|

*Note: This is an unofficial copy and contains different pagination
than the original.
UNITED STATES DISTRICT CQURT
SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF WEST VIRGINIA
CHARLESTON DIVISION
PATRICIA BRAGG,
et al.,
Plaintiffs
v.
DANA ROBERTSON,
et al.,
Defendants.
CIVIL ACTION NO. 2:98-0636
MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER GRANTING PRELIMINARY
INJUNCTION
Pending is Plaintiffs' motion for a preliminary injunction. At a continuing
hearing held on February 4 and 5; February 9 and 10; February 17, 18 and
19; and February 26, came the Plaintiffs by counsel Joseph Lovett, James
Hecker, Suzanne Weise and Patrick McGinley; the federal Defendants(1) by Department of Justice counsel Steven Rusak
and Ruth Ann Storey; Defendant Miano(2) by
counsel Russell Hunter, Craig Giffin and Thomas Clarke; the Arch subsidiaries
(Hobet) by counsel Roger Wolfe, James Snyder and Robert McLusky; the Associations(3) by counsel Warren Upton and Shane Harvey;
and the Land Companies(4) by counsel Robert
Pollitt and Rick Farmer for a hearing on Plaintiffs' motion. After considering
the arguments of counsel, the Court GRANTS the motion.
I. BACKGROUND
This case involves the proposed issuance of permits by state and federal
agencies required before a mining company may conduct surface mining operations
colloquially known as "mountaintop removal mines." Because several
permits are required from different agencies and under complex laws and
regulations, the Court briefly outlines the permitting process.
Under the Surface Mining Control and Reclamation Act ("SMCRA"),
"[s]urface mining operations must comply with the environmental protection
performance standards established by SMCRA and refined in its implementing
regulations." 5 Am. L. of Mining § 172.05[1]. The permit applicant
must receive a SMCRA permit from the regulatory authority which, in this
state, is the DEP.
A mining company must also seek permits in order to comply with the Clean
Water Act. Our Court of Appeals has recognized that "[t]he stated objective
of the Clean Water Act is 'to restore and maintain the chemical, physical,
and biological integrity of the Nation's waters." James Citv County,
Va. v. EPA, 12 F.2d 1330, 1332 (4th Cir. 1993), cert. denied,
513 U.S. 123 (1994)(citing 33 U.S.C. § 1251(a)). Under section 401
of the Clean Water Act("CWA"), the permit applicant must "obtain
a certification from the state in which the proposed discharge is located
that the discharge will comply with any applicable water quality standards."
5 Am. L. of Mining § 169.02[2][a][i]. Section 402 "makes it unlawful
to discharge any pollutant from a point source [within the mine operation]
to waters of the United States without an NPDES(5)
permit." Id. (footnote added)
Under section 404, the applicant must receive a permit from the United
States Army Corps of Engineers ("Corps") "for the discharge
of dredged or fill material into the navigable waters," 33 U.S.C. §
1344(a), which are all "waters of the United States." Id.
§ 1362(7). An applicant may seek a general Section 404 permit under
the Nationwide Permit ("NWP") program, if the mining "will
cause only minimal adverse effects when performed separately, and will have
only minimal cumulative adverse effect on the environment." 5 Am. L.
of Mining § 169.02[3][b][iii][A]. For surface coal mining, the relevant
Nationwide Permit is generally NWP 21. Alternatively, if the mining will
not qualify under the Nationwide Permit program, the applicant may seek
an individual section 404 permit.(6)
A. Procedural Background
Because several agencies are called upon to permit mountaintop removal
mining under more than one federal and state statute and regulation, the
procedural background is challenging.
Plaintiffs instituted this civil action on July 16, l998, alleging three
counts against the federal Defendants and ten counts against Defendant Miano,
of the DEP.
In Counts One through Ten, Plaintiffs sued Miano, alleging a pattern
and practice of violations of mandatory non-discretionary duties under SMCRA
and the West Virginia state regulatory program approved under that statute.
In Counts Eleven though Thirteen, Plaintiffs sued the federal
Defendants, alleging a pattern and practice of failure on their part to
carry out their statutory duties under the National Environmental Policy
Act ("NEPA"), 42 U.S.C § 4321 et seq., Clean
Water Act, 33 U.S.C. § 1344 et seq., and the Administrative
Procedure Act ("APA"), 5 U.S.C. §§ 553, 706(2)(A). Plaintiffs
allege it is unlawful for the Corps to issue NWPs for surface mining valley
fills in West Virginia; the Corps violates NEPA by issuing NWPs without
the required analysis; and the Corps issues permits in a manner that allows
illegal segmentation of intended mine operations.
One of the proposed permits alleged to be an instance of the pattern
and practice is Hobet's Spruce Fork #1 mine, a permit application submitted
by the Arch subsidiaries. Two of the individual Plaintiffs, James and Sibby
Weekley, live in Pigeonroost Hollow, directly adjacent to the proposed mine,
where valley fills for the mine would be placed. If the permits are granted,
it is undisputed this mine would be the largest contiguous surface mine
permit in state history.
Arguments about the Spruce Fork mine were first brought before the Court
in November 1998 when Plaintiffs sought a temporary restraining order ("TRO")
to force Defendant Miano to rescind the surface mining permit granted November
4, 1998.(7) The issue was averted because
Hobet had to acquire other permits before mining or disturbance could begin
and because, at the hearing, Hobet offered a conciliation. It agreed to
give Plaintiffs at least one week's notice before beginning any mining activity
at Spruce Fork. Because Plaintiffs could not demonstrate irreparable harm,
in light of the concession, the Court denied the motion for a TRO.
On December 7, Plaintiffs moved for summary judgment, declaratory judgment
and a permanent injunction or, in the alternative, for a preliminary injunction
on Count 12, a count alleged against the federal Defendants. One
day later, Plaintiffs and the federal Defendants moved to cancel the preliminary
injunction hearing and to withdraw the motion for a preliminary injunction.
The Court granted the respite. Plaintiffs' motion for summary judgment,
declaratory judgment and permanent injunction remained pending.
On December 23,1998, based on a proposed Settlement Agreement,(8) Plaintiffs moved for voluntary dismissal of the
three counts against the federal Defendants. The Settlement Agreement stated
the Corps, in conjunction with other federal and state agencies, would
enter into an agreement to prepare an Environmental Impact Statement
("EIS") on a proposal to consider developing agency policies,
guidance, and coordinated agency decision-making processes to minimize,
to the maximum extent practicable, the adverse environmental effects to
waters of the United States and to fish and wildlife resources affected
by mountaintop mining operations, and to environmental resources that could
be affected by the size and location of excess spoil disposal sites in valley
fills.
Page 3. In the interim, the agreement will require mining companies to
seek individual Section 404 permits, rather than NWPs, when there are more
than minimal adverse effects expected. The Agreement stipulates that if
a mining permit will drain a watershed of 250 acres or more, it will be
"considered" to have more than minimal adverse effects. See
pages 4-5.
Important for this injunction application, Plaintiffs specifically reserved
in the Settlement Agreement the right to challenge the proposed Spruce Fork
permit, which was exempted from application of the new policies.
