One step forward, two steps back: EPA's proposed revision to the
definition of solid waste
by Kate Davis
University of Wisconsin Law School
Wisconsin State Bar Environmental Essay Competition
May 17, 2005
Introduction
On October 28, 2003, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
proposed a rule to change the definition of solid waste under the
Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA).[1] If the rule is adopted, an
estimated 1.5 million tons of hazardous waste annually would be no
longer subject to regulation as hazardous waste under Subtitle C of
RCRA.[2] While EPA
asserts that this deregulation will promote "safe, beneficial" recycling
of hazardous wastes, it acknowledges the hazardous waste recycling
operations have accounted for a number of notorious damage incidents.[3] Recycling operations
make up twenty of the first National Priority Sites under Superfund.[4] Despite this fact,
the Agency performed no analysis of the proposal's potential health and
environmental consequences - weakening not only its policy assertions,
but also the ability of the rulemaking to withstand a challenge of
"arbitrary and capricious" decision-making.
In contrast to its lack of environmental analysis on the proposed
rule, EPA compiled detailed information regarding cost-savings to
businesses whose wastes would no longer be subject to hazardous waste
regulations. According to the proposal, industries would save about $178
million annually by avoiding costs associated with transporting,
managing and disposing of wastes, contingency planning costs and state
hazardous waste taxes.[5] Recycling hazardous waste rather than disposing
of it is a commendable goal. However, the proposed exclusion could very
well encourage unregulated recycling of hazardous materials rather than
regulated recycling.
This proposal is by no means EPA's first attempt to modify its
hazardous waste recycling framework. Since its inception, RCRA has been
criticized by industry for unduly regulating and therefore discouraging
the recycling of hazardous wastes.[6] EPA has thus far responded to these concerns in
a piecemeal fashion, attempting to encourage recycling by creating
special regulatory exemptions and exclusions for particular processes
and industries.[7]
The resulting regulatory framework has been described as one where
"[t]he definitions, exclusions and exemptions, counter exceptions and
negations, and layers of management are scattered, overloaded, and
difficult to understand."[8]
In the 1990's EPA participated in a variety of initiatives aimed at
exploring and developing comprehensive new approaches to regulating
hazardous material recycling.[9] These efforts have been largely unsuccessful -
attributable in large part, EPA notes, "to the fundamental difficulty of
trying to distinguish wastes from non-waste materials in a national
regulatory framework that applies to an exceptionally broad array of
industries, materials and recycling practices."[10]
EPA's conceptual difficulty with distinguishing waste from non-waste
was pulled into focus by a series of D.C. Circuit Court opinions which
held, in a variety of contexts, that the Agency was improperly
regulating non-waste materials (which are outside the scope of their
RCRA jurisdiction). The cases center around the meaning of "solid waste"
for purposes of the RCRA Subtitle C (hazardous waste) program.
Association of Battery Recyclers v. EPA (ABR)[11], a recent D.C. Circuit case,
was a driving force behind EPA's October, 2003 proposed "Revisions to
the Definition of Solid Waste." [12] The mining industry challenged an EPA rule
which "defin[ed] 'solid waste' in terms of how materials 'generated and
reclaimed within the primary mineral processing industry' [were]
stored."[13] The
court found storage to be an inappropriate means to differentiate waste
from non-waste - noting "Congress clearly and unambiguously expressed
its intent that 'solid waste' be limited to materials that are
'discarded' by virtue of being disposed of, abandoned or thrown away."[14] Some of the
material EPA sought to regulate as solid waste under this rule was, in
fact, "destined for reuse as part of a continuous industrial process and
thus [was] not abandoned or thrown away."[15] The court therefore vacated the
provisions which improperly expanded jurisdiction to non-waste
materials.[16] EPA
then removed those provisions from the final version of the rule.[17]
Looking beyond the rule-specific changes required by the court,
EPA perceived the ABR decision to be of broader significance - an
"opportunity to re-examine its rules and interpretations and clarify
whether they regulate certain materials that are not 'discarded.'"[18] EPA felt that it
needed to address the court's statements regarding the waste
classifications of certain recycled materials.[19] In developing the proposal to
revise the definition of solid waste, one of EPA's objectives was to
create a regulatory exclusion based on the court's view that "materials
generated and reclaimed in a continuous process within the same
industry" are not discarded, and hence, are outside the Agency's
regulatory jurisdiction.[20] This key phrase was judged to be the clearest
direction from the D.C. Circuit as expressed in ABR and
previous decisions.[21]
The proposed revision to the definition of solid waste was crafted
through a series of discretionary decisions - (1) deciding that a
revision to the Subtitle C regulations was necessary (2) excising a
phrase from a few circuit court opinions to articulate the boundaries of
the exclusion (materials generated and reclaimed in a continuous process
within the same industry) - and (3) defining the scope of the
"exclusionary phrase" in broad terms to enhance its applicability.
However, this exercise of discretion is not supported by adequate
analysis of the potential human health and environmental consequences.
The deficiency raises significant legal and policy concerns that must be
better addressed by the Agency to have a legally defensible and
environmentally sound regulatory framework for the recycling of
hazardous materials.
This comment examines the proposal in light of recent D.C. Circuit
decisions, and evaluates the policy implications and likelihood of a
successful legal challenge should the proposal be finalized. Part I
provides a snapshot of the current regulatory framework for hazardous
waste recycling. Part II examines the series of D.C. Circuit Court
opinions that EPA used as "guideposts" in crafting the language and
scope of the proposed exclusion. Part III details the relevant portions
of the proposed rule. Finally, Part IV evaluates the Agency's use of the
D.C. Circuit Court opinions to support its exercised of discretion - and
articulates legal and policy concerns with the proposed exclusion.
I. The Current Regulatory Framework for Hazardous Waste
Recycling
RCRA is a comprehensive environmental statute under which EPA is
granted authority to regulate solid and hazardous wastes.[22] Congress'
"overriding concern" in enacting RCRA was to establish the framework for
a national system to insure the safe management of hazardous waste.[23] In passing RCRA,
Congress expressed concern over the "rising tide" in scrap, discarded,
and waste materials.[24] Congress thus crafted RCRA "to promote the
protection of human health and the environment and to conserve valuable
material and energy resources."[25] RCRA includes two major parts: one dealing
with non-hazardous solid waste management and the other with hazardous
waste management. Under the latter, called the Subtitle C program, EPA
is directed to promulgate regulations establishing a comprehensive
management system for hazardous waste.[26]
"Hazardous waste," for purposes of RCRA's Subtitle C program, is a
subset of "solid waste" that has the potential to pose a high-level
threat to human health and the environment.[27]
Therefore, to qualify as a hazardous waste, a material must first
satisfy the definition of a solid waste.[28] A solid waste is defined by RCRA as "any
garbage, refuse, sludge from a waste treatment plant, water supply
treatment plant, or air pollution control facility and other
discarded material, including solid, liquid, semisolid or contained
gaseous material, resulting from industrial, commercial, mining, and
agricultural operations, and from community activities . . ."[29] Discarded
materials include abandoned, recycled, inherently waste-like materials,
as well as certain military munitions materials.[30]
In general, hazardous wastes are subject to RCRA regulation from the
moment of their generation all the way through disposal.[31] However,
hazardous secondary materials can often be recycled instead of disposed,
which can effect how the materials are regulated.[32] Since 1980, EPA has interpreted
"solid waste" to encompass both materials that are destined for final,
permanent placement in disposal units, as well as some
materials that are destined for recycling.[33] Those secondary materials that
are used or reused directly as effective substitutes for commercial
