materials to the
Dewey Loeffel Site in Rensselaer County, New York between 1952 and
1968. The Dewey Loeffel Site is a 19.6-acre inactive hazardous
waste disposal site. The site is contaminated primarily with PCBs.
The DEC issued an ROD in January 2002 instructing GE to remediate
the site. The ROD relies solely on natural attenuation to remediate
the lower portions of the site. In addition, the ROD requires
annual monitoring of sediment, suspended sediment, and surface water
to track the progress of natural attenuation in Nassau Lake. The
lower portion of the site, Nassau Lake, remains under an advisory
warning against consumption of fish in the Lake due to PCB
contamination. A clinic student, Sarah Samp, submitted a F.O.I.L.
request for the monitoring results. Communication continues with DEC
to obtain updated information on the ROD.
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Town of Dover v. Salvatore Cascino |
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The Clinic sent a Notice of Intent to Sue to the proper parties on
January 14, 2005. The notice alleged that Mr. Cascino, et al.,
committed violations of RCRA and the Clean Water Act by transporting
and dumping loads of pulverized construction and demolition debris
onto a site in the Town of Dover. This site abuts a tributary of
the Ten Mile River and parts of the site are designated DEC
wetlands. The concern is that the piles pose an imminent and
substantial endangerment, debris is falling into the tributary, and
wetlands have been filled from debris dumped by Mr. Cascino. The
Clinic has been working with attorneys from the Town of Dover to
analyze the scope of the action and whether a §404 action should be
brought. A complaint has not yet been filed.
In
December of 2004, the DEC established a Solid Waste Removal Plan for
the site, which requires a Sampling Plan and Investigation Scope of
Work, as well as a Solid Waste Characterization and Removal Plan
Report based on the Sampling Plan and Investigation Scope of Work.
This has not yet been fully complied with, due to extensions of the
date of compliance, however some sampling has been done by DEC and
Mr. Cascino’s company. The DEC has stated that the site is in
significant non-compliance with this Civil Compromise. The Clinic
is in the process of determining whether a complaint should be filed
and the scope of the cause of action.
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Ulster County Wetlands |
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The Clinic has been retained to represent Riverkeeper and seven
local landowners interested in wetlands preservation to petition DEC
to re-map freshwater wetlands M-21 and M-22 in the Town of
Rochester, Ulster County. The official map of these wetlands, which
has not been updated since 1988, significantly understates the
extent of these wetlands, which has allowed inappropriate
development and disturbance of wetlands areas. During the Spring of
2006, Clinic Students Stephanie Talbert and Justin Kimple drafted a
petition to DEC to re-map these wetlands to reflect their true
boundaries. The Clinic received notice from DEC in November 2006
that its petition has been granted and that the subject wetlands
will be remapped over the next several months.
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Riverkeeper v. Entergy
Indian Point |
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In September, 2005, Entergy and the
Nuclear Regulatory Commission announced that the underground pools
containing spent nuclear fuel at the Indian Point Nuclear Power
Plant were leaking contaminated water. This water is contaminated
with radioactive tritium, strontium 90, and cesium. These
radioactive elements are reaching the Hudson River. Although Indian
Point is regulated by the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, certain
aspects of hazardous nuclear waste, including underground storage
tanks, are regulated by EPA. Pursuant to Resource Conservation and
Recovery Act regulations, Entergy was required to notify EPA
promptly upon its discovery that its underground waste storage tanks
were leaking. This notice would invoke a public EPA remedial
process pursuant to 40 C.F.R. Part 280. Entergy has failed to make
the required notification.
On April 18, 2006, Riverkeeper gave notice of its intent to sue
pursuant to RCRA to enforce the notification requirement and invoke
EPA regulatory jurisdiction. The notice period expired in June.
Riverkeeper has not yet decided whether to proceed with the
litigation.
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