Arlene Q. Stevens, et al. v. Prettyman Manor Mobile Home Park Wastewater Treatment
Plant, No. 487, September Term, 2017. Opinion filed on June 27, 2018, by Berger, J.


ENVIRONMENTAL LAW - DISCHARGE PERMITS - NOTICE AND COMMENT

We defer to MDE’s reasonable interpretation of an ambiguous term in a statute that it
administers.

ENVIRONMENTAL LAW - DISCHARGE PERMITS - NOTICE AND COMMENT

The term “application” in Env’t Law § 1-603 and Env’t Law § 9-324 is ambiguous as
applied to a revised application.

ENVIRONMENTAL LAW - DISCHARGE PERMITS - NOTICE AND COMMENT

MDE reasonably interpreted the term “application” in Env’t Law § 1-603 and Env’t Law
§ 9-324 as encompassing an initial application and subsequent revisions “which do not
substantially change the permitted activity.”

ENVIRONMENTAL LAW - DISCHARGE PERMITS - NOTICE AND COMMENT

MDE was not required to publish a second notice of application after the appellant
submitted a revised application where the changes were not substantial and did not prevent
the public from participating in the permitting process.

ENVIRONMENTAL LAW - DISCHARGE PERMITS - JUDICIAL REVIEW

Appellants were barred from challenging the total suspended solids limit in an NPDES
permit on appeal because they failed to raise the issue in the comment period.
Circuit Court for Caroline County
Case No. 05-C-15-018616

                                                   REPORTED

                                      IN THE COURT OF SPECIAL APPEALS

                                                OF MARYLAND


                                                     No. 487

                                              September Term, 2017

                                    ______________________________________

                                          ARLENE Q. STEVENS, ET AL.

                                                        v.

                                      PRETTYMAN MANOR MOBILE HOME
                                       PARK WASTEWATER TREATMENT
                                                    PLANT
                                    ______________________________________

                                         Berger,
                                         Shaw Geter,
                                         Sharer, J. Frederick
                                          (Senior Judge, Specially Assigned),

                                                      JJ.
                                    ______________________________________

                                              Opinion by Berger, J.
                                    ______________________________________

                                         Filed: June 27, 2018
       This case is an appeal from a judgment entered on judicial review of an

administrative decision. In 2015, the Maryland Department of the Environment (“MDE”)

issued a permit (“the Permit”) to Prettyman Manor, LLC (“Prettyman”), appellee, to

discharge treated wastewater into Little Creek, a tributary of the Choptank River. Arlene

Q. Stevens and Mildred Quidas (collectively, “Stevens and Quidas”), appellants, filed a

petition for judicial review in the Circuit Court for Caroline County. The circuit court

affirmed MDE’s decision to issue the discharge permit.

       On appeal, Stevens and Quidas present two questions for our review, which we have

rephrased as follows:

              1. Whether MDE failed to publish proper notice of
                 Prettyman’s application before issuing the Permit.

              2. Whether the Permit allows an unlawful discharge of total
                 suspended solids into an impaired water in violation of state
                 and federal water quality standards.1

For the reasons explained herein, we shall affirm the judgment of the circuit court.




       1
         In an appeal from a judgment entered on judicial review of an administrative
decision, we review “the agency’s decision, and not that of the circuit court.” Assateague
Coastkeeper v. Maryland Dep’t of Env’t, 200 Md. App. 665, 691 (2011). Accordingly, we
have reframed the questions presented by Stevens and Quidas to focus on MDE’s permit
decision, rather than any alleged error on the part of the circuit court.
                  FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

I.     Regulatory Background

       A.      The Clean Water Act and the National Pollutant Discharge Elimination
               System

       Congress enacted the Clean Water Act (“the CWA”) in 1972 to “restore and

maintain the chemical, physical, and biological integrity of the Nation’s waters.” 33 U.S.C.

§ 1251(a). To this end, the CWA prohibits the discharge of any pollutant to waters of the

United States without a permit issued through the National Pollutant Discharge Elimination

System (“NPDES”). 33 U.S.C. § 1251(a)(1); 33 U.S.C. § 1311(a); 33 U.S.C. § 1342(a)(1).

The CWA requires that every NPDES permit contain

               (1) effluent limitations that reflect the pollution reduction
               achievable by using technologically practicable controls and

               (2) any more stringent pollutant release limitations necessary
               for the waterway receiving the pollutant to meet “water quality
               standards.”

Piney See Run Preservation Ass’n v. Cnty. Commissioners of Carroll Cnty., 268 F.3d 255,

266 (4th Cir. 2001) (quoting Am. Paper Inst., Inc. v. U.S. E.P.A., 996 F.2d 346, 349 (D.C.

Cir. 1993)).

