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IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF WEST VIRGINIA
AT HUNTINGTON
PATRICIA BRAGG, JAMES W. WEEKLEY,
SIBBY R. WEEKLEY, THE WEST VIRGINIA
HIGHLANDS CONSERVANCY, HARRY M.
HATFIELD, CARLOS GORE, LINDA GORE,
CHERYL PRICE, JERRY METHENA,
TOMMY MOORE, and VICTORIA MOORE,
Plaintiffs,
v. CIVIL ACTION NO. 3:98-
COLONEL DANA ROBERTSON, District
Engineer, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers,
Huntington District, LIEUTENANT GENERAL
JOE N. BALLARD, Chief of Engineers and
Commander of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers,
MICHAEL D. GHEEN, Chief of the Regulatory
Branch, Operations and Readiness Division,
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Huntington
District, and MICHAEL MIANO, Director,
West Virginia Division of Environmental Protection,
Defendants.
Complaint for Declaratory and Injunctive Relief
Introduction
1. Counts 1 through 10 below arise under the citizen suit provision of
the Surface Mining Control and Reclamation Act of 1977 (The Surface Mining
Act), 30 U.S.C. § 1270(a)(2). Plaintiffs allege that Defendant, the
Director of the West Virginia Division of Environmental Protection (DEP),
is engaged in an ongoing pattern and practice of violating his non-discretionary
duties under the Surface Mining Act and the West Virginia state program
approved under that statute. Defendant Miano has routinely approved surface
coal mining permits which decapitate the State's mountains and dump the
resulting waste in nearby valleys, burying of hundreds of miles of headwaters
of West Virginia's streams. Defendant Miano's issuance of these permits
violates his non-discretionary duty to withhold approval from permit applications
that are not accurate, complete, and in compliance with the approved State
surface mining program.
2. Specifically, Defendant Miano has abdicated his responsibilities to withhold
approval of permit applications that will result in unpermitted discharges
of pollutants into state waters, violations of state water quality standards,
disturbances to 100-foot buffer zones around streams, destruction of riparian
vegetation, violations of the requirement to restore mined and reclaimed
areas to their approximate original contours, and improper post-mining land
uses.
3. Plaintiffs seek a declaration that Defendant Miano has violated his statutory
responsibilities, an injunction requiring him to conform his future conduct
to federal and state law, and costs and expenses, including attorneys' and
expert witness fees.
4. In Counts 11 through 13 below, Plaintiffs seek relief from officials
in the Huntington District office of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers ("Corps")
for their failure to carry out their statutory duties under the National
Environmental Policy Act, 42 U.S.C. §§ 4321 et seq. ("NEPA"),
the Clean Water Act, 33 U.S.C. § 1344, and the Administrative Procedure
Act, 5 U.S.C. §§ 553, 706(2)(A) ("APA").
5. Plaintiffs contend that it is beyond the Corps' jurisdiction under 33
U.S.C. § 1344 to regulate such fills, because the fills are created
for the disposal of waste material. Alternatively, if the Corps does in
fact have jurisdiction to regulate surface mining valley fills, Plaintiffs
contend that the Corps has violated NEPA by unlawfully failing to analyze
the adverse and cumulative environmental impacts of filling of waters of
the United States when they grant Nationwide Permits for valley fills and
surface coal mining activities in West Virginia. Finally, Plaintiffs contend
that it is unlawful for the Corps to issue Nationwide Permits 21 and/or
26 for surface mining valley fills in West Virginia, because those fills
have more than minimal adverse environmental impacts. To curtail the continuing
effect of these errors, Plaintiffs seek (1) a declaration that the Corps
has violated its statutory responsibilities, (2) an injunction requiring
the Corps to conform its future conduct to federal law, and (3) an award
of costs and expenses, including reasonable attorneys' and expert witness
fees.
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Jurisdiction and Venue
6. This action arises under Section 520(a)(2) of the Surface Mining Act,
30 U.S.C. § 1270(a)(2), the Clean Water Act, 33 U.S.C. §§
1251-1387, NEPA, 42 U.S.C. §§ 4321 et seq., the Administrative
Procedure Act, 5 U.S.C. §§ 701-706, and the All Writs Act, 28
U.S.C. § 1651(a). The Court has subject matter jurisdiction by virtue
of 30 U.S.C. § 1270(a)(2), 28 U.S.C. §§ 1331, 1361, 1551,
2201 and 2202.
7. By certified letter dated April 16, 1998, and in a supplemental letter
dated June 18, 1998, Plaintiffs gave notice of the violations and their
intent to file suit to Defendant Miano, DEP, and others entitled to receive
notice of intent to sue, as required by Section 520(b)(2) of the Surface
Mining Act, 30 U.S.C. § 1270(b)(2), and 30 C.F.R. § 700.13.
8. More than 60 days have passed since the April 16 notice, and Defendant
Miano has not redressed the violations.
9. Plaintiffs need not wait 60 days after giving the June 18 supplemental
notice because the Surface Mining Act authorizes citizens to sue "immediately
after such notification in the case where the violation or order complained
of constitutes an imminent threat to the health or safety of the plaintiff
or would immediately affect a legal interest of the plaintiff," 30
U.S.C. § 1270(b)(2), and Defendant Miano's failure to withhold the
permits at issue in this case would immediately affect the Weekleys' property
interests.
10. Venue is appropriate in this judicial district pursuant to both 30 U.S.C.
§1270(c) and 28 U.S.C. § 1391(e) because (a) the surface mining
operations complained of are located within this district, (b) defendants
Robertson and Gheen reside in this district, (c) a substantial part of the
events or omissions giving rise to this action occurred in this district,
and (d) the individual plaintiffs reside in this District.
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Parties
11. Defendant Lieutenant General Joe N. Ballard is the Chief of Engineers
and Commander of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. He is charged with the
supervision and management of all Corps decisions and actions, including
the evaluation of Corps decisions and actions under NEPA and section 404
of the Clean Water Act, which are the subject of this lawsuit.
12. Defendant Colonel Dana Robertson is the District Engineer for the Huntington
District office of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers in Huntington, West
Virginia. The District office is responsible for issuing permits for the
disposal of dredged and fill material in southern and central West Virginia
under section 404 of the Clean Water Act, 33 U.S.C. § 1344.
13. Defendant Michael D. Gheen is the Chief of the Regulatory Branch, Operations
and Readiness Division, in the Huntington District office of the U.S. Army
Corps of Engineers in Huntington, West Virginia. He is responsible for issuing
permits for the disposal of dredged and fill material in southern and central
West Virginia under section 404 of the Clean Water Act, 33 U.S.C. §
1344. In this Complaint, "the Corps Defendants" refers to Defendants
Ballard, Robertson and Gheen.
14. Defendant Michael Miano is the Director of DEP. He has the responsibility
for administering West Virginia's approved state program under the Surface
Mining Act, including the authority to approve or withhold approval of permits
for surface coal mining activities under that statute. W.Va. Code §
22-3-2. For example, Director Miano has the authority to approve or disapprove
a pending permit application from Hobet Mining, Inc. (SMA S-5013-97) for
the Spruce Fork No. 1 Surface Mine. This operation would remove several
mountaintops near Blair in Logan County, extract the coal, and dump 150
million cubic yards of waste rock into five valley fills, the largest of
which would cover 1.6 miles of the stream in the Pigeonroost Branch of Spruce
Fork.
15. Plaintiff James L. Weekley owns a home and one acre of land on Pigeonroost
Branch in Pigeonroost Hollow, at Blair, Logan County, West Virginia. He
and his wife, Plaintiff Sibby R. Weekley, have lived in this home for ten
years and in the Hollow for decades.
16. The Weekleys live at the bottom of the Hollow and a few hundred yards
directly downstream from the largest proposed valley fill for the Spruce
Fork No. 1 mine (SMA S-5013-97). These plaintiffs and their children and
grandchildren use this stream and Hollow for recreational and other activities,
including swimming, fishing, hiking, nature observation and hunting.
17. As currently proposed, the Spruce Fork No. 1 Surface Mine would have
numerous adverse impacts on the Weekleys' residence and throughout Pigeonroost
Hollow. It would produce blasting noise audible at their residence and in
the Hollow. It would cause airborne dust to enter into and come to rest
upon their property in Pigeonroost Hollow, including but not limited to
the interior of their residence there. It would significantly reduce water
quality and quantity in areas of Pigeonroost Branch that the Weekleys and
their invitees use for recreational and other purposes. One valley fill
associated with this mine would not only bury 1.6 miles of Pigeonroost Branch,
but it would also would significantly reduce the quantity and variety of
wildlife and aquatic life in areas of Pigeonroost Hollow that the Weekleys
use for hunting, fishing and nature observation. It would cause a further
population exodus from the Blair community and thereby reduce the value
of the Weekleys' property and significantly diminish the quality of their
lives. It would produce an ugly landscape that would further reduce the
value of the Weekleys' property and significantly diminish the quality of
their lives.
