Appeal of Conservation Law Foundation ( 2021 )


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    THE SUPREME COURT OF NEW HAMPSHIRE
    ___________________________
    Waste Management Council
    No. 2020-0049
    APPEAL OF CONSERVATION LAW FOUNDATION
    (New Hampshire Waste Management Council)
    Argued: November 17, 2020
    Opinion Issued: February 2, 2021
    Conservation Law Foundation, Inc., of Concord (Thomas F. Irwin on the
    brief and orally), for the petitioner.
    McLane Middleton, Professional Association, of Concord (Mark C.
    Rouvalis, Gregory H. Smith, and Viggo C. Fish on the brief, and Mr. Rouvalis
    orally), and Gail M. Lynch of Hampton, on the brief, for the respondent.
    Gordon J. MacDonald, attorney general (Joshua C. Harrison, assistant
    attorney general, on the memorandum of law), for the New Hampshire
    Department of Environmental Services.
    DONOVAN, J. The petitioner, Conservation Law Foundation (CLF),
    appeals an order of the New Hampshire Waste Management Council (Council)
    denying CLF’s appeal of a permit, issued by the New Hampshire Department of
    Environmental Services (DES), which authorizes the expansion of a landfill
    owned by the respondent, Waste Management of New Hampshire, Inc.
    (WMNH).1 CLF argues that the Council committed legal error by: (1)
    determining that DES acted reasonably in granting the permit despite finding
    that a condition therein is ambiguous; and (2) premising its decision on the
    occurrence of future negotiations between DES and WMNH to resolve the
    ambiguity. We affirm because we conclude that the permit’s ambiguities do
    not render the Council’s decision unlawful.
    I. Facts
    The following facts were found by the Council or are supported by the
    administrative record. WMNH owns and operates the Turnkey Recycling and
    Environmental Enterprise facility, a solid waste management facility located in
    Rochester, where WMNH engages in various waste management activities, such
    as composting leaf and yard waste, extracting gas from landfills, and
    maintaining its fleet of vehicles. The facility also includes three plots of land
    dedicated to landfills, two of which are closed and inactive. The third plot,
    known as Turnkey Landfill Rochester III (TLR-III), remains open and active.2
    In May 2017, WMNH applied to DES for a permit authorizing it to expand
    TLR-III. The permit would allow WMNH to increase the landfill’s existing 218-
    acre footprint by approximately 58 acres.3 According to DES’s projections,
    without the proposed expansion New Hampshire’s waste disposal capacity will
    fall short of demand beginning in 2020. If the permit were to be approved,
    disposal capacity would meet the projected need through 2034.
    In June 2018, DES approved the permit. As part of the approval
    process, DES determined, as required by statute, that the TRL-III expansion
    would provide a substantial public benefit if WMNH complies with certain
    conditions. See RSA 149-M:11, III, IX (2005). Specifically, Condition 21 of the
    permit requires, among other things, that each year the facility operates,
    WMNH “[d]emonstrate that the sources, in aggregate, from which [it] accepted
    municipal solid waste (MSW) and/or construction and demolition (C&D) debris
    for disposal achieved a minimum 30 percent waste diversion rate to more
    preferred methods than landfilling as outlined in” New Hampshire’s statutory
    waste disposal hierarchy. See RSA 149-M:3 (2005). If WMNH cannot
    demonstrate a minimum 30 percent diversion rate, then it must submit a
    report to DES evaluating the diversion rate achieved, the “primary factors
    1DES submitted a memorandum of law explaining that it “concurs in the arguments and
    positions of WMNH in its brief.”
    2The initial permit for TLR-III was granted in 1995, and subsequent permits have allowed it to
    expand.
    3The permit would also allow TLR-III to expand vertically, increasing its permitted disposal
    capacity by approximately 15.9 million cubic yards. To ensure that landfill capacity is available
    through 2034, DES capped the amount of airspace that may be filled annually.