       Pursuant to 33 U.S.C. § 1313(d), states are required to identify all waters within

their respective boundaries where technology-based effluent limitations are inadequate to

ensure that water quality standards are being met. For each impaired water, a state must

establish a total maximum daily load (“TMDL”) for every pollutant that is preventing the

water from meeting water quality standards. 33 U.S.C. § 1313(d). Under 40 C.F.R. §

122.4(i), no permit may be issued “[t]o a new source or a new discharger, if the discharge


                                             2
from its construction or operation will cause or contribute to the violation of water quality

standards.” When an applicant for an NPDES permit proposes to discharge a pollutant into

an impaired body of water subject to a TMDL for that pollutant, the applicant must

demonstrate that

              (1) [t]here are sufficient remaining pollutant load allocations to
              allow for the discharge; and

              (2) [t]he existing dischargers into that segment are subject to
              compliance schedules designed to bring the segment into
              compliance with applicable water quality standards. The
              Director may waive the submission of information by the new
              source or new discharger required by paragraph (i) of this
              section if the Director determines that the Director already has
              adequate information to evaluate the request.

40 C.F.R. § 122.4(i).

       MDE is authorized to issue NPDES permits for discharges in Maryland. Maryland

Code (1986, 2014 Repl. Vol., 2016 Supp.), § 9-324 of the Environment Article (“Env’t”);

see also Piney See Run Preservation Ass’n, supra, 268 F.3d at 266 (noting that “EPA has

authorized approximately forty states, including Maryland, to issue NPDES permits”).

When issuing NPDES permits for wastewater treatment plants (“WWTPs”), MDE must

ensure that the proposed designs comply with technology-based effluent limitations as well

as specific limitations for total suspended solids (“TSS”), biochemical oxygen demand,

and pH levels. 40 C.F.R. § 133.100 et seq. Pursuant to 40 C.F.R. § 122.4(i), MDE must

also ensure that a new discharge to an impaired body of water does not violate applicable

TMDLs.




                                              3
      B.     Notice and Comment Procedures for NPDES Permits

      MDE is required to publish notice for each application for an NPDES permit. Env’t

§ 1-603; Env’t § 9-324. The notice of application must include the following information:

             a) The name of the applicant;

             b) The type of permit applied for;

             c) The type of proposed discharge;

             d) The volume of the proposed discharge;

             e) The location of the proposed discharge;

             f) A statement that persons may review and copy the
                application or related material and the procedure for doing
                so;

             g) A statement that the Department shall hold an
                informational meeting, if a person makes a written request
                within 10 working days of the publication of the notice, and
                the procedure for requesting an informational meeting; and

             h) Other information the Department determines is necessary
                for adequate public notification.

COMAR 26.08.04.01-1(D).

      Upon receiving an application for an NPDES permit, MDE “shall prepare a tentative

determination[.]” Env’t § 1-604; COMAR 26.08.04.01-2(B)(1)(a). MDE must then

publish -- or require the applicant to publish -- a notice of tentative determination that

includes the following information:




                                             4
              (i)     The information in §B(1)(a) of this regulation;2

              (ii)    The procedures for a person to review and copy the
                      tentative determination, draft permit, or related
                      material;

              (iii)   A statement allowing 30 days for public comment to the
                      notice of tentative determination before the issuance of
                      the final determination and the procedures for offering
                      public comment;

              (iv)    A statement that the Department shall hold a public
                      hearing when a written request for a public hearing is
                      made within 20 days of the publication of the notice of
                      tentative determination and the procedure for making a
                      written request for a public hearing; and

              (v)     Other information the Department considers necessary
                      to ensure adequate public notice.

COMAR 26.08.04.01-2(B)(2)(b). After the public comment period closes, MDE may

proceed to make a final determination and issue the permit. COMAR 26.08.04.01-3.

II.    Factual and Procedural Background

       Stevens and Quidas own two parcels in Preston, Maryland. One of the parcels is

located at 3740 Frazier Neck Road, while the other is located at 21355 Marsh Creek Road.

For more than fifty years, Stevens and Quidas have grown vegetables on their property

(hereinafter “Quidas Farm”) as their primary source of income. To irrigate their crops,

Stevens and Quidas draw water from a retaining pond that they constructed by diverting

water from Little Creek, a tidal tributary of the Choptank River. Maryland has identified


       2
         This information includes, inter alia, “[a] proposal to issue or not issue the permit,”
“[t]he type, volume, and location of the proposed discharge,” “[p]roposed permit
limitations and conditions,” and “[a] brief explanation of the Department’s tentative
decision.” COMAR 26.08.04.01-2(B)(1)(a).

                                               5
this segment of the Choptank River as impaired due to excess nitrogen, phosphorus, TSS,

and other pollutants.