18. Existing mine operations near Blair have adversely affected these plaintiffs
and their community. The operations proposed under Permit Application No.
SMA-S-5013-97 would significantly worsen the damage the Weekleys have already
suffered.
19. In addition, these plaintiffs will suffer procedural injury if defendant
Miano grants the permit for the proposed mine before EPA's objections to
it are resolved because plaintiffs would have to challenge the surface mining
permit before the final shape, size and hydrologic impact of the proposed
mining operations can be known, as described in Count 10 below.
20. Plaintiff Patricia Bragg lives on and owns a home and property on Nighway
Branch in Mingo County, West Virginia. Nighway Branch is a perennial stream
that Plaintiff regularly uses for recreational and domestic purposes. Nighway
branch will be disturbed by valley fills associated with Mingo-Logan Mining
Coal Company permits S-5066-92 and 5074-92. Plaintiff Bragg would be affected
by dust, noise, and by the reduction of water quantity and quality in Nighway
Branch from the construction of the valley fills associated with the proposed
operation. Her property value and aesthetic enjoyment of her property would
be reduced by the proposed surface mining operation.
21. Plaintiffs Harry M. Hatfield and Marcia Hatfield own and occupy residential
property in Boone County within 2500 feet of the proposed Independence Coal
Company permit mountaintop removal operation, SMA S-5025-97. Spruce Fork
and Pond Fork, both of which will serve as receiving streams for valley
fills, serve as aquifers which supply drinking water to their home. A tributary
of Spruce Fork, flows from the proposed Independence Coal mine across the
Hatfield property. That tributary is used as a water supply for domestic
farm animals. The tributaries contain abundant aquatic life, including fish
and crayfish. The Hatfields' children and visitors use the tributaries as
well as Spruce Fork for recreation. The Hatfields would be affected by dust,
noise, and by the reduction of water quantity and quality in Pond Fork and
Spruce Fork and their tributaries from the construction of the valley fills
associated with the proposed operation. Their property value and aesthetic
enjoyment of their property would be reduced by the proposed surface mining
operation.
22. Plaintiffs Cheryl Price and Jerry Methena own and occupy residential
property in Uneeda, West Virginia beneath the proposed Independence Coal
Company permit mountaintop removal operation, SMA S-5025-97. Their property
is situated along Griffith's Branch which runs into the Pond Fork River
within view of their front yard. The Pond Fork River has been stocked with
bass and trout, and is used by the local residents for swimming in the summer.
Ms. Price and Mr. Methena purchased this house approximately 1 ½
years ago, and they were not aware at the time of the purchase of any plans
for the Independence Coal Company mining operations. These Plaintiffs would
be affected by dust, noise, and by the reduction of water quantity and quality
in Pond Fork and its tributaries from the construction of the valley fills
associated with the proposed operation. Their property value and aesthetic
enjoyment of their property would be reduced by the proposed surface mining
operation.
23. Plaintiffs Carlos Gore and Linda Gore live in a house in Kelly Hollow
in Blair, West Virginia. Ms. Gore grew up in the Kelly Hollow house, and
has lived there for most of her life. The stream near their house has been
referred to as "White Trace Creek", "George's Trace Creek",
"Right Fork of Trace Creek" and "Aleshire Branch Hollow."
The well used for their domestic water supply is recharged by that stream,
and their cats and dogs drink from the stream. The quantity and quality
of the stream water is affected by a valley fill from an active Hobet Mountaintop
removal mine in Blair. These Plaintiffs have been and continue to be affected
by dust, noise, and by the reduction of water quantity and quality in the
stream from the construction of the valley fills associated with the active
operation and they will be similarly affected by the proposed operation
in Blair, SMA S5013-97. The property value and aesthetic enjoyment of their
property would be and has been reduced by the active surface mining operation
and would be further reduced by the proposed operation.
24. Plaintiffs Tommy and Victoria Moore own approximately one acre of land
in Blair along the Spruce Fork River in 1991. The quantity and quality of
water in the river are affected by an active Hobet mountaintop removal mine
in Blair. There are crayfish and other fish in the river, and the Moores'
children and other neighborhood children would often play in the water during
the warm summer months. These Plaintiffs' property have been and continue
to be affected by dust, noise, and by the reduction of water quantity and
quality in the river from the construction of the valley fills associated
with the active operation and they will be similarly affected by the proposed
operation in Blair, SMA S5013-97. The property value and aesthetic enjoyment
of their property has been reduced by the active surface mining operation
and would be further reduced by the proposed operation.
25. Plaintiff West Virginia Highlands Conservancy is a nonprofit, statewide
membership organization and is one of the largest and oldest nonprofit conservation
organizations in West Virginia. It publishes a monthly newsletter and maintains
an active conservation-education program. It holds weekend informational
meetings in the spring and fall which are open to the public and which focus
on environmental issues, especially water quality, land use, and mining.
The Conservancy is a leading source of information about environmental issues,
especially surface coal mining and clean water issues, in West Virginia.
Conservancy members frequently comment on administrative rules and testify
before public bodies concerning clean water issues and valley fills associated
with coal mining.
26. The Conservancy and its members are particularly concerned about the
protection of streams during coal mining activities. The Conservancy has
members who visit, live near, drive by and/or fly over areas of the state
that are visibly affected by surface coal mining activities, including the
mining operations near Blair, West Virginia. Those activities change the
natural landscape in ways that offend these members' aesthetic and environmental
interests. In addition, the Conservancy and its members will suffer procedural
injury if Defendant Miano grants the permit for the proposed Spruce Fork
No. 1 Mine before EPA's objections to it are resolved, because the Conservancy
would have to challenge the surface mining permit before the final shape,
size and hydrology of the proposed mining operations can be known, as described
in Count 10 below.
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Facts
27. Plaintiffs are affected by the loss and degradation of West Virginia's
waters resulting from the valley fills associated with mountaintop removal
surface mining operations. In mountaintop removal operations, surface mine
operators remove hundreds of feet of overburden from mountaintops to expose
and remove multiple coal seams.
28. The waste rock, or spoil, that is not placed back on the mountaintop
is dumped in nearby valleys and streams, creating huge "valley fills"
as waste disposal areas.
29. All mountaintop removal mines in West Virginia bury the headwaters of
streams. Headwaters begin in the hollow or valley between the mountains,
beginning their flow as ephemeral streams, then becoming intermittent, and
then perennial. All of these types of streams are being filled with mining
waste from mountaintop removal operations.
30. These streams contain aquatic life and are often used by nearby residents
for recreational, domestic, and other purposes. The streams being filled
are classified as at least Tier 1 waters under West Virginia water quality
standards and many of them are high quality, Tier 2 waters.
31. The number and size of valley fills are increasing and are burying the
State's headwaters at an alarming rate. The United States Fish and Wildlife
Service, in a study produced by Dan Ramsey, estimated in March 1998 that
469.3 miles have been lost in just five West Virginia watersheds as a result
of surface mining valley fills.
32. Plaintiffs have reviewed many of the surface coal mining applications
filed with, and granted by, DEP since 1991. An analysis of those 48 applications
for mines over 225 acres in size shows that nearly all of them use mountaintop
removal mining and have filled, or will fill, streams with mining waste.
Cumulatively, those applications of over 225 acres issued since 1991 involve
over 40,000 acres of mined and reclaimed land, on which more than two billion
cubic yards of mining waste has or will be placed in over 200 valley fills.
A table displaying this information is attached as Exhibit A and incorporated
herein by reference.
33. The environmental and social impacts of mountaintop removal mining extend
well beyond the streams that are actually filled. Significant portions of
the State's forests and mountains are destroyed. The communities below these
massive operations are often devastated. The residents are effectively forced
from their homes by blasting (which often cracks the walls and foundations
of their houses), dust, noise, flyrock, the threat of flooding, fear that
the valley fills above their homes are unstable, and the degradation of
stream and well water.
34. Rather than fight constant complaints from homeowners, Arch Coal, one
of largest mountaintop removal mining companies in the State, has bought
more than half of the 231 houses in Blair. In Blair, the elementary school
and the town's only grocery stores have closed. According to plaintiff Sibby
R. Weekley, a life-long resident of Blair, trying to live in the midst of
the destruction resulting from one of these operations has led her to "appreciate
how the Indians must have felt" as they were driven from their land.
35. Congress authorized mountaintop removal mining permits as a narrow exception
to the general rule that surface mining sites must be restored to approximate
original contour after mining.
36. In return for this exception, Congress expected that the flattened mountains
would be used for economic development or public recreational facilities.
For the most part, this promise has not been realized.