    2
    affecting [the] diversion rate,” and the “practicable measures that [WMNH] will
    undertake to improve the diversion rate and an implementation schedule for
    doing so.” Condition 21 further requires that WMNH “assist 15 or more New
    Hampshire solid waste generators per year with establishing or improving
    programs that assist in the implementation of the goals and hierarchy” in New
    Hampshire’s solid waste disposal statutes. See RSA 149-M:2 (2005), :3.
    CLF appealed to the Council DES’s decision to grant the permit. As
    relevant here, it argued that the permit, including Condition 21 in particular, is
    “inconsistent with, and premised on a failure to comply with, public benefit
    requirements pertaining to solid waste management planning, and statutorily
    required state solid waste planning and reporting.” The Council heard five
    days of testimony from witnesses called by CLF and WMNH and received
    hundreds of pages of exhibits from both parties.
    The Administrator of DES’s Solid Waste Management Bureau, which was
    responsible for reviewing the permit application, explained how Condition 21,
    which takes effect in 2021, will function. DES expects that WMNH will obtain
    diversion data from its waste generators, demonstrate that those generators, in
    the aggregate, divert 30 percent of their waste, and report that data to DES. If
    WMNH fails to demonstrate that its waste generators are diverting 30 percent
    of their waste, “that’s not a violation of the permit,” but rather triggers the
    requirement that WMNH analyze what obstacles impede reaching the 30
    percent threshold and what measures are needed to achieve that number.4
    According to a DES witness, Condition 21’s diversion threshold and reporting
    requirement are novel and have not been included in a solid waste or landfill
    permit before. The Council noted that DES is incorporating similar conditions
    into subsequent waste management permits.
    The Council heard testimony that there is currently no standard for
    calculating diversion rates. The Director of DES’s Waste Management Division
    testified that “[d]iversion is not specifically defined in [New Hampshire’s Waste
    Management statute] or in [DES’s] solid waste rules.” See RSA ch. 149-M
    (2005 & Supp. 2020); N.H. Admin. R., Env-Sw 102. He further testified,
    however, that he believes the statutory language suggests that “diversion
    includes basically anything that is or could . . . end[] up as a solid waste, any
    method including waste reduction or reuse, any kind of method whatsoever,
    composting, that keeps that waste from ultimately being disposed by either
    landfilling or incineration.” See RSA 149-M:2, I.
    The testimony also reveals that DES and WMNH did not, prior to the
    permit’s approval, discuss the precise method by which the diversion rate will
    4A witness for WMNH testified that, if the 30 percent threshold is not met, he expects that WMNH
    could take measures such as engaging in public education, solid waste operator training
    programs, or conducting market studies.
    3
    be calculated for purposes of Condition 21. The DES staff member who was
    the primary reviewer of the permit explained that, before Condition 21 goes into
    effect, DES will discuss with WMNH how it will calculate the diversion rate to
    ensure consistency. A senior manager for WMNH similarly testified that he
    expects WMNH will consult with DES to determine the details of the
    calculation, “much like other permit conditions that [WMNH] regularly deal[s]
    with.” According to this witness, WMNH acknowledges that the methodology
    for calculating the diversion rate “is something we’re going to have to further
    review and work with [DES] on.”
    Because the method by which the diversion rate will be determined is not
    set forth in the permit, it is unclear how Condition 21’s diversion rate will be
    calculated and, specifically, what waste will be included in that calculation.5
    For example, the methodology WMNH has previously employed to calculate its
    diversion rate considers leaf and yard waste as diverted, although such waste
    cannot be disposed of at TLR-III and, according to a DES witness, is not
    considered solid waste in New Hampshire. A DES witness testified that leaf
    and yard waste would not be included in Condition 21’s diversion calculation.
    The senior manager for WMNH agreed, noting that TLR-III’s current
    calculations likely yield a higher diversion rate than that which will be
    calculated under Condition 21, in part because leaf and yard waste may not
    count towards that rate.6
    With regard to Condition 21’s requirement that WMNH assist fifteen or
    more New Hampshire waste generators in establishing or improving diversion
    programs, DES witnesses testified that WMNH may work with the same
    generator two years in a row, “[a]s long as they’re establishing or improving
    diversion.” The senior manager for WMNH testified that WMNH has an idea “as
    to how [it] would select . . . or identify [the fifteen generators with which it will
    work] based on trying to achieve the most success, the most quantity,” and
    that it would also discuss its selections with DES.