       Directly across from Quidas Farm on Little Creek is a mobile home park

(“Prettyman Manor”) owned and operated by Prettyman. Located at 21269 Dover Bridge

Road, Prettyman Manor has been home to dozens of families for decades. Over time, the

sewage generated by the residents of Prettyman Manor has overwhelmed the park’s aging

septic tanks and drainfields. Eventually, MDE initiated an enforcement action, forcing

Prettyman to pump and haul the sewage from the failing on-site disposal systems to a

treatment facility in Dorchester County. Thereafter, Prettyman decided to build an on-site

WWTP to service Prettyman Manor.

       A.     Prettyman’s 2012 Application for a Discharge Permit

       In April of 2012, Prettyman submitted an application for a discharge permit to

discharge treated wastewater from the proposed WWTP into Little Creek (“the 2012

Application”). According to the 2012 Application, the proposed facility would treat up to

40,000 gallons per day using extended aeration technology. MDE published notice of the

2012 Application in The Times Record on August 8, 2012 and August 15, 2012 (“the 2012

Notice”). MDE did not receive any requests for an informational meeting.

       MDE quickly determined that the 2012 Application was not consistent with the

Caroline County Water and Sewer Plan. On August 24, 2012, MDE gave Prettyman an

update on the status of the 2012 Application:

              In reviewing your discharge permit application for the
              proposed Prettyman Manor WWTP, we have found that your
              proposal is not consistent with the Caroline County Water and


                                            6
              Sewer Plan. We cannot issue a wastewater surface water
              discharge permit until the proposed facility is consistent with
              the county Plan and have suspended further processing of your
              application. However, to assist you in making a determination
              whether to proceed with the project, we will develop planning
              effluent limitations which are needed to estimate potential
              costs for the project.

In October of 2012, MDE helped Prettyman determine the best point of discharge for the

proposed WWTP.       In December of 2013, MDE met with Prettyman to discuss, among

other things, the possibility of amending the Caroline County Water and Sewer Plan.

       B.     Prettyman’s 2014 Revised Application for a Discharge Permit

       On July 21, 2014, Prettyman submitted a revised permit application (“the 2014

Revision”). In the 2014 Revision, Prettyman proposed using a membrane bioreactor rather

than extended aeration technology in order to meet MDE’s enhanced nutrient removal

standards. The new design also lowered the treatment capacity from 40,000 gallons per

day to 20,000 gallons per day. Additionally, Prettyman changed the outfall location from

the southwest corner of Prettyman Manor to the southeast portion of the property. MDE

processed the 2012 Revision under the same NPDES number as the 2014 Application and

did not publish a new notice of application.

       Because Little Creek was impaired by excess amounts of phosphorus and nitrogen,

MDE required Prettyman to secure offsets in the form of total nitrogen (“TN”) credits and

total phosphorus (“TP”) credits. To obtain the necessary TN credits, Prettyman had to

eliminate eighty on-site disposal systems. To obtain the necessary TP credits, Prettyman

entered into a nutrient credit transfer agreement with the Town of Denton.




                                               7
       On February 5, 2015, MDE provided Prettyman with effluent limits for the purpose

of planning the wastewater treatment system. That same month, the Caroline County

Commissioners amended the Caroline County Water and Sewer Plan to authorize the

treatment technology and discharge volume proposed in the 2014 Revision. On July 28,

2015, MDE notified Prettyman and other interested parties of its tentative determination to

issue the Permit.

       C.     Tentative Determination, Comment Period, and Final Determination

       MDE published a notice of tentative determination in The Times Record on

August 5, 2015 and August 12, 2015. The notice included the following information:

(1) the location of the WWTP; (2) the water that would receive the discharge; (3) the

effluent limits; (4) details of the nutrient credit agreement with the Town of Denton; (5) the

deadline for requesting a public hearing; and (6) the deadline for submitting comments,

which was September 4, 2015.

       There was no request for a public hearing. On September 2, 2015, Stevens and

Quidas sent a letter to MDE expressing their concern about the potential environmental

impact of the project and requesting a meeting. MDE met with Stevens and Quidas on

September 15, 2015. According to a letter from MDE to Prettyman’s contractor, “[t]he

neighboring farmers had concerns about potential bacterial contamination of their produce

and they requested a few more days to take our proposed effluent bacterial limit and run it

by their inspector before sending something in writing.”

       On September 27, 2015, Stevens and Quidas sent a letter to MDE with additional

questions and comments. MDE responded on October 21, 2015 with a detailed letter


                                              8
addressing each issue raised by Stevens and Quidas. Regarding the effect of the proposed

WWTP on the Quidas Farm irrigation pond, MDE wrote the following:

             In addition, information of stage of the stream and wet trace
             observed during our site visit, and a Digital Elevation Model
             (DEM) (USGS, 2009) of Little Creek were analyzed to
             determine the tidal boundary of the Creek, and the runoff
             drainage pattern for the landscape above the proposed outfall
             location. The DEM indicates the tidal boundary is 670 ft
             upstream of the point of discharge. Given your property is 850
             ft upstream from the proposed outfall location and the stream
             bed elevation beside your property is 3 ft above the stream bed
             elevation adjacent to the proposed outfall location, there is no
             reasonable potential the irrigation pond will be affected by the
             proposed discharge under normal circumstances (water profile
             modeled by HEC-RAS using DEM data, attachment pages 5-
             6).

