Friday, September 22, 2017

Motion to Dismiss: Not!!

STATE OF TENNESSEE
DEPARTMENT OF ENVIRONMENT AND CONSERVATION 



IN THE MATTER OF:                                               DOCKET NUMBER 04.30-1412531J
STAN OLMSTEAD                                                     CASE NUMBER WPC 16-0097
                  Petitioner,                                                               
  
  
v.                                                                                                        
                                                                                                            
                                                                                                            
TENNESSEE DEPARTMENT OF                             DIVISION OF WATER RESOURCES ENVIRONMENT AND                                                                 
CONSERVATION                                                                                    
                  Respondent,                                                                    
                                                                                        Administrative Judge
                                                                                         Mattielyn B. Williams
                                                                                                                            
and                                                                                                  
                                                                                                            
US NITROGEN LLC,                                                               
                  Intervenor,                                                             


PETITIONER’S SUPPLEMENT TO THE OPPOSITION OF MOTION TO DISMISS


As the Petitioner in the matter of TDEC and NPDES Permit TN0081566 authorization, I respectfully ask that the respondent’s and Intervenor’s request for a Motion to Dismiss, “once again” be rejected, the following is a supplement to my original opposition to their motion. As petitioner and Pro Se appellant I continue to argue my opposition for the dismissal based on statutes and law.  The right to appeal before an administrative judge is clear in the statutes of the state.

In the matter of the Hearing Set For September 26 -27, 2017, delayed until October 26th, 2017 and due to the respondents Motion to Dismiss and the Petitioner’s obligation to argue why the Motion to Dismiss should be denied, I plead with the Administrative Judge to allow the hearing to occur and the argument for dismissal is faulty based on the following.

Motion to Dismiss: The Respondents have submitted three arguments for dismissal.
  •          Tenn. R. Civ. P. 12.02(6): the Petitioners failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted.
  •           Collateral Attacks on Tennessee’s General Water Quality Criteria should be excluded from any contested case hearing.
  •           Under Section 303 (c) of the Federal Water Pollution Control Act there is another avenue of administrative procedures for argument: a). Designated uses of water-bodies. b). Establishing water quality criteria is based on the protection of these uses. c).  Anti-degradation policy is in place.  

 My Response:

1). The Federal Water Pollution Control Act also known as the Clean Water Act (CWA); Section 101 clearly states the objective of the Act is to restore and maintain the chemical, physical and biological integrity of the Nations Waters. I am able show proof that the policies of the state has not resulted in restoring and maintaining the chemical, physical and biological integrity of state waters and that the degrading biological make up of aquatic organisms are “Facts of Truth” to this appeal.  

2). The Tennessee Water Quality Control Act; T.C.A. 69-3-102 clearly states:  it recognizes that the waters of Tennessee are the property of the state and are held in public trust for the use of the people of the state, it is declared as public policy that the people of Tennessee, as beneficiaries of this trust, have a right to unpolluted waters. In the exercise of its public trust over the waters of the state, the government of Tennessee has an obligation to take all prudent steps to secure, protect, and preserve this right”. The State’s surface waters as administered by TDEC is not fulfilling this trust and that based on the understanding of the biological community of surface waters there is proof of failure.

3). Endangered Species Act of 1973:  Sec. 2 (a) Findings, (1) various species of fish, wildlife, and plants in the United States have been rendered extinct as a consequence of economic growth and development un-tempered by adequate concern and conservation; (2) other species of fish, wildlife, and plants have been so depleted in numbers that they are in danger of or threatened with extinction. Numerous species within the direct physical and chemical disturbance of this action (U.S. Nitrogen) warrant, not only the protection of federally listed species but also the protection of species not listed that will necessitate listing in the future.

The “cavalier behavior” and process of the authorization of permit TN0081566, places in jeopardy species of life that are listed on the Federal Register of Endangered species. The original request to use Lick Creek for discharged water conflicted with Section 303(d) of the Federal Water Pollution Control Act and necessitated a pipeline installed to discharge into the Nolichucky River. The preferred location of discharge into the Nolichucky River and the least expensive for development resulted in the finding of a small number of individual fresh water mussels listed as endangered would be physically disturbed. U.S. Nitrogen’s needed then to select an alternate location which was up stream of these few federally listed individual organisms now threatened with chemical contamination due to the authorization of U.S. Nitrogen’s discharge.

I am able to argue that “cause and effect” due to chemistry is as negative to these organisms as would be physical disturbance.