    5Condition 21 does state that the diversion calculation “shall not be required to include” certain
    types of MSW and C&D waste for which there is “no environmentally safe or economically sound
    diversion alternative[] to landfilling.”
    6 Another example of waste that may or may not be considered diverted for purposes of Condition
    21 is “alternative daily cover.” At the end of each day, landfilled waste is covered with
    approximately six inches of an approved cover material, such as soil. The daily cover material
    helps mitigate problems with “vermin, birds,” and the inevitable odor emanating from tons of
    newly deposited garbage. Certain C&D waste, which would have otherwise been landfilled, can be
    used as alternative daily cover. This waste thus serves a purpose other than being mere landfilled
    waste, but still ultimately ends up in the landfill. WMNH currently includes alternative daily cover
    in calculating its C&D diversion rate and, although the Council noted that alternative daily cover
    “exists in that form for only one day,” DES witnesses indicated that alternative daily cover would
    be included in calculating the rate.
    4
    After deliberating for a full day, the Council rejected CLF’s appeal. In its
    written decision, the Council described several “ambiguities” with regard to
    Condition 21, including that it is “unclear whether certain materials are validly
    included in the definition [of diversion] given their particular characteristics”
    and “there are no requirements describing the makeup of the [fifteen]
    generators” with which WMNH will work. The Council acknowledged that
    Condition 21 “was vague in several respects[] and would require flexibility and
    refinement in coming to an agreed definition of ‘diversion’ for this provision to
    be enforceable.”
    On a motion to find that DES “acted unreasonably in failing to provide a
    definition of the 30 percent diversion rate contained in [Condition 21],” thus
    “rendering the public benefit requirement unmet,” the Council split its vote,
    three in favor and three opposed. Because CLF bore the burden of
    demonstrating that DES’s decision was “unlawful or unreasonable,” RSA 21-
    O:14, I-a (2020), the split vote resulted in the denial of its appeal.7 CLF filed a
    motion for rehearing and reconsideration, which the Council denied. This
    appeal followed.
    II. Standard of Review
    CLF bears the burden of demonstrating that the Council’s decision is
    clearly unlawful or unreasonable. RSA 541:13 (2007); see RSA 21-O:14, III
    (2020). We will not set aside or vacate the Council’s decision unless it contains
    an error of law, or CLF establishes, by a clear preponderance of the evidence,
    that its decision was unjust or unreasonable. RSA 541:13. We deem the
    Council’s findings on questions of fact properly before it to be prima facie
    lawful and reasonable. Id.
    III. Discussion
    New Hampshire’s Solid Waste Management statute requires DES to deny
    any permit application when the applicant fails to demonstrate that it satisfies
    three “substantial public benefit” criteria. RSA 149-M:11, III, IX. “‘Public
    benefit’ means the protection of the health, economy, and natural environment
    of the state of New Hampshire . . . .” RSA 149-M:4, XVII (Supp. 2020). As
    relevant here, we need only consider the criterion which requires that, in
    determining “whether a proposed solid waste facility provides a substantial
    public benefit,” DES assess “[t]he ability of the proposed facility to assist the
    7The Council also determined that: (1) DES did not act unreasonably in determining that the
    permit sufficiently addressed the State’s waste disposal capacity needs; (2) in light of the lack of
    regulations regarding certain chemicals, DES did not act unreasonably in granting the permit
    without a requirement that WMNH test for those chemicals; and (3) DES did not act unlawfully or
    unreasonably in granting the permit without conditions addressing methane gas emissions from
    the landfill. CLF does not challenge these findings on appeal.
    5
    state in achieving the implementation of” New Hampshire’s waste reduction
    hierarchy and goals. RSA 149-M:11, III(b).