MDE provided Prettyman with the final discharge permit on October 27, 2015 and

published notice of its final determination in The Times Record on November 11, 2015 and

November 18, 2015. On December 11, 2015, Stevens and Quidas filed a petition for

judicial review in the Circuit Court for Caroline County.

      D.     Judicial Review

      The circuit court held a hearing on December 12, 2016. At the hearing, Stevens and

Quidas argued that the Permit was invalid because MDE failed to publish notice of the

2014 Revision. Stevens and Quidas further argued that the Permit unlawfully allowed

Prettyman to discharge TSS into a body of water already impaired by excess TSS levels

without requiring any offsets. MDE argued that the 2012 Notice was sufficient and that

Stevens and Quidas had waived any objection to the TSS limit specified in the Permit. In

a memorandum opinion and order issued on March 22, 2017, the circuit court found that



                                            9
MDE had “acted properly within its authority and did not err by granting the discharge

permit in this matter[.]” Stevens and Quidas timely appealed.

                                      DISCUSSION

I.     Standard of Review

       In reviewing a decision by MDE to issue a discharge permit, we apply the

substantial evidence and arbitrary and capricious standards of review. Maryland Dep’t of

Env’t v. Anacostia Riverkeeper, 447 Md. 88, 118-19 (2016), reconsideration denied (May

20, 2016). In Assateague Coastkeeper v. Maryland Dep’t of Env’t, we explained the

substantial evidence standard as follows:

              In applying the substantial evidence test, a reviewing court
              decides “whether a reasoning mind reasonably could have
              reached the factual conclusion the agency reached.” A
              reviewing court should defer to the agency’s fact-finding and
              drawing of inferences if they are supported by the record. A
              reviewing court “must review the agency’s decision in the light
              most favorable to it; . . . the agency’s decision is prima facie
              correct and presumed valid, and . . . it is the agency’s province
              to resolve conflicting evidence” and to draw inferences from
              that evidence.

200 Md. App. 665, 690 (2011) (quoting Najafi v. Motor Vehicle Admin., 418 Md. 164, 173-

74 (2011)).

       Under the arbitrary and capricious standard of review, we consider whether the

agency “relied on factors which Congress has not intended it to consider, entirely failed to

consider an important aspect of the problem, offered an explanation for its decision that

runs counter to the evidence before the agency, or is so implausible that it could not be

ascribed to a difference in view or the product of agency expertise.”             Anacostia



                                             10
Riverkeeper, supra, 447 Md. at 121 (quoting Nat. Res. Def. Council v. U.S. E.P.A., 808

F.3d 556, 569 (2d Cir. 2015))

       “When an agency resolves a question of law, however, our review is less

deferential.” HNS Dev., LLC v. People’s Counsel for Baltimore Cty., 425 Md. 436, 449

(2012)). “We refuse to uphold an agency decision ‘premised solely upon an erroneous

conclusion of law.’” Anacostia Riverkeeper, supra, 447 Md. at 122 (quoting HNS Dev.,

LLC, supra, 425 Md. at 449). Nevertheless, we give deference to an administrative

agency’s interpretation of the law in certain cases:

              Despite some unfortunate language that has crept into a few of
              our opinions, a court’s task on review is not to “substitute its
              judgment for the expertise of those persons who constitute the
              administrative agency.” Even with regard to some legal issues,
              a degree of deference should often be accorded the position of
              the administrative agency. Thus, an administrative agency’s
              interpretation and application of the statute which the agency
              administers should ordinarily be given considerable weight by
              reviewing courts. Furthermore, the expertise of the agency in
              its own field should be respected.

Assateague Coastkeeper, supra, 200 Md. App. at 690-91 (quoting Najafi v. Motor Vehicle

Admin., 418 Md. 164, 173-74 (2011)).

II.    MDE Was Not Required to Publish Notice of the 2014 Revision

       MDE acknowledges that it did not publish notice upon receiving Prettyman’s 2014

Revision. MDE argues, however, that the 2014 Revision was not a new application, but

merely a revised version of the 2012 Application. Stevens and Quidas, on the other hand,

assert that the 2014 Revision and the 2012 Application were “materially different” and




                                             11
that, consequently, each plan required a separate public notice.3 The question before us,

therefore, is whether the 2014 Revision and the 2012 Application constitute a single

“application” under Maryland law. We hold that MDE’s interpretation of the notice

requirement is both reasonable and consistent with the CWA’s goal of public participation.

