United States v. Bd. of Cty. Comm'rs of Hamilton Cty. ( 2019 )


Menu:
  •                           RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION
    Pursuant to Sixth Circuit I.O.P. 32.1(b)
    File Name: 19a0228p.06
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, et al.,                        ┐
    Plaintiffs,   │
    │
    │
    v.                                                >     No. 18-4036
    │
    │
    BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS OF HAMILTON                │
    COUNTY, OHIO,                                            │
    Defendant-Appellee,             │
    │
    CITY OF CINCINNATI,                                      │
    │
    Defendant-Appellant.
    │
    ┘
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Southern District of Ohio at Cincinnati.
    No. 1:02-cv-00107—Michael R. Barrett, District Judge.
    Argued: August 6, 2019
    Decided and Filed: September 6, 2019
    Before: ROGERS, BUSH, and LARSEN, Circuit Judges.
    _________________
    COUNSEL
    ARGUED: Aaron M. Herzig, TAFT, STETTINIUS & HOLLISTER LLP, Cincinnati, Ohio, for
    Appellant. Anthony L. Osterlund, VORYS, SATER, SEYMOUR AND PEASE LLP,
    Cincinnati, Ohio, for Appellee. ON BRIEF: Aaron M. Herzig, Donnell J. Bell, TAFT,
    STETTINIUS & HOLLISTER LLP, Cincinnati, Ohio, for Appellant. Anthony L. Osterlund,
    Mark A. Norman, Nathan L. Colvin, VORYS, SATER, SEYMOUR AND PEASE LLP,
    Cincinnati, Ohio, James W. Harper, Charles W. Anness, Michael Friedmann, HAMILTON
    COUNTY PROSECUTOR’S OFFICE, Cincinnati, Ohio, for Appellee.
    No. 18-4036         United States v. Bd. of Cty. Comm’rs of Hamilton Cty., et al.         Page 2
    _________________
    OPINION
    _________________
    ROGERS, Circuit Judge. In 1968, the Board of County Commissioners of Hamilton
    County, Ohio and the City of Cincinnati consolidated their sewer districts into a single sewer
    system and entered an agreement providing that the City would manage the sewer system’s
    operations, subject to County oversight, for a period of fifty years. After the City indicated that
    it planned to unilaterally withdraw from the agreement in 2018, the Board sought intervention
    from the district court.    The court found that the City’s withdrawal would interfere with
    environmental remediation projects that the City and Board had committed to implement under a
    2004 consent decree. To prevent this from happening, the court temporarily extended the term
    of the 1968 agreement, enjoining the City’s withdrawal pursuant to the court’s inherent power to
    enforce consent decrees. The district court did not abuse its discretion in granting the temporary
    injunction because doing so was necessary to enforce the terms and objectives of the 2004
    consent decree.
    I.
    A.
    The Board of County Commissioners of Hamilton County established and operated sewer
    districts in accordance with Ohio law beginning in 1924, and a few decades later it consolidated
    the sewer districts into a single county sewer district called “Hamilton County Sewer District No.
    1.” By 1968 the Board’s management of the consolidated sewer district had attracted criticism
    due to mounting problems with pollution in Hamilton County. To resolve these problems, the
    Board turned to the City of Cincinnati, which had managed its own sewer system for over 150
    years.
    The City assisted the Board in two ways. First, the City passed an ordinance authorizing
    the consolidation of its sewer system with Hamilton County Sewer District No. 1. The ordinance
    provided that “in becoming a part of Hamilton County Sewer District No. 1, [the City] Council
    conveys to the Board of County Commissioners, for use only, all of the sanitary sewage
    No. 18-4036        United States v. Bd. of Cty. Comm’rs of Hamilton Cty., et al.          Page 3
    facilities” that were “owned and operated by the City of Cincinnati for the sole and exclusive use
    of the sewer district.” The reason for the ordinance was “the necessity of providing for the
    creation of one combined sewer district for the City and County under the direction and control
    of the County Commissioners,” and the City “authorize[d] and consent[ed] to the construction,
    maintenance, repair and operation of any sewer improvement for local service” within the City
    by the Board. The Board approved the consolidation of the City’s sewer system with Hamilton
    County Sewer District No. 1 through a resolution, with the new consolidated sewer district being
    named “The Metropolitan Sewer District of Greater Cincinnati” (“MSD”). Neither the City’s
    ordinance nor the Board’s resolution contained provisions about when, if ever, the sewer district
    was to be de-consolidated.