On December 30, l998 the Court granted Plaintiffs' motion to amend their
Complaint, which, inter alia, added two new claim against Defendant
Miano, alleging similar violations of nondiscretionary duties in the same
course of conduct. On January 6, 1999 Plaintiffs moved again for leave to
file a Second Amended Complaint, which deleted the previously-alleged counts
against the federal Defendants and a similar count against Defendant Miano,
but which added two new counts against Defendant Robertson.(9)
Plaintiffs moved for a TRO on January 22. Due to an unopposed motion
to continue the hearing, the parties did not argue the motion until February
3, at which time the Court granted the TRO, pending the injunction request.
The preliminary injunction hearing began the next morning and has continued
on every day available on the docket, eventually consuming over thirty-five
hours of courtroom time. The subjects of evidence and argument are complex,
and the interplay of statutes and regulations is byzantine. The Court emphasizes
that a decision on the merits of the case will not be made until discovery
and other pretrial processes are complete.
B. Factual Development
Plaintiffs argue that, without preliminary injunctive relief, mining
at Spruce Fork will bury a living stream and a forested hollow, permanently
destroying the indigenous wildlife and flora as well as the unique topography
of this portion of southern West Virginia. They allege Miano has granted
permits in violation of his nondiscretionary duties requiring that the mined
area meets approximate original contour ("AOC") requirements,
in granting a buffer zone variance, in granting a contemporaneous reclamation
variance, and in not requiring a hydrologic reclamation plan. Plaintiffs
allege the federal Defendants violated a nondiscretionary duty by granting
a permit under the NWP 21 program and by failing to conduct an Environmental
Assessment ("EA") or to require an Environmental Impact Statement
("EIS") before issuing the permit.
Miano and the federal Defendants contend they have completed all duties
required under the law. Hobet joins in their arguments. Specifically, Miano
argues the permit application indicates the mine will be restored to AOC.
He also argues DEP made the required findings before granting the buffer
zone and contemporaneous reclamation variances, and that all elements of
the hydrological reclamation plan are included within the permit application.
Similarly, the federal Defendants argue the Corps properly determined the
mine qualified for NWP analysis because it would have minimal adverse impacts.
The Corps argues it has already conducted an EA on NWP 21 and found such
permits have no significant impact, a finding that satisfies NEPA review.
Generally, all Defendants argue that, because Defendants have made all required
findings and conclusions, Plaintiffs are actually contesting Defendants'
exercise of discretion in making required findings and conclusions.
II. DISCUSSION
A. Jurisdiction
A1though the parties have not contested the issue seriously, the Court
is ever mindful to examine subject matter jurisdiction. After an evaluation
of statutory and congressional intent, the Court previously held Plaintiffs
need not exhaust administrative remedies before filing a citizen action
alleging agencies have engaged in a pattern and practice of violations of
mandatory, nondiscretionary duties. Bragg v. Robertson, 2:98-0636,
slip op. at 9-16 (S.D. W. Va. Oct. 9, 1998) (Haden, C.J.). "Because
Congress has not specifically mandated exhaustion of administrative remedies
for citizen suits, the question lies within the sound discretion of the
Court." Id. at 13. The Court holds that when a plaintiff states
allegations of a pattern and practice claim sufficient to survive a motion
to dismiss, there is no exhaustion requirement before attacking a particular
permit as an instance of the alleged pattern and practice violations.
B. Standard of Review
1. Preliminary Injunction Standard
Our Court of Appeals has a long tradition of applying a balancing test
in determining whether a preliminary injunction is properly granted. See
Blackwelder Furn. Co. v. Seilig Mfg. Co., Inc., 550 F.2d 189 (4th
Cir. 1977). The sequential application of the Blackwelder factors
was discussed most recently in Steakhouse, Inc. v. City of Raleigh, North
Carolina, No. 97-2341, 1999 WL 22978, *2 (4th Cir. Jan. 21, 1999):
In deciding whether to grant a preliminary injunction, the district court
is to consider three factors. First, it must balance the likelihood of irreparable
harm to the plaintiff if the injunction is refused against the likelihood
of irreparable harm to the defendant if it is granted. Second, the court
should consider the likelihood that the plaintiff will succeed on the merits.
The more the balance of harm leans away front the plaintiff, the stronger
his showing on the merits must be. Finally, the court must consider the
public interest. Blackwe1der Furniture Co. v. Seilig Mfg. Co., 550
F.2d 189 (4th Cir. 1977).
Id. The plaintiff bears the burden of proving the factors favor
the grant of an injunction. Manning v. Hunt, 119 F.3d 254, 263 (4th
Cir. 1997).
On review, the Court of Appeals applies an abuse of discretion standard,
Steakhouse, 1999 WL 22978, at *2 (citing Direx Israel Ltd. V.
Breakthrough Medical Corp., 952 F.2d 802, 814 (4th Cir. 1991)).
In applying the balancing test, the most important factors are the two
factors regarding the balancing of harms. Manning, 119 F.3d at 263.
A plaintiff must demonstrate harm that is "'neither remote nor speculative,
but actual and imminent.'" Id. (quoting Tucker Anthony Realty
Corp. V. Schlesinger, 888 F.2d 969, 975 (2nd Cir. 1989)). If, after
balancing the harm to a plaintiff if the injunction is not granted against
the harm to a defendant if the injunction is granted,
"the balance 'tips decidedly' in favor of the plaintiff, a preliminary
injunction will be granted if 'the plaintiff has raised questions going
to the merits so serious, substantial, difficult and doubtful, as to make
them fair ground for litigation and thus for more deliberate investigation.'
As the balance tips away from the plaintiff, a stronger showing on the merits
is required."
Id. (citations omitted). Until the balancing of harms is complete,
"the district judge cannot know how strong and substantial must be
the plaintiff's showing of 'likelihood of success.'" Id. (quoting
Direx Israel, 952 F.2d at 812).
The Court recognizes "'[T]he grant of interim relief [is] an extraordinary
remedy involving the exercise of a very far-reaching power, which is to
be applied only in limited circumstances which clearly demand it.'"
Steakhouse, 1999 WL 22978, at *2 (quoting Direx Israel, 952
F.2d at 811 (internal quotation marks omitted)).
2. Arbitrary and Capricious Standard
Fourth Circuit precedent establishes the application of the arbitrary
and capricious standard in reviewing the merits of agency actions. James
City County v. EPA, 12 F.3d 1330, 1338 n.4 (4th Cir. 1993), cert.
denied, 513 U.S. 823 (1994). That standard is circumscribed by example
and limitation:
when reviewing an agency's decision to determine if that decision
was arbitrary and capricious, the scope of our review is narrow. Like the
district court, we look only to see if there has been a "clear error
of judgment." Marsh v. Oregon Natural Resources Council, 490
U.S. 360, 378, 109 S. Ct. 1851, 104 L.Ed.2d 377 (1989). An agency's
rule would be arbitrary and capricious if the agency relied on factors
that Congress has not intended it to consider, entirely failed to consider
an important aspect of the problem, offered an explanation for
its decision that runs counter to the evidence before the agency,
or is so implausible that it could not be ascribed to a difference in view
or the product of agency expertise. See Motor Vehicle Mfrs
Ass'n v. State Farm Mut., 463 U.S. 29, 43, 103 S. Ct. 2856, 77 L.Ed.2d
443 (1983). Although our inquiry into the facts is to be searching and careful,
this court is not empowered to substitute its judgment for that of the agency.