       A.     MDE’s Interpretation of the Notice Requirement Is Reasonable

       MDE argues that “the regulation does not require the Department to continually

provide updates about revisions to a permit application, which do not substantially change

the permitted activity, prior to the Department’s issuance of a tentative determination.”

Although the underlying statutes and regulations are ambiguous on this point, we will not

substitute our judgment for MDE’s reasonable interpretation of the notice requirement.

       Under Env’t § 1-603, MDE “shall cause to be published notice of applications for

[discharge] permits.” Likewise, Env’t § 9-324 provides that MDE “shall give public notice

of each application for a discharge permit as required by Title 1, Subtitle 6 of this article,

and by making available to the public appropriate documents, permit applications,

supporting material, plans, and other relevant information.”         “After the Department

receives the discharge permit application, the Department shall prepare a tentative

determination[.]” Env’t § 1-604; COMAR 26.08.04.01-2(B)(1)(a). Neither the statutes

nor the regulations address whether a revised application should be treated as a new



       3
        Stevens and Quidas further argue that, prior to issuing the Permit, MDE allowed
Prettyman to construct a pipe that would result in a different outfall location. Assuming
arguendo that the actual outfall location differs from the location specified in the Permit,
such a discrepancy would be an issue of compliance rather than grounds for challenging
the Permit.

                                             12
application for the purposes of the notice requirement. We must turn, therefore, to statutory

construction.

       The “cardinal rule” of statutory construction is “to ascertain and effectuate the intent

of the Legislature.” Assateague Coastkeeper, supra, 200 Md. App. at 708-09 (quoting

Headen v. Motor Vehicle Admin., 418 Md. 559, 569 (2011)). “If, after considering the

plain language in its ordinary and common sense meaning, two or more equally plausible

interpretations arise, however, then the general purpose, legislative history, and language

of the act as a whole is examined in an effort to clarify the ambiguity.” Id. at 709 (quoting

Wal Mart Stores, Inc. v. Holmes, 416 Md. 346, 359 (2010)). “When applying these rules

of statutory construction, we give deference to an administrative agency’s interpretation of

the statutes it administers.” Headen v. Motor Vehicle Admin., 418 Md. 559, 570 (2011).

       Our decision in Assateague Coastkeeper v. Maryland Dep’t of Env’t clarifies the

proper role of agency deference in matters of statutory construction. In that case, an

environmental group challenged an NPDES permit for animal feeding operations in

Maryland. Assateague Coastkeeper, supra, 200 Md. App. at 680-83. The basis of the

challenge was that the permit violated 40 CFR § 122.4(i), which prohibits the issuance of

a permit “[t]o a new source or a new discharger, if the discharge from its construction or

operation will cause or contribute to the violation of water quality standards.” Id. at 704-

05. MDE argued that a net reduction in the pollutant due to offsets should be considered

in determining whether a new discharger “causes or contributes” to a violation of water

quality standards. Id. at 706. In affirming MDE’s decision to issue the permit, we

determined that the phrase “cause or contribute” was “susceptible to two or more equally


                                              13
plausible interpretations.” Id. at 710 (citations and quotation marks omitted). Recognizing

that MDE is tasked with “administering federal regulations regarding water quality

standards,” we held that MDE’s construction of 40 C.F.R. § 122.4(i) was “reasonable.” Id.

at 713-14. Accordingly, we declined to “substitute our judgment for that of the agency.”

Id. at 714.

       Turning to the case at hand, the word “application” in the statutes and regulations is

ambiguous in the context of a revised application. Notably, the General Assembly left the

word undefined. In general usage, an application is a “request or petition” or “a form used

in making a request.” Application, Black’s Law Dictionary (10th ed. 2014); Application,

https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/application. According to this definition, an

“application” could plausibly encompass both an initial request and subsequent revisions

to that request; just as plausibly, each subsequent revision could be considered an entirely

new “application.” We conclude, therefore, that the notice requirement as applied to

revised applications is “susceptible to two or more equally plausible interpretations.”

       Inasmuch as the notice requirement is ambiguous, we give considerable weight to

MDE’s reasonable construction of that requirement. The General Assembly has explicitly

tasked MDE with administering the NPDES permit process in Maryland, including the

notice-and-comment requirements. Env’t § 9-324; Env’t 1-601 et seq. Indeed, MDE is

uniquely situated to determine whether a particular interpretation of the notice-and-

comment requirements would be practically feasible and consistent with the agency’s

overall mission. MDE may be wary of delays that would arise if every minor revision of

an application were to reset the process to the very beginning. Each revised application, in


                                             14
turn, could lead to more revisions, and so on ad absurdum. Additionally, MDE can

reasonably expect a certain amount of flexibility in processing permits that implicate

competing interests among local communities. In the case at hand, for example, MDE had

determined that the replacement of the failing septic system was an urgent matter “for the

health and well being of the residents” of Prettyman Manor. We will defer, therefore, to

MDE’s expertise in the NPDES permit process.