products, and those which can be used as ingredients in an industrial
process (provided they are not being reclaimed) are not regulated as
wastes.[34] These
practices are likened to normal industrial productions as opposed to
waste management.[35] In contrast, some recycling practices, such as
certain kinds of reclamation[36], the Agency likens to waste management and
therefore regulates under Subtitle C.[37] In sum, the Subtitle C regulations essentially
divide recyclable hazardous materials into waste-like and product-like
categories and then regulates accordingly.[38]
In the preamble to the proposed exclusion from the definition of
solid waste, EPA offers three additional arguments for their selective
regulation, under RCRA Subtitle C, of certain recycling practices:
[1]The statute and legislative history suggest that Congress expected
EPA to regulate as wastes some materials that are destined for
recycling. [2] Many materials stored or transported prior to recycling
present the same types of threats to human health and the environment as
materials stored or transported prior to disposal. . . [3] Excluding all
material destined for recycling would allow materials to move in and out
of the hazardous waste management system depending on what any person
handling the material intended to do with it - which seems inconsistent
with mandate to track hazardous wastes and control "cradle to grave."[39]
It is important to note that EPA has always asserted that materials
are not excluded from its jurisdiction simply because someone claims
that they will be recycled. EPA considers materials destined for "sham
recycling"[40] to
be discarded, and, therefore, subject to Subtitle C regulations.[41] The D.C. Circuit
has agreed that materials undergoing sham recycling are discarded and
therefore properly fall under Subtitle C jurisdiction.[42]
The proposed revision to the definition of solid waste deals with one
category of hazardous waste recycling: reclamation.[43] In a reclamation operation,
some components of a material are recovered and reused, while others are
separated and in some cases discarded.[44] EPA currently has a wide variety of regulatory
approaches to reclamation operations because some processes more closely
resemble waste management while others more closely resemble normal
manufacturing.[45]
Taken all together, EPA has devised a high complex regulatory program
for hazardous waste recycling - the evaluation of which is complicated
by the limited amount of data EPA collects on specific industries or
recycling practices.[46] These regulations have been subject to
challenges and criticism from industry, states, and environmental
groups.[47] Key
industry concerns include: "the difficulty of interpreting and applying
the definitions consistently; the costly, time-consuming, and uncertain
permitting process; [and] the high production costs for recyclable
materials and their derivatives . . ." [48] These concerns translate into reluctance on
the part of businesses to invest in recycling units, thereby, according
to industry, increasing consumer costs, wasting natural resources, and
holding back technological innovations.[49] States have also raised concerns about the
complexity of the system - noting the difficulty distinguishing waste
from non-waste and the impossibility of tracking materials and
inspecting facilities interferes with their ability to implement and
enforce the RCRA program.[50] Finally, environmental groups "have emphasized
the high number of recycling sites for the Superfund National Priorities
List; the information deficit associated with exempt recycling; and the
lack of oversight, regulation or product specification for exempt
waste-derived products. [51]
II. The Force Behind Regulatory Reform: A Series of D.C. Circuit
Court Cases that Guided EPA's Exercise of Discretion in Proposing
Revisions to the Definition of Solid Waste
The D.C. Circuit Court has had several opportunities to examine and
critique EPA's regulatory definition of solid waste as it pertains the
Agency's jurisdiction over recyclable hazardous materials. The landmark
case is American Mining Congress v. EPA (AMC I),[52] in which
organizations representing mining, iron and steel, and chemical
manufacturing industries, as well as industry groups representing
electric and gas utilities challenged EPA's 1985 regulatory definition
of solid waste.[53] The petitioners maintained that EPA exceeded
its authority by seeking to regulate materials that were not
discarded or otherwise disposed of.[54] The key question identified by
the court was "whether Congress was using the term "discarded" in its
ordinary sense -- 'disposed of' or 'abandoned'--or whether Congress was
using it in a much more open-ended way, so as to encompass materials no
longer useful in their original capacity though destined for immediate
reuse in another phase of the industry's ongoing production process."[55]
Because the issue was one of statutory interpretation, the court
applied the principles enunciated in Chevron U.S.A., Inc. v. NRDC[56] to guide its
inquiry.[57] Under
Chevron, the reviewing court first considers whether Congress "has
directly spoken to the precise question at issue."[58] This inquiry focuses initially
on the language and structure of the statute itself.[59] If the answer is not found in
the statute, then the court looks to secondary indicia of intent, such
as the measure's legislative history.[60] If the intent of Congress is clear, the
analysis ends and the court (as well as the agency) must give effect to
the intent.[61]
However, "if the statute is silent or ambiguous with respect to the
specific issue, the question for the court is whether the agency's
answer is based on a permissible construction of the statute."[62]
The AMC I court never got beyond the first prong of the
Chevron analysis, finding ample evidence of congressional
intent both in the statute and the legislative history. The court noted
that:
RCRA was enacted . . . in an effort to help States deal with the
ever-increasing problem of solid waste disposal by encouraging
the search for and use of alternatives to existing methods of disposal
(including recycling) and protecting health and the environment by
regulating hazardous wastes. To fulfill these purposes, it seems clear
that EPA need not regulate "spent" materials that are recycled and
reused in an ongoing manufacturing or industrial process. These
materials have not yet become part of the waste disposal problem;
rather, they are destined for beneficial reuse or recycling in a
continuous process by the generating industry itself.[63]
The court concluded that "discarded materials" could not include
materials "destined for beneficial reuse or recycling in a continuous
process by the generating industry itself."[64] Because Congress had directly
spoken to this issue, EPA's use of a conflicting definition was not
entitled to Chevron deference.[65] Therefore, the petition for review was
granted.[66]
It is important to note that the circuit court's analysis was
performed against a specific factual backdrop: the mining and petroleum
industry. The court went to great lengths to describe each industry's
unique recycling concerns. In the mining industry, the production of
primary metals from ores involves multiple extraction steps to obtain as
much of the metal as possible - reclamation of slag, dross, dust, revert
and similar materials is an integral part of the production process.[67] As the court in
AMC I explained:
In the mining industry, primary metals production involves the
extraction of fractions of a percent of a metal from a complex
mineralogical matrix (i.e., the natural material in which minerals are
embedded). Extractive metallurgy proceeds incrementally. Rome was not
built in a day, and all metal cannot be extracted in one fell swoop. In
consequence, materials are reprocessed in order to remove as much of the
pure metal as possible from the natural ore. . . . The mining facility
typically recaptures, recycles, and reuses these [materials].[68]
For the petroleum industry, the court first noted that "[p]etroleum
refineries vary greatly both in respect of their products and their
processes," and then found that "most of their products" are produced
"through a number of interdependent and sometimes repetitious processing
steps."[69] The
court concluded:
Any hydrocarbons that are not usable in a particular form or state
are returned to an appropriate stage in the refining process so they can
eventually be used. Likewise, the hydrocarbons and materials which
escape from a refinery's production vessels are gathered and, by a
complex retrieval system, returned to appropriate parts of the refining
process.[70]
Following the industry descriptions, the court stated "against this
factual backdrop, we now examine the legal issues presented by the
petitioners challenge."[71] Thus, the court's focus on reclamation of
secondary materials as an essential aspect of the production
process is important in considering the applicability of the holding to
other materials and recycling practices.