37. Few mountaintop removal mines have brought economic opportunities to
the surrounding communities. Instead, these operations have destroyed the
very communities that Congress intended them to benefit.
38. DEP has recently granted many permit applications for very large mountaintop
removal mines in southern West Virginia. For example, one of these permit
applications, filed by Hobet Mining, Inc., seeks approval for a 3113-acre
(nearly five-square-mile) surface mine in Logan County near Blair. This
mine, called Spruce Fork Surface Mine No. 1, would be adjacent to Hobet's
existing, nearly seven-square-mile, mountaintop removal mine near Blair.
39. The Spruce Fork mine would extract coal from land at the headwaters
of three watersheds, including the Pigeonroost Branch of Spruce Fork, a
tributary of the Little Coal River. As it progresses down Pigeonroost Hollow
through the area to be mined, Pigeonroost Branch becomes an intermittent
and then a perennial stream. Most of the stream segment that would be filled
is intermittent and perennial and contains abundant aquatic life. The mine
would excavate 826 million cubic yards of material and place 151 million
cubic yards of this material into valley fills. According to the U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency (EPA), the excavation would remove over 400 feet from
the top of the mountain and the largest valley fill would cover about 1.6
miles of the main channel of Pigeonroost Branch. Other valley fills proposed
by the permit application would bury other streams.
40. Hobet asked DEP for a variance from stream buffer zone requirements
so that it may disturb land within 100 feet of the streams. The "disturbance"
consists of placing millions of tons of waste rock in the streams.
41. As of the date of the filing of this complaint, the Hobet application
in SMA-S-5013-97 fails to present any data to support Hobet's conclusory
assertions that the valley fills proposed as a part of the mining operation
would not (a) adversely affect the normal flow or gradient of affected streams,
(b) adversely affect fish migration or related environmental values, (c)
materially damage the water quantity or quality of affected streams, or
(d) cause or contribute to violations of applicable State water quality
standards. Consistent with DEP's pattern and practice of not requiring permit
application to submit the information necessary to make an informed permitting
decision, the Hobet application does not present any data regarding the
effects of the proposed fill on the stream segment to be filled.
42. As is typical of the permit applications examined by Plaintiffs and
summarized in Exhibit A, the Hobet application, SMA-S-5013-97, presents
data which affirmatively establish that the currently proposed operations
would in fact, at a minimum, (a) adversely affect the normal flow or gradient
of affected streams, (b) adversely affect fish migration or related environmental
values, (c) materially damage the water quantity or quality of affected
streams, and (d) cause or contribute to violations of applicable State or
Federal water quality standards.
43. Hobet also asked DEP to issue a new state NPDES permit to control discharges
of pollutants from the mine to the streams.
44. However, this permit would only regulate discharges from a small in-stream
pond downstream from the toe of the valley fill, and not the waste rock
dumped into the much larger stream segment above the pond.
45. Hobet also asked the Corps to issue a permit to authorize the discharge
of fill material into the waters of the United States.
46. On May 22, 1998, in accordance with DEP's pattern and practice of ignoring
regulatory requirements, including those for obtaining variances from the
buffer zone requirement, Larry Alt in DEP's Logan field office found that
Hobet's permit application "meets the requirements of the Rules and
Regulations for surface mining set forth by the State of West Virginia for
mining activities" and advised Director Miano that he "recommend[ed]
that this permit be issued."
47. On June 5, 1998, EPA issued a general objection to the draft National
Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (NPDES) permit for this mine pursuant
to 40 C.F.R. § 123.44(b) and 33 U.S.C. § 1342(d) under the Clean
Water Act. EPA stated that it was "concerned that the permit may not
be in compliance with the West Virginia Water Quality Standards or the Clean
Water Act." EPA stated that it would supply specific grounds for its
objection, or withdraw the general objection by August 4, 1998.
48. In response to Plaintiffs' June 18, 1998 notice of intent to sue, DEP
officials have indicated that they will not agree to withhold issuance of
the Hobet permit until EPA's objection is resolved. However, DEP has agreed
to provide plaintiffs' counsel with two days' advance notice before the
permit is approved.
49. Since at least 1990, the Corps Defendants have followed a pattern and
practice of issuing Nationwide General Permits 21 and/or 26 under section
404 of the Clean Water Act for valley fills associated with surface coal
mining activities in West Virginia.
50. On June 22, 1998, Plaintiffs' counsel sent a letter to Defendant Gheen
that asked him to state whether his office had the authority under section
404 to issue such permits. In that letter Plaintiffs also asked Defendant
Gheen whether surface mining valley fills were regulated by section 404
of the Clean Water Act or by section 402. In a letter dated July 2, 1998,
Gheen declined to state either that section 404 authorizes valley fills
or that section 402 does not.
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Claims
General Allegations for Counts 1 Through 10
51. Section 520 of the Surface Mining Act, 30 U.S.C. § 1270, authorizes
citizens to bring suit against the appropriate State regulatory authority
"where there is alleged a failure of the . . . appropriate State regulatory
authority to perform any act or duty under this Act which is not discretionary
with the . . . State regulatory authority."
52. Section 503(a) of the Surface Mining Act, 30 U.S.C. § 1253(a),
requires each State that wishes to assume exclusive jurisdiction over the
regulation of surface coal mining and reclamation operations in a state
to submit a State program to the Secretary of the Interior which demonstrates
that the State is capable of carrying out the provisions of the Surface
Mining Act and that the State's laws, rules and regulations meet the minimum
requirements of, and are consistent with, the Surface Mining Act.
53. Effective January 21, 1981, the Secretary of the U.S. Department of
the Interior, through his designee, the Office of Surface Mining and Reclamation
(OSM), approved West Virginia's state program under the Surface Mining Act.
30 C.F.R. § 948.10. West Virginia's state program is contained in the
West Virginia Surface Coal Mining and Reclamation Act, W. Va. Code §
22-3-1, et seq., and in state regulations implementing that state law, 38
C.S.R. § 2-1, et seq. Defendant Miano has the authority to administer
this state program. W.Va. Code § 22-3-2.
54. State-promulgated regulations that comprise a federally approved state
program under the Surface Mining Act are "issued pursuant to"
that Act and are federally enforceable.
55. Defendant Miano has a continuing duty to implement, administer, enforce
and maintain the State program in a manner consistent with that program
and with the Surface Mining Act and its implementing regulations. 30 C.F.R.
§ 733.11.
56. According to the approved State program, Defendant Miano has a nondiscretionary
duty to refrain from approving a permit application unless the application
affirmatively demonstrates and Defendant Miano finds, in writing, on the
basis of information set forth in the application or from information otherwise
available that is documented in the approval, that the application is complete
and accurate and the applicant has complied with all requirements of the
West Virginia Surface Coal Mining and Reclamation Act and its implementing
regulations. 38 C.S.R. § 2-3.32.d.
57. Plaintiffs have no adequate remedy at law for the claims raised herein.
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Count 1
58. Section 702(a) of the Surface Mining Act, 30 U.S.C. § 1292(a),
provides that nothing in that statute "shall be construed as superseding,
amending, modifying or repealing" the Clean Water Act. Congress intended
by this section to ensure that there is no inconsistency between mining
activities and the water pollution control requirements in effect under
the Clean Water Act.
59. West Virginia's approved state program provides that "discharges
from areas disturbed by surface mining shall not violate effluent limitations"
under the Clean Water Act. 38 C.S.R. § 2-14.5.b. Surface mining operators
must protect the prevailing hydrological balance. Id. This means that they
must "comply with all applicable non-Act [i.e., non-Surface Mining
Act] requirements for water quality protection." 48 Fed. Reg. 30315
(June 30, 1983). Applicants for surface mining permits must also submit
a hydrologic reclamation plan that contains the steps that will be taken
during mining and reclamation "to meet applicable Federal and State
water quality laws and regulations." 38 C.S.R. § 2-3.22.f.
60. Surface mining applications that are inconsistent with the Clean Water
Act and which do not demonstrate how the operation will meet State water
quality laws are not complete, accurate or in compliance with the approved
State program.
61. Section 301(a) of the Clean Water Act, 33 U.S.C. § 1311(a), makes
it unlawful for any person to discharge any pollutant into navigable waters
of the United States unless the discharge is in compliance with enumerated
sections of that Act, including sections 402 and 404, 33 U.S.C. §§
1342, 1344.
62. Section 402 of the Clean Water Act establishes the National Pollutant
Discharge Elimination System (NPDES). EPA, and states authorized by EPA,
may issue NPDES permits for the discharge of pollutants into navigable waters
from point sources, if the discharger complies with the terms and conditions
in such permits. EPA authorized West Virginia to issue NPDES permits in
May 1982. 47 Fed. Reg. 22363. Defendant Miano administers the NPDES program
for West Virginia.