       In light of MDE’s expertise, we hold that MDE’s construction of the notice

requirement is reasonable. Indeed, the parties appear to be roughly in agreement as to the

appropriate standard for determining when a new notice of application is needed.

According to MDE, a new notice of application is unnecessary if the revisions “do not

substantially change the permitted activity”; Stevens and Quidas, on the other hand, assert

that a new notice is required if the revised plan is “materially different.”       MDE’s

“substantial change” standard is consistent with Proffitt v. Rohm & Haas, in which the U.S.

Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit held that an amendment to an existing NPDES

permit requires public notice if the amendment “effects a substantial change in the terms

of the permit.” 850 F.2d 1007, 1012-13 (3d Cir. 1988).4 We hold, therefore, that MDE


       4
         Because Proffit involved an amendment to an existing permit, rather than a
revision to a pending application, it is not directly on point. EPA and state agencies may
have greater flexibility in publishing notices of application, so long as the notice of
tentative determination and subsequent comment period provide an adequate avenue of
public participation. The court in Proffitt was particularly concerned that EPA had
amended the NPDES permit without a public hearing or any opportunity for public
participation. Supra, 850 F.2d at 1012. Here, Stevens and Quidas had notice of the thirty-
day comment period, met with MDE, made comments on the 2014 Revision, and received
a detailed response.


                                            15
reasonably interpreted the term “application” in Env’t § 1-603, Env’t § 9-324, and the

related regulations as encompassing an initial application and subsequent revisions “which

do not substantially change the permitted activity.”

       B.     The Procedures Followed by MDE Were Consistent with CWA’s Overall
              Policy of Public Participation

       We must now turn to the question of whether the 2014 Revision did, in fact,

represent a substantial change to the permitted activity. In undertaking this inquiry, we are

guided by the CWA’s emphasis on public participation:

              Public participation in the development, revision, and
              enforcement of any regulation, standard, effluent limitation,
              plan, or program established by the Administrator or any State
              under this chapter shall be provided for, encouraged, and
              assisted by the Administrator and the States. The
              Administrator, in cooperation with the States, shall develop
              and publish regulations specifying minimum guidelines for
              public participation in such processes.

33 U.S.C. § 1251(e); see Anacostia Riverkeeper, supra, 447 Md. at 179 (rejecting a

procedural challenge to an NPDES permit because MDE’s actions were consistent with

33.U.S.C. § 1251(e)). We hold that the changes in the 2014 Revision were minor and they

did not prevent Stevens and Quidas from fully participating in the permitting process.

       The 2012 Notice published by MDE included the following information:

              The Department will hold an informational meeting to discuss
              any of the following discharge permit applications and the
              permit review process if a written request is received by the
              date specified below.

                                            [. . .]

              If you wish to be notified of further action concerning any of
              the permit applications listed below, please call Mr.


                                             16
                Richardson or Mr. Cheng at the above telephone number and
                request placement on the individual mailing list for that
                permit.

                                             [. . .]

                State Discharge Permit Application 12-DP-3779, NPDES
                Permit MD0071552:
                Mr. Franklin W. Prettyman, Owner, 21269 Dover Bridge, Rd.,
                Preston, MD 21655 applied for a new permit to discharge an
                average of 40,000 gallons per day of treated domestic
                wastewater from the Prettyman Manor Mobile Home Park
                Wastewater Treatment Plant located at 21269 Dover Bridge
                Rd. #6, in Preston, MD 21655 to Little Creek.
                Publication Dates: August 8 and 15, 2012
                Meeting Deadline: August 22, 2012

Stevens and Quidas argue that this notice was not sufficient to apprise affected residents of

the permit that was ultimately granted. We disagree.

          Although the volume and location of the discharge changed somewhat between

2012 and 2014, these changes fell within the scope of the 2012 Notice. The effluent

discharge in the 2014 Revision was actually decreased from 40,000 gallons per day to

20,000 gallons per day. Given that nearby residents were already on notice of a proposed

discharge of up to 40,000 gallons per day, they could not have been surprised that the

Permit allowed a discharge within that range. More broadly, the change in the discharge

volume did not result in an increased environmental impact that would warrant additional

notice.

          Stevens and Quidas argue that the “location of the outfall structure as proposed in

2012 was materially different than the location selected, and ultimately permitted, in the

2014 application.” Notably, the 2012 Notice stated only that the proposed facility would



                                              17
discharge effluents “to Little Creek.” Although the precise point of discharge was moved

to a different part of Prettyman’s property, the body of water receiving the discharge --

Little Creek -- remained the same.5 Further, there is nothing in the record to suggest that

the new point of discharge would significantly change the environmental impact of the

permitted activity.6 We, therefore, conclude that the change in discharge location did not

deprive the public of a fair opportunity to participate in the process.