4). Rules of the Tennessee Department of Environment and Conservation; 0400-40-03-.06 Anti-degradation Statement. I claim the issuance of the National Pollution Discharge Elimination Permit TN0081566 based on de minimis, 7Q10 Rule and mixing zone prevents degradation is not a reality and that the rules and regulations in and of themselves are in conflict with the intent of the Clean Water Act as well the states obligation to myself in protecting the surface waters to fulfill it’s Anti-degradation obligation . Review of this TDEC Rule and directive to prevent the degradation of waters, “Weaves In and Out of Degrading and Anti-degradation” language that is challengeable scientifically and requires the state in the discharge of pollutants into the Nolichucky River to have more “factual truth”. Dilution has been used as an argument for most of human history and the author “Rachel Carson, Silent Spring - 1962” demonstrated that parts per million and less can have devastating impacts to species. It is the same today with this authorized permit allowing nitrates, nitrites and metals to be discharged.

5). Tennessee Code Annotated 69-3-105 subsection (i): Duties and authority of the Water Quality Board allows for an appeal and that the final authority of the rules is solely the responsibility of the Board. However for the Board to hear this argument and accept the serious nature of the argument, it must be acknowledged by an Administrative Judge and if the court rules in favor of this appeal it would be the best course of action for the Board to respond seriously to the argument of the continued water degradation.  You are aware that procedures have changed from previous procedures in that appellants previously argued first before the Board and then appealed to the courts and now the petitioner argues to an Administrative Judge with an Initial Order reviewable by the Board.

6). Title 69-3-110; Hearings: Any hearing brought before the board pursuant to 69-3-105(i) … et. al … shall be conducted as a contested case. The hearing shall be heard before an administrative judge sitting alone pursuant to 4-5-301(a)(2) and 4-5-314(b), unless settled by the parties. It is clear that the issue before the court is unsettled and I request that I be given the opportunity to argue the case in full, without being encumbered by a lesser legal statute where as there are many other far compelling statutes that prevail.  

7). Collateral Attacks on Tennessee’s General Water Quality Criteria: My arguments are far from being collateral. There are many in the same opinion as myself and take offence of being subordinate, in an attempt to acknowledge these others and which the respondents refers to a collateral, subordinate, without direct objection; I contend my argument serves to support the failure of the state in its obligation to accomplish Anti-degradation of state waters. 

  •           Clean Water Expected in East Tennessee
  •           Tennessee Clean Water Network
  •           Sierra Club Tennessee
  •           Park Overall concerned citizen withdrawn Pro Se
  •           Anne Harris concerned citizen withdrawn Pro Se
  •           Save the Nolichucky web site
  •           Hundreds if not more individuals that attended public meeting protesting U.S. Nitrogen
  •           Brian Paddock Attorney and dedicated environmental activist
  •           Gary Davis and Elizabeth Murphy attorneys for previous appellants during the first round of legal challenge
  •           Hundreds of citizen posting their property with “No Free Water, Save the Nolichucky

The before list of concerned groups and citizens are only a sample of those concerned for the protection of the Nolichucky River and the respondents continue to state via Tenn. Civ. R. of Procedures 12.02(6) there is no claim as the process worked well and the standards are being met. “ Worked For Whom”? & “Who’s Standards”? Language within Rule 12.02 states: “If a pleading sets forth a claim for relief to which the adverse party is not required to serve a responsive pleading, the adverse party may assert at the trial any defense in law or fact to the claim for relief”. The respondent asserts there is no claim and the petitioner asserts there is a claim. The rule states that a trial (hearing) is to resolve the claim/counter claim.

I also state as in my original appeal that:  T.C.A 69-3-105 (b): The board has and shall exercise the power, duty, and responsibility to adopt, modify, repeal, and promulgate, after due notice, all necessary rules and regulations that the board deems necessary for the proper administration of this part, the prevention, control, and abatement of pollution, or the modification of classification and the upgrading of the standards of quality in accordance with subsection (a).  I ask that you let me argue this need so I may have greater influence when presenting to the board.

8). Under Section 303 (c) of the Federal Water Pollution Control Act the respondents state that there is another avenue of administrative procedures to argue: a). That designated uses of water-bodies. b). That established water quality criteria is based on the protection of these uses. c). Anti-degradation policy is in place. 

The idea that the correct course of action based on executive and legislative installed procedures to be the best course of action, I argue that solely because Tennessee assumes they have met Section 303 (c) of the CWA;  “water quality standards applicable to interstate waters which was adopted by any state and submitted to, and approved by, or is awaiting approval by, the Administrator pursuant to the CWA as in effect immediately prior to the date of enactment shall remain in effect unless the Administrator determined that such standard is not consistent with the requirements of the Act as in effect immediately prior to the date of enactment of the CWA”.