    Second, the Board and the City entered into a written agreement (the “1968 Agreement”)
    that established what the district court would later characterize as a principal-agent relationship
    between the two respective parties. The City, assuming the role of an agent, was to “provide a
    total and complete management service for the operation of the county sewer system.” To fulfill
    its responsibility of doing “all things necessary to manage and operate the [MSD] in an efficient
    and businesslike manner,” the City agreed, among other things, to “[m]aintain and operate all
    sanitary and combined sewers, sewage pumping stations and sewer treatment facilities,” and to
    “draft all necessary legislation” for the sewage system and submit such legislation to the Board
    “for consideration and approval.” The City also agreed to employ MSD staff, including those
    who transferred to the City from the County. Such transferees were “completely subject to the
    City’s personnel Rules and Regulations” after the transfer was completed, though they had the
    option of participating in the retirement system of either the City or the State.
    The Board, assuming the role of a principal, was granted the authority to oversee the
    City’s management of the sewer system, with the 1968 Agreement providing that the City’s
    management was “subject to the exclusive control and direction of the [Board of]
    Commissioners.”      Similarly, a different provision of the 1968 Agreement stipulated that
    “authority and control of the sewer system of the sewer district shall remain vested in the [Board
    of] Commissioners including, but not limited to, the major responsibilities of fixing sewerage
    service charges, adopting Rules and Regulations and approving capital improvement programs,
    No. 18-4036        United States v. Bd. of Cty. Comm’rs of Hamilton Cty., et al.            Page 4
    and undertaking the necessary legislation therefor.” The arrangement was to “be in full force
    and effect for a fifty (50) year period beginning May 1, 1968, and thereafter extended for
    additional periods of time as are mutually agreed upon by the County and the City.” During that
    time period, the 1968 Agreement provided that “the City will be the sole management and
    operating agency for the sewer system of the district.”
    B.
    In 2002, the United States Environmental Protection Agency (“EPA”), the State of Ohio,
    and the Ohio River Valley Water Sanitation Commission (“Sanitation Commission”) sued the
    Board and the City, alleging that the codefendants’ management of MSD had violated the Clean
    Water Act, along with similar Ohio laws and regulations. According to the Amended Complaint,
    the codefendants had allowed MSD’s discharge of certain pollutants to exceed authorized limits,
    had discharged other pollutants from MSD’s sewage system without obtaining permits to do so,
    and had failed to prevent the release of sewage overflows into buildings. The plaintiffs sought,
    among other things, injunctive relief and civil penalties for the various alleged infractions.
    The parties resolved the dispute in 2004 by entering into two consent decrees—one
    interim decree and one final decree (collectively, the “Consent Decree”). The parties’ “express
    purpose” in entering into the Consent Decree was “to further the objectives set forth in Section
    101 of the [Clean Water] Act, 33 U.S.C. § 1251, and to resolve the claims of the Plaintiffs for
    injunctive relief and civil penalties for the violations alleged in [the Amended Complaint] in the
    manner set forth in” a later section of the Consent Decree. To effectuate these objectives, the
    Board and the City agreed:
    to use sound engineering practices, consistent with industry standards, to perform
    investigations, evaluations and analyses and to design and construct any remedial
    measures required by this Decree; to use sound management, operational, and
    maintenance practices, consistent with industry standards, to implement all the
    requirements of this Consent Decree; and to achieve expeditious implementation
    of the provisions of this Decree with the goals of eliminating all Sanitary Sewer
    Overflows and Unpermitted Overflows and coming into and remaining in full
    compliance with the requirements of the Clean Water Act, U.S. EPA’s 1994
    Combined Sewer Overflow (CSO) Policy, Chapter 6111 of the Ohio Revised
    Code and the rules promulgated thereunder, the Compact and the pollution control
    standards promulgated thereunder, and Defendants’ Current Permits.
    No. 18-4036        United States v. Bd. of Cty. Comm’rs of Hamilton Cty., et al.            Page 5
    The Consent Decree required the Board and the City to take measures to remedy the
    pollution and sewage overflow problems in MSD by particular dates and to pay civil penalties if
    they missed the deadlines.       The codefendants’ environmental reform efforts were to be
    conducted in two phases. The first phase was to be completed by December 31, 2018 at an
    estimated cost of $1.145 billion, while the second phase was scheduled to begin on January 1,
    2019 at an estimated cost of $2.145 billion. In the Consent Decree, the district court retained
    jurisdiction to “enforce the terms and conditions and achieve the objectives of this Consent
    Decree and to resolve disputes arising hereunder as may be necessary or appropriate for the
    construction, modification, implementation, or execution of this Decree.” The Consent Decree
    also granted the district court jurisdiction to resolve disputes related to the implementation of the
    Consent Decree:
    This Court shall retain jurisdiction of this matter for the purposes of
    implementing and enforcing the terms and conditions of this Consent Decree and
    for the purpose of adjudicating all disputes among the Parties (including [the
    Sanitation Commission]) that may arise under the provisions of this Consent
    Decree . . . . [including] any dispute that arises with respect to the meaning,
    application, implementation, interpretation, amendment or modification of this
    Consent Decree, or with respect to Defendants’ compliance herewith . . . or any
    delay hereunder, the resolution of which is not expressly provided for in this
    Consent Decree.