While AMC I found clear Congressional intent as to the
meaning of "discard" in so far as it applied to hazardous materials in
an "ongoing process," subsequent D.C. Circuit decisions found
ambiguities demanding resolution by the Agency's delegated lawmaking
powers. In American Petroleum Institute v. EPA (API I), the
court examined EPA's contention in a proposed rulemaking that K061
sludge discarded by producers of steel was no longer "discarded" when it
arrived at a facility for metal reclamation.[72] The Agency explained that the
furnaces used for metals reclamation "are normally ... essential
components of the industrial process, and when they are actually burning
secondary materials for material recovery[,] [they] can be involved in
the very act of production . . . "[73] Using AMC I as guidance, EPA felt
constrained to view K061 as no longer being "waste" within the meaning
of the RCRA once it entered a reclamation furnace.[74]
The court responded by stating that AMC I was "by no means
dispositive of EPA's authority to regulate K061 slag."[75] Unlike the materials in
question in AMC I, the court noted, "K061 was indisputably
'discarded' before being subject to metals reclamation -
consequently, it has 'become part of the waste disposal
problem.'"[76]
K061 is delivered to the reclamation facility not as part of an
"ongoing manufacturing or industrial process" within "the
generating industry," but as part of a mandatory waste treatment plan
prescribed by EPA.[77] As such, the material appeared to remain
"discarded" and therefore subject to EPA's jurisdiction.[78] Because EPA
mistakenly concluded that case law left it no discretion to interpret
the relevant statutory provisions, the court remanded the issue to EPA
for reconsideration.[79]
The court noted, however, that the scope of the agency's interpretive
discretion on remand was far from unbounded.[80] Although the court concluded
that Congress had not spoken precisely on the question of EPA's
authority to regulate the slag produced from the treatment of K061, any
"permissible" construction of the relevant provisions must comport with
the broader "statutory purpose" of RCRA.[81]
Shortly after API I, the D.C. Circuit addressed another
challenge from the American Mining Congress involving EPA's
interpretation of "discard."[82] The petitioners sought review of an EPA rule
relisting as hazardous six wastes generated from metal smelting
operations. AMC challenged both the Agency's interpretation of the term
"discarded" in RCRA, and argued that EPA had inadequately explained the
bases of its decision to relist the six wastes as hazardous.[83] Relying
principally on the decision of the court in AMC I, the
petitioners argued that three wastes, which were stored in surface
impoundments, were not "discarded," were therefore not "solid wastes,"
and thus could not be "hazardous wastes" within the meaning of RCRA.[84]
The court felt the petitioners' reading of AMC I was too
broad.[85]
AMC 's holding concerned only materials "destined for
immediate reuse in another phase of the industry's ongoing
production process,"[86] which "have not yet become part of the waste
disposal problem."[87] The court found that nothing in AMC
I prevented the Agency from treating as "discarded" the wastes
at issue. The wastes were "managed in land disposal units that
are part of wastewater treatment systems, which have
therefore become 'part of the waste disposal problem,' and which are
not part of ongoing industrial processes."[88]
In reference to the court's API I decision earlier that
year, it noted that the petitioners were unable to point to anything in
the language, overall structure, or legislative history of the statute,
that showed the term "discarded" to be any less ambiguous regarding
sludge stored in surface impoundments than it was regarding the
materials at issue in API.[89] Because Congress has not directly spoken
to the precise question at issue, the court considered whether the
Agency's interpretation of the term "discarded" was "reasonable and
consistent with the statutory purpose."[90] In this case, the Agency had determined that
material placed in wastewater treatment surface impoundments where it is
"capable of posing a substantial present or potential hazard to human
health or the environment when improperly treated, stored, transported
or disposed of, or otherwise managed, by leaching into the ground, is
'discarded material,' and hence a 'solid waste.'"[91] The court concluded that the
Agency's interpretation of "discard" was both reasonable and consistent
with the statutory purposes of RCRA.[92]
The Agency did not fare as well on the petitioners' second claim of
an inadequate agency record to justify EPA's decision to relist the
wastes. The court concluded that regarding some of the six wastes, the
Agency met its obligation to engage in reasoned decision making.[93] Regarding
others, however, the Agency failed to articulate a rational connection
between the data on which it purportedly relied and its decision to
reject the petitioners challenges.[94] The court remanded to the Agency for a fuller
explanations regarding the materials not sufficiently supported. [95]
The D.C. Circuit again stressed the importance of demonstrating
reasoned decision-making in the context of interpreting 'discard' in
American Petroleum Institute v. EPA (API II).[96] In this case,
industry groups challenged EPA's determination that oil-bearing
wastewaters are solid waste for purposes of RCRA regulation. [97] The point of
contention between EPA and industry was whether primary treatment of the
oil-bearing wastewater was part of the production process, or
"discard."[98]
Citing AMC II, the court noted that where an industrial by-product
may be characterized as either "discarded" or "in process" material,
EPA's choice of characterization is entitled to deference.[99]
However, the court also noted that "the record must reflect that EPA
engaged in reasoned decision-making to decide which characterization is
appropriate."[100] Finding the record to be deficient in that
regard, the court held EPA's decision was arbitrary and capricious.[101] It vacated
the portion of EPA's decision declining to exclude oil-bearing
wastewaters from the statutory definition of solid waste, and remanded
for further proceedings.[102] The court did not suggest any particular
result on remand, but its earlier statements indicate that EPA
potentially had jurisdiction over oil-bearing wastewaters recycled at
petroleum refineries.
At least two other circuits have held that EPA has authority over
some material destined for reuse or recycling. The Eleventh Circuit
found that "it is unnecessary to read into the term 'discarded' a
congressional intent that the waste in question must finally and forever
be discarded."[103] The Fourth Circuit found that slag held on
the ground untouched for six months prior to sale for use as roadbed
could be a solid waste.[104]
Association of Battery Recyclers v. EPA, decided in 2000,is
the final "guidepost" cited by EPA as it proposes to once again exercise
its discretion to interpret the statutory term "discard" for purposes of
their Subtitle C program.[105] In ABR, petitioners challenged a
new EPA rule, promulgated in 1998, adjusting the Agency's Subtitle C
jurisdiction over hazardous materials recycled by reclamation within the
mineral processing industry --- the Land Disposal Restrictions Phase IV
Rule ("LDR").[106] The rule contained a conditional exclusion
for all types of mineral processing materials destined for
reclamation.[107] As part of LDR, EPA prohibited land-based
storage prior to reclamation because it considered secondary materials
from the mineral processing industry that were stored on the land to be
part of the waste disposal problem.[108] EPA noted that while RCRA did not authorize
the Agency to regulate "materials that are destined for immediate reuse
in another phase of the industry's on going production process"
-materials removed from the production process for storage are not
"immediately reused," and therefore are "discarded" and subject to EPA's
jurisdiction. [109]
Petitioners challenged the portion of LDR defining a "solid waste" in
terms of how materials "generated and reclaimed within the primary
mineral processing industry" are stored.[110] Under the rule, if the
mineral processor stored secondary material destined for recycling in
tanks, containers, buildings, or on properly maintained pads, the
materials are not considered solid waste.[111] However, if the same
secondary materials were not stored in such a manner prior to being
recycled, they could be regulated as hazardous waste.[112] Petitioners contended that
the rule exceeded EPA's authority and asked how secondary material held
for recycling in production could be a "waste" when the statute defines
"waste" as "discarded materials."[113]
The court noted that these issues were fully vetted in AMC
I.
