JOSEPH N. LAPLANTE, District Judge.
"Organizational standing" is a frequently contested issue in citizen enforcement actions. In the case at bar, Conservation Law Foundation (CLF) alleges that Continental Paving, Inc., (operating under the trade name Concord Sand & Gravel), violated the Federal Water Pollution Control Act by discharging polluted water without proper authorization or permits. CLF seeks declaratory and injunctive relief, and imposition of civil penalties. Continental moves to dismiss the complaint, arguing that CLF lacks organizational standing to sue. Specifically, Continental argues that CLF has failed to identify any of its members who were harmed by Continental's alleged activities. After briefing and oral argument, the court finds that CLF members have alleged sufficient injury to confer standing on CLF. While Continental correctly observes that CLF's complaint contains no allegations regarding individual members, declarations from CLF members appended to its objection to Continental's motion to dismiss satisfy the standing requirement. The court therefore denies Continental's motion to dismiss.
CLF is a regional, non-profit environmental protection organization headquartered in Boston. It has over 3000 members, including more than 450 in New Hampshire. Continental operates two New Hampshire facilities at issue in this litigation: a sand and gravel facility in Concord and a sand, gravel and asphalt paving mixtures facility in Pembroke. CLF alleges that Continental engages in various industrial activities at the facilities, including mining, storing, moving and processing sand, gravel, rock and other earth materials. CLF further alleges that such sand, gravel, rock and other earth materials are exposed to the elements and are sprayed with water on occasion. The Complaint also asserts that Continental stockpiles, processes, stores and transfers asphalt materials outdoors; operates, maintains, and stores heavy machinery and equipment outdoors; and drives vehicles on and off the facilities via driveways and immediate access roads.
When the materials and equipment at the facilities are exposed to precipitation and snowmelt, the water becomes polluted with dust, suspended and dissolved solids, hydrocarbons, heavy metals, sediment, road salt, trash and other pollutants from the facilities' operation. CLF alleges that this polluted runoff is then conveyed through various means, e.g., site grading, surface water channels, subsurface connections and pipes, to the Soucook River, its tributaries and wetlands, and eventually to the Merrimack River. CLF also alleges that at the Concord facility, Continental has redirected an unnamed tributary of the Soucook River under an on-site access road, after which the tributary connects with and carries flow from two small constructed ponds, under another interior access road, and into a large constructed pond located along the bank of the Soucook River. This pond has an outlet pipe that discharges into the Soucook River, then into the Merrimack River, and thereafter into the Atlantic Ocean.
After giving Continental the statutorily-required 60-day notice of intent to file suit,
In its objection to the pending motion, CLF submitted the declarations of three CLF members — Thomas Irwin (who also serves as a vice president and director of CLF), Katharyn Hok and Mark Feigl. Each of the three describe their own interactions with the Soucook and Merrimack Rivers. For example, Feigl, a Concord resident, expressed his concern for the cleanliness of water flowing to the Merrimack from the Soucook because he has swum, canoed, hunted for ducks and trained his retrieving dogs there. Hok, also a Concord resident, stated that she has used the Soucook and Merrimack Rivers for canoeing and swimming. Irwin described hiking, kayaking and swimming with his children in the Merrimack River. He also described his children's school field trips to study the river. All three declarants described potential pollution from the Continental facilities as impacting their future enjoyment of the rivers.
In considering a motion to dismiss for lack of standing under
To have standing to sue, a plaintiff must have "such a personal stake in the outcome of the controversy as to assure that concrete adverseness which sharpens the presentation of issues upon which the court so largely depends for illumination of difficult . . . questions."
"Standing consists of both a constitutional aspect and a prudential aspect. The constitutional dimension derives from the requirement that federal courts can act only upon a justiciable case or controversy."
Of particular relevance here, as an exception to the general prudential rule that a party must assert its own legal rights and not those of third parties, an "association has standing to bring suit on behalf of its members when its members would otherwise have standing to sue in their own right, the interests at stake are germane to the organization's purpose, and neither the claim asserted nor the relief requested requires the participation of individual members in the lawsuit."
The "relevant showing for purposes of Article III standing. . is not injury to the environment but injury to the plaintiff."
If the court had examined only the Complaint in isolation, it might have found Continental's argument meritorious, as the complaint alleges only that "CLF members use and enjoy New England's waterways," and that Continental's alleged discharges into the Soucook and Merrimack Rivers "adversely affect CLF members' use and enjoyment of those water resources."
Continental argues that the court should not consider the affidavits, as considering any materials that are not part of the Complaint is procedurally improper under
Continental additionally argues that the court should disregard the declarations and instead require CLF to file an amended complaint with the members' allegations contained therein.
Continental also argues that
Defendant's motion to dismiss