There are repeated cases of concern presented to the legislative and executive branches of government only to be heard by the courts to correct. This is the case here that the hearing now set for October 26, 2017 must be allowed to present a much more holistic argument associated with the negative impacts that will occur by TDEC granting U.S. Nitrogen the authorization to pollute the Nolichucky.

9). Section 303(d) of the CWA: The implementation of the CWA provides “caveats” to the Anti-degradation of water quality and Section 303(d) requires the state identify impaired waters. The use of the Nolichucky River for discharge waters is only occurring because the original discharge outfall was Lick Creek and Section 303(d) although “valuable if not vital” is a single parameter pollution issue and the cumulative or synergistic impact of pollution is not rendered important. Lick Creek as with the Nolichucky are both impaired, the difference in the waterways is that Lick Creek is impaired for nitrogen where as the Nolichucky is not. The authorized discharge of the polluted discharge waters are located on river mile 20.8, the out flow of Lick Creek into the Nolichucky is approximately river mile 12; only 8 miles separates these nitrogen “laced” fluids from the two locations, resulting in the nitrogen pollutants to contaminate the surface waters of the state and to down stream locations. Additionally I contend that the “Best Available Technology economically achievable is with fault, that “to whom are we expecting to measure economically achievable”? The issue of pollution is not a statute issue designed for monetary gain as much as it is for biological, human health and value issues.  

CLOSING

The above is a clear and legal explanation that challenges the respondent and intervenor for their Motion to Dismiss. I argue that all my actions have been in good faith and the Motion to Dismiss is less so. I have listed above a holistic and cumulative argument that clearly identifies a problem and where the respondents are trying to use a single statute to discourage, I am trying to make the argument that the procedures of TDEC are industry biased and contrary to citizen-rights.

Please reject the Dismissal Motion and allow the hearing to go forward as scheduled.  Although I assure you I will make the specific argument of an “offence of law” in the issuance of this permit. There remains a greater need to analyze through this authorization a greater failure of water quality management and the only logical solution is to have an impartial decision maker in the Judicial Court to rule on the subject of “legal water degradation”. Only this process presently before the court has the opportunity to provide the necessary justice; where as the influence contrary to our state’s obligation to provide for social justice, economic justice and environmental justice clash within our system of governance. Let the case be heard.





Respectfully submitted,

  
____________________________________                                                           
Stan Olmstead – Natural Resource Advocate                                            
P.O. Box 403
Jonesborough TN 37659
  
___________________________________________________________________________

Certificate of Service

I certify that a true and correct copy of this document was deposited in the U.S. mail, postage prepaid, September 22, 2017 addressed to:

Administrative Judge
Mattielyn B. Williams
Administrative Procedures Division
Office of Tennessee Secretary of State
William R. Snodgrass TN Tower, 8th floor
312 Rosa L. Parks Avenue
Nashville Tennessee 37243

Patrick Parker: Attorney
TDEC Office of General Counsel
Department of Environment and Conservation
William R. Snodgrass TN Tower, 2nd Floor
312 Rosa L. Parks Avenue
Nashville, Tennessee 37243

Michael K. Stagg: Attorney
Waller Lansden Dortch & Davis, LLP
511 Union Street, Suite 2700
Nashville, Tennessee 37219










Sunday, September 3, 2017

Opposition to Motion to Dismiss

STATE OF TENNESSEE
DEPARTMENT OF ENVIRONMENT AND CONSERVATION 



IN THE MATTER OF:                                                   DOCKET NUMBER 04.30-1412531J
STAN OLMSTEAD                                                         CASE NUMBER WPC 16-0097
                  Petitioner,                                                   
                                                                                       
v.                                                                                    
                                                                                                                                                                              
TENNESSEE DEPARTMENT OF                               DIVISION OF WATER RESOURCES ENVIRONMENT AND                                              
CONSERVATION                                                                      
             Respondent,                                                              
                                                                                           Administrative Judge
                                                                                           Mattielyn B. Williams
                                                                                                       
and                                                                                 
                                                                                       
US NITROGEN LLC,                                                 
                  Intervenor,                                                  





PETITIONER’S OPPOSITION TO MOTION TO DISMISS


 As the Petitioner in the matter of TDEC and NPDES Permit TN0081566 authorization, I respectfully ask that the respondent’s and Intervenor’s request for a Motion to Dismiss be rejected. As petitioner and Pro Se appellant I make the following argument for the rejection of the Dismissal based on procedures, law and science.

