City of Salisbury, North Carolina v. FERC ( 2022 )


Menu:
  •  United States Court of Appeals
    FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA CIRCUIT
    Argued November 2, 2021                 Decided June 10, 2022
    No. 20-1238
    CITY OF SALISBURY, NORTH CAROLINA,
    PETITIONER
    v.
    FEDERAL ENERGY REGULATORY COMMISSION,
    RESPONDENT
    CUBE YADKIN GENERATION, LLC,
    INTERVENOR
    Consolidated with 20-1457
    On Petitions for Review of Orders
    of the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission
    Robert J. King, III argued the cause for petitioner. On the
    briefs were V. Randall Tinsley, Kyle Woosley, and Julia C.
    Ambrose. Joseph A. Ponzi entered an appearance.
    Jared B. Fish, Attorney, Federal Energy Regulatory
    Commission, argued the cause for respondent. With him on
    2
    the brief were Matthew R. Christiansen, General Counsel, and
    Robert H. Solomon, Solicitor.
    Sharon L. White and Julia S. Wood were on the brief for
    intervenor Cube Yadkin Generation, LLC in support of
    respondent.
    Before: KATSAS and JACKSON, * Circuit Judges, and
    GINSBURG, Senior Circuit Judge.
    Opinion of the Court filed by Circuit Judge KATSAS.
    KATSAS, Circuit Judge: The Federal Energy Regulatory
    Commission has licensed Cube Yadkin Generation LLC to
    operate a series of hydroelectric dams on the Yadkin River in
    North Carolina. The license requires Cube to develop a plan to
    protect a nearby water pump station from flooding. In the order
    under review, FERC approved a plan to do so by raising the
    station’s sensitive equipment above the water levels expected
    during extreme flooding. We hold that this order correctly
    construed the license and was not arbitrary.
    I
    A
    Two federal statutes govern the regulation of hydroelectric
    dams. The Federal Power Act makes it unlawful to operate
    such dams in the navigable waters of the United States without
    a license from FERC. 
    16 U.S.C. § 817
    (1). The Clean Water
    Act preserves the states’ ability to regulate hydroelectric dams
    and other projects that “may result in any discharge” into
    *
    Judge Jackson participated in the oral argument but not the
    decision of this case.
    3
    navigable waters. 
    33 U.S.C. § 1341
    (a)(1); see S.D. Warren Co.
    v. Me. Bd. of Envtl. Prot., 
    547 U.S. 370
    , 373–74 (2006). A
    FERC hydroelectric license thus is ineffective until the relevant
    state issues or waives a water quality certification, 
    33 U.S.C. § 1341
    (a)(1), which may impose conditions to control
    pollution or implement other state laws, 
    id.
     § 1341(d). If FERC
    licenses a dam under the Federal Power Act, such state-
    imposed conditions become part of the federal license by
    operation of law. Id.
    B
    Since 1958, the federal government has licensed a
    hydroelectric dam project along the Yadkin River in central
    North Carolina. The project’s northern-most facility is the
    High Rock Dam, which provides electricity for local
    communities. The dam has caused sediment deposits to
    accumulate, which has led to rising upstream water levels.
    The city of Salisbury, North Carolina relies on the river for
    drinking water, which it obtains by operating a pump station
    about 20 miles upstream from the dam. Rising water levels
    pose two threats to the station. During moderate flooding, the
    river washes out its access road, preventing workers from
    reaching it. During severe flooding, the water level approaches
    the floor of elevated rooms that house the station’s sensitive
    mechanical and electrical systems. Although such equipment
    has never suffered flood damage since the station was built in
    1917, a storm in 2003 brought the water level to within a few
    feet of the equipment-room floor.
    During re-licensing proceedings, Salisbury pressed its
    concerns with federal and state regulators. It asked FERC to
    require Cube’s predecessor to build the city a new pump station
    in a less flood-prone area. FERC staff recommended a more
    4
    modest requirement—development of a flood protection plan
    for the existing station. The Commission declined to impose
    either requirement. Alcoa Power Generating, Inc., 
    156 FERC ¶ 62,210
    , PP 67–69 (2016) (Licensing Order).
    Salisbury had more success at the state level. North
    Carolina conditioned its water quality certification on the
    development of a flood protection plan for the pump station.
