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Energy and Environment Monitor

IT’S TIME TO CLARIFY WHAT CONSTITUTES A “POINT SOURCE”

June 7, 2017

By: M. Shane Harvey

Another Clean Water Act Definition Is Being Stretched To Its Limits

When Congress passed the Clean Water Act (“CWA”), it drew a bright line: discharges of pollutants into “Waters of the United States” from “point sources” were declared illegal unless the discharger obtained a CWA permit.

It seemed so simple.   

But it turned out not to be. The definition of “Waters of the United States,” or “WOTUS,” has been hotly debated for years.   Most recently, EPA Administrator Scott Pruitt announced that EPA would review and rescind an extremely broad definition of WOTUS promulgated during the Obama Administration.  That definition, embodied in the so-called “WOTUS rule,” spawned litigation and public outcry from farmers, ranchers and various other industry groups. 

While the fight over the definition of WOTUS has received a great deal of attention, it is not the only fight being waged over the scope of the CWA. In recent years, the Sierra Club and others have also sought to expand the definition of “point source” to include structures never previously regulated under the CWA.  For example, the Sierra Club and others have argued that reclaimed valley fills, coal ash ponds and even trains are “point sources” if pollutants somehow make it from these structures into rivers or streams – no matter how circuitous the path.Capture

 

It does not appear that Congress intended such a result. Congress defined “point sources” to include “discernible, confined and discrete” conveyances, such as pipes, ditches and channels. And that made sense.  Water can be controlled and treated at these structures to comply with water quality standards.   Congress expressly left runoff and other diffuse discharges – commonly known as “nonpoint source pollution” – to be regulated by the States.

 

But in response to suits by the Sierra Club and others, some courts have found that the definition of “point source” should be read broadly to include structures that States have never regulated in the NPDES program. Most notably, some courts have even found that discharges to groundwater – which is not regulated by the CWA – can constitute point source discharges if there is a “direct hydrologic connection” between the discharger and surface water (with groundwater servings as the conduit).  A federal court in Virginia recently followed such logic in a case involving a coal ash pond that was leaking to groundwater.  Other courts have taken a different approach, leaving a split among courts.

EPA (or Congress) should clarify what a “point source” is, just as EPA has vowed to fix the WOTUS rule. While the definition of “point source” originally enacted by Congress seemed clear enough, some courts have read the definition very liberally, citing the “broad remedial purpose” of the CWA.  However, statutes have ends as well as purposes.    As Justice Kennedy recently wrote:    “[a]fter all, almost every statute might be described as remedial in the sense that all statutes are designed to remedy some problem . . . no legislation pursues its purposes at all costs.” 

 This article was authored by M. Shane Harvey, Jackson Kelly, PLLC.

 

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