See Bowman Transp., Inc. v. Arkansas-Best Freight Sys., Inc.,
419 U.S. 281, 285, 95 S. Ct. 438, 42 L.Ed.2d 447 (1974).
Hughes River Watershed Conservation v. Johnson, 165 F.3d 283,
287-88 (4th Cir. 1999)(emphasis added).
C. Application of the Standard
1. Balancing of the Harms
a. Harm to Plaintiffs in Absence of Injunction
The harm to Plaintiffs in the absence of preliminary injunctive relief
is actual, imminent and wholly irreparable. Not only would mining activity
detrimentally affect James and Sibby Weekley, who live within the hollow
where valley filling will occur, the valley fill would actually and detrimentally
affect the stream and its flora and fauna near the Weekleys' home.
James Weekley, who has lived in Pigeonroost Hollow for 57 years, and
in his current home for a decade, fished and swam in the stream his entire
life; his grandchildren now do the same. Weekley obtains water from the
stream year-round. He and his wife Sibby enjoy watching the variety of animals
that live in the stream and in the surrounding area. Mr. Weekley described
the Hollow: "To me it's a rain forest. It's a beautiful place with
clear water, with every aquarium life in it, all different species of hardwoods,
between two mountains that is very, very beautiful to me." Feb. 4 &
5 Tr. at 11.
The blasting at the Del-Tex Mine, another Arch operation located about
3/4 miles by air or 2 ½ miles by road from the Weekleys' home, has
cracked the walls of their house. The Dal-Tex operations have made the air
so dusty that he and his wife cannot sit out on the porch comfortably. Even
while staying inside, the Weekleys cough from dust particles and their furniture
is constantly layered with dust.
Cindy Rank, Chair of the West Virginia Highland Conservancy's ("Highland
Conservancy," "Conservancy") Mining Committee, testified
to the harm that will occur to the Highland Conservancy members if the injunction
does not issue. She characterized the group as "protect[ing] special
places" and "the specialness of the place that we find in West
Virginia, the clean water, the clean air that allows us to have healthy
communities of people and wildlife." Feb. 4 & 5 Tr. at 71.
Last fall, the Conservancy organized a rally in which it conducted a
flyover of the proposed Spruce Fork mine and visited Pigeonroost Hollow.
Mr. Weekley showed them where the mine would be located, according to the
maps he had seen. Members hiked up the hollow to the ridgeline and looked
at the proposed Spruce Fork site, as well as the current Dat-Tex mine. Rank
remembered, "My heart sunk and I think everyone else's did. It was
a relatively cheery walk -- hike up the hill. Got very quiet and people
were visibly shaken from what they thought would appear behind us when they
looked across and saw what was already taking place." Feb. 4 &
5 Tr. at 76-77. On another trip to a mine, Conservancy members walked to
the bottom of a fill and were "aghast." Id. at 81. Rank
testified the group intends to continue outings to view the natural habitat
in areas like Pigeonroost Hollow "to the greatest extent their physical
and mental abilities can stand." Id. at 112. Rank has visited
several mine areas, including several mountaintop removal sites, over the
past few years.
Rank was "pretty much upset" at seeing the loss of "some
of the richest areas of West Virginia." Id. at 80. She considered
Pigeonroost Hollow to be "much like a whole lot of hollows I have been
to and the one I live in, that is, "pristine," although there
is a deserted car in the hollow where she lives. Id. at 76. Rank
explained, "I think the quality of the ecosystem and the water and
all are pristine, and I certainly think Pigeonroost was one of those basically
undisturbed hollows that we find all over the State of West Virginia."
Id.
Other Conservancy members have encountered the effects of mining. One
was kayaking elsewhere in southern West Virginia and could not travel up
one of his favorite tributaries because it no longer existed, having been
covered and destroyed by mining activities. Id. at 111.
Plaintiffs introduced a map prepared by Rank showing the extent of surface
mining in Boone, Mingo and Logan counties of southern West Virginia. Rank
transposed topographical maps Qf issued and pending(10)
mine permits prepared by a geologist in the Logan DEP office onto
a larger topographical map.(11) While preparing
it, she observed a noticeable change in the size of the permits. Permits
issued in the late 1980s and early 1990s were approved for noticeably larger
contiguous areas than were earlier ones. Although Rank's map does not purport
to depict what areas have been reclaimed within the map area, it demonstrates
the surface area that has been or is proposed to be disturbed by mining
within three counties.
Plaintiffs' biologist, Benjamin Stout III, testified the stream was "a
very nice pristine watershed" with very little human or natural disturbance.(12) Feb. 9 & 10 Tr. at 35.
Considering that, he characterized the stream as within the top ten percent
of streams, as "exceptionally good water quality." Id.
at 40. The area of the stream is over ninety percent forested. Id.
at 35. He classified the stream as a perennial stream, of third order at
its mouth.
Stout determined the stream is a "keystone community"(13) such that its destruction would have serious
detrimental effects on downstream communities. He based his judgment primarily
on the strength of macroinvertebrates, which are the primary consumers in
the stream. Stout found "diverse, abundant, and vibrant macroinvertebrate
communities in all the streams" he examined at Pigeonroost Hollow.
Id. at 40. At the mouth of the stream, Stout found all three cycles
of stonefly pteronarcys, a very pollution sensitive species with a three-year
life cycle, indicating that, over the last three years, nothing has disturbed
the stream in a way to disturb its lifecycle. This further supports classification
of the stream as perennial because it demonstrates there was sufficient
water year-round for this species to continue to live. It also supports
the stream's classification as very good quality because the animal is pollution-sensitive.
Because the headwater stream community is a "keystone community,"
if it is disturbed, the rest of the stream is adversely affected in a serious
manner. Id. at 47. Stout described the ecosystem of the watershed
and forest community as completely interrelated and interdependent. The
forest canopy buffers the daily fluctuations in temperature, keeping the
stream-temperature at a moderate level, which protects aquatic life. Fallen
limbs in the stream bed hold fallen leaves long enough for the macroinvertebrates
to shred them into fine particles that feed larger animals downstream. Deforestation
would eliminate this interdependence and destroy the aquatic life.
Similarly, if the watershed is destroyed, diversity within the forest
community will fail. The watershed is a critical area for growth of insects,
which, at adulthood, leave the stream and are the primary foodsource for
mammals and birds of the forest community. The insects are not only the
primary foodsource, but also a unique one because they are composed mostly
of fats, unusual in the forest, and of protein.