    When FERC renewed the license for the dam, this state-
    imposed requirement became part of the federal license.
    Licensing Order, 
    156 FERC ¶ 62,210
    , P 180, Appendix A.
    C
    Cube currently operates the Yadkin River dam project. As
    required by its license, Cube developed a flood protection plan
    for the pump station. The plan calls for dredging to reduce
    sediment. To address flooding of the access road, it also calls
    for electronic upgrades to allow remote operation of the station,
    as well as an amphibious vehicle to allow physical access in
    case of emergency. Finally, the plan calls for raising the pump
    station’s equipment above the highest projected flood level.
    Salisbury objected that raising the equipment would damage
    the station and violate state building codes. Cube responded
    that the proposed modifications would be reviewed for
    engineering soundness and code compliance. North Carolina
    did not object to the plan in substance, but it required Cube to
    submit further details for review prior to construction.
    FERC approved the plan. It found that Cube’s proposal to
    further elevate the pump station’s equipment was consistent
    with the water quality certification and otherwise reasonable.
    Cube Yadkin Generation LLC, 
    170 FERC ¶ 62,143
    , PP 30–31
    (2020) (Approval Order). FERC acknowledged Salisbury’s
    preference for a new pump station but noted that Cube’s plan
    5
    “achieves similar results” at “significantly less” cost—upwards
    of $16 million for a new pump station, versus $2.8 million to
    modify the existing structure. 
    Id.
     P 31.
    FERC denied rehearing in relevant part. It again approved
    Cube’s proposal to raise the pump station’s equipment rather
    than to build a new pump station. Cube Yadkin Generation
    LLC, 
    172 FERC ¶ 61,254
    , P 29 (2020) (Rehearing Order).
    FERC declined to consider whether Cube’s proposal was
    consistent with state-law siting, design, and water-quality
    standards. 
    Id.
     P 32. Finally, FERC found inapplicable to the
    pump station a federal regulation requiring sound engineering
    practices for hydroelectric dams. 
    Id.
     P 34.
    Salisbury petitioned for review of FERC’s decision
    approving the plan to elevate the pump station’s equipment.
    Cube has intervened in support of the Commission. We have
    jurisdiction under 16 U.S.C. § 825l(b).
    II
    We begin by considering the condition imposed by the
    North Carolina water quality certification, which requires Cube
    to develop a flood protection plan for Salisbury’s pump station.
    The parties raise two disputes about the scope of this condition,
    as well as a dispute about deference.
    A
    FERC asks us to defer to its interpretation of the condition.
    It invokes cases stating that the Commission is entitled to
    deference when construing license conditions that it imposes
    under the Federal Power Act. See, e.g., Pacific Gas & Electric
    Company v. FERC, 
    720 F.2d 78
    , 84 (D.C. Cir. 1983).
    6
    We are not so sure that deference is appropriate here,
    because state-imposed conditions under the Clean Water Act
    raise distinctive deference questions. That Act preserves a
    primary role for the states in regulating emissions into
    navigable waters. Solid Waste Agency of N. Cook Cnty. v. U.S.
    Army Corps of Eng’rs, 
    531 U.S. 159
    , 174 (2001). Accordingly,
    FERC “may not alter … conditions imposed by the states” in a
    water quality certification. U.S. Dep’t of Interior v. FERC, 
    952 F.2d 538
    , 548 (D.C. Cir. 1992); see also Keating v. FERC, 
    927 F.2d 616
    , 622 (D.C. Cir. 1991) (Clean Water Act permits states
    “to block, for environmental reasons, local water projects that
    might otherwise win federal approval”). Given this assignment
    of substantive authority to the states, we are reluctant to vest in
    FERC the interpretive authority to resolve ambiguities in
    water-quality certifications as it thinks best.
    We reserve the deference issue. As explained below, we
    conclude that FERC has adopted the best interpretation of the
    disputed condition, so we need not decide who must yield when
    the agency and the court reach competing reasonable
    interpretations. See, e.g., Truck Trailer Mfrs. Ass’n v. EPA, 
    17 F.4th 1198
    , 1201 n.1 (D.C. Cir. 2021).
