                                                                                FILED
                                                                    United States Court of Appeals
                                     PUBLISH                                Tenth Circuit

                     UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS                         May 14, 2018

                                                                         Elisabeth A. Shumaker
                            FOR THE TENTH CIRCUIT                            Clerk of Court
                        _________________________________

DIRTY BOYZ SANITATION SERVICE,
INC.,

     Plaintiff - Appellant,

v.                                                         No. 16-8123

CITY OF RAWLINS, WYOMING,

     Defendant - Appellee.
                     _________________________________

                    Appeal from the United States District Court
                            for the District of Wyoming
                         (D.C. No. 2:16-CV-00005-NDF)
                      _________________________________

James B. Harris, Thompson & Knight LLP, Dallas, Texas (Stephen F. Fink, Thompson &
Knight LLP, Dallas, Texas, and Bruce T. Moats, Law Office of Bruce T. Moats, P.C.,
Cheyenne, Wyoming, with him on the briefs) for Plaintiff-Appellant.

Richard Rideout, Law Offices of Richard Rideout, PC, Cheyenne, Wyoming, for
Defendant-Appellee.
                      _________________________________

Before LUCERO, O’BRIEN, and PHILLIPS, Circuit Judges.
                  _________________________________

PHILLIPS, Circuit Judge.
                     _________________________________

      This case concerns an agreement between the City of Rawlins, Wyoming

(Rawlins), and Dirty Boyz Sanitation Services (Dirty Boyz) for local garbage

collection and disposal. About two years after the parties executed the agreement, the
State of Wyoming required Rawlins to close its landfill. Soon after, Rawlins opened a

transfer station to process garbage for transport to a landfill elsewhere. Later,

Rawlins adopted a flow-control ordinance requiring that all locally licensed garbage

haulers take collected garbage to Rawlins’s transfer station. Rawlins, Wyo., Code

§ 8.08.030 (2016). Dirty Boyz argues that the ordinance violates the Contract Clause

of the United States Constitution, U.S. Const. art. I, § 10, cl. 1, and is preempted by

the Federal Aviation Administration and Authorization Act (FAAAA), 49 U.S.C.

§ 14501(c)(1) (2016). The district court granted summary judgment in favor of

Rawlins. Exercising jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291, we affirm.

                                   BACKGROUND

      Dirty Boyz is a Wyoming corporation that operates a garbage-collection

business in Rawlins, Wyoming. In December 2008, Dirty Boyz and Rawlins entered

an agreement for the collection and disposal of local garbage (that is, garbage

collected in the city).1 By the agreement, Rawlins granted Dirty Boyz a non-exclusive

license to collect and dispose of local garbage. The agreement recognized that

Rawlins could grant licenses to other garbage haulers,2 and it included a “reservation


      1
         We understand the parties to be using the term “disposal” to mean something
broader than the landfill where the garbage is ultimately disposed. Instead, the parties
use “disposal” to refer to everything after a hauler collects the garbage. This includes
its taking the collected garbage to a transfer station for processing as well as
dumping the garbage at a landfill. This flexible use of “disposal” leads the parties to
refer to transfer stations as disposal sites. We follow the parties’ lead and use the
term “disposal” to mean both the transfer station and the landfill.
      2
          Wyoming Waste Systems is also licensed to collect garbage in Rawlins.

                                            2
by the City to collect and dispose of Garbage in the City if the City deems it

necessary.” Appellant’s App. vol. 1 at 19. Initially, Dirty Boyz claims it disposed of

the local garbage at Rawlins’s landfill.

      In June 2010, things changed when the operating permit for Rawlins’s landfill

expired. Rather than renew the permit, the Wyoming Department of Environmental

Quality and Rawlins agreed to close and seal the landfill.3 In December 2010, no

longer able to accept garbage at its landfill, Rawlins entered an agreement with the

City of Casper, Wyoming to use its landfill.4 Then Rawlins expanded the facilities at

its landfill to function as a transfer station to process garbage for transport to Casper.