63. Defendant Miano has not issued any NPDES permits for the discharge of
rock and earth from valley fills into streams, even though these permits
are required by section 402.
64. The construction of valley fills constitutes a "discharge of a
pollutant," because it adds pollutants to waters of the United States
from a point source. 40 C.F.R. § 122.2. The dump trucks, draglines,
end loaders, bulldozers, and other earth- and rock-moving equipment used
to transport mining spoil into valley fills are point sources, because each
of these machines is a "discernible, confined and discrete conveyance,"
including "rolling stock." Id. The materials in valley fills are
pollutants, because this term includes "dredged spoil, solid waste,
. . . rock, sand, cellar dirt and . . . industrial . . . waste discharged
into water." Id. In addition, the stream segments being filled (most
of which are intermittent and perennial stream segments) are waters of the
United States. Id.
65. Section 404 of the CWA authorizes the Secretary of the Army to issue
permits for the discharge of dredged or fill material into the navigable
waters of the United States at specified disposal sites. Discharges of dredged
and fill material under section 404 are excluded from the NPDES permit program
under section 402. 33 U.S.C. § 1342(a); 40 C.F.R. 122.3(b). The Secretary
of the Army has delegated to the Chief of Engineers of the Corps the authority
to issue or deny section 404 permits. 33 C.F.R. § 323.6(a).
66. The Corps defines "fill material" as "any material used
for the primary purpose of replacing an aquatic area with dry land or of
changing the bottom elevation of a waterbody." 33 C.F.R. § 323.2(e).
This definition also states that this term "does not include any pollutant
discharged into the water primarily to dispose of waste, as that activity
is regulated under section 402 of the Clean Water Act." Id.
67. The primary purpose of valley fills associated with surface mining activities
is to dispose of waste (i.e., mining spoil) not to create dry land or elevate
a waterbody.
68. As a result, section 404 permits do not, and cannot, regulate the disposal
of mining spoil in valley fills. Such spoil is a discharge of a pollutant
and is therefore subject to the section 402 permit requirement.
69. Defendant Miano is engaged in a pattern and practice of approving applications
for mountaintop removal surface coal mining operations without requiring
the applicants to obtain NPDES permits under section 402 of the Clean Water
Act for the mining spoil discharged into streams, when the fills are created
by disposing of mining spoil directly into waters of the United States.
As a result, Defendant Miano has violated his nondiscretionary duty to withhold
approval of permit applications that are not complete and accurate and in
compliance with all requirements of the state program.
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Count 2
70. The approved State program and federal regulations establish a 100-foot
wide buffer zone between streams and mining operations. The buffer zone
requirement provides that "no land within one hundred feet (100') of
an intermittent or perennial stream shall be disturbed by surface mining
operations including roads unless specifically authorized by the Director."
38 C.S.R. § 2-5.2(a); 30 C.F.R. § 816.57. The director may grant
a variance for surface mining activities "closer to or through"
a stream only if he finds that such activities "will not adversely
affect the normal flow or gradient of the stream, adversely affect fish
migration or related environmental values, materially damage the water quantity
or quality of the stream and will not cause or contribute to violations
of applicable State or Federal water quality standards." Id.; 38 C.S.R.
§ 2-5.2(a). The Director is engaged in pattern and practice of approving
buffer zone variances on the basis of applications that do not include information
that supports a finding such findings.
71. The 100-foot limit in the buffer zone requirement "is used to protect
streams from sedimentation and help preserve riparian vegetation and aquatic
habitats." 48 Fed. Reg. 30314 (June 30, 1983).
72. Since 1990, Defendant Miano has granted buffer zone variances for dozens
of surface coal mining operations without making the required findings.
These variances often authorize burying large stream segments with mining
spoil. As a result, in relation to just those applications which cover more
than 225 acres issued since 1991, over 200 valley fills containing billions
of tons of mining spoil from surface mining activities have been approved
in southern West Virginia without any analysis of whether they will adversely
affect the normal flow or gradient of streams, adversely affect fish migration
and related environmental values, materially damage the water quantity and
quality of streams, and cause or contribute to violations of applicable
state water quality standards in regard to the stream segments being filled.
73. Defendant Miano is engaged in a pattern and practice of approving applications
for surface mining permits that disturb areas within buffer zones without
making the required findings for a buffer zone variance, in violation of
38 C.S.R. § 2-5.2(a). As a result, Defendant Miano has violated his
nondiscretionary duty to withhold approval of permit applications that are
not complete and accurate and are not in compliance with all requirements
of the state program.
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Count 3
74. The Director may grant a variance for surface mining activities closer
than 100 feet to, or through, an intermittent or perennial stream only if
he finds that such activities "will not adversely affect the normal
flow or gradient of the stream, adversely affect fish migration or related
environmental values, materially damage the water quantity or quality of
the stream and will not cause or contribute to violations of applicable
State or Federal water quality standards." 38 C.S.R. § 2-5.2(a).
75. Under this rule, Defendant Miano's authority is limited to allowing
surface mining activities "closer to, or through" land within
100 feet of an intermittent or perennial stream. The rule therefore allows
minor incursions but forbids Defendant Miano from approving activities that
bury substantial portions of such a stream.
76. Valley fills in intermittent and perennial streams containing spoil
from surface mining activities necessarily violate the buffer zone requirement
because such fills bury and destroy substantial portions of intermittent
or perennial streams. By their very nature, such fills adversely affect
the normal flow or gradient of the stream, adversely affect fish migration
and related environmental values, materially damage the water quantity and
quality of the stream, and cause or contribute to violations of applicable
state water quality standards in the segment of the stream actually filled.
Accordingly, Defendant Miano may not lawfully find that such activities
meet the criteria for a variance from the buffer zone requirement.
77. Defendant Miano is engaged in a pattern and practice of approving applications
for surface mining permits that disturb buffer zones, even though the permitted
activities cannot satisfy the criteria for a variance, in violation of 38
C.S.R. § 2-5.2(a). As a result, Defendant Miano has violated his nondiscretionary
duty to withhold approval of permit applications that are not complete and
accurate and in compliance with all requirements of the state program.
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Count 4
78. Permits issued pursuant to the approved state program for surface mining
activities in West Virginia must ensure compliance with state water quality
standards under the Clean Water Act. West Virginia's approved state program
provides that "discharges from areas disturbed by surface mining shall
not . . . cause a violation of applicable water quality standards."
38 C.S.R. § 2-14.5.b. Applicants for surface mining permits must also
submit a hydrologic reclamation plan that contains the steps that will be
taken during mining and reclamation "to meet applicable Federal and
State water quality laws and regulations." Id., § 2-3.22.f. In
addition, no surface mining activities may be conducted within 100 feet
of intermittent or perennial streams if such activities would "cause
or contribute to violations of applicable State or Federal water quality
standards." Id., § 2-5.2(a).
79. Section 303 of the Clean Water Act, 33 U.S.C. § 1313, requires
each state to develop water quality standards for its waters. These standards
must consist of the designated uses of such waters and the water quality
criteria for such waters based on such uses. 33 U.S.C. § 1313(2)(A).
80. West Virginia statutes define the waters of the state as "any and
all water on or beneath the surface of the ground," including rivers,
streams, creeks and branches. W.Va. Code § 22-11-4(23).
81. West Virginia water quality standards provide that, "at a minimum,
all waters of the State are designated for the Propagation and maintenance
of Fish and Other Aquatic Life (Category B) and for Water Contact Recreation
(Category C) consistent with Clean Water Act goals." 46 C.S.R. §
1-6.1.
82. The Clean Water Act requires each state to develop an anti-degradation
policy for its waters. 33 U.S.C. § 1313(d)(4)(B); 40 C.F.R. §
131.12. Pursuant to this requirement, West Virginia water quality standards
provide that "existing water uses and the level of water quality necessary
to protect the existing uses shall be maintained and protected." 46
C.S.R. § 1-4.1.a.
83. West Virginia water quality standards also provide that "waste
assimilation and transport are not recognized as designated uses."
46 C.S.R. § 1-6.1.a. No "industrial wastes or other wastes present
in any of the waters of the State shall cause therein or materially contribute
to "deposits . . . on the bottom" or "any other condition
which adversely alters the integrity of the waters of the State." Id.,
§ 1-3.2. In addition, "no significant adverse impact to the chemical,
physical, hydrologic or biologic components of aquatic ecosystems shall
be allowed." Id., § 1-3.2.i. Industrial wastes are defined to
include any solid waste substance "incidental to the development, processing
or recovery of any natural resources," which includes wastes from surface
mining activities. W.Va. Code § 22-11-3(11).
84. By burying waters of the State beneath millions of tons of rock and
dirt, valley fills from surface mines necessarily kill aquatic life in the
buried part of the stream and make water contact recreation impossible.
These fills therefore violate West Virginia's anti-degradation standard.