The [AMC I] court began by referring to the "ordinary,
plain-English meaning" of "discarded"-- " 'disposed of,' 'thrown away,'
or 'abandoned.' " Id. at 1184. Secondary materials destined for
recycling are obviously not of that sort. Rather than throwing these
materials away, the producer saves them; rather than abandoning them,
the producer reuses them. After examining the structure and history of
RCRA, the AMC I court concluded: "Congress clearly and
unambiguously expressed its intent that 'solid waste' (and therefore
EPA's regulatory authority) be limited to materials that are 'discarded'
by virtue of being disposed of, abandoned, or thrown away."[114]
The court concluded "at least some of the secondary material EPA
seeks to regulate as solid waste is destined for reuse as part of a
continuous industrial process and thus is not abandoned or thrown
away."[115] As
in AMC I, " by regulating in-process secondary materials, EPA
has acted in contravention of Congress' intent, because it has based its
regulation on an improper interpretation of 'discarded' and an incorrect
reading of our AMC I decision."[116] The court also explained that the
intervening API I and AMC II decisions had not
narrowed the holding in AMC I.[117] In response to thisdecision,
EPA promulgated a final rule removing the provisions of the LDR rule
that the court vacated in ABR.[118]
Taken together, these court decisions provide valuable guidance as to
EPA's jurisdictional boundaries when dealing with recyclable hazardous
waste. The court appears to view the question of discard along a
continuum of materials and recycling practices.[119] At one end of the continuum
are materials directly reinserted by the generator into the production
process from which they are produced, such as the mining and petroleum
processing described in AMC I. At the other end of the
continuum are materials and are "indisputably discarded" before being
reclaimed, such as K061 slag that was shipped to a metals reclamation
furnacein API I.[120]
Materials falling somewhere in between were addressed by the court in
AMC II and API II. In AMC II, the court held
that sludge from a surface impoundment that may later be reclaimed were
part of the facility's wastewater treatment system and not part of an
ongoing industrial process.[121] In API II, the court reviewed EPA's
determination that oily wastewaters were discarded prior to treatment to
recover oil, against industry's contention that they were in-process
materials that were recycled and therefore not discarded.[122] In doing so,
the court took a hard look at EPA's reasoning, noting that "the record
must reflect that EPA engaged in reasoned decision-making to decide
where characterization is appropriate."[123] Finding the record to be
deficient in that regard, the court held EPA's decision to be arbitrary
and capricious, it vacated the portion of the rule dealing with
oil-bearing wastewaters.[124]
III. A Brief Look at EPA's Proposed Revision to the Definition of
Solid Waste
As noted earlier, EPA perceived the ABR decision and its
predecessors as providing an "opportunity to re-examine its rules and
interpretations and clarify whether they regulate certain materials that
are not 'discarded.'"[125] Looking to the decisions for guidance (and
perhaps justification), the Agency now proposes to exercise its
discretion to interpret the statutory term "discard" for Subtitle C
purposes.[126]
The proposed revision is de-regulatory in nature, in that certain
recyclable materials that have heretofore been subject to hazardous
waste regulations would no longer be regulated under the hazardous waste
regulatory system.[127] The rule also provides more explicit
criteria for determining the legitimacy of recycling practices -
although, this was not in response to the D.C. Circuit decisions and is
therefore not analyzed is this paper. [128] Taken together, EPA expects that this
proposed rule will encourage safe, beneficial recycling of hazardous
secondary materials by industry - consistent with one of the primary
goals of Congress in enacting the RCRA statute.[129] However, EPA performed no
formal analysis of the exclusion's potential impacts to human health and
the environment to back up this assertion.[130]
A. Overview of the Proposed Exclusion
The proposal would modify the current regulatory provision at 40
C.F.R. §261.2(c)(3), which specifies that some types of hazardous
materials are wastes if their recycling involves reclamation.[131] A material
is reclaimed "if it is processed to recover a usable product, or if it
is regenerated."[132] The basic premise of the proposed exclusion
is that hazardous secondary materials that are "generated and reclaimed
in a continuous process within the same industry" would not be
considered wastes for Subtitle C purposes, and thus would not be subject
to the hazardous waste regulations. [133]
The Agency reasons that, generally, when a material is reclaimed
within the same industry that generated it, and the material can remain
useful to that industry, and the material is not discarded.[134] The industry
has not "finished" with the material; rather, it is to the advantage of
the industry to continue using it as a substitute for other types of
materials.[135]
The Agency also asserts that the potential for environmental harm from
same-industry recycling of hazardous secondary materials is likely small
compared to other recycling practices because: "processes and facilities
within the same industry are likely to use similar raw materials and
process them in a similar manner; they are also likely to have expertise
as to types of secondary materials produced by their industry, their
potential for recycling, and appropriate practices for managing such
materials."[136] However, EPA did not perform any formal
analysis to support this assertion.
In addition to selecting "generated and reclaimed in a continuous
process within the same industry" to articulate the boundaries of the
exclusion, the Agency had to define the key concepts in the phrase
itself. The Agency chose to construe the phrase and its components quite
broadly, extending the reach of the exclusion to a diverse set of
materials and recycling practices.
B. Defining "Continuous Process Within the Same
Industry"
EPA proposed two options for defining "continuous process within the
same industry"[137] (the Agency definitions of components
"industry" and "continuous process" are discussed next). Under Option 1,
hazardous secondary materials would have to be generated and reclaimed
within a single industry in order to qualify for the exclusion.[138] The
reclamation of excluded material could take place in multiple processing
steps, provided that each processing step takes place in the same
industry that generated the material.[139] The proposal would also allow reclamation of
excluded material to take place at one or more different locations or
facilities, as long as each reclamation step occurs within the
generating industry- there would not be any geographical limits on the
movements of excluded materials.[140]
Option 2 is identical to the first option described above, with one
exception - hazardous secondary materials that are generated and
reclaimed in a continuous process within the same industry would not be
eligible for the exclusion if the reclamation takes place at a facility
that also recycles regulated hazardous wastes generated in a different
industry.[141]
This would essentially make all commercial recyclers, who typically
handle wastes from many industries, ineligible for the exclusion.[142]
C. Defining "Industry"
In developing a definition of industry for the proposed exclusion,
EPA considered: "(1) whether the definition could be easily identified
and readily implemented; (2) whether it was simple (versus unnecessarily
complicated); and (3) the degree to which the definition, when used as
part of an "intra-industry" exclusion, resulted in outcomes consistent
with the principle described above (i.e., that the materials were being
continuously used rather than discarded)." [143] After consideration of these
criteria, EPA proposed using the North American Industry Classification
System (NAICS) developed by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) as
the foundation for industry definitions for purposes of the proposed
rule.[144]
EPA considered creating its own list of specific industries or
industry categories, however, such a list would have required a
significant investment of time and resources and would not necessarily
have reflected standardized, commonly accepted definitions of
industry.[145]
EPA believes that the developers of the NAICS have more expertise with
respect to diverse industrial operations, and consequently, find it to
be a reasonable starting point for defining "industry" with regard to
identifying materials that are not "discarded" for purposes of RCRA
Subtitle C.[146]
There are several additional facts provided by EPA in support of its
decision to use NAICS to define "industry." First, NAICS was developed
using a "production-oriented" concept, whereby producing units that use
identical or similar production processes are grouped together.[147] This fact is
relevant for the purpose of this exclusion because materials being
generated from, and returned to, "identical or similar production
processes" can be likewise viewed as being beneficially recycled "within
the same industry." Second, the NAICS are immediately functional as an
existing, recognized system for classifying industries. Finally, under
the NAICS system, the owner/operator of a facility determines his/her
own industry classification, largely using the NAICS Manual for help in
determining how to categorize his/her own establishment. For purposes of
the proposed rule, owners of facilities handling secondary hazardous
materials will identify which NAICS code applies to them for RCRA
recycling purposes.[148]
EPA is proposing to identify industry for purposes of this exclusion
at the 4-digit NAICS level - therefore, two establishments will be
considered within the "same industry" if they share the same 4-digit
NAICS code.[149] The 4- digit level approach was selected
because the Agency believed it struck the appropriate balance between
being overly broad (i.e., undermining any meaningful distinctions of
industry) and too narrow (i.e., inappropriately restricting beneficial
resource recovery and recycling opportunities).[150]
EPA does note that there are a number of 4-digit NAICS industry codes
that are designated as "Other" activities within an industry
Sub-sector.[151] Generally, these categories seem to
represent a more diverse set of process activities than occurs under
other 4-digit NAICS codes and can therefore lead to some awkward
"industry" groupings.[152] For example, "NAICS 3259 (Other Chemical
Product and Preparation Manufacturing) includes Printing Ink
Manufacturing; Explosives Manufacturing; Custom Compounding of Purchased
Resins; Photographic Film, Paper, Plate, and Chemical Manufacturing; and
All Other Miscellaneous Chemical Product and Preparation
Manufacturing."[153] Finally, EPA proposed to retain definitions
it has developed in previous rules for the petroleum and mineral
processing industries in lieu of the 4-digit NAICS approach.[154]
D. Defining "Continuous Process"
Having taken a brief look at how EPA defines "industry" for purposes
of this exclusion, we move to the second key component - continuous
process. EPA proposes that generation and reclamation of materials would
be understood to take place in a "continuous process" only if the
materials are handled exclusively by facilities or entities (except for
transporters) that are within the generating industry, and the materials
are not "speculatively accumulated" as defined in 40 C.F.R.