Furthermore, Stout testified that a study performed by a private environmental
group for Hobet that discussed the effects of valley fills would never withstand
peer review. Stout explained the report failed to include a scientific control
group so it was impossible to see what changes might have occurred simply
based on natural changes, such as El Nino. Second, the measurements
were taken at inconsistent times of the year, first April, then May and
finally July. Stout explained that samples taken in April or May would contain
different organisms than would be present in the stream in July, a difference
that would in itself make the samples inconsistent. The Hobet study also
used different sampling techniques: first using a square foot sampler but
then using handpicking techniques. Finally, it took too few measurements
to give an accurate view of what was occurring in the sampled areas. They
sampled once, then seven years later, and then four years later. Three samples
over an eleven year period made it "pretty tough to ascertain what's
going on out there." Id. at 56.
b. Harm if an Injunction Issues
Hobet presented evidence demonstrating significant harms to the company,
workers and the local economy if the permit is further delayed. First, Mark
White, general manager of the division of Hobet that contains the proposed
Spruce Fork operation and the current Dal-Tex mine, testified that the company
has suffered losses of a million dollars a month since July 1998 at just
the Old Hickory Mine at Dal-Tex. Because the company is unable to begin
pre-mining operations at Spruce Fork, it has had to begin "marginal"
mining of less profitable seams at Old Hickory. Because there were losses
rather than profits in these areas, the campany has shown losses in other
areas. The company has had to buy coal outside its own operations to make
up for shortfalls in expected production.
Even the marginal areas, however, will provide mining activity utilizing
miners and equipment until mid-summer for some operations and December 1999
for others. Hobet expects that, if a permit is issued immediately, the dragline
will be idle for one to three months. Currently Hobet has laid off thirteen
employees and issued WARN notices(14)
for others. With the shutting down of the marginal operations, it
anticipates continued layoffs.
White also testified that, because of the massive investment in the Spruce
Fork operation, which currently carries a book value of $70 million, the
company may not continue to suffer losses, but instead may choose to close
the complex. It it did that, he warned the complex's 300 employees would
lose their jobs. Similarly, equipment would be moved to operating locations
outside of West Virginia.
He averred that mining using mountaintop removal methods was the only
economically feasible option for the site because of the depth and placement
of the coal seams. Nevertheless, he also acknowledged that Spruce Fork could
be mined with shovel and truck operations but at a much greater cost.
Hobet also presented expert testimony of Michael Brookshire that total
economic losses from the withholding of the permit until September 1999,
the approximate time of trial, is over twenty million dollars. This number
included lost compensation to production and supervisory employees, lost
compensation to contractors for services, lost income to vendors, and lost
income to mineral rights owners. Projected lost tax revenue to West Virginia
was calculated at over one and a half million dollars during the delay period.
Finally, Hobet presented evidence to rebut Plaintiffs' demonstration
of harm. Mark White testified that the only disturbance near the Weekleys'
home in the next several months would be the construction of the sediment
pond four thousand feet upstream from their home.(15)
Hobet elicited testimony from DEP witnesses that, once the catchment
pond were filled after an
initial storm, there would be no change in the downstream flow. Its consulting
biologist, Jessica Yeager, testified she found evidence the stream had been
disturbed by logging and human activities, by damming, draining and littering.
Because of this, she opined the stream has shifted from a keystone community
to a damaged one that produces little energy flowing downstream.
Similarly, a wildlife ecologist, Dr. Edwin Michael, testified
that the Pigeonroost Hollow habitat rated as a 59 at stream-side and a 69
at ridge-top, on a scale of 0 to 100. By contrast, two reclaimed mining
areas rated as 80. He testified to one area of recent logging and other
signs of logging within the past twenty-five years.
c. On Balance
Weighing the harms to be suffered by Plaintiffs in the absence of an
injunction against the harms to be suffered by Defendants and Hobet if an
injunction is issued, the Court finds the balance "tips decidedly"
in favor of Plaintiffs.
First, although the federal laws at issue consider economic interests,
the laws are intended to protect environmental interests. In its findings
for SMCRA, Congress acknowledged the importance of the coal industry
to the Nation's energy needs but also recognized the vast impact on the
environment, private property and quality or life that surface mining had
made in some areas. 30 U.S.C. § 1201(b)-(d). Accordingly, Congress
stated that the purpose of SMCRA was to:
(a) establish a nationwide program to protect societv and the
environment from the adverse effects of surface coal mining operations;
. . .
(d) assure that surface coal mining operations are so conducted as to
protect the
environment;
. . .
(f) assure that coal supply essential to the Nation's energy requirenients,
and to its economic and social well-being is provided and strike
a balance between protection of the environment and agricultural productivity
and the Nation's need for coal as an essential source of energy.
Id. § 1202. Congress recognized
the need to ensure the balance is maintained among protecting the environment,
protecting the citizenry and protecting the coal industry. Nonetheless,
written
against a backdrop of prior mining with
little environmental regulation, it is clear the laws' primary protections
extend to the citizenry and the environment.
Here, the Court cannot ignore the economic
harm that Hobet will suffer if an injunction issues. Hobet has made a significant
investment in the Spruce Fork mine, considering the cost of the operation
itself, the cost of purchasing homes around the proposed mine, and preparing
the permit application. Moreover, the dragline alone is a significant investment
and, if idled, downtime will be costly. Finally, Hobet adduced evidence
of current and proposed layoffs, caused by the delay in mining operations
at Spruce Fork. These harms, however great, are purely temporary economic
harms.
On the contrary, the harms to Plaintiffs
are imminent and irreversible. Although the stream quality is not as "pristine"
as some have testified, the harms currently present in the Pigeonroost stream
in the form of foreign objects such as a refrigerator and a table, are easily
removable and, thus, reparable. This differs dramatically from the permanent
destruction of the stream by filling it with tons of rock and fill. Furthermore,
Stout located, without Yeager's protest, many of the beneficial aquatic
animals to which Stout earlier testified and only some of the predator animals
to which Yeager testified.(16)
Overall, the Court's site visit, examination
of the stream and surrounding area, and observation of wildlife indicate
the stream is a keystone community rather than the damaged community of
Yeager's portrayal.
The Court's helicopter flyover of all mountaintop
removal sites in southern West Virginia revealed the extent and permanence
of environmental degradation this type of mining produces. On February 26,
the ground was covered with light snow, and mined sites were visible from
miles away. The sites stood out among the natural wooded ridges as huge
white plateaus, and the valley fills appeared as massive artificially landscaped
stair steps. Some mine sites were twenty years old, yet tree growth was
stunted or non-existent. Compared to the thick hardwood: of surrounding
undisturbed hills, the mine sites appeared stark and barren and enormously
different from the original topography.
If the forest canopy of Pigeonroost Hollow
is leveled, exposing the stream to extreme temperatures, and aquatic life
is destroyed, these harms cannot be undone. If the forest wildlife
are driven away by the blasting, the noise,
and the lack of safe nesting and eating areas, they cannot be coaxed back.
If the mountaintop is removed, even Hobet's engineers will affirm that it
cannot be reclaimed to its exact original contour. Destruction of the unique
topography of southern West Virginia, and of Pigeonroost Hollow in particular,
cannot be regarded as anything but permanent and irreversible. Such harms
cannot be remedied through the availability of damages. Again, the balance
of harms "tips decidedly" in favor of Plaintiffs.(17)
2. Likelihood of Success on the
Merits
Plaintiffs have presented evidence and argument
on several complex grounds in which they allege Defendants have violated
their mandatory, nondiscretionary duties. Of all these, the Court discusses
only two of the serious legal issues which have been raised in some detail.
a. Approximate Original Contour
Congress set out an approximate original
contour ("AOC") requirement that applies "to all surface
coal mining and reclamation operations" that require the operator to
backfill, compact . . . and grade in order
to restore the approximate original contour of the land with all highwalls,
spoil piles and depressions eliminated [.]