85. Valley fills that cover streams, creeks and branches use such waters
for waste assimilation, cause deposits of materials on the bottom of such
waters, and adversely and significantly alter the integrity of such waters,
including the physical, hydrologic and biologic components of their aquatic
ecosystems.
86. Defendant Miano is engaged in a pattern and practice of approving applications
for surface mining permits that cause or contribute to violations of state
water quality standards. Specifically, Defendant Miano has approved permits
which authorize the filling and burying of numerous streams, creeks and
branches in southern West Virginia with billions of tons of mining spoil.
As a result, Defendant Miano has violated his nondiscretionary duty to withhold
approval of permit applications that are not complete and accurate and in
compliance with all requirements of the approved state program.
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Count 5
87. West Virginia's approved state program provides that surface coal mine
operators "shall avoid disturbances to, enhance where practicable,
restore, or replace, wetlands, and riparian vegetation along rivers and
streams and bordering ponds and lakes." 38 C.S.R. § 2-8.2.a.
88. Valley fills not only make it impossible to avoid disturbance to, enhance,
restore or replace, riparian vegetation and wetlands, they forever destroy
the wetlands and riparian vegetation along rivers and streams by burying
it beneath millions of tons of mining spoil.
89. Defendant Miano is engaged in a pattern and practice of approving applications
for surface mining permits that lead to the construction of valley fills
and to the resulting destruction of riparian vegetation along rivers and
streams in southern West Virginia. As a result, Defendant Miano has violated
his nondiscretionary duty to withhold approval of permit applications that
are not complete and accurate and fail to comply with all requirements of
the state program.
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Count 6
90. West Virginia's approved state program provides that each application
for a surface coal mining permit "shall contain a hydrologic reclamation
plan." 38 C.S.R. § 2-3.22.f. This plan must contain descriptions
of, among other things, "the steps to be taken during mining and reclamation
through bond release to minimize disturbances to the hydrologic balance
within the permit and adjacent areas" and "to meet applicable
Federal and State water quality laws." Id.; 40 C.F.R. § 780.21(h).
91. Although valley fills disturb the hydrologic balance within the permit
area and violate applicable state water quality standards by burying and
destroying streams, Defendant Miano is engaged in a pattern and practice
of approving permits that do not contain a hydrological reclamation plan
describing the steps to be taken to minimize disturbances to the hydrological
balance, particularly disturbances within the permit area.
92. Defendant Miano is therefore engaged in a pattern and practice of approving
applications for surface mining permits that propose to construct valley
fills in streams but that fail to contain a hydrologic reclamation plan.
As a result, Defendant has violated his nondiscretionary duty to withhold
approval of permit applications that are not complete and accurate and in
compliance with all requirements of the state program.
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Count 7
93. In granting any permit for mountaintop removal mining, the Director
shall require, in part, that "no damage will be done to natural watercourses."
W.Va. Code § 22-3-13(c)(4)(D).
94. Defendant Miano is engaged in a pattern and practice of approving applications
for mountaintop removal mining permits that damage natural watercourses.
Specifically, Defendant Miano has granted permits that authorized the construction
of valley fills and the resultant filling and burying of natural watercourses
with millions of tons of mining spoil. As a result, Defendant Miano has
violated his nondiscretionary duty to withhold approval of permit applications
that are not complete and accurate and in compliance with all requirements
of the state program.
Count 8
95. The Surface Mining Act requires that mined lands be returned to their
"approximate original contour" (AOC). 30 U.S.C. § 1265(b)(3).
Approximate original contour is defined as a "surface configuration
achieved by backfilling and grading of the mined area so that the reclaimed
area . . . closely resembles the general surface configuration of the land
prior to mining . . . ." Id., § 1291(2). Congress provided an
exception to the AOC requirement "where the mining operation will remove
an entire coal seam or seams running through the upper fraction of a mountain,
ridge, or hill . . . by removing all of the overburden and creating a level
plateau or a gently rolling contour . . . ." Id., § 1265(c)(2).
This mining practice is known as "mountaintop removal." Id., §
1291(28)(A).
96. The Surface Mining Act and West Virginia's approved state program provide
that DEP may grant a permit application for surface coal mining activities
using mountaintop removal if the applicant demonstrates that several conditions
are satisfied. W.Va. Code § 22-3-13(c); 30 U.S.C. § 1265(c). Among
other things, the applicant must demonstrate that:
a. The proposed postmining land use is "an industrial, commercial,
agricultural, residential or public facility (including recreational facilities),"
30 U.S.C. § 1265(c)(3); and
b. The applicant presents "specific plans for the proposed postmining
land use and appropriate assurances that such use will be," in part:
i. "obtainable according to data regarding expected need and market,"
30 U.S.C. § 1265(c)(3)(B)(ii);
ii. "assured of investments in necessary public facilities," id.,
§ 1265(c)(3)(B)(iii);
iii. "practicable with respect to private financial capability for
completion of the proposed use," id., § 1265(c)(3)(B)(v); and
iv. "planned pursuant to a schedule attached to the reclamation plan
so as to integrate the mining operation and reclamation with the postmining
land use," id., § 1265(c)(3)(B)(vi).
97. Defendant Miano is engaged in a pattern and practice of approving permit
applications for mountaintop removal mining activities that do not meet
the AOC requirement, do not propose permissible postmining land uses (but
instead propose such uses as fish and wildlife habitats and recreation lands
or rangeland, etc.) and do not contain the specific plans, assurances, and
schedule described in paragraph 96 above. As a result, Defendant Miano has
violated his nondiscretionary duty to withhold approval of permit applications
that are not complete and accurate and fail to comply with all requirements
of the state program.
Count 9
98. West Virginia's approved state program provides that unless DEP has
granted a mountaintop removal permit as described in Count 8 above, all
reclaimed areas must be restored to their approximate original contours.
W.Va. Code § 22-3-13(b)(3). "Approximate original contour"
means "that surface configuration achieved by backfilling and grading
of the disturbed areas 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 . . . ." Id., § 22-3-3(e).
99. Because valley fills are part of the reclaimed area, the AOC requirement
applies to the fills as well as to the rest of the reclaimed area.
100. Defendant Miano has adopted and followed a policy that the AOC requirement
does not apply to valley fills.
101. Defendant Miano is engaged in a pattern or practice of approving permit
applications that do not propose to restore the valley fills and the rest
of the reclaimed areas to approximate original contour even when a mountaintop
removal permit as described in Count 8 above has not been granted. As a
result, Defendant Miano has violated his nondiscretionary duty to withhold
approval from permit applications that are not complete and accurate and
in compliance with all requirements of the state program .
Count 10
102. Section 702(a) of the Surface Mining Act, 30 U.S.C. § 1292(a),
provides that nothing in that statute "shall be construed as superseding,
amending, modifying or repealing" the Clean Water Act. Congress intended
by this section to ensure that there is no inconsistency between mining
activities and the water pollution control requirements in effect under
the Clean Water Act.
103. EPA's June 5, 1998 objection represents EPA's opinion that the existing
permit application and draft NPDES permit for the Spruce Fork No. 1 Surface
Mine may be inconsistent with the Clean Water Act. To resolve or withdraw
its objections, EPA may require that the scope and configuration of the
proposed mining operations be changed to reduce its impacts on water quality,
such as by changing the amount and placement of mine spoil, the size and
location of valley fills, the size and location of water impoundments, and
the plans for hydrologic reclamation activities.
104. Until EPA's objection is withdrawn or resolved, Defendant Miano cannot
lawfully determine under the Surface Mining Act whether the permit application
for the Spruce Fork No. 1 Surface Mine is complete and accurate and whether
its proposed activities are consistent with the Clean Water Act If Defendant
Miano issues the permit before that objection is withdrawn or resolved,
his actions will be in conflict with the requirements of the Surface Mining
Act and the Clean Water Act.
105. Defendant Miano is engaged in a pattern and practice of issuing permits
for surface coal mining activities before EPA objections to the draft NPDES
permits for those activities are withdrawn or resolved. Defendant Miano's
past conduct concerning prior permits, and his recent agreement to provide
only two days' notice to plaintiffs' counsel before the permit is issued,
create an imminent threat that he will issue the permit for that mine before
EPA's objection is withdrawn or resolved. As a result, Defendant Miano has
violated, and threatens to again violate in the very near future, his nondiscretionary
duty under the Surface Mining Act to withhold approval of permit applications
until they are complete and accurate and comply with all requirements of
the state program.
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General Allegations for Counts 11 through 13
106. The Clean Water Act establishes a general prohibition against the discharge
of pollutants into waters of the United States unless a permit is first
obtained, 33 U.S.C. § 1311, and it requires all persons who wish to
discharge dredge or fill material into waters of the United States to first
acquire a § 404 permit. See 33 U.S.C. §§ 1311(a), 1344(a).