    The Consent Decree stipulated that its provisions were “binding upon the Defendants,”
    and a sale or transfer of either defendant’s interest in the sewer system would not alter that fact:
    Effective from the Date of Lodging of this Consent Decree until its
    termination, any sale or transfer of either Defendant[’s] interests in or operating
    role with respect to the Sewer System or WWTPs [wastewater treatment plants]
    shall not in any manner relieve either Defendant of its responsibilities for meeting
    the terms and conditions of this Consent Decree, except as provided in Paragraph
    III.C.
    Paragraph III.C’s exception applied if either defendant sought to name a successor in interest to
    assume its responsibilities under the Consent Decree and succeeded in obtaining permission from
    the parties or the district court to amend the Consent Decree to effectuate the change:
    If either Defendant seeks to name a successor in interest to assume any or
    all of its interest in, or operating role with respect to, the Sewer System or
    WWTPs, such defendant may request modification of this Consent Decree from
    No. 18-4036       United States v. Bd. of Cty. Comm’rs of Hamilton Cty., et al.          Page 6
    U.S. EPA/Ohio EPA/[Sanitation Commission] to amend this Consent Decree in
    accordance with the role to be assumed by the proposed successor in interest.
    Upon such Defendant’s request, the Parties shall discuss the matter. If the Parties
    agree on a proposed modification to the Consent Decree, they shall prepare a joint
    motion to the Court requesting such modification and seeking leave to join the
    proposed successor in interest. If the Parties do not agree, and the Defendant still
    believes modification of this Decree and joinder of a successor in interest is
    appropriate, it may file a motion seeking such modification in accordance with
    Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 60(b); provided, however, that nothing in this
    Paragraph is intended to waive the Plaintiffs’ right to oppose such motion and to
    argue that such modification is unwarranted.
    The Consent Decree’s description of the relationship between the Board and the City was
    consistent with the 1968 Agreement, as multiple Consent Decree provisions recognized the
    principal-agent relationship that the Board and City established. For example, the Consent
    Decree described the Board as
    the duly authorized governing body of Hamilton County, Ohio, pursuant to the
    laws of the State of Ohio. The County is the holder of various NPDES permits
    that govern discharges from the County’s Wastewater Treatment Plants and
    Sewer System. As such, it is responsible for operating the County’s Wastewater
    Treatment Plants and Sewer System. The County has established the MSD, a
    county sewer district established pursuant to Chapter 6117 of the Ohio Revised
    Code, and acts as the principal of MSD, including maintenance of funding
    authority for MSD.
    A different Consent Decree provision characterized the City as the Board’s agent:
    Defendant, City of Cincinnati (“the City”), is a chartered municipal
    corporation, organized and existing under the laws of the State of Ohio. Pursuant
    to an agreement with the County, and subject to the pertinent provisions of the
    Ohio Revised Code, the City also serves as the agent for the County in the
    management and operation of MSD. It is in this capacity that the City is named
    as Defendant.
    C.
    The implementation of the Consent Decree has not gone smoothly. Consent Decree
    projects have been set back by delays and budgetary shortfalls, and the Board and the City have
    blamed each other for the problems.      By 2013, City officials were becoming increasingly
    frustrated with the County’s attempts to implement new oversight measures, because the
    oversight allegedly interfered with the City’s management of MSD. The oversight measures
    No. 18-4036        United States v. Bd. of Cty. Comm’rs of Hamilton Cty., et al.          Page 7
    included “requests for reports, records, justifications, and financial information,” along with the
    use of County “monitors” (consisting of “new County employees, consultants, and lawyers”) to
    evaluate the City’s work. Meanwhile, County officials were opposed to the City’s decision to
    pass three procurement ordinances that were intended to apply to contract bids for Consent
    Decree projects. The first ordinance required contractors to ensure that a certain percentage of
    construction worker hours were performed by Hamilton County residents, the second required
    some contractors to employ a certain percentage of apprentices in their workforces, and the third
    gave a bidding advantage to small businesses from the City.
