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Tex. Comm'n on Envtl. Quality v. Maverick Cnty.
William J. Cobb III, 401 Congress Ave., Suite 1540, Austin, TX 78701, Daniel C. Wiseman, Office of the Attorney General of Texas, Environmental Protection Division, P. O. Box 12548, Capitol Station (MC-018), Austin, TX 78711-2548, Nancy Elizabeth Olinger, Cynthia Woelk, Assistant Attorney General, Environmental Protection Division, P. O. Box 12548 (MC-066), Capitol Station, Austin, TX 78711-2548, Matthew B. Ploeger, Cobb & Counsel PLLC, 401 Congress Ave., Suite 1540, Austin, TX 78701, for Appellants.
Adam M. Friedman, Paul R. Tough, McElroy Sullivan, Miller, Weber & Olmstead, LLP, P. O. Box 12127, Austin, TX 78711, David O. Frederick, Frederick, Perales, Allmon & Rockwell, 1206 San Antonio, Austin, TX 78701, for Appellees.
Before Justices Goodwin, Baker, and Triana
Melissa Goodwin, Justice This administrative appeal concerns a Texas Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (TPDES) permit application for industrial wastewater discharges from the Eagle Pass Mine (the Mine) that was submitted by Dos Repúblicas Coal Partnership (DRCP) to the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality (TCEQ). The City of Eagle Pass, Environmental Defense Fund, Walter Herring, Ernesto Ibarra, Gabriel De La Cerda, Mike Hernandez, Boulware and Anson Family, Ltd., and Maverick County Environmental and Public Health Association (collectively, the Downstream Landowners) and Maverick County (the County) (collectively, with the Downstream Landowners, the Permit Contestants) challenged the TPDES permit in a contested case hearing.
In a final order, TCEQ granted the TPDES permit over the Permit Contestants' challenges. The Travis County district court reversed and remanded on one issue—whether DRCP, the undisputed owner, was also properly considered the operator for purposes of submitting the application—but affirmed TCEQ's order in all other respects. DRCP and TCEQ now appeal the district court's judgment reversing and remanding the operator issue. On cross appeal, the Permit Contestants challenge the district court's judgment affirming TCEQ's order as to all other issues raised. For the reasons described below, we agree with the district court's judgment reversing TCEQ's order as to the operator issue and remanding for further proceedings, but we vacate in part the judgment affirming TCEQ's order as to all other issues raised.
DRCP owns the subbituminous coal Mine located in Maverick County, Texas. DRCP's predecessor in interest acquired a surface coal mining permit for the Mine in 2000, which was transferred to DRCP in 2009.2 See Tex. Nat. Res. Code § 134.051 (). In 2009, DRCP entered into a Contract Mining Agreement with Camino Real Fuels, LLC (CRF) for CRF to "develop, construct, operate and perform on-going reclamation at the Mine and to remove and deliver coal from the Mine" to DRCP. In 2013, the Railroad Commission renewed and issued to DRCP the surface coal mining permit and approved CRF as the operator of the Mine. See id. § 134.004(10) (). Removal of coal began in 2015. However, without a TPDES permit, DRCP would not be able to operate the Mine as it is currently designed. See Tex. Water Code § 26.121 (); 30 Tex. Admin. Code § 305.1(b) (Tex. Comm'n of Envtl. Quality, Scope and Applicability) (describing TPDES permit program).3
DRCP's predecessor in interest acquired a wastewater discharge permit for the Mine in 1994, which was renewed in 2001, 2006, and most recently on November 7, 2011 (the Current TPDES Permit), which was set to expire on September 1, 2015. See Tex. Water Code § 26.027(a) (). On September 5, 2013, DRCP applied to TCEQ to amend and renew the Current TPDES Permit. Although DRCP had held a TPDES permit for many years, it had not discharged prior to submitting its September 2013 application. The Current TPDES Permit authorized discharges of stormwater and mine seepage water from active mining areas through certain outfalls,4 imposed effluent limitations, required flow to be monitored and reported, and included additional reporting, notice, monitoring, testing, and record-keeping requirements. In its application, DRCP sought to add certain mining areas and make a boundary change; remove some outfalls; maintain certain current outfalls and add new outfalls for discharging stormwater, wastewater, and mine seepage; and allow water in ponds to be used for dust suppression.