Waters of the United States' is defined as including "[a]ll other
waters, such as intra-state lakes, rivers, streams (including intermittent
streams), mudflats . . . the use, degradation, or destruction of which could
affect interstate commerce or foreign commerce. 30 C.F.R. § 328.3(a)(3).
Many of the streams being filled by surface mining valley fills are waters
of the United States.
107. The Clean Water Act establishes a two-track system for obtaining permission
to discharge dredge or fill materials to waters of the United States through
either individual or general permits. See id. § 1344(a)(e). The Corps
is the delegated federal agency responsible for administering the issuance
of either individual or nationwide permits for the filling of waters of
the United States, and has established regulations concerning their issuance.
Individual permits are issued following a "case-by-case evaluation
of a specific project involving the proposed discharge(s)." 30 C.F.R.
§ 323.2(g). Conversely, a nationwide, or general, permit is issued
on a "nationwide or regional basis for a category or categories of
activities . . . [that] cause only minimal individual and cumulative environmental
impacts . . .. Id. § 323.2(h)(1)(2). Any permit issued by the Corps
must comply with the "404(b)(1) guidelines" published by EPA at
40 C.F.R. § 230.
108. The Corps has further promulgated regulations that specify the criteria
for its Nationwide Permit Program in 30 C.F.R. § 330 et seq. "Nationwide
permits (NWPs) are a type of general permit issued by the Chief of Engineers
and are designed to regulate with little, if any, delay or paperwork certain
activities having minimal impacts." Id. § 330.1(b). Activities
that do not qualify for authorization under an NWP can still be permitted,
but must go through the individual permitting process. See id. § 330.1(c).
109. Before issuing a general permit, the Corps must "set forth in
writing an evaluation of the potential individual and cumulative impacts
of the category of activities to be regulated." 40 C.F.R. § 230.7(b).
The Corps must document the "potential short term or long term effects"
of a proposed permit, 40 C.F.R. § 230.11, and must predict its cumulative
effects by estimating "the number of individual discharge activities
likely to be regulated." 40 C.F.R. § 230.7(b)(3). The Corps must
prepare a "precise description" of the activities to be permitted
explaining why they "are sufficiently similar in nature and in environmental
impact to warrant regulation under a single general permit. 40 C.F.R. §
230.7(b). The Corps may not issue a permit unless there is "sufficient
information to make a reasonable judgment as to whether the proposed discharge
will comply with [404(b)(1)] guidelines." 40 C.F.R. § 230.12(a)(3)(iv).
110. The NWP permitting process generally allows a permittee to proceed
with an activity authorized by an NWP with little or no notice to the Corps,
however the Corps does retain the authority to intervene and mandate additional
provisions to the NWP or to compel the permittee to seek an individual permit.
See id. § 330.1(d). A Corps Division Engineer retains the authority
to "modify, suspend, or revoke NWP authorizations for any specific
geographic area, class of activities, or class of waters within his division,
including on a statewide basis. Id. 330.5(c). A Corps District Engineer
retains the authority to "modify, suspend, or revoke a case specific
activity's authorization under an NWP" based on changes in circumstances,
the adequacy of the specific conditions of the authorization, "any
significant objections to the authorization not previously considered,"
and "cumulative adverse environmental effects occurring under an NWP
. . .." Id. § 330.5(d).
111. NEPA is the "basic national charter for protection of the environment."
40 C.F.R. § 1500.1(a). Its purpose is "to help public officials
make decisions that are based on understanding of environmental consequences,
and take actions that protect, restore, and enhance the environment."
Id. § 1500.1(c). The Council on Environmental Quality ("CEQ")
-- an agency within the Executive Office of the President -- has promulgated
regulations implementing NEPA, which have been adopted by the Corps. See
40 C.F.R. §§ 1500-1508; see also 57 Fed. Reg. 43188 (Sept. 18,
1992).
112. To accomplish its purpose, NEPA requires that all agencies of the federal
government must prepare a "detailed statement" regarding all "major
Federal actions significantly affecting the quality of the human environment.
. . ." 42 U.S.C. § 4332(2)(C). This statement -- known as an Environmental
Impact Statement ("EIS") -- must describe (1) the "environmental
impact of the proposed action," (2) any "adverse environmental
effects which cannot be avoided should the proposal be implemented,"
(3) any "alternatives to the proposed action," and (4) any "irreversible
or irretrievable commitment of resources which would be involved in the
proposed action should it be implemented." Id.
113. "Major Federal actions" includes "actions with effects
that may be major and which are potentially subject to Federal control and
responsibility," including "new and continuing activities . .
.[and] projects . . . regulated or approved by federal agencies." 40
C.F.R. § 1508.18. "Significantly," takes into account both
the context and intensity of a proposed action. See id. § 1508.27.
The intensity of an action's impacts involves several factors, including:
"[w]hether the action is related to other actions with individually
insignificant but cumulatively significant impacts ...." Id. §
1508.27(b)(7).
114. CEQ regulations provide for the preparation of a document known as
an environmental assessment ("EA") so that agencies may determine
whether a particular action may have a significant impact on the quality
of the human environment and thus require preparation of an EIS. 40 C.F.R.
§ 1501.4.
115. The Corps's regulations also define a Finding of No Significant
Impact' ("FONSI"): "A FONSI shall be prepared for a proposed
action, not categorically excluded, for which an EIS will not be prepared."
33 C.F.R. § 230.11.
116. If an EIS must be prepared, it must include an analysis of direct and
indirect environmental "effects" of the proposed action, including
"cumulative" impacts and "cumulative actions." 40 C.F.R.
§§ 1502.16, 1508.8, 1508.25(a)(2). A "cumulative impact'
is the impact on the environment which results from the incremental impact
of the action when added to other past, present, and reasonably foreseeable
future actions regardless of what agency (Federal or non-Federal) or person
undertakes such other actions." 40 C.F.R. § 1508.7. "Cumulative
impacts can result from individually minor but collectively significant
actions taking place over a period of time." Id. Cumulative actions
are actions "which when viewed with other proposed actions have cumulatively
significant impacts and should therefore be discussed in the same impact
statement." Id., § 1508.25(a)(2).
117. The Corps, under the authority delegated to it by section 404 of the
Clean Water Act, has issued a number of nationwide permits ("NWP").
On December 13, 1996, the Corps reissued and modified its NWP program. 61
Fed. Reg. 65874. Two of the reissued NWPs are NWP 21, which concerns activities
associated with surface coal mining activities, and NWP 26, which concerns
the filling of headwaters and isolated bodies of water. Id. at 65916-17.
118. The Corps completed a programmatic EA on the issuance of the modified
NWPs which generically examined the impacts of NWPs on a national level
and made a finding of no significant impact for all of them. See Decision
Document - Nationwide Permit 21, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (Dec. 10,
1996) ("Decision Document"). The Corps issued a FONSI for NWP
21 and 26. 61 Fed. Reg. 65879.
119. In large measure, the Corps based its FONSI on the fact that it was
"substantially increasing the number of instances where a Corps review
is necessary, and [that it was] requiring increased and more detailed data
collection to better monitor NWP activity." 61 Fed. Reg. at 65879.
Moreover, the Corps asserted that it was even "more strongly directing
the Corps districts and divisions to add regional conditions for high value
watersheds, and additional generalized regional conditions that will ensure
that only minimal impacts will occur . . . [in order to] ensure that cumulative
impacts will not be significant." Id.
120. Despite these statements, the Corps Defendants have never documented
or analyzed pursuant to NEPA or its own regulations the regional or site-specific
impacts of NWP 21 and 26 permits on streams in West Virginia. Nor have they
added any regional conditions for NWP 21 and 26 permits in West Virginia.
Instead, the Corps has a longstanding practice of approving surface coal
mining operations and associated valley fills in West Virginia without assessing
their cumulative impacts.
121. The Corps' use of NWP 21 and 26 has not been limited to activities
with minimal adverse environmental impacts. Hundred of miles of streams
in West Virginia have been filled pursuant to NWP 21 and 26.
122. On April 30, 1996, Don Henne, the Regional Environmental Officer in
the Office of Environmental Policy and Compliance in the U.S. Department
of Interior office in Philadelphia, wrote a letter to EPA Region 3 requesting
that EPA "consider preparation of an environmental impact statement
that would evaluate the nationwide impacts" of valley fills associated
with surface coal mining activities. Mr. Henne stated that he was not "aware
of a complete and thorough analysis of the cumulative impacts of this practice,
either for Pennsylvania or for all States where this practice is allowed."