§261.1(c)(8).[155] This definition would not allow a generator
to ship excluded materials to a broker or other middleman before they
are received at a reclamation facility.[156] EPA acknowledges that
middlemen such as brokers are often better able to find markets for
recyclable secondary materials, and thus can facilitate their beneficial
reuse.[157]
However, they regard the use of brokers as a significant discontinuity
in the use of a secondary material, and therefore inconsistent with the
management identified by the courts as outside the Agency's
jurisdiction.[158] Independent transporters can to ship
excluded materials from one facility to another, as long as each
facility is within the generating industry.[159]
In addition to requiring materials be shipped directly between the
generator and reclaimer, EPA feels that time limitations on reclamation
are an appropriate component of "continuous process." The Agency
proposed to use RCRA's existing "speculative accumulation" provisions[160] to
distinguish between processes that are "continuous" and those that are
not.[161] Under
this existing rule, a material is accumulated speculatively if the
person accumulating it cannot show that the material is potentially
recyclable and has a feasible means of being recycled.[162] More importantly for the
purpose of this proposal, the person accumulating the material must show
that during a calendar year (beginning January 1) the amount of material
that is recycled, or transferred to a different site for recycling, must
equal at least seventy-five percent by weight or volume of the amount of
that material on hand at the beginning of the period.[163]
EPA believes that using the existing regulatory provisions for
speculative accumulation as the time limit for defining "continuous
process" in the proposed rule is consistent with the D.C. Circuit
Court's direction, and fits well within the existing regulatory
structure for hazardous waste recycling.[164] In the ABR
decision, the Court suggested that temporary storage of secondary
materials prior to reclamation may be a necessary phase in the overall
reclamation process.[165] However, the ABR court did not
suggest a particular time limit beyond which accumulation of materials
could no longer be considered part of a "continuous process."[166]
E. Enforcement
Generators who wish to use the 40 C.F.R. § 261.2(g) exclusion
must submit a one-time notice to EPA or a state that is authorized to
administer RCRA.[167] If a material is not managed within the
boundaries of the proposed exclusion, the material is not excluded and
is a hazardous waste for Subtitle C purposes from the time the generator
first generated it.[168] Therefore, each person who manages a
hazardous secondary material that loses its exclusion would have to
manage it consistently with hazardous waste management requirements from
the point when the material was first generated, regardless of whether
the person is the one who actually causes the loss of the exclusion.[169] EPA believes
that this approach will provide everyone involved with hazardous
secondary materials with an incentive to manage them in such a way as to
prevent loss of the exclusion.[170] It also encourages each person to use all
appropriate steps to see that others handle the material so it is
legitimately reclaimed. [171]
In addition, the proposed exclusion would not affect the obligation
to promptly respond to and remediate any releases of hazardous secondary
material that may occur.[172] If, for example, a hazardous secondary
material is spilled or released, then the material would be 'discarded'
and subject to Subtitle C regulation.[173] Any management of the released material not
in compliance with applicable Federal and State hazardous waste
requirements could result in an enforcement action.[174]
F. Estimated Costs and Benefits
Entities potentially affected by this action are expected in include
more than 1700 facilities that generate and/or recycle hazardous
secondary materials. The proposed exclusion is expected to result in a
net savings to industry of approximately $178 million per year.[175] These cost
savings for both those who are modeled to switch to recycling and those
who currently recycle either on-site or within the same industry are
expected to come from reduced administrative costs, transportation
costs, disposal/management costs, state hazardous waste taxes,
contingency planning costs and increased salvage revenue (for entities
that shift from disposal to recycling). [176]
Some of the environmental benefits predicted to result from the
proposed rule include conservation of landfill capacity, increase in
resource efficiency, growth of a recycling infrastructure, and
development of innovative technologies for affected secondary
materials.[177]
EPA estimates that approximately 425 thousand tons of secondary
hazardous materials would be redirected away from landfills towards
recycling under the proposed exclusion.[178] EPA believes the rule will
facilitate the growth and development of the innovative recycling
technologies in the United States by reducing regulatory barriers to new
technologies becoming established.[179] The Agency acknowledges that some 1.5
million tons of hazardous secondary materials would be no longer subject
to regulation as hazardous waste under Subtitle C of RCRA under this
proposal.[180]
EPA has not, however, evaluated any potential for changes resulting in
either higher or lower releases to the environment of hazardous
constituents from different handling methods for affected secondary
materials.[181]
IV. Legal and Policy Concerns with the Proposed Revision to the
Definition of Solid Waste
"If AMC I and ABR are the guideposts, then EPA has lost its
way."[182]
A. Legal Concerns
EPA was not required by ABR or its predecessors to revise
the definition of 'discard' for purposes of Subtitle C regulations.[183] After
ABR, EPA revoked the regulatory provisions that the court held
were unlawful.[184] The existing RCRA regulations were duly
promulgated and remain lawful. Therefore, any further Agency action
should be characterized as an exercise of Agency discretion and as such
must be supported by a record demonstrating "reasoned
decision-making."[185] Perhaps in acknowledgment of its deficient
rulemaking record, the Agency seeks to bolster it exercise of discretion
by identifying ABR and other decisions as guideposts. However,
a close analysis of these guideposts suggests and that EPA has gone
astray by taking language from the court and applying it a broader
universe of materials and practices than was contemplated.
The D.C. Circuit Court did clearly hold that secondary hazardous
materials directly reused by the producer in an ongoing production
process are not discarded, and therefore are not wastes.[186] However,
"the court has never ruled that materials no longer useful to the
original producer, that are stored in an uncontrolled manner for a
lengthy period of time, then shipped long distances through many states
to a different company within the same industry, to be reclaimed in a
different recycling process, cannot be [considered] discarded."[187]
First, both AMC I and ABR cases dealt primarily
with the mineral processing and petroleum refining industries. While the
ABR court recognized the potential application of its holding
to some other industries, the facts presented were in many respects
unique to these industries. As discussed in the AMC I case,
both the mineral processing and petroleum refining industries are
essentially extractive - they inherently involve the processing (i.e.,
reclaiming) of secondary materials in a continuous series of steps to
produce finished products (infra to industry descriptions).[188] Certainly,
the same type of reclamation is not found in all industries.
In addition, the recoverable materials in mineral processing are
typically put directly back into the production process by the
generator at the mill or smelter located on site or in close
proximity.[189]
Likewise petroleum residues are reinserted directly back into
the production process.[190] This fact is a critical one in the court's
decisions. The ABR court held that secondary materials destined
for recycling were not discarded because "[r]ather than throwing
materials away, the producer saves them; rather than abandoning
them, the producer reuses them."[191] This distinction appears to
limit the holding to materials reused by the generator on-site or in a
closely integrated production process.[192] The facts considered by the ABR
court certainly did not involve the generator shipping materials to a
different company for recycling. Therefore, if EPA intends to use
ABR and its predecessors as guideposts for the reform of
recycling regulations for hazardous secondary materials- a close reading
suggests their application is limited to the petroleum and mineral
refining industry - and, perhaps, similarly extractive industries.
Regardless of what exact industries the court was contemplating,
there is evidence that the court expected EPA to analyze types of
materials and recycling activities against reasonable indicia of
discard.[193]
In its opinions, the circuit court was careful to either designate the
specific materials examined (such as the 'indisputably discarded' K061[194] ) or state a
general conclusion, either unwilling or unable to comment of specific
materials ("at least some of the secondary material EPA seeks to
regulate as solid waste is destined for reuse as part of a continuous
industrial process and thus is not abandoned or thrown away."[195]) In those
instances where the court's holdings were general in scope because of an
insufficient administrative record, the court vacated the provisions and
remanded for a more complete inquiry.[196]
In its new proposed rule, EPA has not taken heed of this advice,
instead seeking to exclude all hazardous secondary materials that are
reclaimed in any process in hundreds of industries. EPA has not
sufficiently examined the materials, reclamation processes, and
industries that it proposes to exclude from the definition of solid
waste on an adequate administrative record.[197] So, while the proposed
exclusion does indeed borrow the phrase "continuous process/same
industry" from these decisions, EPA is, in fact, applying it to a much
broader, more diverse set of recycling processes than have been
sufficiently examined.
Indeed, in both AMC I and ABR, the court warned EPA
against parsing individual words in its opinions.[198] Yet EPA seems to be treating
the words "continuous process" and "within the generating industry" from
the court's opinions "as if they were statutory terms in need of
regulatory definition."[199]
The Agency's inadequate rulemaking record will make the proposed
exclusion vulnerable to a challenge of "arbitrary and capricious"
rulemaking. A court's initial inquiry would show that EPA's
interpretation of the scope of its authority under RCRA via "discard"
has been unclear and unsteady. As noted in AMC I, "EPA has
shifted from its vague 'sometimes discarded' approach of 1980 to a
proposed exclusion from regulation of all materials used or reused as
effective substitutes for raw materials in 1983, and finally, to a very
narrow exclusion of essentially only materials processed within the
meaning of the 'closed-loop' exception under the final rule."[200] Therefore,
in analyzing the proposed exclusion, a court would be confronted with
neither a consistent nor a longstanding agency interpretation.