30 U.S.C. § 1265(b}(3) (emphasis added).
The statute permits an exception to the AOC requirement if the applicant
complies with statutory requirements for either a mountaintop removal variance
or a steep slope variance. See id. §
1265(c), (e). The statute defines AOC as:
that surface configuration achieved by backfilling
and grading of the mined area so that the reclaimed area, including any
terracing or access roads, closely resembles the general surface configuration
of the land prior to mining and blends into and complements the drainage
pattern of the surrounding terrain, with all highwalls and spoil piles
eliminated; water impoundments may be permitted where the regulatory authority
determines that they are in compliance with section 1265(b)(8) of this title.
Id. §
1291(2) (emphasis added); see also W. Va. Code § 22-3-3(e).
Neither Defendants nor Hobet attempt to
argue that Spruce Fork was granted a variance or that it was qualified for
one. Moreover, neither Defendants nor Hobet challenge that, in the absence
of a variance, a surface mine must comply with AOC. In fact, Defendant Miano's
brief states, "Without any doubt, the WVDEP, as the agency with primary
responsibility for interpretation and enforcement of the SMCRA in West Virginia,
has a mandatory duty to require restoration of AOC on surface mining operations
for which no variance from this requirement is sought." Miano Reply
Br. at 5. Instead, Defendants and Hobet argue that Defendants have made
all findings necessary to determine, and have determined in fact, the mine
will comply with the AOC requirement.
Relevant to the AOC issue, DEP Permit Supervisor,
Larry Alt, explained how he educates new permit reviewers about determining
AOC. Besides using chalkboard drawings, Alt draws contour lines around his
knuckles. He then shows a closed fist as the original mountain and a semi-open
fist as the restored mine site. Although his lessons include contour lines
which, among other things, show elevation, Alt does not consider elevation
in determining a permit meets AOC. Instead, Alt considers whether the site
will have the same general contours as before and whether the site will
be stable. Feb. 4 & 5 Tr. at 133-34.
Miano's primary defense is that the Court
is without jurisdiction in this area because determining "approximate
original contour" is by its nature a discretionary judgment call. Similarly,
Hobet argues AOC and its definition use non-specific terms that give DEP
discretion in its determination.
The AOC requirement and definition undeniably
allow the use of some discretion in determining whether a permit meets the
standard.(18)
The agency must make a ease-by-case determination
of whether the requirement is satisfied. This does not, however, give the
agency carte blanche in making the determination. "Approximate
original contour" does have an inherent meaning, more fully embodied
in the definition requiring the post-mining site to "closely resemble[]
the general configuration" of the land prior to mining. 30 U.S.C. §
1291(2).
As Miano admits, DEP is under a nondiscretionary
obligation to require the operator to restore the land to AOC if a variance
is not requested and approved.
During the permitting process, the applicant
is required to identify the pre-mining and post-mining topography to allow
the DEP to make a determination of whether the operation will comply with
the AOC requirement. Hobet's expert witness Oren Kitts measured one area
on the pre-mining topography map as having a total elevation of 1,620 feet
and an elevation change of 580 feet over 1250 feet. Feb. 19 Tr. at 30. The
valley fill will raise the valley floor in some areas by as much as three
hundred feet. Weekley, Feb. 4 & 5 Tr. at 17; Halstead, Feb.
9 & 10 Tr. at 151. The mountains will, in places, be lowered by as much
as two hundred feet. Feb. 9 & 10 Tr. at 152. Current plans for regrading
will leave five level or gently rolling areas, in stark contrast to the
current topography. The post-mining elevation map showed one flat or approximately
level area, 6000 feet in length, that had projected final elevations of
less than 50 feet.
Furthermore, the revised permit application
requires the elimination or diminution of some valley fills. Plaintiffs'
expert John Morgan testified, and Hobet's expert Oren Kitts concurred, the
revision does not include excess spoil calculations demonstrating where
all excess spoil will be placed.(19) The
revision does not include a revised regrade map showing the post-mining
regrade and topography either.(20) Instead,
the revised proposal includes only two cross-sections, which show the surface
configuration for just a slice of the mountain. Accordingly, it is difficult
to determine exactly what the post-mining surface configuration will be,
including the total relief, that is, the ratio of the highest elevation
to the lowest valley and whether the post-mining shapes will "closely
resemble the general surface configuration" pre-mining. This lack of
information prevents a determination of whether the proposed post-mining
configuration will meet AOC.
Finally, Plaintiffs introduced evidence
of DEP's fifty-foot rule in determining AOC. Under this rule, if there is
any change in elevation of more than 50 feet between pre-mining and post-mining
elevations, the permit would not be considered to restore the area to AOC.
Feb. 4 & 5 Tr. at 128-29. Larry Alt testified he did not apply the fifty-foot
rule because he believed the rule had been withdrawn. In fact, Larry Alt
sought and found the memorandum he had believed withdrew the rule, but discovered
the memorandum did not withdraw the rule. Id. at 129-30. Lewis Halstead,
DEP Assistant Chief of the Office of Mining and Reclamation, who is charged
with permitting, testified that a prior DEP Director David Callaghan put
out a "book" that rescinded all previous policies, including the
fifty-foot rule, not specifically included in the book, Feb. 9 & 10
Tr. at 149-50, but neither DEP nor any other party has produced the document.(21)
Chief Halstead testified that DEP does not
follow its fifty-foot rule but instead applies a completely subjective analysis
in which changes in elevation play "a very minor role." Feb. 18
Tr. at 127. Without looking at pre-mining configuration, Halstead said that
he could say a mine has been restored to AOC simply because, if a person
did not know the mountain had been mined, they could not tell. Id.
at 127-28. This, he said, was sufficient to qualify it as having been restored
to AOC.
The evidence demonstrates a serious question
as to whether DEP is failing to apply a fifty-foot rule that remains applicable.
Such actions may demonstrate arbitrary and capricious behavior of DEP in
violating or ignoring what may be a mandatory, nondiscretionary duty. Moreover,
the evidence demonstrates Plaintiffs have raised substantial, serious questions
going to the merits of whether Defendant Miano himself has breached mandatory,
nondiscretionary duties in his application of the AOC requirement. These
questions are so complex and difficult that they are "fair ground for
litigation and thus for more deliberate investigation," Manning,
119 F.3d at 263.
b. Illegal Segmentation
Under the NEPA, the Corps must prepare an
EIS before any "major Federal action[] significantly affecting the
quality of the human environment" is approvable. 42 U.S.C. § 4332(2)(C). The Corps may perform an EA if the
significance or the environmental impact is not apparent at the outset.
40 C.F.R. § 1508.9. If the agency
concludes an EA with a "finding of no significant impact" ("FONSI"),
the agency has fully complied with NEPA. South Carolina ex rel. Campbell
v. O'Leary, 64 F.3d 892, 896 (4th Cir. 1995).