       Stevens and Quidas claim that the 2012 Application was “wholly abandoned.” The

record shows, however, that MDE did not reject the 2012 Application. Instead, MDE

informed Prettyman that it would not issue a permit “until the proposed facility is consistent

with the county Plan[.]” Although MDE “suspended further processing” of the 2012

Application, MDE continued to work with Prettyman in 2012 and 2013 to bring the plan

into compliance.

       Stevens and Quidas stress that “three (3) full years” passed between 2012 Notice

and the notice of tentative determination in 2015. While this is true, the 2012 Notice made


       5
         It is likely that an additional public notice for the 2014 Revision would have listed
“Little Creek” as the location of discharge. Stevens and Quidas contend that a notice of
application must include the “point of discharge,” which is defined as “that location in or
adjacent to a body of water at which any liquid, solid, or gaseous substances are discharged
or deposited.” COMAR 26.08.01.01(B)(64). Significantly, COMAR 26.08.04.01-1(D)
refers to “the location of the discharge” rather than “point of discharge.” This distinction
is reflected in the format of the 2012 Notice, which listed the general body of water that
would receive the discharge, rather than the exact coordinates.
       6
        Stevens and Quidas assert that the new point of discharge is “far worse” than the
old one. In both the 2012 Application and the 2014 Revision, however, the point of
discharge is downstream of the Quidas Farm irrigation pond. MDE found that “there is no
reasonable potential the irrigation pond will be affected by the proposed discharge under
normal circumstances.”

                                             18
it clear that members of the public could ask “to be notified of further action” concerning

the application. Critically, Stevens and Quidas did not sign up for these notifications. Had

they done so, MDE would likely have alerted them to the 2014 Revision. Further, MDE

did not receive any request for an informational meeting after it published the 2012 Notice.

If residents were not alarmed by the 2012 Application, it is unclear why they would

suddenly be spurred into action by the 2014 Revision, which drastically cut the effluent

discharge.

       Although MDE did not publish notice of the 2014 Revision, the 2012 Notice and

the notice of tentative determination published in 2014 were sufficient to place Stevens and

Quidas on notice of the proposed discharge. Indeed, MDE went beyond the statutory

requirements in ensuring that Stevens and Quidas had an opportunity to participate. MDE

held an informational meeting with Stevens and Quidas even though their request was

untimely.7 MDE further accommodated Stevens and Quidas by responding to their

September 27, 2015 letter, even though, as we explain infra, the comment period closed on

September 4, 2015. More broadly, the outcome of this particular proceeding -- a permit

with more stringent standards than those proposed in the initial application -- is the

expected and desired outcome of the public comment process. Accordingly, we reject

Stevens’s and Quidas’s contention that such an outcome is proof that the process was

flawed. We hold, therefore, that MDE “provided for, encouraged, and assisted” public

participation as Congress envisioned. 33 U.S.C. § 1251(e).


       7
         An informational meeting must be requested within ten working days of the notice
of application. COMAR 26.08.04.01-2(A).

                                            19
III.   Stevens and Quidas Waived Any Objection to the TSS Limits in the Permit

       Stevens and Quidas argue that the TSS effluent limitation established in the Permit

violates 40 C.F.R. § 122.4(i), which prohibits the issuance of a permit “[t]o a new source

or a new discharger, if the discharge from its construction or operation will cause or

contribute to the violation of water quality standards.” MDE responds that “[p]etitioners

are prohibited from raising this issue on appeal . . . because they failed to raise it during

the public comment period.” We agree with MDE.

       Judicial review of a permit decision by MDE is “on the administrative record and

limited to objections raised during the public comment” unless one of the following

exceptions applies:

              (i)     The objections were not reasonably ascertainable
                      during the comment period; or

              (ii)    Grounds for the objections arose after the comment
                      period.

Env’t § 1-601. The comment period extends for thirty days after the first notice of tentative

determination is published. Env’t § 1-604. This limitation on judicial review is consistent

with the rule that “a court ordinarily may not pass upon issues presented to it for the first

time on judicial review and that are not encompassed in the final decision of the

administrative agency.” Zakwieia v. Baltimore Cty., Bd. of Educ., 231 Md. App. 644, 649-

50 (2017), cert. denied sub nom. Zakwieia v. Baltimore Co. Bd. of Educ., 454 Md. 676

(2017).

       In the present case, MDE published its first notice of tentative determination on

August 5, 2015. The comment period ended, consequently, on September 4, 2015. The


                                             20
only comment made by Stevens and Quidas during this period was a letter, dated

September 2, 2015, in which Stevens and Quidas expressed some general concerns and

requested a meeting with MDE:

              My family and I are property owners on Little Creek in
              Caroline County and use it as a water source for irrigation of
              vegetables and other agricultural products. We have concerns
              with effects the proposed influx of treated wastewater and
              nutrients may have in the future. We believe the potential
              exists for detrimental environmental impact. As farmers and
              family members who are income dependent on growing crops,
              including some for human consumption, a major concern is
              possible economic consequences this proposal may have on
              our business.