    New Hampshire’s waste reduction goal is to, “by the year 2000, . . .
    achieve a 40 percent minimum weight diversion of solid waste landfilled or
    incinerated on a per capita basis.” RSA 149-M:2, I. “Diversion shall be
    measured with respect to changes in waste generated and subsequently
    landfilled or incinerated in New Hampshire. The goal of weight diversion may
    be achieved through source reduction, recycling, reuse, and composting, or any
    combination of such methods.” Id. The solid waste disposal hierarchy sets
    forth, in descending order of preference, the following waste management
    methods: source reduction, recycling and reuse, composting, waste-to-energy
    technologies, incineration without resource recovery, and landfilling. RSA 149-
    M:3.
    CLF argues that, in light of the Council’s finding that Condition 21 is
    ambiguous with regard to how the diversion rate will be calculated and the
    parameters for selecting the fifteen waste generators with which WMNH must
    work to lower their diversion rates, DES could not have determined that the
    permit would assist the State in achieving its solid waste diversion goal or
    hierarchy, which inhibited it from certifying that the facility provides a
    substantial public benefit. See RSA 149-M:2, :3, :11, III(b). Accordingly, CLF
    argues that the permit is legally flawed and that the Council should have
    remanded the matter to DES. We disagree.
    Undisputed evidence in the record supports the Council’s conclusion
    that DES did not act unreasonably in determining that Condition 21, as
    written, will “assist the state in achieving the implementation of the hierarchy
    and goals under RSA 149-M:2 and RSA 149-M:3.” RSA 149-M:11, III(b). The
    Director of DES’s Waste Management Division described Condition 21 as a
    “very progressive condition” that would increase diversion rates without
    “sett[ing] [WMNH] up for failure.” He explained that Condition 21 “imposes
    concrete realistic direct actions that [WMNH] would need to do that would
    absolutely directly assist . . . with reaching the hierarchy and the goals set out
    in the statute.” An attorney for CLF, who testified at the hearing, similarly
    stated that, although she believed it “could do much . . . more,” Condition 21
    “will assist the State in achieving its” waste reduction goals.
    The record indicates that Condition 21 will do so, in part, by providing
    DES a much-needed data-gathering mechanism. A DES staff member testified
    that it is “unclear” whether the State has achieved the 40 percent statutory
    diversion goal because DES does not have access to the full amount of data
    necessary to make such a determination. See RSA 149-M:2, I. He further
    testified that the State’s diversion rate has not been calculated recently, in part
    6
    because the amount of data necessary to determine the precise rate is vast.8
    Indeed, according to the CLF attorney, no one “know[s] what the waste in New
    Hampshire is actually composed of.” Thus, in order to ascertain meaningful
    numbers with respect to waste and diversion, DES is seeking to improve the
    quality of the data it collects. One challenge to collecting the necessary data is
    that waste generators themselves do not report diversion numbers directly to
    DES. Rather, data reported to DES comes, in part, from authorized and
    permitted waste management facilities, like the Turnkey Recycling and
    Environmental Enterprise facility.
    Condition 21 seeks to fill the gap in data and provide DES with valuable
    information by requiring that WMNH demonstrate that its waste generators
    “achieved a minimum 30 percent waste diversion rate” and, if the 30 percent
    threshold is not met, report what the rate was, the primary factors affecting the
    rate, and practicable measures that WMNH will take to improve it. According
    to a DES staff member, any effort by WMNH to contact its generators and
    require that they “think about diversion and provide that information to
    [WMNH],” which would report the data to DES, would provide access to data
    that DES currently lacks. Such data collection “would assist [DES] in working
    towards” the statutory goals, in part because it will increase DES’s
    understanding of where the State stands with regard to waste diversion. As the
    CLF attorney testified, “getting data from haulers as well as disposal facilities is
    an excellent first step”: “more data and better data with consistent metrics
    around [diversion] weight is . . . a good thing.”9 Thus, regardless of how the
    diversion rate is calculated under Condition 21, the permit will assist the State
    in achieving its waste diversion goal and disposal hierarchy by providing DES
    crucial information about the composition of the waste stream, in particular
    whether and how diversion is being achieved through “source reduction,
    recycling, reuse, and composting,” RSA 149-M:2, I, informing the development
    and implementation of future diversion strategies. See RSA 149-M:2, :3.