In the matter of the Hearing Set For September 26 -27, 2017 by the June 1st, 2017 order before Judge Mattielyn B. Williams I contend the argument for dismissal is faulty based on the following:

1). Background: This is not a routine reissuance of a National Pollutant Discharge Elimination Permit as asserted by Respondents. An earlier permit had been Commented on, Appeal made and a Hearing set before Judge Rob Wilson and only dismissed due to the state not informing Judge Wilson that a second hearing was being considered on the same permit.  Judge Wilson received the details of the new permit from the petitioner. The previous permit and the present permit all were prior to U.S. Nitrogen going into production. With the original permit expiration it was necessary for U.S. Nitrogen to start over, which has required a new period for public comment, this timely filed appeal and a scheduled Contested Case hearing (September 26 & 27th, 2017). This appeal process by the petitioner was initiated in May of 2014 and has been known by the respondent (TDEC) and intervenor (US Nitrogen) for more than three years. Now four weeks from the hearing they ask for dismissal.

2). Hearing Set for September 26-27, 2017 by order of Administrative Judge Wattielyn B. Williams; June 1, 2017. Since this date little has changed from my original Comment and Appeals letter with the exception of my due diligence in timely responding to the joint demands for discovery and my service of Petitioner’s Interrogatories and Request for Production (mailed July 11, 2017; due July 17, 2017).

3). My First set of Interrogatories and Production requests July 17, 2017 and Second set July 24, 2017 by the petitioner in an effort to determine facts and prepare for trial. More than thirty days there remains no response by the respondent or the intervenor.

4). Tennessee Department of Environment and Conservation and US Nitrogen filed a Joint Motion for leave to file Dispositive Motion, August 14, 2017; Leave was Granted August 17, 2017. The Motion request was two weeks past the August 1, 2017 requirement without objection as a demonstration of good faith by petitioner and yet at this late date, without good faith, nor; procedural responsibility the respondent requests dismissal.

6). August 28, 2017 the respondent and intervenor ask for a Motion to Dismiss.

TDEC and U.S. Nitrogen have missed repeated time obligations for submittal. I argue that at the latest it should have been made when I asked for their Interrogatories and Production. They are deliberately by calculation or by lack of competence submitting their documents not in good faith. Their dismissal argument is that I have not shown a claim upon which relief can be granted based on Tennessee Rule of Civil Procedures 12.02(6) and secondly that I have made collateral attacks on the Tennessee General Water Quality Criteria; which should be excluded.  They have extracted excerpts from my appeal letter to show lack of understanding, however they have had a long period of time to ask for a dismissal and now do so at this “late hour”.

This dismissal request is based completely on their interpretation of the law and would not allow me to argue Section 101 of the National Pollution Control Act or the Tennessee Code Annotated 69-3-102 of the Tennessee Water Quality Control Act. The respondent and intervenor are noted and experienced attorneys and are familiar with procedural requirements and for them to be repeatedly late on providing requested documents; where as I as a Pro Se, have worked hard in an unfamiliar legal environment to be on time and within protocol. Lastly; for the respondent and the intervenor to accept the status quo of water pollution without allowing the petitioner to demonstrate a failure by the state within a judicial setting knowing that the other two branches of government have abdicated their responsibility it is necessary that a judicial hearing be held and the best date for that hearing is before Judge Mattielyn B. Williams on September 26 – 27, 2017.     

A). The Federal Water Pollution Control Act also known as the Clean Water Act (CWA). Section 101 of the CWA clearly states that the objective of the Act is to restore and maintain the chemical, physical and biological integrity of the Nations Waters.

B). The Tennessee Water Quality Control Act (TWQCA; T.C.A 69-3-102) clearly states that it recognizes that the waters of Tennessee are the property of the state and are held in public trust for the use of the people of the state, it is declared as public policy that the people of Tennessee, as beneficiaries of this trust, have a right to unpolluted waters. In the exercise of its public trust over the waters of the state, the government of Tennessee has an obligation to take all prudent steps to secure, protect, and preserve this right.

C). I have repeatedly stated that the issuance of the National Pollution Discharge Elimination Permit TN0081566 based on the de minimis, 7Q10 and a mixing zone prevents degradation is not a reality and that the rules and regulations in and of themselves are not achieving Anti-degradation and are in conflict with the intent of the Clean Water Act and the states obligation to myself in protecting the surface waters.

