Agricultural Retailers Assoc. v. LABR , 837 F.3d 60 ( 2016 )


Menu:
  •  United States Court of Appeals
    FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA CIRCUIT
    Submitted May 16, 2016            Decided September 23, 2016
    No. 15-1326
    AGRICULTURAL RETAILERS ASSOCIATION AND THE
    FERTILIZER INSTITUTE,
    PETITIONERS
    v.
    UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF LABOR AND OCCUPATIONAL
    SAFETY & HEALTH ADMINISTRATION,
    RESPONDENTS
    Consolidated with 15-1340
    On Petitions for Review of a Memorandum
    of the Occupational Safety & Health Administration
    Gary H. Baise, Stewart D. Fried, Chris S. Leason, Mark
    C. Dangerfield, and Andrew E. Dudley were on the joint
    briefs for petitioners. Anson M. Keller Sr. entered an
    appearance.
    Ann S. Rosenthal, Associate Solicitor, Occupational
    Safety & Health Administration, Charles F. James, Counsel,
    U.S. Department of Labor, and Lauren S. Goodman, Senior
    2
    Attorney, U.S. Department of Labor, were on the brief for
    respondents.
    Randy S. Rabinowitz was on the brief for movant-
    intervenor for respondents.
    Before: ROGERS, SRINIVASAN and MILLETT, Circuit
    Judges.
    Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge SRINIVASAN.
    SRINIVASAN, Circuit Judge: The Occupational Safety
    and Health Administration, part of the Department of Labor,
    aims to secure “safe and healthful working conditions” for the
    Nation’s workers. 
    29 U.S.C. § 651
    (b). To that end, OSHA in
    1992 issued the so-called Process Safety Management
    Standard to protect the safety of those who work with or near
    highly hazardous chemicals. From its inception, the standard
    has exempted retail facilities from its requirements. The
    exemption rests on an assumption that the retail setting
    involves diminished risks of a substantial release of toxic
    chemicals. Recently, after a catastrophic chemical explosion
    at a Texas fertilizer company that qualified as an exempt retail
    facility, OSHA narrowed the scope of the retail-facility
    exemption so that the safety standard’s requirements would
    now apply to formerly exempt facilities like the Texas plant.
    The question we confront is whether, when OSHA
    narrowed the scope of the exemption for retail facilities, the
    agency issued a safety “standard” within the meaning of the
    Occupational Safety and Health Act (OSH Act). If so, we
    have jurisdiction to review OSHA’s action, and the OSH Act
    would have required the agency to adhere to procedural
    notice-and-comment requirements, which it concededly did
    not do. If, however, OSHA’s action did not amount to
    3
    issuance of a “standard,” we would lack jurisdiction to review
    it and the OSH Act would have imposed no obligation to
    follow notice-and-comment procedures.
    Under our decisions, when an action by OSHA corrects a
    particular hazard, as opposed to adjusting procedures for
    detection or enforcement, it amounts to a “standard.”
    Applying that understanding, we conclude that the agency’s
    narrowing of the substantive scope of the exemption for retail
    facilities qualified as issuance of a “standard.” We therefore
    have jurisdiction, and OSHA was required to adhere to notice-
    and-comment procedures.          Consequently, we grant the
    petitions for review and vacate OSHA’s action.
    I.
    In 1992, OSHA promulgated the Process Safety
    Management (PSM) Standard in an effort to “provide safe and
    healthful employment and places of employment for
    employees in industries which have processes involving
    highly hazardous chemicals.” Process Safety Management of
    Highly Hazardous Chemicals; Explosives and Blasting
    Agents, 
    57 Fed. Reg. 6356
    , 6359 (Feb. 24, 1992), codified at
    