Because the key issue is one of statutory interpretation (EPA's
interpretation of "discard") the principles enunciated in Chevron[201] guide the
court's inquiry. "[I]f the intent of Congress is clear, that is the end
of the matter; for the court, as well as the agency, must give effect to
the unambiguously expressed intent of Congress."[202] While AMC I found clear
Congressional intent for material reused directly to not be considered
'discard' for Subtitle C purposes - later decisions highlight the
ambiguities that exist for materials & recycling practices not
clearly at either end of the continuum. The proposed exclusion, as noted
above, is quite broad and involves very diverse recycling processes -
and therefore necessarily spans a portion of the continuum and cannot be
attributed to Congressional intent identified and articulated in AMC
I.
When Congress' intent is not clear, "the question for the court is
whether the agency's answer is based on a permissible construction of
the statute . . ."[203] While a court may not "substitute its own
construction of a statutory provision for a reasonable interpretation
made by the administrator of an agency,"[204] it has a duty to carefully
"review the record to ascertain that the agency has made a reasoned
decision based on 'reasonable extrapolations from some reliable
evidence.' "[205] The court will ensure that the Agency has
examined "the relevant data and articulate[d] a satisfactory explanation
for its action including a 'rational connection between the facts found
and the choice made,' " [206]
A court reviewing this proposal would find the rulemaking record
sorely lacking. EPA failed to perform any sort of analysis to understand
the potential consequences of the proposed exclusion on human health and
the environment. Executive Order 12866 entitled Regulatory Planning
and Review[207] requires EPA to assess the costs of
significant regulatory actions both to health, safety, and the
environment and to government programs responsible for administering the
regulatory program. However,"[t]here is no EPA analysis of the potential
environmental harm from the proposed rule, no reasoned analysis of the
indicia of discard or the environmental basis for EPA's approach, and
scant attention to significant concerns such as how the rule will likely
cut of off superfund liability for generators of these excluded
materials"[208]
Therefore, as the proposal currently stands, it is very vulnerable to a
claim of arbitrary and capricious Agency decision-making.
B. Policy Concerns
Congress crafted RCRA "to promote the protection of human health and
the environment."[209] Looking beyond the potential legal problems
associated with the administrative record, the Agency's failure to
investigate the human health and environmental consequences of the
proposed exclusion warrants serious criticism.
As EPA has recognized, hazardous secondary materials that are stored
and transported prior to recycling can present the same types of threats
to human health and the environment as materials sent for permanent
disposal.[210]
In fact, EPA has found that recycling operations have accounted for many
damage incidents and contaminated sites, including 20 of the first
filing under RCRA's imminent and substantial endangerment authority and
20 of the first National Priority Sites under Superfund.[211] EPA now
proposes to exclude from RCRA regulation an estimated 1.5 million tons
of hazardous waste.[212]
States and environmental groups have expressed significant concerns
about enforcement which suggest that additional hazardous wastes (beyond
the 1.5 million tons contemplated by the Agency) may be managed outside
Subtitle C regulations due to improper use of the exclusion.[213] Often "the
best and most cost-effective way for government to ensure compliance
with environmental laws and regulations, and thus protect human health
and the environment from harm, is to have an aggressive inspection
program to identify violations and return the violator to compliance
before the opportunity for significant adverse effects or significant
non-compliance occurs."[214] Early identification of violations means
that return to compliance is quicker, penalties are lower or not even
necessary, and inspection and enforcement resource expenditures are kept
to a minimum.[215]
The enforcement strategy implicit in this proposed rule is one that
would largely cause violations to be identified after the major
deviation and potential environmental harm has occurred.[216] For example,
if a shipment of hazardous secondary material is sent to a reclaimer
outside of its industry and is mismanaged by storage on the ground at a
series of "reclaimers", there is no required paper trail that will give
an inspector early warning or documentation of the non-compliance.[217] Neither the
generator, transporter, nor receiving company is required to maintain
records on the shipment. Rather, an inspector would have to become
suspicious of long-term storage of material at a facility and expend
significant time and resources re-constructing its movements by
reviewing non-standardized business paperwork in order to determine that
noncompliance (and associated potential environmental harm) has
occurred.[218]
While this research is going on, the material remains stored on the
ground, a potential hazard to human health and the environment, and
several business entities remain in non-compliance.[219]
The Agency states that because the material would be out of
compliance from the point of generation, all involved parties would be
subject to enforcement action and thus there would be a strong incentive
for the parties to ensure compliance by each other.[220] However, the absence of
reporting and recordkeeping requirements and the freedom with which the
excluded materials would be able to be managed would make the movements
and transactions associated with the material so difficult to trace that
enforcement would be perceived as unlikely.[221] In addition, the various
parties involved in managing the material will have no control over the
financial viability of the other parties.[222] It will be difficult for
regulatory agencies to establish accountability for abandoned materials
if there are inadequate records.[223]
Additionally, the NAICS coding system would be open to abuse by those
wishing to claim the exclusion. Companies self-select their NAICS
code(s) and it is unclear whether EPA and the states have the authority
to second-guess or over-ride their self-designations.[224] It is also unclear how
states will be able to evaluate, much less enforce against, a wrongly
classified facility in another state.
In addition to protecting human health and the environment, a stated
goal of RCRA generally and this proposed revision is encouraging
recycling.[225]
EPA admits that middlemen such as brokers are often better able to find
markets for recyclable secondary materials, and thus can facilitate
their beneficial reuse - but does not extend the exclusion to them.[226]
[This leaves EPA] with an illogical dichotomy: if an automobile
repair shop sends its secondary materials to a company that is permitted
by EPA to properly recycle hazardous solvents, it has "discarded" its
waste. However, if the auto shop sends its solvents to another
automobile repair shop that decides to enter the solvent recovery
business, then the spent solvent is not "discarded." How can one
situation be an example of "discarding" and the other not? Clearly, the
solvents are discarded in both cases. EPA's proposed rule would
encourage waste properly treated and recycled today in permitted
facilities to be sent instead to unpermitted, unqualified and
uncontrolled sites.[227]
The reality is that most recycling occurs between industries, and of
the most successful, responsible recyclers are specialized, third-party
commercial entities who have made large investments in equipment and
personnel, can meet rigorous specifications for reclaimed materials, and
have well-developed markets for their products.[228] This proposal would only
hurt these successful recyclers, by creating strong incentives for
developing intra-industry recycling capacity, while discouraging the use
of these commercial recyclers.[229] It is difficult to understand, then, how
this exclusion intends to promote "safe, beneficial recycling."[230]
C. Conclusion
EPA asserts that its proposed revision to the definition of solid
waste will promote "safe, beneficial" recycling of hazardous wastes.
Despite the known environmental dangers of hazardous waste recycling,
the Agency proposes to allow certain hazardous wastes to now be recycled
at unregulated facilities, without having performed any analysis of the
potential health or environmental consequences. This deficiency will
make it very difficult for the Agency to show its interpretation of
"discard" was both reasonable and consistent with the statutory purposes
of RCRA. In the face of this deficient record, EPA points to
ABR and other D.C. Circuit decisions as "guideposts" in
crafting the language and scope of the exclusion. However, it is not
altogether convincing that those "guideposts" intended to lead us here,
on the verge of excluding 1.5 million tons of hazardous waste from
regulation and directing it away from regulated, commercial
recyclers.
[1] Revisions to the
Definition of Solid Waste, 68 Fed.Reg. 61558, 61560 (proposed Oct. 28,
2003).
[2] Id. at
61560, 61592.
[3] Id. at
61560.
[4] Id. at
61562 (citing 48 Fed. Reg. 14474 (Apr. 4, 1983)). Superfund National
Priorities List sites are the most serious uncontrolled or abandoned
hazardous waste sites that have been identified for possible long-term
remedial action under Superfund. The list is based primarily on the
score a site receives from the Hazard Ranking System. EPA Superfund
page, http://www.epa.gov/superfund.
[5] Id. at
61592.
[6] Interview with
Dave Fagan, Environmental Protection Specialist, United States
Environmental Protection Agency (Nov. 2, 2004).
[7] Id.
See, e.g.40 C.F.R. § 261.4(a)(6)(pulping liquor
exclusion); 40 C.F.R. § 261.4(a)(9)(spent wood preserving solutions
conditional exclusion).