    B
    The condition at issue requires Cube to develop a flood
    protection plan that includes:
    [1] Physical modifications to the facilities such as a
    protective dike for the pump station, [2] improved
    access to the pump station with the road consistent
    with the City of Salisbury’s design or [3] other
    feasible option(s) for achieving the same benefits.
    7
    Licensing Order, 
    156 FERC ¶ 62,210
    , P 180, Appendix A. As
    shown above, this text has three clauses: The first requires
    physical modifications to the pump station facilities. The
    second requires improved access to the pump station. The third
    permits other feasible options in place of the first two.
    The parties’ first interpretive dispute centers on the phrase
    “consistent with the City of Salisbury’s design” in the second
    clause. The parties agree that it governs provisions for
    improved access to the pump station. But Salisbury reads the
    phrase as qualifying the first and third clauses as well as the
    second.      So while the first clause requires physical
    modifications “such as a protective dike,” Salisbury contends
    that any physical modifications must also be consistent with the
    city’s design. Likewise, while the third clause permits other
    options that achieve the “same benefits” as physical
    modifications, Salisbury contends that these options must
    achieve not only the same benefits as a dike, but also the same
    benefits as the city’s design. And since the city asked for Cube
    to build it a new pump station, Salisbury concludes that any
    physical modifications, or other options in their place, must
    afford the same benefits as a new pump station.
    This proposed construction is untenable. Under the rule of
    the last antecedent, “a limiting clause or phrase … should
    ordinarily be read as modifying only the noun or phrase that it
    immediately follows.” Lockhart v. United States, 
    577 U.S. 347
    , 351 (2016) (quoting Barnhart v. Thomas, 
    540 U.S. 20
    , 26
    (2003)). If that noun or phrase does not fit, the limiting clause
    should then be read to modify “the nearest reasonable referent.”
    A. Scalia & B. Garner, Reading Law: The Interpretation of
    Legal Texts 152 (2012); see Grecian Magnesite Mining, Indus.
    & Shipping Co. v. Comm’r, 
    926 F.3d 819
    , 824 (D.C. Cir. 2019)
    (“ordinarily, and within reason, modifiers and qualifying
    8
    phrases attach to the terms that are nearest”). Here, the nearest
    referent is the noun “access” or, alternatively, the noun phrase
    “improved access to the pump station with the road.” Those
    referents fit naturally with the limiting phrase “consistent with
    the City of Salisbury’s design,” as Cube’s access plan must
    integrate with the city’s existing road network. And because
    the nearest referent is also a reasonable one, there is no basis
    for reading the limiting phrase to modify other, more-distant
    language in the first or third clauses of the condition.
    In contrast, Salisbury would have the phrase “consistent
    with the City of Salisbury’s design” qualify the more remote
    noun “modifications.” That is not grammatically possible. In
    some circumstances, an adjectival phrase may modify each of
    the nouns in a preceding list, through what is called the series-
    qualifier canon. But for that canon to apply, the nouns must
    appear in a “straightforward, parallel construction,” Facebook,
    Inc. v. Duguid, 
    141 S. Ct. 1163
    , 1169 (2021) (quoting Reading
    Law, supra, at 147), as in the phrase “the laws, the treaties, and
    the constitution of the United States,” see Lockhart, 577 U.S.
    at 352 (cleaned up). Here, the relevant syntax is anything but
    straightforward or parallel. In the second clause of the
    condition, the central noun access is modified by one adjective
    (“improved”) and two prepositional phrases (“to the pump
    station” and “with the road”) as well as by the contested phrase
    “consistent with the City of Salisbury’s design.” In the first
    clause, the central noun modifications is modified by one
    adjective (“physical”) and one prepositional phrase (“to the
    facilities”) and is illustrated by a phrase of two prepositional
    phrases (“such as a protective dike for the pump station”).
    Given all these “internal modifiers or structure,” the phrase
    consistent with the City of Salisbury’s design simply cannot
    skip over 21 intervening words, six intervening nouns, and five
    intervening prepositional phrases to qualify modifications as
    9
    well as access. See id.; see also Yellen v. Confederated Tribes
    of the Chehalis Reservation, 
    141 S. Ct. 2434
    , 2455 (2021)
    (Gorsuch, J., dissenting).