    29 C.F.R. § 1910.119
     (2016). The PSM Standard “contains
    requirements for preventing or minimizing the consequences
    of catastrophic releases of toxic, reactive, flammable, or
    explosive chemicals.” 
    29 C.F.R. § 1910.119
    .
    From the outset, OSHA exempted “[r]etail facilities”
    from the requirements of the PSM Standard.                  
    Id.
    § 1910.119(a)(2)(i). The exemption, OSHA explained in the
    preamble of the final standard, was rooted in an understanding
    that “chemicals in retail facilities are in small volume
    packages, containers and allotments, making a large release
    [of toxic chemicals] unlikely.” 57 Fed. Reg. at 6369. OSHA
    4
    identified “gasoline stations” as prototypical examples of
    retail facilities. Id. Shortly after promulgating the PSM
    Standard, OSHA issued a letter defining an exempt retail
    facility as “an establishment . . . at which more than half of
    the income is obtained from direct sales to end users.” See
    Letter from Patricia K. Clark, Dir. of Enf’t Programs, OSHA,
    to Gary Myers, President, The Fertilizer Inst. (June 19, 1992).
    The “50 percent test” remained the rule for more than two
    decades.
    In April 2013, a catastrophic chemical explosion at a
    fertilizer company in West, Texas, resulted in the deaths of 15
    persons and injured many others. Although the company
    stored large quantities of a highly hazardous chemical
    (anhydrous ammonia) for bulk distribution as fertilizer to
    farmers, it had been exempt from the PSM Standard under the
    50 percent test for retail facilities. That test had enabled
    establishments to claim the exemption even if they stored
    large amounts of hazardous chemicals for distribution in
    wholesale quantities to commercial end users (including
    farmers), as long as the distributions went directly to the end
    users.
    After the explosion at the West, Texas, fertilizer facility,
    President Obama issued an executive order that, among other
    things, directed the Secretary of Labor to “identify any
    changes that need to be made in the retail . . . exemption[] in
    the PSM Standard” so as to “meet the goal of preventing
    major chemical accidents.” Improving Chemical Facility
    Safety and Security, 
    78 Fed. Reg. 48029
    , 48032 (Aug. 1,
    2013).     OSHA responded in 2015 by issuing the
    Memorandum at issue in this case. OSHA, Memorandum on
    Process Safety Management of Highly Hazardous Chemicals
    and Application of the Retail Exemption (
    29 C.F.R. § 1910.119
    (a)(2)(i)), July 22, 2015.
    5
    The Memorandum “rescind[ed] all prior policy
    documents, letters of interpretation, and memoranda related to
    the retail exemption and the 50 percent test.” 
    Id.
     OSHA
    explained that the “50 percent test allows employers who sell
    or distribute large, bulk quantities of highly hazardous
    chemicals directly to end consumers to claim the exemption,
    even if the end users are themselves commercial
    establishments.” 
    Id.
     That result was “directly contrary to
    OSHA’s original intent,” i.e., “to exclude retail facilities from
    PSM coverage because the small container, package, or
    allotment sizes of the chemicals typically found at these
    facilities do not present the same safety hazards as
    establishments that handle large, bulk quantities of materials.”
    
    Id.
     Concluding that the retail exemption “should never have
    been interpreted to cover facilities engaged in distinctly
    wholesale activities,” OSHA announced that retail facilities
    would instead be defined by a Department of Commerce
    manual classifying types of businesses. 
    Id.
     Under that
    definition, retail facilities must be “organized to sell
    merchandise in small quantities to the general public.” 
    Id.
    Because farm supply establishments like the West, Texas,
    facility sell chemical fertilizers in bulk to farmers, they fall
    outside the revised definition of retail facilities. 
    Id.
     Under
    the new definition, those facilities thus would become subject
    to the PSM Standard’s requirements for managing highly
    hazardous chemicals.
    II.
    The Agricultural Retailers Association, the Fertilizer
    Institute, and a number of individual businesses brought
    petitions for review in this court to challenge OSHA’s
    narrowed definition of retail facilities.    According to
    petitioners, the OSH Act required the agency to adhere to
    6
    notice-and-comment procedures in promulgating its new
    definition. We agree with petitioners.
    The OSH Act authorizes the Secretary of Labor, through
    OSHA, to promulgate “occupational safety [and] health
    standard[s].” 
    29 U.S.C. § 655
    (b). The Act provides for pre-
    enforcement review in the courts of appeals of any such
    “standard” issued by OSHA. 
    Id.
     § 655(f). The Act also
    authorizes the promulgation of “regulation[s]” (and other
    rules falling short of “standards”), which are governed by a
    different means of judicial review: challenges to regulations
    are brought under the Administrative Procedure Act (APA),
    which calls for initial review in federal district court rather
    than in a court of appeals. Id. § 657(c)(1); see also Edison
    Elec. Inst. v. OSHA, 
    411 F.3d 272
    , 277 (D.C. Cir. 2005);
    Workplace Health & Safety Council v. Reich, 
    56 F.3d 1465
    ,
    1467 (D.C. Cir. 1995).
    The OSH Act provides for distinct treatment of
    “standards” in another pertinent respect as well. When
    promulgating or modifying a “standard,” OSHA must adhere
    to notice-and-comment procedures set forth in the OSH Act.
    