"A non-federal project is considered
a 'federal action' if it cannot 'begin or continue without prior approval
of a federal agency.'" Maryland Conservation Council, Inc. v. Gilchrist,
808 F.2d 1039, 1042 (4th Cir. 1986) (citations omitted). An important
factor in the determination of whether a non-federal project is "federal
action" is the federal agency's "'authority to exercise discretion
over the outcome."' Id. (citation omitted).
To determine whether the environmental effects
are significant, the agency must ask:
whether the action is related to other actions
with individually insignificant but cumulatively significant impacts. Significance
exists if it is reasonable to anticipate a cumulatively significant impact
on the environment. Significance cannot be avoided by terming an action
temporary or by breaking it down into small component parts.
40 C.F.R. §
1508.27(b)(7). Thus, if the proposed action is separated into components
to avoid significance, the proposed project would be illegally segmented.
"We are committed to the proposition that when a major federal action
is undertaken, no part may be constructed without an EIS." Maryland
Conservation Council, 808 F.2d at 1042.
Our Court of Appeals has addressed the factors
to be considered in addressing segmentation.(22)
In Maryland Conservation Council,
the Court considered not only the utility of the proposed component, but
also whether the component involved such a dedication of resources that
it would virtually force the agency to approve a later component as "a
fait accompli." 808 F.2d at 1042-43. Accordingly, the Court must consider
whether the "project would violate NEPA by limiting the choice of reasonable
alternatives available to federal decision-makers." State of N.C.
v. City of Virginia Beach, 951 F.2d 596, 602 (4th Cir. 1991)
(internal quotations and citations omitted). That is, the Court considers
whether the completion of the first component has "a direct and substantial
probability of influencing" the agency's decision. Id. at 603.
It is undisputed that the Spruce Fork mine
requires a Section 404 permit from the Corps of Engineers before the operation
begins. Under Circuit precedent, when such a major project requires the
permitting approval of at least one federal agency, as the Spruce Fork mine
does, it qualifies as a major federal action. See Maryland Conservation
Council, 808 F.2d at 1042.
Here, no NEPA review has been undertaken.
The company has split the Spruce Fork operations into two phases: the first
phase to be authorized under a "NWP 21"; the second phase is to
be authorized, if at all, under an individual permit. The significance of
this is substantial. NWP 21 is a categorical authorization of surface mining
that "will cause only minimal adverse effects when performed separately,
and will have only minimal cumulative adverse effect on the environment."
33 U.S.C. § 1344(e)(l). NWP 21
received a categorical "FONSI" in l966. If a permit falls within
NWP 21's general parameters, it will not undergo the more careful review
that an individual permit receives. Accordingly, if authorized under NWP
21, the first phase of Spruce Fork would receive a much less stringent review
of the permit application by the Corps and would not be subject to any NEPA
analysis.
Hobet readily acknowledges that the permit
at issue is merely the "first phase" of its plans for Spruce Fork.(23)
Mark White, the general manager for the
Spruce Fork operation stressed the company has "a large investment
made based on running large volumes, based on running the type of volumes
that can be supported with the dragline operation." Feb. 19 Tr. at
193-94.
Plaintiffs have demonstrated a probability
of success on the merits in their argument regarding illegal segmentation.
The Court concludes that splitting Spruce Fork into two operations, the
first of which will receive only minimalized scrutiny for its environmental
effects, is a paradigmatic example of illegal segmentation. There is a strong
potential that "construction and the concomitant expenditure of funds
would create so much pressure" as to improperly influence the agency.
The Corps and Hobet argue that no improper
segmentation occurs where, based on a Corps regulation, portions of a larger
project proceed under an NWP, "while" the other portions are analyzed
under an individual permit. See 40 C.F.R. §
330.6(d).(24) This argument fails, for purposes
of the preliminary injunction, because there was no evidence adduced that
the Corps is evaluating the remainder of the operation under the individual
permit, but only, that Hobet will apply for one. Thus, instead
of the Corps making a determination of the entire project at once under
different programs, Hobet has phased the operation and not yet applied for
an individual permit for other significant parts. Second, the Corps and
Hobet note the regulation also states the Corps will not be prejudiced by
the approval of the first portion. This case alleges a pattern and practice
of the officials violating their mandatory duties. Accordingly, a regulation
stating that the agency will not be prejudiced by a decision on the earlier
phase lacks the force it might have in other circumstances. Contra
State of North Carolina, 951 F.2d at 602.(25)
Suffice it to say that although applicable law is not settled on this issue,
serious legal questions exist.
Although Spruce Fork's first "phase"
certainly possesses some independent utility, that is, the mining of coal
within its borders, that utility alone may not sustain the phasing of operations.
Instead, one must consider the vast dedication of resources to the Spruce
Fork operation, including the investment in the permit property itself,(26)
the permitting application process, moving
the equipment to the site, readying the site for mining, and the cost of
mining operations, not to mention the cost of litigating the permits. Second
and equally important, completion of the first phase may limit the agency's
"choice of reasonable alternatives" because, once this portion
of the mountain is clear-cut and mined, and the valley fills created, the
environmental harm is final and irreversib1e. It is probable that Hobet
would emphasize in the second permitting process, as it did before the Court,
the financial importance of avoiding having the dragline idle for any time
as well as the significant ripple effect that suspension of this mining
operation would have on the local and state economy.
In summary, it seems apparent the operations
were split intentionally to allow the commencement of mining operations
under a less critical agency review and to delay more detailed scrutiny
until after significant work has begun. Because completion of the first
phase has a direct and substantial probability of influencing the second
phase, splitting the operations in an effort to avoid significance appears
to violate NEPA.
c. Other Serious, Legal Questions
Exist
Finally, the Court again notes that these
are but two of the many areas in which Plaintiffs have demonstrated serious,
substantial and difficult questions going to the merits of the case. These
questions include whether DEW made its required findings before granting
the buffer zone variance or the contemporaneous reclamation variance;(27) whether valley fills must meet AOC; whether
alternative, off-site locations exist for excess spoil; and when the contemporaneous
reclamation 180-day period (28) begins to
run, including the administration of bond releases; and whether the Corps
violates the CWA by allowing Hobet to seek a NWP 21 for the Spruce Fork
operation.(29)
3. Public Interest
Finally, the Court considers the public
interest. It is apparent that, in the face of such serious and complex legal
questions presenting imminent and irreversible environmental harm, the public
interest favors preservation of the status quo until the Court is able to
rule finally on the merits at trial.
C. Posting of a Band
Rule 65(c), Federal Rules of Civil Procedure,
provides as follows:
(c) Security. No restraining
order or preliminary injunction shall issue except upon the giving of security
by the applicant, in such sum as the court deems proper, for the
payment of such costs and damages as may be incurred or suffered by any
party who is found to have been wrongfully enjoined or restrained. no such
security shall be required of the United States or of an officer or agency
thereof.
Fed. R. Civ. P. 65(c) (emphasis added).