                                           [. . .]

              I would appreciate meeting with you regarding this matter.
              Please contact me at the above cell phone number at your
              earlier convenience.

Although Stevens and Quidas followed up with specific objections in a letter dated

September 27, 2015, these objections were not made within the comment period.

       The September 2, 2015 letter was not sufficient to put MDE on notice that Stevens

and Quidas would object to the TSS limit specified in the Permit. Critically, the September

2, 2015 letter does not raise any concrete objections to the proposed WWTP. Although

Stevens and Quidas referred generally to “the proposed influx of treated wastewater and

nutrients,” their concerns were couched in broad and indefinite language. Stevens and

Quidas were worried about “effects the proposed influx . . . may have in the future,” the

“potential . . . for detrimental impact,” and “possible economic consequences” (emphasis

added). The September 2, 2015 letter evinced no particular knowledge of the details of



                                            21
either the 2012 Application or the 2014 Revision. The lack of detail and concluding request

for a meeting indicate that, as of September 2, 2015, Stevens and Quidas were primarily

seeking to learn more about the project, rather than to lodge a substantive objection

grounded in the specifics of the project.

       Because the TSS issue was not properly raised in the comment period, we do not

have a complete administrative record that would support a review on the merits. MDE

claims that offsets for TSS levels were unnecessary in light of the expected overall

reduction of TSS levels under Maryland’s Phase II Watershed Implementation Plan for the

Chesapeake Bay TMDL (“WIP II”). Stevens and Quidas correctly point out that WIP II is

not part of the record. The dispute over WIP II only underscores our conclusion that the

record concerning the TSS levels was not properly developed prior to judicial review.

       The record clearly demonstrates that MDE did not merely “rubber stamp”

Prettyman’s application; instead, MDE worked with Prettyman for three years to bring its

application into compliance. Among other things, MDE required Prettyman to offset the

expected levels of phosphorus and nitrogen in the WWTP discharge by eliminating eighty

on-site disposal systems and entering into a “nutrient transfer agreement” with the Town

of Denton. MDE held an informational meeting with Stevens and Quidas and provided a

detailed response to their untimely comment letter. Had Stevens and Quidas properly

raised the TSS issue, MDE would have had an opportunity to revise the Permit or, at the

very least, to explain its decision, as it did for every other objection raised by Stevens and

Quidas.




                                             22
       Stevens and Quidas argue that a neighboring farm family will not necessarily

“command the same grasp of the technical jargon employed in the Clean Water Act, State

statutes[,] and implementing regulations as only private experts, environmental attorneys,

and the agency itself would have [done].”8             Nevertheless, we cannot review an

administrative decision without a fully-developed record. The general concerns voiced by

Stevens and Quidas during the comment period were insufficient to generate such a record.

We do not fault Stevens and Quidas for failing to use “technical jargon.” Stevens and

Quidas may not, however, recast a request for an informational meeting as an all-purpose

objection preserving every issue they wish to raise.

       Stevens and Quidas argue that the procedural bar of Env’t § 1-601 does not apply

here because the TSS issue “[was] not reasonably ascertainable during the comment

period.” We disagree. As we explain supra, the 2012 Notice was sufficient to apprise

concerned residents of the discharge permit that was ultimately issued in 2014.

Furthermore, the 2014 Revision imposed the same TSS limit as the 2012 Application.

Stevens and Quidas had nearly three years to review the TSS limit, study the relevant

statutes and regulations governing TSS levels, and formulate a specific objection to the

Permit on that basis. If Stevens and Quidas had questions about the TSS limit, they could

have requested an informational meeting in 2012. If the 2014 Revision gave rise to

additional questions, Stevens and Quidas could have requested a public hearing. In short,



       8
        We note, however, that Stevens and Quidas demonstrated in their September 27,
2015 letter to MDE that they are quite capable of articulating detailed and specific
challenges to an NPDES permit application.

                                            23
Stevens and Quidas had ample opportunity to ascertain potential issues related to the TSS

limit, but they failed to do so. We hold, therefore, that the TSS issue has been waived.

       The only question preserved for our review is whether MDE was required to publish

a second notice of application for the 2014 Revision. For the foregoing reasons, we hold

that MDE reasonably dispensed with the second notice of application, and that MDE’s

actions were consistent with the need to ensure public participation in the NPDES permit

process. We, therefore, affirm the judgment of the circuit court.

                                          JUDGMENT OF THE CIRCUIT COURT
                                          FOR CAROLINE COUNTY AFFIRMED.
                                          COSTS TO BE PAID BY APPELLANTS.




                                            24