    29 U.S.C. § 655
    (b).         OSHA concedes that, when it
    promulgated its Memorandum redefining “retail facility,” it
    did not satisfy the procedural requirements for standards. The
    agency instead argues that the Memorandum did not issue or
    modify a standard. In the agency’s view, the Memorandum
    only interpreted an existing standard, and it therefore was
    subject neither to the procedural requirements set out in the
    OSH Act, 
    id.,
     nor to direct review in this court under that Act,
    
    id.
     § 655(f).
    The existence of jurisdiction in this court, as well as the
    applicability of the OSH Act’s notice-and-comment
    procedures, both turn on the same question: whether OSHA’s
    7
    Memorandum amounted to issuance (or modification) of an
    “occupational safety and health standard.” The OSH Act
    defines an “occupational safety and health standard” as “a
    standard which requires conditions, or the adoption or use of
    one or more practices, means, methods, operations, or
    processes, reasonably necessary or appropriate to provide safe
    or healthful employment and places of employment.” Id.
    § 652(8).
    Our decisions construing that definition have established
    a framework for differentiating between OSHA standards and
    regulations. A standard within the meaning of that definition
    is “a remedial measure addressed to a specific and already
    identified hazard, not a purely administrative effort designed
    to uncover violations of the Act and discover unknown
    dangers.” Workplace Health & Safety Council, 
    56 F.3d at 1468
     (quoting La. Chem. Ass’n v. Bingham, 
    657 F.2d 777
    ,
    782 (5th Cir. 1981)). Standards, that is, are designed for
    “correction rather than mere inquiry into possible hazards.”
    
    Id.
     They focus on “correct[ing] a particular significant risk,”
    not on “general enforcement.” 
    Id.
     (quotation and internal
    quotation marks omitted).
    In Workplace Health & Safety Council, we applied that
    understanding to find that a rule requiring employers to report
    workplace deaths and hospitalizations was a regulation rather
    than a standard. 
    56 F.3d at 1468
    . The “basic function of the
    rule [was] administrative,” in that it principally served to
    enable “collect[ing] information about unknown hazards.” 
    Id.
    We distinguished “information-gathering” measures of that
    kind from the “correction of a particular significant risk.” 
    Id.
    (quotation and internal quotation marks omitted).
    When we later applied the same framework in Chamber
    of Commerce of the United States v. U.S. Department of
    8
    Labor, 
    174 F.3d 206
     (D.C. Cir. 1999), we reached the
    opposite outcome with regard to the OSHA rule at issue in
    that case. We determined that a compliance program
    subjecting businesses to extra inspections if they did not
    engage in specified safety measures amounted to a standard
    rather than a regulation. That program aimed at “correcting,
    rather than merely uncovering,” workplace safety hazards. 
    Id. at 210
    . It therefore could not “be described as merely an
    enforcement or detection procedure.” 
    Id.
     (quotation and
    internal quotation marks omitted). Whereas the rule held to
    be a regulation in Workplace Health & Safety Council was
    “procedural,” the “basic function of the rule” in Chamber of
    Commerce was “substantive,” in that it “impose[d] upon
    employers new,” and “more demanding,” “safety standards”
    than those in existence beforehand. 
    Id. at 210-11
    .
    Under the principles set forth in those decisions, we
    conclude that OSHA’s new definition of a retail facility, like
    the compliance program in Chamber of Commerce, amounts
    to a standard. The “basic function” of OSHA’s new
    definition is to address a “particular significant risk,” 
    id.
     at
    209: the risk associated with storing large quantities of highly
    hazardous chemicals for distribution to end users in bulk
    quantities, as had been the case at the West, Texas, fertilizer
    company. OSHA’s Memorandum aims not just to gather data
    about that risk or otherwise serve a general detection or
    enforcement function, but instead to correct the risk by
    subjecting facilities such as farm supply companies to the
    preventative measures in the PSM Standard. OSHA estimates
    that its revised definition would subject up to 4,800 facilities
    to “new,” and necessarily “more demanding,” substantive
    standards for the management of highly hazardous chemicals.
    