    The County did not approve of the City’s procurement policies, as County officials
    believed that MSD should be governed by State and County law. When the City refused to back
    down and comply with the County’s position, the County responded by passing a series of
    resolutions. The first resolution suspended appropriations for MSD projects pending resolution
    of the procurement dispute. The second resolution terminated the suspension and authorized
    MSD contract bidding to proceed under State law, providing that any project bid “awarded
    contrary to this authorization” would be “de-legislated effective immediately.” The County
    followed through on this threat in a subsequent resolution, which de-legislated MSD projects that
    had “violated the County’s policies” by being subject to the City’s procurement ordinances.
    The City and the Board continued to discuss their procurement policies and exchange
    memos on the issue in 2013 and 2014, but their efforts to resolve the dispute proved futile. As a
    result, the Board sought intervention from the district court, filing a motion to enjoin the City
    from violating the Consent Decree. The Board argued that the 1968 Agreement established a
    principal-agent relationship between the Board and the City, and that the City was accordingly
    required to follow the laws and regulations of the State and County while operating MSD.
    Because the City’s procurement ordinances allegedly conflicted with Ohio law, the Board
    requested that the court issue an injunction “pursuant to the Consent Decree, the All Writs Act,
    and the Court’s inherent powers and prior orders.” The City countered that the Board’s motion
    amounted to a request for the court “to rewrite the 1968 Agreement,” because the City and Board
    had “agreed that the City’s sole management of [MSD] meant that the City would follow the
    laws and requirements which pertain to Cincinnati as a municipal corporation in contracts and
    No. 18-4036         United States v. Bd. of Cty. Comm’rs of Hamilton Cty., et al.      Page 8
    purchases for the MSD.” According to the City, the 1968 Agreement put the City in charge of
    MSD’s operations, and MSD should be subject to City ordinances rather than the laws and
    regulations of the State and the County.
    The district court granted the Board’s motion. The court determined that the 1968
    Agreement established a principal-agent relationship between the Board and the City, citing
    multiple provisions from the 1968 Agreement providing that the City’s management authority
    was subject to County oversight. The court reasoned that because the Board acts as MSD’s
    principal, the City was bound to apply the laws of the State and County in its operation of MSD,
    rather than City ordinances: “The City’s authority to operate and manage MSD is not unqualified
    but is restricted by the 1968 Agreement and state law which require the City—as the agent for
    the County—to apply County rules and regulations and state law in procuring contracts for
    Consent Decree projects.” The court concluded that “the plain terms of the 1968 Agreement”
    indicated that “the City must adhere to the County’s rules and regulations, as well as the
    County’s resolutions, for procuring Consent Decree projects.” The City did not appeal the
    district court’s order.
    D.
    The order did not resolve the parties’ disputes over procurement policies and other
    Consent Decree issues. In 2016, the Board filed a second motion to enjoin the City’s alleged
    violations of the Consent Decree, characterizing the City as a “rogue agent” that was “opposing
    County oversight and directives and MSD Rules” and subjecting taxpayers to “soaring” costs in
    the process. The Board also moved for the court “to order the County and City to mediation to
    address the impending termination” of the 1968 Agreement. In its Response, the City opposed
    the Board’s request for an injunction, arguing that such an injunction would “nullify the 1968
    Agreement by permitting the County to take managerial and operational control of [MSD] and
    the City’s sewer assets.” However, on the issue of mediation, the City agreed to participate in
    “Court-led negotiations designed to help ensure that termination of the 1968 Agreement proceeds
    in an orderly manner.”
    No. 18-4036        United States v. Bd. of Cty. Comm’rs of Hamilton Cty., et al.          Page 9
    The Board and the City began mediation, which culminated in their agreement to a
    “MSD Operation Transition and Cooperation Agreement Commitment Letter” (“Commitment
    Letter”) in 2017. The Commitment Letter provided a preliminary plan for the termination of the
    1968 Agreement and the transfer of MSD operations to the Board. Two conditions precedent
    needed to be satisfied before a final termination plan would go into effect: (1) the City was to be
    “removed as a defendant” in the MSD case and was to “not remain or act to become a party,” a
    condition that required court approval “under the terms of the Consent Decrees in the MSD
    case”; and (2) “[a]ll present and future Sewer District employees” were to become “County
    [Board] employees” and “Members of the Cincinnati Retirement System,” an arrangement that
    required a change in state law. If the parties were unable to approve a final termination plan
    prior to the expiration of the 1968 Agreement, the Commitment Letter provided for an extension
    of the 1968 Agreement through September 30, 2018. The Commitment Letter also granted the
    district court “continuing jurisdiction” over the Commitment Letter and the eventual termination
    agreement.
    E.