[8] Markus G. Puder,
Sounds of Silence: What Happened to the U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency's Hazardous Waste Recycling Program Reform?, 10
Cornell J.L & Pub. Pol'y 95, 105 (2001).
[9] Id. at
112-121.
[10] 68 Fed. Reg.
at 61560.
[11] 208 F.3d
1047 (D.C. Cir. 2000).
[12] 68 Fed.
Reg. at 61558.
[13] 208 F.3d
at 1050. See LDR Phase IV Rule, 63 Fed. Reg 28556 (May 26,
1998).
[14] Id.
at 1051 (citingAmerican Mining Congress v. EPA, 824 F.2d 1177,
1190 (D.C. Cir. 1987)).
[15] Id.
at 1056.
[16] 68 Fed.
Reg. at 61563.
[17] LDR Phase
IV rule, 67 Fed. Reg. 11251 (Mar. 13, 2002).
[18] 68 Fed.
Reg. at 61563.
[19] Fagan
Interview, supra note 1.
[20] 68 Fed.
Reg. at 61563.
[21] Fagan
Interview; 68 Fed. Reg at 61563.
[22] RCRA was
enacted in 1976, and amended in 1978, 1980, and 1984. See The
Quiet
Communities Act of 1978, Pub.L. No. 95-609, 92 Stat. 3081; The Solid
Waste Disposal Act Amendment of 1980, Pub.L. No. 96-482, 94 Stat. 2334;
Hazardous and Solid Waste Amendments of 1984, Pub.L. No. 98-616, 98
Stat. 3221.
[23] H.R.Rep.
No. 1491, 94th Cong., 2d Sess. 3 (1976), U.S.Code Cong. & Admin.News
1976, pp. 6238, 6240, 6241.
[24] 42 U.S.C.
§ 6901 (a)(2).
[25] Id.
§ 6902.
[26] Id.
§ 6921.
[27] Id.
§ 6903(5). RCRA does not prescribe a method for determining whether
a solid waste is hazardous but delegates this authority to EPA.
Id. §6921(a)-(b). The regulatory definition of hazardous
waste, barring certain exclusions and exemptions, covers listed and
characteristic wastes, as well as certain waste mixtures and residues.
40 C.F.R. §261.3.
[28] American
Mining Congress v. EPA, 824 F.2d 1177, 1179 (D.C. Cir. 1987).
[29] 42 U.S.C.
§ 6903(27) (emphasis added).
[30] See
40 C.F.R §261.2(a)(2).
[31] For this
reason, the RCRA regulations are often described as "cradle-to grave."
See 40 C.F.R §261.6(b)-(d).
[32] 68 Fed.
Reg at 61561.
[33] Id.
(citing 40 Fed. Reg. 33090, 33090-95 (May 19, 1980); 50 Fed. Reg. 604,
616-618 (Jan. 4, 1985)) (emphasis in original).
[34]
Id.
[35]
Id.
[36] A
material is reclaimed if it is processed to recover a usable product, or
if it is regenerated. 40 C.F.R. §261.2(c)(3).
[37]
Id.
[38] 68 Fed.
Reg. at 61561.
[39] Id.
at 61561-62 (citation omitted).
[40] For all
recycling activities, the premise is that legitimate reclamation or
reuse is
taking place. Some facilities, however, may claim that they are
"recycling" a material
in order to avoid being subject to RCRA regulation, when in fact
the activity is not
legitimate recycling. In distinguishing "legitimate" from "sham"
recycling, EPA considers whether the secondary material is effective for
the claimed use, whether the secondary material is used in excess of the
amount necessary, and whether or not the facility has maintained records
of the recycling transactions. RCRA, Superfund & EPCRA Call Center
Training Module. Introduction to: Definition of Solid Waste and
Hazardous Waste Recycling (updated Oct. 2001) available at
http://www.epa.gov/epaoswer/hotline/training/defsw.pdf
[41] 68 Fed.
Reg. at 61562 (citing 45 Fed. Reg. 33093 (May 19th, 1980), 50
Fed. Reg. 638-39 (Jan. 4, 1985)).
[42] See
American Petroleum Institute v. EPA, 216 F.3d 50, 58-59 (D.C.
Cir. 2000).
[43] 68 Fed.
Reg. at 61563.
[44] Id.
at 61562.
[45] Id.
See 40 C.F.R §261.2(c) tbl.1.
[46] Markus G.
Puder, Sounds of Silence: What Happened to the U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency's Hazardous Waste Recycling Program Reform?, 10
Cornell J.L & Pub. Pol'y 95, 105 (2001).
[47] Id.
at 106; Fagan Interview, supra note 1.
[48] Id.
at 107.
[49] Id.
at 107-08.
[50] Id.
at 108.
[51]
Id.
[52] 824 F.2d
1177 (D.C. Cir. 1987).
[53] Id.
at 1178.
[54] Id.
(emphasis added).
[55] Id.
at 1185.
[56] 467 U.S.
837 (1984).
[57] 824 F.2d
at 1182.
[58] 476 U.S.
at 842.
[59]
Id.
[60]
Id.
[61] Id.
at 842-843.
[62]
Id.
[63] 824 F.2d
at 1185 (emphasis in original).
[64] Id.
at 1186.
[65] Id.
at 1182.
[66] Id.
at 1193.
[67] Comment from
Environmental Technology Council, to OSWER Docket, 5 (Feb. 25, 2004)(at
http://docket.epa.gov/edkpub/index.jsp, Docket ID No.
RCRA-2002-0031).
[68] 824 F.2d at
1181.
[69]
Id.
[70]
Id.
[71]
Id.
[72] 906 F.2d 729,
740 (D.C. Cir. 1990). K061 is a zinc-bearing listed hazardous waste that
emanates from the primary production of steel in electric furnaces. 40
C.F.R. § 261.32
[73] Id.
at 734 (quoting 53 Fed.Reg. 11742, 11753 (Apr. 8, 1988)).
[74] Id.
(citing 53 Fed. Reg. 11753).
[75] Id.
at 741.
[76]
Id.(emphasis in original).
[77]
Id.(emphasis in original).
[78]
Id.(citing Ohio v. Department of Interior, 880 F.2d 432, 441
(D.C. Cir. 1989)).
[79]
Id.
[80]
Id.
[81]
Id.
[82] American
Mining Congress v. EPA, 907 F.2d 1179 (D.C. Cir. 1990).
[83] Id.
at 1184.
[84]
Id.
[85] Id.
at 1186.
[86]
Id.(quoting AMC I at 1185) (emphasis added).
[87] Id.
(citing AMC I at 1186).
[88] Id.
(emphasis in original).
[89] Id.
at 1186.
[90] Id.
at 1186-87 (citingChevron v. NRDC, 467 U.S. 837, 843 (1984);
Ohio v. Department of the Interior, 880 F.2d 432, 441 (D.C.
Cir. 1989)).
[91] Id.
at 1187 (citing 40 C.F.R. § 261.11(a)(3)).
[92]
Id.
[93] Id.
at 1188.
[94]
Id.
[95] Id.
at 1190.
[96] 216 F.3d
50 (D.C. Cir. 2000).
[97] Id.
at 58 (citing CERCLA Hazardous Waste Substance Designation and
Reportable Quantities (proposed), 60 Fed.Reg. 57747, 57755-56; CERCLA
Hazardous Waste Substance Designation and Reportable Quantities (Final),
63 Fed.Reg. 42, 110, 42,128-30).
[98] Id.
at 57.
[99]
Id.
[100]
Id.
[101]
Id. at 58.
[102]
Id.
[103]
United States v. ILCO, 996 F.2d 1126, 1132 (11th
Cir. 1993) (finding that used lead batteries sent a reclaimer have been
"discarded once" by the entity that sent the battery to the
reclaimer).
[104] Owen
Electric Steel Co. v EPA, 37 F.3d 146, 150 (4th Cir.
1994).
[105] 208 F.3d
1047 (D.C. Cir. 2000).
[106] 63 FR
28556 (May 26, 1998).
[107]
Id. at 28581.
[108]
Id.
[109]
Id. at 28580.
[110] 208 F.3d
at 1050.
[111]
Id. at 1051.
[112]
Id.
[113]
Id. (citing 42 U.S.C. § 6903(27)).
[114]
Id. at 1051 (internal citations omitted).