And in 2011, Rawlins began transporting garbage to Casper’s landfill. In May 2012,

the Rawlins City Council considered enacting a proposed flow-control ordinance,5


      3
         The decision not to renew Rawlins’s permit to operate its landfill and instead
to close the landfill culminated from a years-long review. In November 2006, the
Wyoming Department of Environmental Quality notified Rawlins that it was required
to complete a solid waste management plan. In response, Rawlins requested an
extension on the landfill’s permit to allow for completion of the plan. In August
2007, the Wyoming Department of Environmental Quality extended the operating
permit for Rawlins’s landfill. One condition required Rawlins to have a containment
system at its landfill before seeking permit renewal in 2010. In June 2009,
contractors completed the “Integrated Solid Waste Management Plan.” Appellant’s
App. vol. 2 at 34. The plan evaluated Rawlins’s alternatives for garbage disposal and
concluded that the best alternative was transporting processed garbage to the City of
Casper’s landfill. Later that month, the Rawlins City Council approved the plan.
      4
         Rawlins agreed to pay Casper $560,520 to help fund the operations of
Casper’s landfill. In exchange, Casper guaranteed it would charge Rawlins the same
fee it charges its residents to dispose of garbage at its landfill.
      5
         “Flow control” refers to laws that “require trash haulers to deliver solid waste
to a particular waste processing facility.” United Haulers Ass’n, Inc. v. Oneida-
Herkimer Solid Waste Mgmt. Auth., 550 U.S. 330, 334 (2007).
                                            3
requiring haulers to convey local garbage to Rawlins’s transfer station. But the

ordinance quickly failed.

      Aware of the problem with Rawlins’s landfill, Dirty Boyz experimented with

hauling garbage to landfills in Rock Springs, Wyoming, and Larimer County,

Colorado. In February 2014, Dirty Boyz sought approval from the Carbon County

Planning Commission and the Wyoming Department of Environmental Quality for

the required permits to construct its own transfer station. Dirty Boyz decided to build

its own transfer station so it could more cost-effectively collect and dispose of

garbage. Rawlins charged a fee per ton of garbage conveyed to its transfer station.

Once the garbage was received at Rawlins’s transfer station, Rawlins processed the

garbage, paid a contractor to transport it to Casper’s landfill, and paid Casper a fee to

use its landfill. The landfills in Rock Springs and Larimer County charged lower fees

for disposal of garbage than Rawlins charged at its transfer station. Despite higher

labor and fuel costs, it was more affordable for Dirty Boyz to transport garbage to

Rock Springs or Larimer County than it was for Dirty Boyz to pay the fee charged at

Rawlins’s transfer station. Dirty Boyz planned to compact garbage at its transfer

station and haul the garbage by semi-truck to a landfill in Larimer County. Because

Larimer County’s landfill charged by volume, not weight, compacting the garbage at

its transfer station allowed Dirty Boyz to save additional money on disposal fees.

      When Dirty Boyz applied for a permit to construct its own transfer station, it

did so knowing of Rawlins’s previous efforts to enact a flow-control ordinance. As

mentioned, the earlier-proposed flow-control ordinance would have prohibited Dirty

                                            4
Boyz from using its own transfer station. In September 2014, the Rawlins city

planner sent a letter to the Carbon County Planning Commission objecting to the

permit for Dirty Boyz’s transfer station because Rawlins’s population could not

support more than one transfer station. But in April 2015, Carbon County and the

Wyoming Department of Environmental Quality approved the permit.

       The formal process of closing the landfill didn’t start until years after the

landfill stopped receiving garbage. In October 2015, the state awarded Rawlins a

grant of $3,651,200 and a no-interest loan of $1,238,800 to help pay the closure

costs. But the state required Rawlins to self-fund the remaining cost of the project,

about $1.6 million. To repay these amounts, Rawlins planned to use revenue from the

fee it charged for garbage received at its transfer station.

       Later in October 2015, Dirty Boyz obtained private financing to build its own

transfer station. Dirty Boyz also asked Rawlins to endorse its application for a small

business grant from the State Small Business Credit Initiative. To receive a grant

under the program Dirty Boyz needed a statement from Rawlins that Dirty Boyz’s

transfer station would provide an economic benefit to the city. On November 3, 2015,

the city council voted against endorsing Dirty Boyz’s grant because Dirty Boyz’s

transfer station would reduce the amount of garbage taken to Rawlins’s transfer

station and decrease the amount of revenue raised from the transfer-station fee.