    In July of 2018 the parties realized that “the conditions precedent identified in the
    Commitment Letter could not be completed by the time the [1968 Agreement] was set to expire,
    September 30, 2018.” After a series of exchanges, the Board and the City remained deadlocked
    on how to proceed. The County proposed that they unconditionally extend the 1968 Agreement
    to July 1, 2019 and use the remaining time to continue mediation. The City refused. Instead, the
    City promised to continue to manage the sewer system, provided that the County agreed to
    implement multiple recommendations made by a consulting firm, Roetzel & Andress LPA, that
    the City and County had hired to evaluate MSD’s operations. The recommendations included
    that the County end its monitor program, that the County “[r]epeal redundant and overly
    burdensome administrative rules and regulations,” and that the County agree to follow the City’s
    approach for the second phase of the Consent Decree. If the Board refused to acquiesce to the
    City’s proposal, a City memo suggested that the City planned to unilaterally withdraw from the
    1968 Agreement:
    No. 18-4036        United States v. Bd. of Cty. Comm’rs of Hamilton Cty., et al.        Page 10
    The Agreement becomes effective only when the conditions precedent are met. If
    they are not met by September 30, 2018, the 1968 Agreement expires. At that
    point, the City returns to operating the City sewer system as it did before the 1968
    Agreement was signed. The [Board] could negotiate with the City for the City to
    continue operating the County system as well.
    In light of this impasse, the Board filed a third motion to enjoin the City from violating
    the Consent Decree. The Board requested that the district court act “pursuant to the Court’s
    inherent injunctive power and the All Writs Act, 28 U.S.C. § 1651(a), or, alternatively, to Fed. R.
    Civ. P. 65” by issuing an order: (1) to enjoin the City from withdrawing or deconsolidating from
    MSD; (2) to enjoin the City “from attempting to assert control over, or otherwise interfere with
    MSD assets”; (3) to grant a temporary extension of the 1968 Agreement; and (4) to require the
    City to “adhere to the law of the case established by multiple Court orders.” In support of its
    Motion, the Board emphasized that the City’s unilateral withdrawal from MSD would prevent
    the parties from managing the sewer system and complying with their Consent Decree
    commitments. According to the Board, “the City would irreparably harm implementation of this
    Court’s Consent Decree, the County, and MSD ratepayers, if it refuses to temporarily
    unconditionally extend the [1968 Agreement].” In its Response, the City contended that the
    district court should deny the Board’s requested injunction and instead order the County to
    comply with the consulting firm’s recommendations, in which case the City would continue to
    “manage and operate the entire sewer system and meet Consent Decree obligations.”
    The district court granted the Board’s motion in part and denied it in part. Relying on the
    “inherent power to enforce its consent decrees,” the court “temporarily extend[ed] the [1968
    Agreement] until further order of this Court.” In support of its decision, the court determined
    that the City’s proposal to “return to a pre-1968 arrangement where the County and the City
    manage their own sewer systems is not workable and threatens the successful completion of the
    objectives of the Consent Decree.”      It also ordered the County and the City “to continue
    mediation efforts, which shall include addressing the City’s concerns regarding the County’s
    monitoring program; certain County rules and regulations which the City has identified as
    unworkable and inefficient; and reaching consensus with regard to the projects planned for Phase
    II of the Consent Decree.”
    No. 18-4036        United States v. Bd. of Cty. Comm’rs of Hamilton Cty., et al.         Page 11
    II.
    The district court did not abuse its discretion in temporarily enjoining the City from
    withdrawing from the 1968 Agreement by the termination date. The court possessed the inherent
    power to enforce consent decrees, and the temporary injunction was a proper exercise of that
    power in two respects.
    A.
    First, the temporary injunction was necessary to enforce provisions in the Consent Decree
    providing that the Consent Decree would remain binding on the City and the Board, unless either
    party named a successor in interest and obtained approval from the other Consent Decree parties
    or from the district court to permit the successor in interest to take over the party’s
    responsibilities (the “successor-in-interest provision”):
    If either Defendant seeks to name a successor in interest to assume any or all of its
    interest in, or operating role with respect to, the Sewer System or WWTPs
    [wastewater treatment plants], such defendant may request modification of this
    Consent Decree from U.S. EPA/Ohio EPA/[Sanitation Commission] to amend
    this Consent Decree in accordance with the role to be assumed by the proposed
    successor in interest. Upon such Defendant’s request, the Parties shall discuss the
    matter. If the Parties agree on a proposed modification to the Consent Decree,
    they shall prepare a joint motion to the Court requesting such modification and
    seeking leave to join the proposed successor in interest. If the Parties do not
    agree, and the Defendant still believes modification of this Decree and joinder of
    a successor in interest is appropriate, it may file a motion seeking such
    modification in accordance with Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 60(b); provided,
    however, that nothing in this Paragraph is intended to waive the Plaintiffs’ right to
    oppose such motion and to argue that such modification is unwarranted.
