PAUL BARBADORO, District Judge.
The United States has filed a motion to modify a consent decree that addresses the City of Portsmouth's failure to abide by the Clean Water Act and the New Hampshire Water Pollution and Waste Disposal Act. The consent decree was entered in 2009 and modified in 2013. In April 2016, the United States lodged a proposed second modification to the consent decree ("the Second Modification"). All of the parties to the consent decree support the Second Modification, and the United States moves to enter it.
A group of Portsmouth residents has intervened and objects. I limited the residents' intervention to issues presently before the court. The residents request that that I defer ruling on the Second Modification until they file and adjudicate a citizen suit under 33 U.S.C. § 1365(a)(1). They also requested, and I denied, additional briefing and discovery. They move to reconsider that denial.
In this Memorandum and Order, I explain why I deny the residents' motion to reconsider and grant the United States' motion to enter the Second Modification.
In 2009, the United States filed a complaint alleging that the City of Portsmouth ("the City") violated several sections of the Clean Water Act, 33 U.S.C. § 1251, et seq. Doc. No. 1. A month later, New Hampshire ("the State") intervened in the action and filed a complaint alleging that the City also violated the New Hampshire Water Pollution and Waste Disposal Act, N.H. Rev. Stat. Ann. § 485-A:13. Doc. No. 4. The complaints allege that the City violated both permit effluent limitations for discharges from the City's Peirce Island wastewater treatment plant and permit conditions applicable to discharges from overflow points in the City's combined wastewater collection system.
The United States filed a proposed consent decree with its complaint. Doc. No. 2-1. The consent decree requires the City to take several steps to bring its wastewater treatment practices into compliance with the Clean Water Act. For example, the decree requires the City to implement a compliance plan, develop and implement a wastewater master plan, perform combined sewer overflow facility upgrades, comply with interim emissions/effluent limits until the secondary treatment facilities achieve full operation, submit and comply with a post construction monitoring plan, and comply with reporting requirements.
On July 2, 2012, the United States lodged a proposed modification to the consent decree ("the First Modification"). Doc. No. 10-1. The Conservation Law Foundation ("CLF") intervened and objected to the modification. CLF did not strictly oppose the main substantive provisions of the modification. Rather, CLF argued that the court should closely monitor the EPA's management of the consent decree. Because the other parties did not request such oversight, and there was no reason to believe that the City's delay was unreasonable, I denied CLF's motion for greater oversight.
The First Modification contains two main provisions. The first extends the schedule for completion of the combined sewer overflow upgrades from 2013 to 2014. The parties agreed to this modification because the City encountered unexpected geological and financial conditions. Applying the test governing consent decree modifications, I found that changed facts merited an extension of the schedule for sewer upgrades and that the proposed schedule was suitably tailored to accommodate the changed facts.
The second main provision establishes a construction schedule for secondary treatment facilities. This provision requires the City to complete construction of secondary treatment facilities by March 2017. Construing this provision as an addition rather than a modification, I applied the standard governing the entrance of consent decrees.
On April 1, 2016, the United States lodged a proposed Second Modification to the consent decree. Doc. No. 38-1. On April 8, a notice was published in the Federal Register soliciting public comments. Due to a technical error, the United States extended the comment window to May 29. The Second Modification received twenty-three comments. Many commenters were Portsmouth residents disappointed by the City's plan to locate the secondary treatment plant on Peirce Island. After considering the comments, on June 14 the United States moved to enter the Second Modification. Doc. No. 43.
The Second Modification was forged by the settling parties when it became clear that the City would be unable to meet its March 2017 deadline for completing construction of the secondary treatment facilities. The Second Modification responds to this change of circumstances and contains four main provisions. First, the Second Modification extends the deadline for substantial completion of secondary treatment facilities to December 1, 2019. It also sets related deadlines for executing the construction contract, submitting the contractor's detailed schedule, and complying with permit limits. Second, it seeks to hold the City accountable for any deviations from the revised timeline through a Schedule Recovery Program. Third, it requires the City to report regularly to the EPA, the State, and CLF. Fourth, it implements mitigation measures that are intended to counteract the pollution stemming from the City's continued violation of its national permit and its failure to meet the existing construction deadline. The measures include enhanced primary treatment, nitrogen removal, stormwater pollution reduction, expanded sewer service, and funds for related environmental projects.
On May 31, a group of Portsmouth residents filed a motion to intervene. Doc. No. 40. No party challenged their standing, and I permitted them to intervene for limited purposes. Doc. No. 58. Their intervention is restricted to the issues presently before the court: namely, the motion to approve the Second Modification. The residents were permitted to participate in briefing in response to the pending motion, appeal from any adverse decision, and participate in regular interactions with the parties concerning the Second Modification. The residents submitted a response and surreply.
The residents also requested additional briefing and discovery, including depositions. On July 29, I denied their request.
On August 3, the residents moved to reconsider that denial. Doc. No. 63. The United States and the City object. The residents' motion does not discuss the legal standard governing motions to reconsider. Rather, the residents point to an affidavit ("The Forndran Draft") that they received from their expert witness after the July 29 order had issued. Doc. No. 63-1. The Forndran Draft is primarily a draft evaluation of the City's planned upgrade at Peirce Island. The residents also renew their request that I defer ruling on the Second Modification until they file and adjudicate their citizen suit under 33 U.S.C. § 1365(a)(1).