    The record also supports the Council’s decision because it demonstrates
    that Condition 21 will cause WMNH to work with its customers to increase
    their diversion rates. According to a DES witness, prior to 2021, when
    Condition 21 takes effect, a waste generator “could contract with [WMNH] for
    whatever waste they have with no accountability or even any thought to divert
    8Contributing to the difficulty, and perhaps impossibility, of calculating an exact and total
    diversion rate is the problem of capturing mundane and essentially immeasurable diversion such
    as “backyard composting . . . or donation to . . . a clothing drive.”
    9CLF draws our attention to testimony from the WMNH senior manager that WMNH would not
    turn away waste intended for TLR-III from generators who refuse to provide diversion data. Even
    assuming, however, that some waste generators will not provide diversion information to WMNH,
    the record reflects that any increase in the data regarding the waste stream will contribute to
    DES’s understanding of diversion rates, and, as a result, assist the State in implementing the
    statutory waste reduction goals and hierarchy. See RSA 149-M:2, :3, :11, III(b).
    7
    some of it that they would normally send to the landfill.” The Director of DES’s
    Waste Management Division stated he believed that WMNH, which provides at
    least some waste management services to customers in approximately 80
    percent of New Hampshire communities, communicating with its generators
    about their diversion rates “will result in significant improvements in the
    diversion rates of their customer base.” This work will, according to DES
    witnesses, assist the State in meeting its diversion goals.
    Condition 21’s requirement that WMNH work with fifteen or more waste
    generators further supports a conclusion that the permit assists the State’s
    efforts to achieve its waste reduction goals and hierarchy, irrespective of which
    generators collaborate with WMNH. The senior manager for WMNH explained
    that WMNH already does “a form of that regularly,” and will now “make it a
    little more robust.” He also explained that he expects some waste generators
    will be uninterested in working with WMNH to increase their diversion rates,
    and that WMNH, knowing “the lay of the land,” will be able to select those who
    are willing to collaborate to increase diversion. Requiring WMNH to collaborate
    with waste generators to improve their diversion methods and decrease the
    amount of waste they generate and contribute to TLR-III will decrease the
    amount of waste ultimately landfilled, and, accordingly, Condition 21 will
    assist the State in achieving its waste diversion goals and disposal hierarchy.
    See RSA 149-M:2, :3. In sum, given the evidence before the Council, we cannot
    conclude that Condition 21’s ambiguities render the Council’s decision
    unlawful. See RSA 541:13; Appeal of Garrison Place Real Estate Inv. Trust,
    
    159 N.H. 539
    , 543-44 (2009) (reversing a Wetlands Council decision partly
    because DES’s determination that a permit condition requiring the permittee to
    gather data on the impact of the permit satisfied statutory wetlands protection
    requirements was entitled to deference); cf. Derry Senior Dev. v. Town of Derry,
    
    157 N.H. 441
    , 452-53 (2008) (concluding that a planning board arbitrarily and
    unreasonably denied approval of a site plan because “nothing in the record”
    supported the board’s justifications for denying approval).10
    CLF also argues that the Council erred as a matter of law because
    Condition 21’s ambiguities undermined the ability of the Council, and now our
    10 We note that DES has discretion to enforce Condition 21 by, inter alia, revoking or
    suspending the TLR-III permit if it concludes that WMNH is failing to satisfy Condition 21’s
    requirements and does not take action to remedy those failures. See RSA 149-M:6, I (2005)
    (authorizing DES to enforce solid waste permits); N.H. Admin. R., Env-Sw 306.03 (establishing
    the procedure by which a solid waste permit may be revoked or suspended for good cause
    following a DES investigation or inspection). Indeed, a DES employee explained that Condition
    21’s reporting requirements would allow DES’s compliance section to assess WMNH’s
    adherence to the permit. He further testified that a failure to comply with any permit
    provision, for example if WMNH refuses to report diversion data to DES, could result in an
    enforcement action by DES, including the assessment of a fine.