       On November 10, 2015, Rawlins sent Dirty Boyz a letter advising that it might

amend the agreement to require that Dirty Boyz take all local garbage to Rawlins’s

transfer station. The letter explained that Rawlins was working with the Wyoming

                                            5
Department of Environmental Quality to close and cap the city’s landfill. And the

letter expressed Rawlins’s “desire” to withdraw any flow-control requirement after

repaying amounts incurred in closing the landfill. Appellant’s App. vol. 2 at 114.

      In January 2016, the Rawlins City Council indeed enacted a flow-control

ordinance. The ordinance requires all garbage “generated and/or accumulated and/or

collected” in the city to be taken to Rawlins’s transfer station. Rawlins, Wyo., Code

§ 8.08.030. One of Dirty Boyz’s owners, Patrick Cain, participated in the city-council

meetings leading up to the passage of the ordinance and objected to the flow-control

requirement. A week after enactment, Rawlins sent Dirty Boyz notice of the

ordinance, advising it that the Rawlins City Attorney’s Office would soon seek an

amendment to the agreement “that fully conforms to the newly enacted regulations.”

Appellant’s App. vol. 2 at 115.

      That same day, Dirty Boyz sued Rawlins in federal district court, alleging,

among other things, that the ordinance violates the Contract Clause of the United

States Constitution and is preempted by the FAAAA.6 Three months later, in April

2016, Dirty Boyz completed construction of its transfer station. Because Dirty Boyz

completed construction after Rawlins enacted the flow-control ordinance, Dirty Boyz

never used its own transfer station to process garbage collected in the city. But Dirty



      6
        Dirty Boyz’s complaint also alleged that the ordinance violates the Sherman
Act, 15 U.S.C. § 2; the Wyoming Constitution, Wyo. Const. art. 1, § 30; the dormant
Commerce Clause, U.S. Const. art. I, § 8, cl. 3; and Due Process Clause, U.S. Const.
amend. XIV, of the United States Constitution. But early on, Dirty Boyz abandoned
its due-process claim.
                                           6
Boyz has used its own transfer station to process garbage collected outside of the city

for transportation to two landfills in Colorado.

       The parties filed opposing summary judgment motions. After a hearing, the

district court granted Rawlins’s motion for summary judgment and denied Dirty

Boyz’s. The district court first ruled that the agreement falls outside of the Contract

Clause’s reach because it is a license, not a contract. Next, it ruled that even if the

agreement is a contract, the flow-control ordinance’s impairment of the agreement

would not be substantial enough to violate the Contract Clause. The district court also

ruled that the collection and disposal of local garbage lies within Rawlins’s police

powers and that Rawlins’s flow-control ordinance has too insignificant an impact on

garbage haulers’ rates, routes, and services to warrant preemption under the FAAAA.

The district court granted summary judgment in favor of Rawlins on each of Dirty

Boyz’s claims. Dirty Boyz appealed the district court’s grant of summary judgment

on its Contract Clause and preemption claims.

                                     DISCUSSION

       Dirty Boyz argues two points on appeal: first, that the flow-control ordinance

violates the Contract Clause by impairing the agreement between Rawlins and Dirty

Boyz, and second, that the FAAAA preempts the ordinance. After identifying the

applicable standard of review, we address each argument in turn.

       “We review a district court’s grant of summary judgment de novo, applying

the same legal standard as the district court.” Hiatt v. Colo. Seminary, 858 F.3d 1307,

1315 (10th Cir. 2017) (quoting Twigg v. Hawker Beechcraft Corp., 659 F.3d 987, 997

                                            7
(10th Cir. 2011)). Summary judgment is appropriate when “the movant shows that

there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to

judgment as a matter of law.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a). “Where, as here, we are

presented with cross-motions for summary judgment, we must view each motion

separately, in the light most favorable to the non-moving party, and draw all

reasonable inferences in that party’s favor.” United States v. Sup. Ct. of N.M., 839

F.3d 888, 906–07 (10th Cir. 2016) (quoting Manganella v. Evanston Ins. Co., 702

F.3d 68, 72 (1st Cir. 2012)).