TCEQ's Executive Director declared the application complete in January 2014. In February 2015, TCEQ referred the application to the State Office of Administrative Hearings (SOAH) to be heard by two administrative law judges (ALJs) on DRCP's request. The Permit Contestants were admitted as parties, and a four day contested case hearing occurred in November 2015. As relevant to this appeal, the following five issues were discussed at the hearing: (1) whether DRCP's contractor CRF should have applied as the permit operator, (2) whether TCEQ properly conducted its antidegradation review, (3) whether water quality based effluent limits for aluminum and boron should be imposed in the permit, (4) whether chronic effluent limits are needed at certain outfalls, and (5) whether TCEQ, by approving the draft permit, was thereby approving an illegal discharge route on private property not owned or controlled by DRCP.
In April 2016, the ALJs issued a proposal for decision (PFD), recommending that the draft permit be granted with a few changes, including "the addition of a boron limit and a requirement that aluminum be monitored." After considering the PFD, TCEQ issued a July 2016 final order granting DRCP's application. But in the final order, TCEQ deleted the ALJ's recommended findings on the boron limit and aluminum monitoring requirement and instead added what it called Other Requirement No. 10 that imposed "a robust and meaningful sampling regime" that "would occur periodically over the life of the permit to ensure that the effluent limits and monitoring requirements in the permit reflect the continuing water quality at the site." See Tex. Gov't Code § 2003.047(m) (permitting amendment of PFD).
The Permit Contestants appealed the issues described above to the Travis County district court, adding as an issue that TCEQ improperly modified the PFD by deleting the boron limit and aluminum monitoring requirement. See id. § 2001.171 (). The district court reversed TCEQ's final order and remanded "because the agency's determination regarding the proper entity to be identified as the operator of the Mine was made in violation of statutory and regulatory provisions, was not reasonably supported by substantial evidence considering the reliable and probative evidence in the record as a whole, and was arbitrary and capricious," but affirmed TCEQ's order "with respect to the other issues on appeal." See generally id. § 2001.174 (). All parties now appeal to this Court. See id. § 2001.901(a) ().
Our review of TCEQ's final order is governed by section 2001.174 of the Texas Administrative Procedure Act. See id. § 2001.174. This standard requires that we reverse or remand a case for further proceedings "if substantial rights of the appellant have been prejudiced because the administrative findings, inferences, conclusions, or decisions" (A) violate constitutional or statutory provisions, (B) exceed the agency's statutory authority, (C) were made through unlawful procedure, (D) are affected by other error of law, (E) are not reasonably supported by substantial evidence considering the reliable and probative evidence in the record as a whole; or (F) are arbitrary or capricious or characterized by abuse of discretion of clearly unwarranted exercise of discretion. Id. § 2001.174(2)(A)–(F).
As to questions committed to agency discretion, a court may not substitute its own judgment for the agency's judgment on the weight of the evidence. Id. § 2001.174. Essentially, this is a rational basis test to determine, as a matter of law, whether there is a reasonable basis in the record for the agency's action. Jenkins v. Crosby Indep. Sch. Dist. , 537 S.W.3d 142, 149 (Tex. App.—Austin 2017, no pet.) (citing Texas Health Facilities Comm'n v. Charter Med.-Dall., Inc. , 665 S.W.2d 446, 452–53 (Tex. 1984) ). We therefore are not concerned with the correctness of the agency's decision, but its reasonableness, and we apply this analysis without deference to the district court's judgment. Id. ...
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