    Absent a modification of the Consent Decree pursuant to this provision, the Consent Decree
    provided no way for either the City or the County to terminate its responsibilities. Instead, the
    Consent Decree was “binding upon” both the City and the County, and a “sale or transfer of
    either [the City’s or the County’s] interests in or operating role with respect to” MSD would not
    automatically terminate that Defendant’s obligations.
    The City’s unilateral withdrawal from the 1968 Agreement with no succession plan
    would likely have resulted in violations of the Consent Decree. The Consent Decree explicitly
    No. 18-4036        United States v. Bd. of Cty. Comm’rs of Hamilton Cty., et al.         Page 12
    recognized that the parties’ operation of MSD was subject to a principal-agent relationship, as set
    forth in the 1968 Agreement. For example, one provision of the Consent Decree referred to the
    County as the “principal of MSD,” while another stipulated that the City “serves as the agent for
    the County in the management and operation of MSD” under “an agreement with the County”
    and was named as a defendant in that capacity. The City’s planned withdrawal from the 1968
    Agreement would have terminated the principal-agent relationship between the Board and the
    City and thus altered the parties’ respective roles in the operation of MSD. To ensure that its
    withdrawal complied with the Consent Decree, which assumed the existence of the principal-
    agent relationship, the City would have needed to follow the requirements laid out in the Consent
    Decree’s successor-in-interest provision. But the City did not attempt to do so. Instead, when
    the parties were unable to agree on a final termination plan, the City claimed that the imminent
    expiration of the 1968 Agreement meant that the City would return “to operating the City sewer
    system as it did before the 1968 Agreement was signed.”
    In light of the City’s refusal to follow the Consent Decree’s protocol for transferring the
    City’s operating role with respect to MSD, the district court properly enjoined the City from
    withdrawing from the 1968 Agreement. As the district court determined, the City’s position
    “ignores the City’s obligations under the Consent Decree” and would have resulted in an
    arrangement that was “not workable.” To prevent this from happening, the court “temporarily
    extend[ed]” the 1968 Agreement “until further order” of the district court, and its decision to do
    so was a proper exercise of its inherent power to enforce consent decrees. “[A] consent decree is
    a ‘settlement agreement subject to continued judicial policing.’” Vanguards of Cleveland v. City
    of Cleveland, 
    23 F.3d 1013
    , 1017 (6th Cir. 1994) (quoting Williams v. Vukovich, 
    720 F.2d 909
    ,
    920 (6th Cir. 1983)). “[I]t is well-settled that ‘courts retain the inherent power to enforce
    agreements entered into in settlement of litigation pending before them.’” Id. at 1018 (quoting
    Sarabia v. Toledo Police Patrolman’s Ass’n, 
    601 F.2d 914
    , 917 (6th Cir. 1979)). We have
    emphasized that the district court’s inherent power is “broad,” and “[t]he court’s choice of
    remedies is reviewed for an abuse of discretion.” Shy v. Navistar Int’l Corp., 
    701 F.3d 523
    , 533
    (6th Cir. 2012) (quoting Stone v. City & Cty. of S.F., 
    968 F.2d 850
    , 861 (9th Cir. 1992)). The
    district court did not abuse that discretion here, given that issuing an injunction was necessary to
    prevent the City from violating the Consent Decree.
    No. 18-4036        United States v. Bd. of Cty. Comm’rs of Hamilton Cty., et al.          Page 13
    This is especially true given the temporary nature of the injunction. Notwithstanding the
    City’s claims to the contrary, both the plain language of the injunction and the record below
    illustrate that the injunction is temporary. With respect to the district court’s language, the order
    stipulates that the “Court temporarily extends” the 1968 Agreement “until further order of this
    Court.” This is consistent with the district court’s description of the injunction as amounting to a
    way of effecting a “transition period of some kind.” It is also consistent with the County’s
    injunction request, which was for the district court to temporarily enjoin the termination of the
    1968 Agreement for a period of less than a year while the parties continued mediation.
    Although the City offered to continue managing MSD while negotiations continued after
    the termination of the 1968 Agreement, that does not weigh against the district court’s decision
    to issue the temporary injunction instead of requiring the parties to follow the terms of the City’s
    offer. The City’s offer was contingent on the Board’s agreeing to reduce its oversight of the
    City’s MSD management and to repeal a number of rules and regulations that the City found to
    be burdensome. If the measures had been implemented, then they would have conflicted with
    provisions in the Consent Decree specifying that the Board amounted to the “principal of MSD,”
    while the City acted as the Board’s agent. The measures would have also conflicted with the
    district court’s prior order determining that the 1968 Agreement established a principal-agent
    relationship, according to which the City’s management of MSD was subject to State and County
    laws and regulations. For these reasons, the district court did not abuse its discretion when it
    declined to permit the City to manage MSD under the terms of the offer.