A.     Contract Clause

       Article I, § 10 of the United States Constitution provides, “No State shall . . .

pass any . . . Law impairing the Obligation of Contracts . . . .” U.S. Const. art. I, § 10,

cl. 1. “[T]he Contract Clause limits the power of the States to modify their own

contracts as well as to regulate those between private parties.” U.S. Tr. Co. of N.Y. v.

New Jersey, 431 U.S. 1, 17 (1977). To determine whether a state law has impaired a

contractual obligation in violation of the Contract Clause, “we first ask whether the

change in state law has ‘operated as a substantial impairment of a contractual

relationship.’” Gen. Motors Corp. v. Romein, 503 U.S. 181, 186 (1992) (quoting

Allied Structural Steel Co. v. Spannaus, 438 U.S. 234, 244 (1978)). “This inquiry has

three components: whether there is a contractual relationship, whether a change in

law impairs that contractual relationship, and whether the impairment is substantial.”

Id. at 186. “The severity of the impairment measures the height of the hurdle the state

legislation must clear. Minimal alteration of contractual obligations may end the

                                            8
inquiry at its first stage.” Spannaus, 438 U.S. at 245. Here, we conclude the flow-

control ordinance doesn’t impair the agreement, so our inquiry ends there.

      Dirty Boyz argues that the flow-control ordinance impairs the agreement by

requiring Dirty Boyz to use Rawlins’s transfer station. This keeps Dirty Boyz from

using its own transfer station to process the local garbage more cheaply and prevents

Dirty Boyz from choosing the landfill where the garbage is ultimately disposed. But

Dirty Boyz hasn’t pointed to an agreement provision granting it the right to select the

disposal sites it uses.7 Instead, Dirty Boyz argues for an implied right to do so,

relying on the agreement’s language, the solid-waste ordinance in effect when the

parties executed the agreement, and the parties’ conduct.

      Though an implied contractual term can support a Contract Clause claim,

Romein, 503 U.S. at 188, Dirty Boyz’s claim fails to establish such an implied term.

Dirty Boyz argues that a right to choose disposal sites is implicit in the agreement’s

references to “collection and disposal” of garbage.8 Appellant’s Opening Br. at 21.


      7
         At oral argument a panel member asked Dirty Boyz to identify what precise
provision of the agreement grants it the right to choose the manner and location in
which it disposes of the garbage it collects. In response, Dirty Boyz recognized that
the agreement doesn’t include language that provides Dirty Boyz can dispose of
garbage “wherever you want to.” Oral Argument at 8:55, Dirty Boyz Sanitation Serv.
v. City of Rawlins, No. 16-8123 (10th Cir. Sept. 12, 2017).
      8
        The agreement refers to disposal ten times: (1) the title of the agreement is
“REVOCABLE AND NON-EXCLUSIVE AGREEMENT FOR GARBAGE
COLLECTION AND DISPOSAL,” Appellant’s App. vol. 1 at 18; (2) the first
sentence of the agreement states it is a “REVOCABLE AND NON-EXCLUSIVE
AGREEMENT FOR GARBAGE COLLECTION AND DISPOSAL,” id.; (3) the first
whereas in the agreement states, “Dirty Boys [sic] is desirous of obtaining a non-
exclusive License for Garbage . . . collection and disposal[,]” id.; (4) the second
                                            9
This means little. After all, the agreement mentions, and contemplates, only one

disposal option—Rawlins’s then-operating landfill. Similarly, the ordinance in effect

when the parties reached their agreement referenced only Rawlins’s then-operating

landfill.9 See Rawlins, Wyo., Code §§ 8.08.190, 8.08.320 (2002). But the parties

didn’t contract on the question raised here, whether Dirty Boyz had a right to select

any disposal site it chooses. Despite Dirty Boyz’s claim that a right to choose

disposal sites is implicit in the agreement’s language, the agreement’s reference to

garbage disposal doesn’t give rise to a right to choose any disposal site. And here the

agreement contemplates that garbage collected in Rawlins will continue to be

disposed of at Rawlins’s then-operating landfill.