    Nor can the phrase modify the third clause in the way that
    Salisbury urges. Introduced by the conjunction or, the third
    clause permits other options “for achieving the same benefits”
    as the required physical modifications or improved access. For
    access improvements, these other options must achieve the
    same benefits as improved access “consistent with the City of
    Salisbury’s design.” But for physical modifications to the
    pump station, the other options must achieve the same benefits
    as modifications “such as a protective dike.” In short, because
    consistent with the City of Salisbury’s design qualifies
    improved access but not physical modifications, it likewise
    qualifies “other feasible options” for improved access, but not
    for physical modifications.
    C
    Any modification to pump station facilities must offer the
    “same benefits” as a protective dike, but what are those
    benefits? The parties agree that a plan must enable the station
    to continue operating during a flood. Salisbury asserts that a
    plan must also ensure that the station itself remains entirely dry.
    A “benefit” is a “useful aid” or something that “promotes
    well-being.” Fischer v. United States, 
    529 U.S. 667
    , 677
    (2000) (quoting Webster’s Third New International Dictionary
    204 (1971)). As this definition implies, what counts as a
    benefit must be understood in relation to some underlying
    goal—a useful aid for what? See 
    id.
     at 677–80. Ice covering a
    lake is a benefit for skating, but not for swimming.
    10
    Salisbury built its pump station to operate, but not remain
    entirely dry, during floods. According to its own expert, the
    whole point of housing the station’s mechanical and electrical
    equipment in elevated rooms was to permit operations when
    flood waters submerged the lower portion of the station. J.A.
    87. And since 1917, this design has achieved that objective
    even though floods have reached high up the station’s outer
    walls. FERC thus correctly concluded that the relevant
    “benefits” are those flowing from continued operation of the
    pump station, consistent with its original design and with
    understandings prevailing for more than a century. The pump
    station was never designed to ensure dry walls and dry floors
    even during floods, and we see no textual or other indication
    that North Carolina required Cube to provide Salisbury with
    the substantial and expensive upgrade that would be necessary
    to secure those benefits.
    To the extent Salisbury further contends that a plan must
    prevent flood waters from entering the inside of the pump
    station, its position runs into another fatal difficulty: Even a
    protective dike would not afford that benefit. Only one of the
    engineering reports in the record recommends a dike to protect
    the pump station. But as that report makes clear, a dike by itself
    would not prevent flooding inside the station, because flood
    water enters through a wet well inside the station. J.A. 56. So
    even if the flood plan had to offer all the benefits of a dike,
    permanently dry floors would not be among them.
    Salisbury contends that the residual clause requires
    “benefits” in the plural, and thus must provide for more than
    just the continued operation of the pump station. But the
    residual clause requires the “same benefits” as those afforded
    by modifications to the facility itself and improvement of its
    access road. Any plan that achieves these two objectives will
    11
    necessarily offer more than one benefit. Moreover, keeping the
    station operational could itself plausibly be described as
    ensuring different benefits. For example, Salisbury itself
    describes the station as providing both “potable and fire-
    fighting water” for its residents. Salisbury Br. at 1.
    III
    We turn now to FERC’s decision to approve Cube’s flood
    plan. In reviewing it, we must accept findings of fact supported
    by substantial evidence. 16 U.S.C. § 825l(b). We must also
    consider whether the decision is arbitrary and capricious under
    the Administrative Procedure Act. 
    5 U.S.C. § 706
    (2)(A); see
    Long Island Power Auth. v. FERC, 
    27 F.4th 705
    , 712 (D.C. Cir.
    2022). A decision is not arbitrary if it is “reasonable and
    reasonably explained.” Nw. Corp. v. FERC, 
    884 F.3d 1176
    ,
    1179 (D.C. Cir. 2018).
    A
    FERC reasonably concluded that Cube’s plan will enable
    the pump station to continue operating during floods. As the
    Commission explained, the pump station was designed to keep
    sensitive equipment above the water line even when its lower
    portions flooded. See Rehearing Order, 
    172 FERC ¶ 61,254
    ,
    P 28 n.55. And Cube proposed to further elevate this
    equipment to account for rising water levels caused by the dam.
    
    Id.
     at P 29. FERC thus reasonably explained the rationale for
    both Cube’s plan and its approval decision.