D). Tennessee Code Annotated 69-3-105 subsection (i): Duties and authority of the Water Quality Board allows for an appeal. I also state that the final authority of the rules and if TDEC has applied them correctly or if they should be understood differently is solely the responsibility of the Board. A subsequent court decision may alter the ruling of the Board. The procedure here has changed from previous procedures in that the appellant previously argued first before the Board and then appealed to the courts and now the petitioner argues to an Administrative Judge with an Initial Order reviewable by the Board.

E). In an Aquatic Resource Alteration Permit; Sierra Club v. TDEC, Docket No. 04.30-140452A – TDEC Case No. WPC16-0084 of 2017, TDEC argued to dismiss a Petition using the Pickard v. Tennessee Water Quality Control Board (2013). In that decision TDEC cited Pickard for the proposition that Tenn. Code Ann. Subsection 69-3-105(i) is the exclusive statutory authorization for administrative appeals to the Board of Water Quality Control, Oil and Gas. As petitioner I agree and “ask” the Administrative Judge to make that happen. The Board is the sole entity to say whether or not it foresaw and intended to create a “de minimus” definition that prevents Anti-degradation and which may or may not be destructive to Exceptional Waters of the State. It is most certainly not TDEC’s. I am arguing that I can demonstrate a factual violation, I contend that my allegation via science are not refutable and that this contested case should go forward and allow me to present before court and additionally before the Board to challenge the Board’s rules and challenge them for a reexamination of these rules.

This process is a “tortuous and labyrinthine” procedure and this case demonstrates the wisdom of the decision making by which any aggrieved person or group of persons would be able to obtain an administrative remedy or if necessary future judicial review of a decision by the Commission regarding our state and national waters that are legally being allowed to be polluted. Parties dissatisfied with the Board’s decision then can appeal and seek judicial review of the Board’s decision by filing a petition for judicial review in accordance with Tenn. Code Ann. 4-5-322. Once again I argue that the factual, legal, and policy issues involved in this dispute are undoubtedly within the particular expertise and competence of the Board’s consideration and disposition of the appeal, the courts will have the benefit of a full record and an authoritative explanation of the Board’s decision should either of the parties seek judicial review of the Board’s determination.
  
F). In E. Ron Pickard et al. v. Tennessee Water Quality Control Board et al. in the court of appeals Chancery Court for Davidson County (2013) states that Tenn. Comp. Code Ann. 69-3-105(i) that the exclusive procedure and the responsible entity to hear a contested case as in this case is exclusively the Tennessee Water Quality Control Board and that any party desiring to seek judicial review of a decision to issue a discharge permit must first exhaust their administrative remedies before seeking judicial review. My efforts in this case has always been to work through the procedures as best as a Pro Se can with limited procedural knowledge.

G). In E. Ron Pickard et al. v. Tennessee Water Quality Control Board et al. filed in the court of appeals Chancery Court for Davidson County (2104) it is stated that In accordance with Tenn. Code Ann. 4-5-225(b) 2011 that petition can be filed in the trial court only after a petition with the Tennessee Water Quality Control Board for a declaratory order and the Board refused to issue a declaratory order. Additionally, Tenn. Code Ann. 69-3-105(i) is the “exclusive means for obtaining administrative review of the commissioner’s issuance of denial of a permit.

CLOSING

The above is a clear and I contend legal explanation that challenges the respondent and intervenor for their motion to dismiss. I argue that all my actions have been in good faith and the motion to dismiss is not in good faith based on procedure, law, rules and science. Please reject the Dismissal Motion and to allow the hearing to go forward as scheduled and allow me the necessary time without interference to prepare for the hearing.





Respectfully submitted,




____________________________________                                                                                         
Stan Olmstead – Natural Resource Advocate                                                            
P.O. Box 403
Jonesborough TN 37659














Certificate of Service

I certify that a true and correct copy of this document was deposited in the U.S. mail, postage prepaid, September 1, 2017 addressed to:


Administrative Judge
Mattielyn B. Williams
Administrative Procedures Division
Office of Tennessee Secretary of State
William R. Snodgrass TN Tower, 8th floor
312 Rosa L. Parks Avenue
Nashville Tennessee 37243

Patrick Parker: Attorney
TDEC Office of General Counsel
Department of Environment and Conservation
William R. Snodgrass TN Tower, 2nd Floor
312 Rosa L. Parks Avenue
Nashville, Tennessee 37243

Michael K. Stagg: Attorney
Waller Lansden Dortch & Davis, LLP
511 Union Street, Suite 2700
Nashville, Tennessee 37219