    The court’s temporary injunction is distinguishable from a consent decree modification
    that the Supreme Court vacated in Firefighters Local Union No. 1784 v. Stotts, 
    467 U.S. 561
    (1984), and Stotts does not provide a basis for reversing the temporary injunction here. Stotts
    involved consent decrees entered into by the Memphis Fire Department in 1974 and 1980 to
    resolve allegations of racially discriminatory hiring and promotion practices. 467 U.S. at 565–
    66. After the entry of the 1980 consent decree, projected budget deficits required the city of
    Memphis to reduce nonessential government personnel, and Memphis attempted to do so by
    implementing a layoff rule that favored the retention of senior employees. Id. at 566. The
    district court enjoined the layoff plan and ordered Memphis instead to comply with a modified
    No. 18-4036         United States v. Bd. of Cty. Comm’rs of Hamilton Cty., et al.           Page 14
    layoff plan that was “aimed at protecting black employees” who would have been
    disproportionately terminated if the seniority system remained in place. Id. at 567. The Supreme
    Court determined that the district court exceeded its inherent power to enforce the consent decree
    by entering the injunction, in part because the consent decree did not contain any textual
    provisions indicating that the parties intended to “depart from the existing seniority system.” Id.
    at 574.
    The Court’s analysis rested on multiple factors that distinguish Stotts from this case.
    First, the Court determined that the Stotts injunction was inconsistent with the 1980 consent
    decree that it was purportedly designed to enforce, given that the 1980 consent decree “stated
    that it was not ‘intended to conflict with any provisions’ of the 1974 [consent] decree” and that
    “the latter decree expressly anticipated that the City would recognize seniority.” Id. Here, the
    temporary injunction is consistent with the terms of the Consent Decree, including the successor-
    in-interest provision. Second, the terms of the Stotts injunction conflicted with a federal anti-
    discrimination statute, Title VII, making it reasonable to presume that the parties would not have
    agreed to such an injunction absent an express provision in the consent decree stipulating
    otherwise. Id. at 575. The temporary injunction in this case presents no such conflict with
    federal law. Third, the Stotts injunction interfered with the rights of nonminority employees and
    a local union, despite the fact that neither of those groups was a party to the litigation that
    culminated in the 1980 consent decree. Id. at 575–76. In contrast, the court’s temporary
    injunction in this case does not interfere with the rights of third parties. For these reasons, the
    Court’s rejection of the district court’s injunction in Stotts does not compel a similar result here.
    Although the parties anticipated the termination of the 1968 Agreement, that does not
    undermine the appropriateness of the temporary injunction. The City cites two cases purportedly
    establishing that a district court exceeds its power when it extends an agreement that “every
    party knew was set to expire.” However, both of the cited cases are distinguishable from this
    one because they involved motions for modification of a consent decree, raising questions about
    the extent of the district court’s inherent power to make modifications. See Rufo v. Inmates of
    Suffolk Cty. Jail, 
    502 U.S. 367
    , 371–72 (1992); Vanguards of Cleveland, 23 F.3d at 1017–18.
    “Modification of a consent decree is appropriate” when one of three circumstances applies:
    No. 18-4036        United States v. Bd. of Cty. Comm’rs of Hamilton Cty., et al.          Page 15
    (1) “changed factual conditions make compliance with the decree substantially more onerous”;
    (2) “a decree proves to be unworkable because of unforeseen obstacles”; or (3) “enforcement of
    the decree without modification would be detrimental to the public interest.” Vanguards of
    Cleveland, 23 F.3d at 1018 (quoting Rufo, 502 U.S. at 384–85). Conversely, “modification
    should not be granted where a party relies upon events that actually were anticipated at the time
    it entered into a decree.” Rufo, 502 U.S. at 385. The modification rules are inapplicable to this
    case because the temporary injunction did not modify the Consent Decree.
    For these reasons, the district court did not abuse its discretion by entering the temporary
    injunction, given that doing so was necessary to ensure that the City did not violate the Consent
    Decree by ceasing to perform its responsibilities without selecting a successor in interest.
    B.