    8
    ability, to determine whether the permit provides a “substantial public benefit.”
    RSA 149-M:11, III. However, evidence in the record supports the Council’s
    conclusion that CLF failed to meet its burden of showing that DES acted
    unreasonably in concluding that the permit satisfied the substantial public
    benefit requirement. See 
    id.
     Thus, we conclude that neither the Council’s nor
    our ability to review DES’s determination is impeded by the lack of a precise
    definition of the diversion calculation method or standards for selecting the
    generators with which WMNH will work.
    CLF points us to Society for Protection of New Hampshire Forests v. Site
    Evaluation Committee, 
    115 N.H. 163
     (1975), and Hampton National Bank v.
    State, 
    114 N.H. 38
     (1974), in support of its argument that Condition 21’s
    “vague and ambiguous nature” inhibits our ability to determine whether the
    permit provides a substantial public benefit. Yet, as CLF acknowledges, both
    decisions “address the need for agencies to provide written findings in their
    decisions,” not whether an ambiguous permit condition is necessarily unlawful
    because it frustrates appellate review. See Society for Protection, 115 N.H. at
    175 (remanding for “the site evaluation committee [to] provide basic findings of
    fact on the existing record to support the ultimate conclusions it has reached”);
    Hampton Nat’l Bank, 
    114 N.H. at 45
     (“We hold that the written findings made
    by the board in this case constituted a sufficient ‘record’ . . . .”), overruled by
    Appeal of Portsmouth Trust Co., 
    120 N.H. 753
     (1980).
    Finally, CLF argues that the Council erred because, by premising its
    denial of CLF’s appeal upon DES’s and WMNH’s future negotiations to
    determine how diversion will be calculated, the Council’s decision subverts the
    process of administrative procedure, relies upon extra-record facts, and strips
    CLF of its statutory right of appeal. CLF further argues that the Council’s
    decision deprived it of its due process right to challenge whether the permit
    provides a substantial public benefit. These arguments are unavailing
    because, as discussed above, Condition 21’s ambiguities did not render DES
    incapable of determining that Condition 21 provides a substantial public
    benefit. Accordingly, that DES and WMNH will ultimately decide which
    materials will be included in the diversion calculations for purposes of
    Condition 21 after the permit is granted does not, as CLF argues, “place[]
    beyond . . . CLF’s ability to be heard on appeal[] the question whether the
    permit . . . will satisfy the substantial public benefit standard.”
    “The fundamental requisite of due process is the right to be heard at a
    meaningful time and in a meaningful manner.” Appeal of Portsmouth Trust
    Co., 120 N.H. at 758. CLF was afforded an ample and meaningful opportunity
    to present its objections to the permit and the terms of Condition 21, including
    a five-day hearing during which it presented testimony and cross-examined
    WMNH’s witnesses and the Council accepted exhibits. In particular, CLF was
    provided with the opportunity to, and did in fact, vigorously contest whether
    9
    Condition 21’s terms sufficiently allowed DES to determine that the permit
    provides a substantial public benefit. See RSA 149-M:11, III.
    We offer one observation in conclusion. Neither the legislature, by
    statute, nor DES, by rulemaking, has defined how diversion rates should be
    calculated. The lack of a statewide definition makes it problematic, even with
    robust data, to determine where the State stands with regard to the 40 percent
    diversion goal set forth in RSA 149-M:2. In light of the Council’s finding that
    DES is incorporating conditions similar to Condition 21 into other waste
    management permits, we encourage the legislature or DES to establish a
    method by which diversion rates will be calculated.
    IV. Conclusion
    For the reasons stated above, we affirm the Council’s decision.
    Affirmed.
    HICKS, BASSETT, and HANTZ MARCONI, JJ., concurred.
    10
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 2020-0049

Filed Date: 2/2/2021

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 2/2/2021