He stated that Corps review of individual Section 404 permits "would
not add measurable environmental protection," because "adverse
impacts may be such that mitigation is not feasible." He further stated
that:
While there was a programmatic impact statement many years ago that attempted
to primarily address hydrologic balance issues, the equally important impacts
to water quality, aquatic communities, riparian zones, fish and wildlife
habitat, and general ecological integrity of these areas have not been analyzed,
particularly for cumulative impacts. In addition, we are not aware of any
valid monitoring to measure the effectiveness of approved valley fills in
protection of resources, any associated mitigation, or tally the total area
of habitat lost. In short, regulatory focus on this issue appears to be
too frequently on consistency with approved programs without our realization
of the significant and cumulative impacts of this practice.
123. The "programmatic impact statement" referred to in Mr.
Henne's letter was prepared by the Office of Surface Mining Reclamation
and Enforcement (OSM) when it issued the first rules concerning the permanent
regulatory program under the Surface Mining Act in 1979. This EIS analyzed,
among other things, the impact of spoil disposal generally and of valley
and head-of-hollow fills in particular. OSM, Final Environmental Impact
Statement, Permanent Regulatory Program Implementing Section 501(b) of the
Surface Mining Control and Reclamation Act of 1977, January 1979. However,
it did not consider or evaluate the possibility that these fills would destroy
any streams. The entire discussion of the impact of these fills is as follows
(id. at p. BIII-40):
(ii) Valley and head-of-hollow fills.--Disposal of excess spoil from surface
mining operations in steep-slope areas poses special problems for protection
of the hydrologic regime. Spoil in these areas is disposed of in valleys
or hollows. Valley and head-of-hollow fills, if not properly constructed,
lead to physical and chemical degradation of water through seepage and leachage
discharges from the fills, erosion leading to sediment discharges, and contaminated
discharges from underdrains (Grimm and Hill, 1974; U.S. Bureau of Mines,
1977a).
124. In its response to Mr. Henne's April 30, 1996 letter, Alvin Morris,
the Director of the Water Protection Division in EPA's Region 3 office,
wrote to Mr. Henne that "this agency shares your concerns" and
that "cumulative effects are very important." He stated that "[s]everal
valley fills in the same watershed could reduce the food chain, spawning
areas and other necessities for supporting aquatic life." However,
he did not agree to prepare an EIS. He instead suggested that cumulative
impacts might be addressed "during reviews under the Corps of Engineers
individual 404 permit process."
125. On August 16, 1996, Mr. Henne wrote another letter to EPA Regional
Administrator Michael McCabe, reiterating his concern that valley fills
posed "a serious threat to water quality and ecosystem health in areas
of Pennsylvania, West Virginia" and other states. He rejected the idea
that cumulative impacts could be adequately addressed in the Corps' individual
404 permit process and again requested that a full EIS be prepared.
126. On February 9, 1998, Richard V. Pepino, Director of the Office of Environmental
Programs in EPA Region 3, sent a letter to Richard P. Buckley, Chief of
the South Permit Section in the Huntington District of the Corps, in which
Mr. Pepino discussed the proposed nationwide permit 21 for valley fills
for Elkay Mining Company's Freeze Fork surface mine in Logan County, West
Virginia. He stated:
We have serious concerns resulting from the elimination of approximately
3.3 miles of stream and associated impacts. The cumulative impact of such
an elimination is certainly significant and goes beyond the purpose and
intent of the nationwide permit. Few could reasonably argue that this proposal
would not result in significant environmental impacts either on a cumulative
or an individual basis as required for projects eligible for nationwide
permits. Consequently, our position is that nationwide permit 21 and the
associated Environmental Assessment are not applicable for this proposal.
We strongly recommend that the District Engineer take discretionary authority
over this proposal by requiring an Individual permit review and separate
document to comply with the procedural provisions of the National Environmental
Policy Act.
127. On February 25, 1998, Defendant Gheen responded in a letter that
rejected Mr. Pepino's request and declined to require an individual permit
review or the preparation of an EIS under NEPA.
128. The Corps Defendants have never required an individual section 404
permit rather than a NWP 21 or 26 for valley fills associated with surface
coal mining activities in West Virginia. The Corps Defendants have never
prepared an EIS concerning the environmental impacts of these activities.
129. Defendant Gheen and the Corps' Huntington District have granted NWP
21 and 26 permits for many surface coal mining permit operations with associated
valley fills in West Virginia since January 1997. For example, on May 28,
1996, they granted a NWP 21 permit to Hobet Mining, Inc. for its Westridge
Surface Mine for a valley fill that impacted 7.0 acres of waters of the
United States in Lincoln and Boone Counties, West Virginia. On August 23,
1996, they granted a NWP 26 permit to Princess Beverly Coal Company for
its Island 5 Surface Mine for a valley fill that impacted 2,925 feet of
waters of the United States in Kanawha County, West Virginia. On September
15, 1997, they granted a NWP 21 permit to Independence Coal Company for
its Twilight MTR Surface Mine for a valley fill that impacted 7.54 acres
of waters of the United States in Boone County, West Virginia. On June 2,
1998, they granted a NWP 21 permit to Elkay Mining Company for its Freeze
Fork Surface Mine for a valley fill that impacted 1.84 acres of waters of
the United States in Logan County, West Virginia.
130. The Corps' NWP 26 permit allows filling of headwaters of streams, but
only if the fill covers no more than 500 linear feet of stream bed. 61 Fed.
Reg. 65916. When it reissued this general permit, the Corps acknowledged
that "[t]he most recent data and scientific literature indicate that
isolated and headwater wetlands often play an ecological role that is as
important as other types of wetlands in protecting water quality, reducing
flood flows, and providing habitat for many species of fish and wildlife."
61 Fed. Reg. 65891. In explaining the 500-foot limitation, the Corps stated
that it was designed "to ensure that projects with potentially greater
than minimal impacts will not be authorized under the NWP." Id. at
65894.
131. Despite this limitation in NWP 26, the Corps Defendants have repeatedly
used NWPs 21 and 26 to authorize surface coal mining activities which will
fill more than 500 linear feet of streambed. For example, they approved
a NWP 21 permit for the Independence Coal Company Twilight MTR Surface Mine,
which includes a valley fill that will bury two miles (over 10,000 feet)
of James Creek in Boone and Raleigh Counties in West Virginia.
132. The Corps, however, may be in the process of revising its policy. Official
in both the Corps' Cincinnati regional office and its Huntington District
office, including Defendant Gheen, Richard Buckley, and Rodney Woods, have,
within the past several months, made statements that § 404 (and thus
NWPs 21 and 26) does not and cannot authorize the disposal of mining waste
in the waters of the United States. These statements have not been disclosed
to the public in any written document. Huntington and Cincinnati Corps permitting
officials have made these statements because they have come to believe that
surface mining spoil is "waste" rather than "fill" material
because it does not satisfy the primary purpose test of 33 C.F.R. §
323.2(e).
TOP
Count 11
133. The failure of the Corps Defendants to prepare an EIS analyzing the
cumulative environmental impacts of the issuance of, or coverage under,
numerous Corps permits for valley fills in West Virginia that cover waters
of the United States is contrary to NEPA, 42 U.S.C. § 4332(2)(C), and
the CEQ's implementing regulations, and is arbitrary, capricious, an abuse
of discretion, and otherwise contrary to law, in violation of the APA, 5
U.S.C. § 706(2).
Count 12
134. The Corps has defined "fill material" as "any material
used for the primary purpose of replacing an aquatic area with dry land
or of changing the bottom elevation of a waterbody." 33 C.F.R. §
323.2(e). This definition also states that this term "does not include
any pollutant discharged into the water primarily to dispose of waste, as
that activity is regulated under section 402 of the Clean Water Act."
Id.
135. The primary purpose of valley fills associated with surface mining
activities is to dispose of waste (i.e., mining spoil) not to create dry
land or elevate a waterbody. As a result, section 404 permits do not, and
cannot, regulate the disposal of mining spoil in valley fills. Such spoil
is a discharge of a pollutant and is therefore subject to the permit requirement
under section 402 of the Clean Water Act.
136. The Corps Defendants are engaged in a pattern and practice of granting
applications for Nationwide Permits under section 404 of the Clean Water
Act for valley fills, even though those fills dispose of mining spoil directly
into waters of the United States.
137. As a result, the Corps Defendants have violated the Corps' regulations
and section 404 of the Clean Water Act, 33 U.S.C. § 1344, and have
acted in a manner that is arbitrary, capricious, an abuse of discretion,
and otherwise contrary to law, in violation of the APA, 5 U.S.C. §
706(2).
Count 13
138. The Corps Defendants have engaged in a pattern and practice of granting
applications for Nationwide Permits under section 404 of the Clean Water
Act for valley fills, even though those fills have more than minimal adverse
environmental impacts.
139. As a result, the Corp Defendants have violated the Corps' regulations
and section 404 of the Clean Water Act, 33 U.S.C. § 1344, and have
acted in a manner that is arbitrary, capricious, an abuse of discretion,
and otherwise contrary to law, in violation of the APA, 5 U.S.C. §
706(2).