The Court, mindful of controlling precedent from our Court of Appeals, does
not have discretion to dispense entirely with the question of whether or
not to require the posting of a bond. See e.g., District
17. UMWA v. A & M Trucking, Inc., 991 F.2d 108, 110 (4th
Cir. 1993)("A & M first argues that the district court's failure
to require the Unions to post security for the issuance of the preliminary
injunction was error. We agree."); Maryland Dep't of Human Resources
v. United States Dep't of Agric., 976 F.2d 1462, 1483 & n.21 (4th
Cir. 1992)("The rule is unambiguous, and the '[f]ailure to require
a bond before granting preliminary injunctive relief is reversible error.'");
see also Erin Connors Morton, Note, Security for Interluctory
Injunctions under Rule 65(c); Exceptions To the Rule Gone Awry, 46 Hastings
L.J. 1863, 1876 (1995) ("The Fourth Circuit [has] found the bond requirement
of Rule 65(c) to be a mandatory one . . . .")
Nonetheless, the Court believes, pursuant
to the unambiguous language of Rule 65(c), that it possesses significant
discretion in setting the amount of the bond. District 17, 991 F.2d
at 110 n.2; Human Resources, 976 F.2d at 1483; see West
Virginia Highlands Conservacy v. Island Creek Coal Co., 441 F.2d 232,
236 (1971) (Conservancy, a nonprofit membership corporation dedicated to
preserving natural, scenic, and historic areas in West Virginia highlands,
was required to post nominal $100 bond in preliminary and permanent injunction
against forest supervisor and coal company to halt certain mining and timber-cutting
activities in forest areas.).
Indeed, commentators have observed the propriety
of requiring little or no security in litigation of this type;
[I]t is common for courts in environmental
cases brought by environmental groups or individuals with limited means,
particularly in NEPA cases, to require little or no security.
Daniel Riesel, Temporary Restraining
Orders, Preliminary Injunctions, and Stays Pending Appeal in Environmental
Litigation, SA85 A.L.I.-A.B.A. 899, 955 (1996) (citing numerous cases);
see also Charles A. Wright et al., 11A Fed. Prac.
& Proc. Civil 2d § 2954 (2d
ed. 1995).(30)
Based on the foregoing authorities, and
the factors and discussion contained in them, the Court deems a bond in
the amount of $5,000 to be appropriate under the circumstances.(31)
If it should be determined this injunction
was issued wrongfully, Plaintiffs' loss of the bond proceeds would be a
significant financial deterrent to similar applications. Any other result
would effectively deny Plaintiffs' right of judicial review of the challenged
policy, practices and conduct of Defendants. Accordingly, Plaintiffs are
ORDERED to post security pursuant to Rule 65(c) in the
amount of $5,000 in cash or bond.
III. CONCLUSION
Accordingly, the Court GRANTS
Plaintiffs' motion for a preliminary injunction and the Court ISSUES
a preliminary injunction for the Plaintiffs and against the federal Defendants,
Defendant Miano, and the Arch subsidiaries. The Preliminary Injunction restrains
the federal Defendants from issuing any further permits for the Spruce Fork
mine, stays any permits previously issued by Miano for Hobet Spruce Fork
mine, and enjoins the Arch subsidiaries from commencing and continuing with
any pre-construction or mining activities for the Spruce Fork operation
until the court resolves the case on the merits. Finally, Plaintiffs are
ORDERED to provide security pursuant to Rule 65(c) in the
amount of $5,000.
The Clerk is directed to send a copy of
this Memorandum Opinion and Order to all counsel of record by FACSIMILE
and by first class mail.
ENTER: March 3,1999
_________[s/]___________________
Charles H. Haden II, Chief Judge
Endnotes
1. Defendants Dana Robertson, Joe Ballard, and Michael
Gheen, officials of the United States Army Corps of Engineers will
be referred to, collectively, as "federal Defendants."
2. Defendant Michael Miano is the Director of the
West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection ("DEP").
3. West Virqinia Coal Association and West Virginia
Mining and Reclamation Association will be referred to, collectively, as
"the Associations."
4. Western Pocahontas Properties Limited Partnership
and National Council of Coal Lessors, Inc. will be referred to, collectively,
as "Land Companies."
5. National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System.
6. For a more detailed discussion of the NWP program,
see infra section II.C.2.b.
7. Plaintiffs argued Miano had agreed to give them
two days' notice before issuing the permit, but failed to give such notice.
In turn, Miano argued the agreement had been conditioned on Plaintiffs'
refraining from filing suit, which was breached in July 1998.
8. The Settlement Agreement was signed by counsel
for Plaintiffs, the federal Defendants and Miano.
9. On January 7, the Court conferred with counsel
to discuss the meaning and ramifications of the Settlement Agreement. The
Court ordered the parties to brief the issues, and that briefing is now
complete. The parties requested and the court agreed that Plaintiffs' motion
to amend their complaint and Plaintiffs' motion for summary judgment and
a permanent injunction would be held in abeyance until matters regarding
the Settlement Agreement were resolved.
10. Rank believes one permit depicted on the map,
Independence Constitution Mine permit, is still pending. She indicated that
others may be pending still but has been unable to verify that information.
11. Rank admits she has no training or experience
in map-making, and that she made no effort to ground-truth the boundaries
of the permits. She stated that she resorted to this method only after attempting
in vain to discover such a composite map that might nave been kept by the
state regulators. She next attempted in vain to develop the map by her own
independent research but, because of the nature of the permit files and
the sheer volume of permit applications, determined the best way to proceed
was utilizing these individual topographical maps from the Logan DEP office.
12. The Court notes that both Stout and Rank described
the stream at Pigeonroost as "pristine." The Court has personally
viewed the stream and surrounding area, including the presence of a refrigerator
and a table, and concludes the "pristine" label is overreaching.
Similarly, the Court discounts Jams Weekley's testimony regarding the site
and presence of trout and other fish varieties in the stream. Nonetheless,
during the site visit, the Court found the stream to be of very good quality,
with clear running water, and containing many of the beneficial aquatic
life about which Stout testified.
13. Stout testified that the article first supporting
the keystone community theory is the most widely-cited article in the aquatic
biology area. Under this theory, the headwaters are a "keystone"
because if the keystone is taken out, the rest of the arch falls. Feb. 9
& 10 Tr. at 47.
14. WARN notices give affected employees notice of
a potential and impending layoff under the Worker Adjustment and Retraining
Notification ("WARN") Act, 29 U.S.C. §§ 2101-09.
15. White acknowledged that the proposed valley fill
above the Weekleys' home would commence five or six months after the issuance
of the permit, which would be prior to the September trial date.
16. The Court is concerned, not with harm to the
individual species of aquatic animals themselves, but instead with the consequential
and serious detrimental effects caused by destroying a link in the stream
and forest community, harming the community itself and the Weekleys, that
would occur within the time period before the September trial.
17. The Weekleys have demonstrated standing to proceed,
which is sufficient for the Court to address the relief sought. The Court
reserves the question of others' standing to pursue this relief.
18. Hobet argues the AOC definition gives DEP discretion
such that this Court may not review the DEP decision, citing National
Wildlife Federation v. Burford, 677 F. Supp. 1445, 1468-69 (D. Mont.