    The second reason that the district court acted within its discretion to issue the temporary
    injunction was because of its finding, which was not clearly erroneous, that the City’s
    withdrawal from the 1968 Agreement would interfere with the parties’ fulfillment of their
    Consent Decree obligations. The court did not abuse its discretion in temporarily enjoining the
    City’s attempt to withdraw as a way of ensuring that the Consent Decree projects would continue
    on schedule.
    There is sufficient information in the record to support the district court’s finding that the
    City’s proposal to withdraw from the 1968 Agreement “threatens the successful completion of
    the objectives of the Consent Decree.” For example, an affidavit from a County official attests to
    the Board’s inability to manage MSD without the City’s assistance. Among other problems, the
    County lacked the employees that would be required to operate MSD when the district court
    entered the temporary injunction. A County attorney also told the district court that the City’s
    withdrawal would “jeopardize MSD bond debt and credit,” and the City did not challenge that
    statement before the district court or on appeal. When we review a temporary injunction, “[t]he
    ultimate decision to grant an injunction is reviewed for an abuse of discretion,” while the court’s
    “findings of fact are reviewed for clear error.” Southern Glazer’s Distribs. of Ohio, LLC v.
    Great Lakes Brewing Co., 
    860 F.3d 844
    , 849 (6th Cir. 2017). The district court did not clearly
    No. 18-4036        United States v. Bd. of Cty. Comm’rs of Hamilton Cty., et al.      Page 16
    err when it found that the City’s withdrawal from the 1968 Agreement would interfere with the
    timely completion of Consent Decree objectives, and the court did not abuse its discretion by
    preventing that problem through the entry of the temporary injunction.
    This determination is supported by our affirmance of an injunction in a related MSD
    case. In United States v. City of Loveland, 
    621 F.3d 465
     (6th Cir. 2010), the district court
    entered a judgment on the pleadings that enjoined the City of Loveland from withdrawing from
    MSD. Id. at 467–70. We affirmed the injunction, in part because Loveland was equitably
    estopped from arguing for withdrawal due to the fact that the Board and City had relied on
    Loveland’s willingness to participate “as they crafted the complex, multiyear infrastructure
    improvements that have begun the implementation of the remedies required by the Consent
    Decrees.” Id. at 474 (quoting United States v. Bd. of Cty. Comm’rs of Hamilton Cty., Nos. 1:02-
    CV-00107, 1:09-CV-00029, 
    2010 WL 200326
    , at *5 (S.D. Ohio Jan. 14, 2010)). Loveland
    supports the district court’s temporary injunction in light of the consistency between the Sixth
    Circuit’s affirmance of the finding that Loveland’s withdrawal from MSD would interfere with
    the implementation of the Consent Decree, and the district court’s finding in this case that the
    City’s withdrawal from the 1968 Agreement would similarly interfere with the parties’
    fulfillment of their Consent Decree obligations.
    The temporary injunction did not exceed the district court’s authority, despite the
    existence of the contractual provision in the 1968 Agreement providing that the 1968 Agreement
    was to “be in full force and effect for a fifty (50) year period beginning May 1, 1968, and
    thereafter extended for additional periods of time as are mutually agreed upon by the County and
    the City” (the “termination provision”). District courts possess broad authority to enforce the
    terms of consent decrees, even where doing so requires interfering with municipal prerogatives
    or commitments. For example, in Sarabia, we held that “it was within the power of the district
    court to suspend a civil service rule whose application prevented achievement of the stated goal
    of the consent decree.” 601 F.2d at 918. Executing their authority to enforce consent decrees,
    district courts may also limit a municipality’s contracting power where necessary. The Third
    Circuit came to this conclusion when it affirmed a district court’s injunction preventing the
    Government of the Virgin Islands from performing a contract because the court determined that
    No. 18-4036        United States v. Bd. of Cty. Comm’rs of Hamilton Cty., et al.          Page 17
    implementing the contract would interfere with the party’s ability to fulfill its obligations under a
    consent decree. United States v. Virgin Islands, 
    363 F.3d 276
    , 280, 289 (3d Cir. 2004). The City
    does not cite cases supporting the contrary position that a district court lacks the power to
    abrogate contractual provisions that interfere with the enforcement of a consent decree.
    Accordingly, the district court did not exceed its inherent power by abrogating the
    termination provision of the 1968 Agreement and entering the temporary injunction, given the
    court’s determination that the abrogation was necessary to effectuate the parties’ obligations to
    implement environmental reform projects under the Consent Decree.
    Because the temporary injunction was a proper exercise of the district court’s inherent
    power to enforce consent decrees, we need not address whether the court had the authority to
    issue the temporary injunction under the All Writs Act or Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 65.
    III.
    The temporary injunction is affirmed.