TOP
Relief
Wherefore, Plaintiffs respectfully request this Court to grant the following
relief:
A. Enter a declaratory judgment that Defendant Miano has violated his non-discretionary
duty under West Virginia's approved program to withhold approval of permit
applications until they are complete and accurate and comply with all requirements
of the state program, and in particular, that Defendant Miano is engaged
in a pattern or practice of illegally approving permit applications in which:
1. Permit applicants have not applied for an NPDES permit under section
402 of the Clean Water Act for discharges of mining spoil which create valley
fills and, in the process, bury waters of the United States;
2. Defendant Miano has not made and cannot make the findings required by
38 C.S.R. § 2-5.2(a) as to requests for buffer zone variances for proposed
valley fills that disturb areas within 100 feet of an intermittent or perennial
stream;
3. Defendant Miano has approved buffer zone variances for proposed valley
fills that bury or destroy portions of intermittent or perennial streams
and that do not and cannot meet the criteria for a variance;
4. Defendant Miano has failed to enforce, and prevent violations of, anti-degradation
requirements, state water quality standards, and riparian vegetation protection
requirements as to proposed valley fills that bury or destroy portions of
waters of the United States and the State;
5. Permit applicants have not submitted a hydrologic reclamation plan to
minimize, prevent or remedy the adverse hydrological consequences and environmental
impacts of valley fills within both the permit and adjacent areas;
6. Permit applicants have requested permits for mountaintop removal under
W.Va. Code § 22-3-13(c) and 30 U.S.C. § 1265(c) but have proposed
the construction of valley fills that will damage natural watercourses,
proposed postmining land uses that are impermissible, and have not included
the specific plans, assurances, and schedule required by those sections
for such uses;
7. Defendant Miano has taken action inconsistent with the Clean Water Act
by acting on permit applications before EPA objections to the draft NPDES
permits requested in those applications are withdrawn or resolved.
B. Enter a declaratory judgment against Defendant Miano that valley fills
violate state water quality standards, because they destroy existing stream
uses, in violation of the anti-degradation requirement, and that they dispose
of industrial waste into streams, in violation of the water quality standards'
prohibition on waste assimilation.
C. Enter a declaratory judgment against Defendant Miano that valley fills
cannot meet the criteria for a buffer zone variance because they adversely
affect the normal flow or gradient of the stream, adversely affect fish
migration and related environmental values, materially damage the water
quantity and quality of the stream, and cause or contribute to violations
of applicable state water quality standards.
D. Enter a declaratory judgment against all Defendants that the placing
of mining spoil in valley fills is the disposal of waste, not fill, under
33 C.F.R. § 323.2(e), is not authorized by section 404 of the Clean
Water Act, and is instead regulated by section 402 of that Act.
E. Enter a declaratory judgment against Defendant Miano that valley fills
damage natural watercourses, and therefore cannot be authorized in a mountaintop
removal permit under West Virginia Code § 22-3-13(c)(4)(D) and 30 U.S.C.
§ 1265(c)(4)(D).
F. Enter a declaratory judgment against Defendant Miano that the area subject
to the approximate original contour requirement includes valley fills;
G. Enter a declaratory judgment against Defendant Miano that permit applications
that request permits for mountaintop removal under W.Va. Code § 22-3-13(c)
and 30 U.S.C. § 1265(c) but propose the construction of valley fills
that will damage natural watercourses are not accurate, complete and in
compliance with the approved State program.
H. Enter a declaratory judgment against defendant Miano that "fish
and wildlife habitat" and "recreation lands," or a combination
of the two, is not an authorized postmining land use for mountaintop removal
operations under W.Va. Code § 22-3-13(c) and 30 U.S.C. § 1265(c).
I. Enter a declaratory judgment against Defendant Miano that applications
requesting permits for mountaintop removal under W.Va. Code § 22-3-13(c)
and 30 U.S.C. § 1265(c) which propose impermissible postmining land
uses such as fish and wildlife habitat and recreation lands, or pasturelands
or rangelands are not accurate, complete and in compliance with the approved
State program.
J. Enter a declaratory judgment against Defendant Miano that applications
requesting permits for mountaintop removal under W.Va. Code § 22-3-13(c)
and 30 U.S.C. § 1265(c) which do not include the specific plans, assurances,
and schedule required by those sections for such uses are not accurate,
complete and in compliance with the approved State program.
K. Enter a declaratory judgment against Defendant Miano that surface coal
mining permit applications are not accurate and complete and in compliance
with the approved state program until EPA's objections to a related draft
NPDES permit under 33 U.S.C. § 1342(d) are resolved or withdrawn.
L. Issue an order directing Defendant Miano to comply with his non-discretionary
duties under West Virginia's approved state program and, in particular,
to withhold approval of permit applications for surface coal mining and
reclamation operations that include proposed valley fills in waters of the
United States and the State unless and until:
1. Permit applicants obtain an NPDES permit under section 402 of the
Clean Water Act for discharges of mining spoil that create valley fills
which bury waters of the United States;
2. The permit application contains information showing that the proposed
disturbance will not a) cause or contribute to the violation of applicable
State or federal water quality standards, b) adversely affect the normal
flow or gradient of the stream, c) adversely affect fish migration or related
environmental values, and d) materially damage the water quantity and quality
of the stream. 38 C.S.R. § 2-5.2(a);
3. Defendant Miano makes each of the findings required by 38 C.S.R. §
2-5.2(a) as to requests for buffer zone variances for proposed valley fills
that disturb areas within 100 feet of an intermittent or perennial stream;
4. Defendant Miano denies all buffer zone variances for proposed valley
fills that bury or destroy portions of intermittent or perennial streams;
5. Defendant Miano determines that each proposed valley fill will not lead
to a violation of the anti-degradation requirements, state water quality
standards, and riparian vegetation protection requirements in regard to
the stream segments (which are waters of the United States and of the State)
to be filled;
6. Permit applicants submit a hydrologic reclamation plan to minimize, prevent
or remedy the adverse hydrological consequences and environmental impacts
of valley fills within both the permit and adjacent areas;
7. Defendant Miano determines that proposed valley fills authorized by permits
for mountaintop removal under W.Va. Code § 22-3-13(c) and 30 U.S.C.
§ 1265(c) cause no damage to natural watercourses, and that permit
applicants use permissible postmining land uses and include the specific
plans, assurances, and schedule required by those sections for such uses;
8. Defendant Miano determines the valley fills as well as the other reclamation
areas will be restored to AOC; and
9. EPA objections to draft NPDES permits requested in permit applications
are withdrawn or resolved.
M. Issue an order enjoining the Corps Defendants from granting any permits
under section 404 of the Clean Water Act for any valley fills that are associated
with surface coal mining activities in West Virginia and that bury or destroy
streams.
N. In the alternative, if the Court finds that the Corps Defendants have
the authority to issue permits under section 404 of the Clean Water Act
for valley fills that are associated with surface coal mining activities
in West Virginia and that bury or destroy streams, issue an order enjoining
these Defendants from granting any further such permits unless and until
they first prepare an EIS under NEPA concerning the cumulative effects of
such activities, and unless and until they issue individual rather than
nationwide permits under section 404 for such activities.
O. Award plaintiffs their costs and expenses, including reasonable attorneys'
and expert witness' fees, as authorized by Section 520(d) of the Surface
Mining Act, 30 U.S.C. § 1270(d), and 28 U.S.C. § 2412(d)(2)(A);
and
P. Grant plaintiffs such other and further relief as this Court deems appropriate.
RESPECTFULLY SUBMITTED,
____________________________________
JOSEPH M. LOVETT
Mountain State Justice, Inc.
Suite 525
922 Quarrier Street
Charleston, West Virginia 25301
(304) 344-3144
Counsel for Plaintiffs James W. Weekley,
Sibbey R. Weekley and Patricia Bragg.
____________________________________
PATRICK C. McGINLEY
737 South Hills Drive
Morgantown, West Virginia 26505
(304) 292-9822
Counsel for Plaintiffs The West Virginia
Highlands Conservancy, Harry M. Hatfield, Carlos
and Linda Gore, Tommy and Victoria Moore,
Cheryl Price and Jerry Methena
____________________________________
SUZANNE M. WEISE
P.O. Box 343
Morgantown, West Virginia 26507-0343
(304) 292-9822
Counsel for Plaintiffs The West Virginia
Highlands Conservancy, Harry M. Hatfield,
Carlos and Linda Moore, Tommy and Victoria
Moore, Cheryl Price and Jerry Methena
JAMES M. HECKER
Trial Lawyers for Public Justice
1717 Massachusetts Avenue, N.W., Suite 800
Washington, D.C. 20036
(202) 797-8600
Co-Counsel for Plaintiffs
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