    Substantial evidence supports FERC’s decision. As the
    Commission explained, the American Society of Civil
    Engineers recommends, and North Carolina law requires,
    essential structures to be placed two to three feet above the
    expected level of a once-in-a-century flood. Rehearing Order,
    12
    
    172 FERC ¶ 61,254
    , P 10 n.25. And Cube’s plan calls for
    raising the pump station’s sensitive equipment a full 3.6 feet
    above that mark. See 
    id.
     P 10. Indeed, during the plan’s
    consultation period, Salisbury’s expert agreed that raising
    sensitive equipment to that altitude would satisfy the water
    quality certification. J.A. 467.
    B
    Salisbury presses three arguments why FERC’s approval
    order nonetheless was arbitrary. None persuades us.
    First, Salisbury contends that FERC was required to
    consider whether Cube’s flood plan would violate North
    Carolina’s design, siting, electrical, and building codes. But
    the Federal Power Act reflects a separation between “subjects
    which remain under the jurisdiction of the States” and those
    “over which Congress vests [FERC] with authority to act.”
    S.C. Pub. Serv. Auth. v. FERC, 
    850 F.2d 788
    , 795 (D.C. Cir.
    1988) (quoting First Iowa Hydro-Electric Coop. v. FPC, 
    328 U.S. 152
    , 168 (1946)). So while the Act empowers FERC to
    exercise “operational control” over federal power projects,
    Simmons v. Sabine River Auth., 
    732 F.3d 469
    , 476 (5th Cir.
    2013), non-project facilities that lie outside project boundaries
    “remain[] under the jurisdiction of the States,” S.C. Pub. Serv.
    Auth., 
    850 F.2d at 795
     (cleaned up)
    Given this division of authority, FERC permissibly
    declined to assess whether Cube’s plan complied with state
    law. It is one thing for FERC to police compliance with state-
    mandated conditions incorporated into a federal license by
    operation of federal law, as FERC did here. But it is quite
    another for FERC to police compliance with state law
    generally: What North Carolina’s building code has to say
    13
    about improvements to Salisbury’s pump station is a question
    best left to North Carolina. Salisbury can raise any state-law
    objections to the plan with the appropriate state regulatory
    agencies. And in the unlikely event that it should be harmed
    by operation of the dam, Salisbury can seek tort damages—a
    remedy that the Federal Power Act expressly preserves. 
    16 U.S.C. § 803
    (c); see, e.g., Portland General Elec. Co., 
    107 FERC ¶ 61,158
     PP 27–33 (2004). FERC did not act arbitrarily
    in applying these settled rules to the pump station, which it
    aptly described as a “non-project facilit[y] located on non-
    project lands.” Rehearing Order, 
    172 FERC ¶ 61,254
    , P 19.
    Second, Salisbury contends that FERC arbitrarily refused
    to consider whether Cube’s flood protection plan was
    consistent with sound engineering practices. Salisbury rests
    that claim on 
    18 C.F.R. § 12.5
    , which requires a FERC licensee
    to use such practices in designing, constructing, or modifying
    a “water power project or project works.” By its terms, section
    12.5 does not apply to Salisbury’s pump station, which exists
    not to generate power, but to help turn river water into drinking
    water. We note that the North Carolina State Building Code,
    like section 12.5, requires “good engineering practice.” 
    N.C. Gen. Stat. § 143-138
    (c). But for the reasons explained above,
    FERC was not compelled to police compliance with that state-
    law provision.
    Third, Salisbury contends that Cube’s plan will
    unreasonably endanger the city’s pump station workers. As
    framed before FERC on rehearing, this argument merely
    repackaged Salisbury’s other arguments that the plan violates
    North Carolina’s building code and is not based on sound
    engineering practices. To the extent that Salisbury now presses
    a freestanding argument about worker safety, the argument was
    not preserved on rehearing before FERC, and we thus have no
    14
    jurisdiction to consider it. See 16 U.S.C. § 825l(b); Shafer &
    Freeman Lakes Envtl. Conservation Corp. v. FERC, 
    992 F.3d 1071
    , 1089 (D.C. Cir. 2021).
    IV
    FERC correctly interpreted the water quality certification,
    and it reasonably approved Cube’s flood protection plan. We
    therefore deny the petitions for review.
    So ordered.