1995). The plaintiffs challenged the Secretary or the Interior's decisions
regarding the sale of coal leases. Relevant to this case, 30 U.S.C. § 1272(a)(5) required that "determinations of
the unsuitability of land for surface coal mining . . . shall be integrated
as closely as possible with present and future land use planning
. . . ." (emphasis added). The court held the language "introduces
a limited element of discretion allowing the Secretary some
degree of latitude . . ." 677 F. Supp. at 1469 (emphasis added). Contrary
to Hobet's claim, however, the Court did not dismiss the complaint based
on this "limited element of discretion." Instead it found the
plaintiffs were collaterally attacking regulations outside the public comment
and notice period. Here, Plaintiffs are not challenging the efficacy of
the "approximate original contour" statutory or regulatory requirement,
but rather the manner in which Defendant Miano has applied it.
19. In mountaintop removal mining, the rock and dirt
covering the coal, that is, the overburden, are removed to expose the coal
seam. Once the material is removed, its volume "swells," that
is, the material take up a larger space because it is no longer compacted
to a solid form. An excess spoil calculation enables one to determine that
the amount of overburden removed from the mine site, including a swell factor,
is equal to the sum of the amount of overburden needed to reclaim the disturbed
area plus the amount to be deposited in valley fills.
Both Morgan and Kitts testified that the
absence of excess spoil calculations precludes one from determining that
the spoil "balances," that is, that the amounts are equal, within
a reasonable degree of accuracy. Both experts testified that the information
within the recent proposed revision demonstrates the spoil is out of balance
by what may be a significant amount.
Morgan, Feb. 4 & 5 Tr. at 187-89; Kitts,
Feb. 19 Tr. at 71-72 (80 million cubic yards minus amounts contained in
several small areas).
20. The absence
of the excess spoil calculations and the regrade map would be especially
relevant if mining were to begin under the NWP, but the individual permit
were denied. In that instance, presumably Hobet would have to restore the
area to the regrade submitted in the original permit application. To do
that, it would have to either draw spoil from valley fills or from regraded
areas, in order to complete reclamation of the disturbed area, or else choose
not to mine some areas of the permitted operation. See Feb. 19 Tr.
at 61.
21. After the conclusion of the hearing, Defendant
Miano produced the document purporting to state the fifty-foot rule, as
well as a document purporting to render the rule void because it was not
specifically stated within a new policy handbook. The existence and validity
of the fifty-foot rule were raised early in the hearing, which stretched
over four weeks. DEP had the opportunity to produce and authenticate these
documents, subject to cross-examination. Production at this late date does
not fully answer the difficult, serious question of the administration of
the AOC rule.
22. The Court is aware of the Circuit's more recent
unpublished decision, New River Valley Greens v. United States Department
of Transportation, 161 F.3d 3 (4th Cir. 1998). Because it
is unpublished, the Court does not rely upon it.
23. When asked about the regrade of Spruce Fork after
the revision, Hobet's expert Oren Kitts characterized the revision as an
"interim configuration." Feb. 19 Tr. at 61 (emphasis added).
24. That provision states:
Subject to the following qualifications,
portions of a larger project may proceed under the authority of the NWPs
while the DE evaluates individual permit application for other portions
of the sane project, but only if the portions of the project qualifying
for NWP authorization would have independent utility and are able to function
or meet their purpose independent of the total project. When the functioning
or usefulness of a portion of the total project qualifying for an NWP is
dependent on the remainder of the project, such that its construction and
use would not be fully justified even if the Corps were to deny the individual
perrnit, the NWP does not apply and all portions of the project must be
evaluated as part of the permit process.
(1) When a portion of a larger project
is authorized to proceed under an NWP, it is with the understanding that
its construction will in no wav prejudice the decision on the individual
permit for the rest of the proiect. Furthermore, the individual permit
documentation must include an analysis of the impacts of the entire project,
including related activities authorized by NWP.
33 C.F.R. § 330.6(d) (emphasis added).
25. Even where
such a regulation did have effect, the Fourth Circuit recognized the possibility
of such dedication of resources as to effectively force the agency to act
under extreme pressure. See State of North Carolina, 951 F.2d
at 602.
26. Mark White testified that the current book value
of Spruce Fork is $70 million, which is substantially less than the initial
investment.
27. For instance, the Court notes particularly the
serious questions raised regarding DEP's having made findings before granting
the buffer zone and contemporaneous reclamation variances.
Ken Stollings, DEP permit review engineer
and team leader for the Spruce Fork permit review team, was questioned about
where his findings for granting variances were listed. When questioned about
his single-sentence legal conclusions, Stollings' beliefs regarding his
role as a permit reviewer became patently clear. Stollings stated, "Now,
I do not provide a justification for Hobet to do this. I simply state that
their justification is found within their permit and that I have reviewed
it," Feb. 17 Tr. at 166, and "Hobet provides the justification,
I only review it." Id. at 168.
Furthermore, Stollings repeatedly stated
his belief regarding the excellence of the permit application. See,
e.g., Feb. 17 Tr. at 115. The putative excellence of a permit application
does not relieve an agency of its mandatory, nondiscretionary duty to make
findings before it issues a permit. Similarly, the number of hours that
the agency personnel have spent reviewing a permit application are not,
by themselves, evidence of the agency having made its required findings
or evidence of the soundness of the application.
Moreover, the Court discounts Mr. Stollings'
testimony as patently unreliable. His testimony reflected continuing refusals
to answer any questions that might be helpful to Plaintiffs or to concede
any deficiency of DEP in the permit review process.
28. As part of
the contemporaneous reclamation standards, a mining company must regrade
the disturbed area within 180 days after it completes the mining in that
area.
29. " Although it does not impact on the particular
preliminary injunction at hand, evidence was adduced on yet another serious,
legal question, that is, the granting of AOC variances based on impermissible
post-mining land uses.
Furthermore, throughout the evidence, the
Court found examples of potentially inappropriate deference in decision-making.
That is, there were instances in which one agency or team within an agency
charged with making a particular finding blindly relied upon a somewhat
similar finding made by another agency or team, without any exercise of
independent agency expertise or discretion.
30. Another commentator
has observed as follows:
During the 1970s [courts] developed a narrow
exemption to allow indigents and public interest groups, without posting
security, to seek injunctive relief requiring the government to properly
administer public programs. The reasoning was clear: Congress had granted
rights or other benefits to the plaintiff classes which could not effectively
be pursued if security had to be posted. Plaintiffs in such cases are merely
surrogate attorneys general, enforcing federal law in the absence of government
enforcement. If the government had enforced, the private defendants would
have been barred from receiving security by Rule 65(c).
Jeffrey G. Miller, Private Enforcerment
of Federal Pollution Control Laws Part II, 14 Envtl. L. Rep. 10063,
nn.87-90 and accompanying text (1984).
31. The Court
does not mean to burden the Court of Appeals with a restatement of its analysis
from the Court's February 23, 1999 Order Granting Extension of Temporary
Restraining Order. The same considerations and rationale in setting the
security that governed the Court's February 23 determination govern its
decision today. As well, the Court considers the significant financial deterrent
effect that would result if Plaintiffs lose their bond.
The Court notes Plaintiffs have posted the
$5,000 security, by check, in accordance with the February 23 Order.
|