For the reasons below, I deny the residents' motion to reconsider and grant the United States' motion to enter the Second Modification.
A party moving for reconsideration of an interlocutory order must "demonstrate that the order was based on a manifest error of fact or law." LR 7.2(d). "Reconsideration of a prior order is `an extraordinary remedy which should be used sparingly.'"
A district court may modify an existing consent decree when applying it prospectively would no longer be equitable.
The First Circuit has not confined the
A party moving for reconsideration of an interlocutory order must "demonstrate that the order was based on a manifest error of fact or law." LR 7.2(d). The residents do not discuss the legal standard governing their motion to reconsider. But their motion cannot plausibly be construed as arguing that the July 29 order "was based on a manifest error of . . . law."
The residents' motion to reconsider focuses on a document ("the Forndran Draft") that they received after the July 29 order. The Forndran Draft was written by their expert and responds to claims made by the United States' expert. It primarily assesses the location and design of the City's planned secondary treatment plant at Peirce Island.
I deny the residents' motion to reconsider for three reasons. First, both their motion and the Forndran Draft consist largely of questions. The residents do not explain why these questions establish "facts" within the meaning of the law. Moreover, the questions reflect a desire for greater information; but they do not affirmatively demonstrate a "manifest error" of fact.
Second, the residents do not explain why the Forndran Draft contains or analyzes facts that are truly new.
Third, and most significantly, the Forndran Draft does not relate meaningfully to the issue presently before me: whether to enter the Second Modification. The Second Modification revises the construction deadline. In contrast, the Forndran Draft bears most closely on the City's plans to locate its secondary facilities at Peirce Island. Although it is clear that the parties contemplate the Peirce Island location, the Second Modification neither mandates that the City locate its secondary treatment plant at that site nor requires the City to select the granular engineering design details that it has. Thus, the Forndran Draft is largely not germane to the issue before me.
For these reasons, the residents have not demonstrated that the July 29 order was based on a manifest error of fact or law. Accordingly, I deny their motion to reconsider.
A district court may modify an existing consent decree when applying it prospectively would no longer be equitable. Fed. R. Civ. P. 60(b)(5).
A party may meet "its initial burden by showing . . . a significant change either in factual conditions or in law."
The settling parties agree the City cannot meet its March 2017 deadline to construct the secondary treatment facilities. This failure is attributable to the City's effort, over the course of a year and a half, to evaluate an alternative construction location and design at Pease Tradeport. This evaluation process involved extensive consultation with engineering experts to examine regulatory requirements and construction issues posed by the Pease site. After deliberation, the City determined that Peirce Island was the better choice and shifted its efforts to that location. Evaluation of the Pease alternative had delayed the process of designing an upgrade at Peirce Island. After consultation, the settling parties agreed that the existing deadline is unworkable, even under a twenty-four-hour construction schedule. Accordingly, after several months of negotiation, consultation, and dispute resolution, the parties forged a proposed modification to the consent decree that would extend the deadline.
The intervening residents neither contest these changed factual circumstances nor argue—apart from a fleeting reference— that the first
The Supreme Court has explained that modification is appropriate "when changed factual conditions make compliance with the decree substantially more onerous."
Accordingly, I conclude that significant factual changes warrant a modification of the consent decree.
After finding that a change of facts has occurred that merits revision of the decree, I next consider whether the proposed modification is suitably tailored to the changed circumstances. "[O]nce a court has determined that a modification is warranted . . . principles of federalism and simple common sense require the court to give significant weight to the views of the local government officials who must implement any modification."
The City's view merits "significant weight" at this stage of the
Now, in the eighth year of this litigation, and after years spent evaluating secondary treatment sites, a group of Portsmouth residents has intervened. They are concerned that construction at Peirce Island would disrupt life, commerce, and historic buildings in Portsmouth. They are also concerned that a Peirce Island plant would lack adequate capacity. But they largely express these concerns through questions reflecting a desire for greater information, rather than affirmative demonstrations.
More fundamentally, the residents' primary concerns and arguments reach beyond the scope of their limited intervention in this action. I have restricted the residents' participation to issues that are presently before me. Thus, it is crucial to note that the Second Modification neither mandates that the City locate a secondary treatment plant at Peirce Island nor requires the City to select the granular engineering design details that it has. Thus, the residents' arguments largely fall outside the scope of their limited intervention.
I conclude that the Secondary Modification is reasonable. The City cannot meet the existing deadline, and its daily pollution must be mitigated promptly. Past delays do not lessen the need for timely action; they heighten it. The Second Modification sets a reasonable deadline for construction and ensures that it is carried out in a timely and transparent manner. The Second Modification also holds the City accountable in the interim through mitigation requirements. The settling parties agree that these provisions are suitably tailored to the circumstances that have occurred since the First Modification. I must give weight to that position.
I conclude that the Second Modification is suitably tailored to the changed circumstances.
For the reasons set forth in this order, I deny the residents' motion to reconsider, Doc. No. 63, and I grant the United States' motion to approve the consent decree modification. Doc. Nos. 43, 38-1.
SO ORDERED.