[115]
Id. at 1056.
[116]
Id. (quoting AMC I, 824 F.2d 1177, 1193 (D.C. Cir.
1987)).
[117]
Id. at 1054-56.
[118] Revisions
to the Definition of Solid Waste, 68 Fed.Reg. 61558, 61563 (proposed
Oct. 28, 2003).
[119] Comment
from ETC, supra note 67, at 9.
[120] 906 F.2d
729, 741 (D.C. Cir. 1990).
[121]907 F.2d
1179, 1186 (D.C. Cir. 1990).
[122] 216 F.3d
50, 57 (D.C. Cir. 2000).
[123]
Id.
[124]
Id. at 58.
[125] 68 Fed.
Reg. at 61563.
[126]
Id.
[127]
Id. at 61560.
[128]
Id.
[129]
Id.
[130]
Id.
[131]
Id. at 61564.
[132]
Id. (quoting 40 C.F.R. § 261.2(c)(3)).
[133]
Id. at 61565.
[134]
Id.
[135]
Id.
[136]
Id.
[137]
Id.
[138]
Id.
[139]
Id.
[140]
Id. at 61565-66.
[141]
Id.
[142]
Id.
[143]
Id.
[144]
Id. NAICS is a new industry classification system that has
replaced the Standard Industrial Classification (SIC) system (most
recently updated in 1987) that has traditionally been used by government
agencies for collecting statistical data and for other administrative
and regulatory purposes. On April 9, 1997, OMB published a Federal
Register Notice of final decision (62 Fed. Reg.17288) to adopt the NAICS
for the United States. NAICS are the most widely-recognized existing
industry classification system in the United States.
[145]
Id.
[146]
Id. In the past, EPA has used the Standard Industrial
Classification (SIC) system (predecessor to the NAICS) to implement
parts of RCRA Subtitle C. Id.
[147]
Id. at 61568(citing 62 Fed. Reg. 17289).
[148] This
aspect of NAICS (and its predecessor SIC) is not new. There are already
EPA regulations where certain facility owner/operators need to identify
their SIC category (e.g., for determining the applicability of the Toxic
Chemical Release Reporting/Community Right-To-Know requirements; see 40
CFR 372.22); or that refer to the SIC categories (e.g., RCRA regulations
that rely in part on SIC codes to delineate the scope of certain
existing industry-specific hazardous waste listings and exclusions); or
that require SIC classification information as part of required
reporting for large quantity hazardous waste generators and RCRA permit
applicants). EPA notes that is it not practical to review and make
determinations for all of the individual facilities potentially affected
by the proposal.68 Fed. Reg. at 61568.
[149]
Id. at 61569. Under the NAICS classification hierarchy, the
first two digits (of the 6-digit code) designate the Sector, the third
digit designates the Sub-sector, the fourth digit designates the
Industry Group, the fifth digit represents the NAICS Industry (the most
detailed level for making data comparisons across the U.S., Mexico, and
Canada), and the sixth digit designates individual country-level
national industries. Id.at 61568.
[150]
Id.
[151]
Id. at 61569-70.
[152]
Id. at 61570.
[153]
Id.
[154]
Id.
[155]
Id. at 61575.
[156]
Id.
[157]
Id.
[158]
Id.
[159]
Id.
[160] 40 C.F.R.
§ 261.1(c)(8).
[161]
Id. at 61575-76. EPA notes that this provision already applies
to secondary materials not otherwise considered to be wastes when
recycled, such as materials used as ingredients or commercial product
substitutes, materials that are recycled in a closed-loop production
process, or unlisted sludges and byproducts being reclaimed.
Id.
[162]
Id.
[163]
Id.
[164]Id. at 61575. For most types of
recycling that are excluded from regulation under RCRA, the existing
speculative accumulation provisions serve to define the point at which
potentially recyclable secondary materials nevertheless become solid and
hazardous wastes. Id.
[165]
Id.
[166]
Id.
[167]
Id. at 61577. The intent of the proposed notification
requirement is to provide basic information to regulatory agencies as to
who would be managing hazardous secondary materials under the terms of
today's exclusion, and the types of materials being recycled. This
notice requirement would only apply to generators of secondary materials
that have previously been regulated. EPA notes that, with few
exceptions, the current regulations do not require generators of
excluded materials to notify EPA or authorized state agencies. Requiring
these generators to submit one-time notices once they become subject to
the new 40 CFR 261.2(g) exclusion would in effect be a more stringent
requirement. Id. at 61577-78.
[168]
Id. at 61581.
[169]
Id.
[170]
Id.
[171]
Id.
[172]
Id.
[173]
Id. However, there are concerns that arranger liability under
Superfund will be vigorously contested and litigated under the proposed
rule. Comment from ETC, supra note 67, at 42.
[174]
Id.
[175]
Id. at61558.
[176]
Id. at 61592.
[177]
Id.
[178]
Id.
[179]
Id.
[180]
Id.
[181]
Id.
[182]
Comment from ETC, supra note 67, at 5.
[183]
Id. at 10. Comment from Sierra Club, to OSWER Docket (Feb. 25,
2004)(at http://docket.epa.gov/edkpub/index.jsp, Docket ID No.
RCRA-2002-0031).
[184] 67 Feg.
Reg. 11251 (Mar. 13, 2002).
[185] API
II, 216 F.3d 50, 57 (D.C. Cir. 2000).
[186] AMC
I, 824 F.2d 1177 (D.C. Cir. 1987).
[187] Comment
from ETC, supra note 67, at 5.
[188] 824 F.2d
at 1181.
[189] Comment
from ETC, supra note 67, at 5 (emphasis added).
[190]
Id. (emphasis added).
[191] 208 F.3d
at 1051 (emphasis added).
[192] Comment
from ETC, supra note 67, at 5 (emphasis added).
[193]
Id. at 10.
[194] 906 F.2d
729, 741 (D.C. Cir. 1990).
[195] 208 F.3d
at 1056.
[196]
See 208 F.3d at 1051.
[197] Comment
from ETC, supra note 67, at 10.
[198] 824 F.2d
at 1183 n.6; 208 F.3d at 1049.
[199] 208 F.3d
at 1049.
[200] 824 F.2d
at 1183.
[201] 467
U.S. 837 (1984).
[202]
Id. at 842-43.
[203]
Id. at 843-44.
[204]
Id.
[205]
Natural Resources Defense Council v. EPA, 902 F.2d 962, 968,
(D.C.Cir.1990) (quoting Natural Resources Defense Council v. Thomas, 805
F.2d 410, 432 (D.C.Cir.1986)).
[206] Motor
Vehicle Mfrs. Ass'n v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co., 463 U.S. 29, 43,
(1983).
[207] 58
Fed. Reg. 51735 (Oct. 4, 1993).
[208] Comment
from ETC, supra note 67, at 5.
[209] 42 U.S.C.
§ 6902.
[210] 68 Fed.
Reg. 61561-62.
[211] 68 Fed.
Reg. 61562 (citing 48 Fed. Reg. 14474).
[212] 68 Fed.
Reg. 61558.
[213]
See Comment from ETC, supra note 67, at 5; Comment
from Sierra Club, supra note 183; Comment from North Carolina,
to OSWER Docket (Feb. 25, 2004)(at
http://docket.epa.gov/edkpub/index.jsp, Docket ID No. RCRA-2002-0031);
Comment from Kentucky, to OSWER Docket 4 (Feb. 25, 2004)(at
http://docket.epa.gov/edkpub/index.jsp, Docket ID No.
RCRA-2002-0031).
[214] Comment
from North Carolina, supra note 213, at 2.
[215]
Id.
[216]
Id.
[217]
Id.
[218]
Id.
[219]
Id.
[220] 68 Fed.
Reg. at 61581.
[221] Comment
from ETC, supra note 67, at 30-32.
[222]
Id.
[223]
Id.
[224] 68 Fed.
Reg. at 61568.
[225] 42 U.S.C.
§ 6902; 68 Fed. Reg. 61560.
[226] 68 Fed.
Reg. at 61575.
[227] Comment
from ETC, supra note 67, at 25.
[228] Fagan
Interview supra note 1.
[229]
Id.
[230] 68 Fed.
Reg. at 61560.
Environmental
Law Section