    Id. at 211
    .
    9
    Of course, the Memorandum itself does not require new
    preventative measures of its own accord; it does so in
    conjunction with the PSM Standard. But we do not look at
    the Memorandum in strict isolation. We consider the
    Memorandum’s “practical effect,” not “its formal
    characteristics.” 
    Id. at 209
    . And the essential effect and
    object of the Memorandum is to expand the substantive reach
    of the PSM Standard by narrowing an exemption from that
    standard. As OSHA describes the measure, it aims to
    eliminate “policy and regulatory gaps” so as to help “prevent
    incidents like the West Fertilizer explosion.”        OSHA,
    Questions and Answers—PSM Retail Exemption Policy, July
    22, 2015. By redefining retail facilities, the Memorandum, in
    purpose and effect, subjects a substantial number of
    businesses previously classified as exempt retail facilities to
    additional safety standards in order to address a “particular
    significant risk.” Given those specific circumstances, the
    measure, under our decisions, qualifies as a standard within
    the meaning of the OSH Act.
    OSHA argues that the Memorandum cannot be a standard
    because it would constitute an interpretive rule under the
    APA. But nothing in the OSH Act or APA establishes that
    the standard/non-standard distinction under the OSH Act must
    directly track the legislative/interpretive rule distinction under
    the APA. The OSH Act and the APA prescribe different
    procedural requirements, and those requirements do not
    necessarily apply to the same subset of rules. Unlike some
    other statutes, the OSH Act does not adopt the “interpretive
    rule” terminology, but instead uses a vocabulary distinct from
    the APA’s. Compare 
    29 U.S.C. § 655
    , with 42 U.S.C.
    § 1395hh(c) (using the term “interpretive rules” in the
    Medicare Act). And petitioners’ principal submission is that
    they are entitled to relief under the OSH Act’s governing
    10
    standards, a result that, in their view, renders the APA
    irrelevant. Petitioners’ Reply Br. at 1-3.
    We thus need not decide whether the rule at issue here
    would constitute an interpretive rule for purposes of the APA.
    Because the Memorandum amounts to a standard within the
    meaning of the OSH Act, we have jurisdiction to review it
    and to vacate it for failure to comply with the procedural
    requirements established by that Act. Of course, nothing in
    our decision necessarily calls into question the substance of
    OSHA’s decision to narrow the exemption for retail facilities
    and correspondingly to expand the scope of the PSM
    Standard. We hold only that, insofar as OSHA does so, it
    must follow the notice-and-comment procedures for standards
    set forth in the OSH Act.
    Finally, we consider the motion of the United Steel,
    Paper and Forestry, Rubber, Manufacturing, Energy, Allied
    Industrial and Service Workers International Union (the
    Union) to intervene in support of OSHA. Mot. to Intervene
    Out of Time Filed on Behalf of [the Union], Nov. 5, 2015.
    We deny the motion because the Union has failed to establish
    its standing to intervene. The Union submitted a declaration
    saying that certain Union members “may” be affected by
    OSHA’s action insofar as there are members whose
    employers previously fit within the retail facility exemption
    under the 50 percent rule but would no longer do so under the
    Memorandum’s revised definition. Decl. of Michael J.
    Wright ¶¶ 4-5 (attachment to Br. of Union). But because
    nothing in the Union’s declaration establishes that the Union
    does have such members, the Union has failed to demonstrate
    standing. See Summers v. Earth Island Inst., 
    555 U.S. 488
    ,
    498 (2009). Although we deny the Union’s motion to
    intervene for that reason, we grant the Union’s alternative
    request to accord it amicus curiae status, and we thus have
    11
    given full consideration to the Union’s arguments. See Rio
    Grande Pipeline Co. v. FERC, 
    178 F.3d 533
    , 539 (D.C. Cir.
    1999).
    *   *   *    *   *
    For the foregoing reasons, we grant the petitions for
    review and vacate OSHA’s Memorandum for failure to abide
    by the OSH Act’s procedural requirements. We also deny the
    Union’s motion to intervene but grant it amicus status.
    So ordered.