whereas states that “the City is desirous of having all of the Garbage in the City
regularly and properly collected and disposed of[,]” id.; (5) the agreement defines
“garbage” as the “portion of solid waste that is normally disposed of by and
originating from the occupants of the City’s residential dwelling units, businesses,
industrial, [sic] and commercial establishments,” id.; (6) the definition of “hazardous
waste” includes materials “otherwise ineligible for transfer or disposal,” id. at 19;
(7) the agreement includes a “reservation by the City to collect and dispose of
Garbage in the City if the City deems it necessary,” id.; (8) the agreement provides
the “fee for commercial collection and disposal is that amount negotiated between
Dirty Boyz and customer[,]” id. at 22; (9) the agreement prohibits price fixing in the
fees charged “for collection and disposal of Garbage,” id. at 23; and (10) the
agreement includes a force majeure provision that states Dirty Boyz would not be in
default “in the event that the collection, transportation and/or disposal services of
Dirty Boyz are temporarily or permanently interrupted” for specified reasons, id. at
24.
      9
        The ordinance in effect in 2008 is not in the record. Federal Rule of Evidence
201 authorizes federal courts to take judicial notice of adjudicative facts, including
provisions in municipal ordinances, at any stage of the proceedings. Zimomra v.
Alamo Rent-A-Car, Inc., 111 F.3d 1495, 1503–04 (10th Cir. 1997).
                                          10
      Further, Dirty Boyz argues that even if the agreement hadn’t even mentioned

disposal, Dirty Boyz would still have a right to choose disposal sites absent a specific

prohibition in the agreement. Because collected garbage requires disposal, Dirty

Boyz argues, common sense dictates that any garbage-collection agreement would

include the right to dispose of the garbage collected. But Dirty Boyz’s need to

dispose of collected garbage doesn’t create a right to choose where local garbage is

disposed. And Dirty Boyz cannot claim a right to do something uncontemplated by

the agreement.

      Left there, Dirty Boyz argues that we must strictly construe the agreement

against Rawlins as the drafter. See Miller v. Monumental Life Ins. Co., 502 F.3d

1245, 1253 (10th Cir. 2007) (explaining that under the doctrine of contra

proferentem, ambiguities are resolved against the drafter). Because Rawlins could

have expressly limited Dirty Boyz’s right to select disposal sites but didn’t do so,

Dirty Boyz argues, the court should interpret the agreement to allow it to choose

disposal sites. But Dirty Boyz doesn’t identify any ambiguous language in the

agreement that the court could construe against Rawlins to give Dirty Boyz a right to

choose disposal sites. If Dirty Boyz wanted rights not included in the agreement, it

needed to ask Rawlins to amend its agreement to include them.

      Next, leaving for the moment the agreement’s language, Dirty Boyz argues

that the ordinance in effect when the parties entered the agreement established an




                                           11
implied right to choose disposal sites.10 Dirty Boyz points out that one provision of

the ordinance differentiated between commercial haulers and persons hauling their

own garbage and required persons hauling their own garbage to dispose of it at

Rawlins’s landfill (as opposed, presumably, to the nearest vacant lot or roadside).

Rawlins, Wyo., Code § 8.08.190 (2002). Dirty Boyz argues there wasn’t an

analogous requirement for commercial haulers, which implies that commercial

haulers were free to take collected garbage to other landfills. All this really means is

that Rawlins likely wasn’t worried that a licensed local-garbage hauler would dispose

somewhere other than the landfill. And, even so, another provision, applicable to

“any person,” not just persons hauling their own garbage, prohibited the dumping of

garbage anywhere in the city except at Rawlins’s landfill. Id. at § 8.08.320. Because

parallel waste-disposal restrictions applied to both commercial and non-commercial

haulers, Dirty Boyz’s argument fails.

      For its last argument, Dirty Boyz claims that the parties’ conduct establishes

an implied contractual right. Though “the terms to which the contracting parties give

assent may be express or implied in their dealings,” Romein, 503 U.S. at 188, we

conclude that the parties’ conduct did not give rise to an implied right.

      First, Dirty Boyz asserts that Rawlins knew Dirty Boyz was investigating

disposal alternatives and occasionally transporting garbage to landfills in Rock

Springs and Larimer County. Because Rawlins didn’t inform Dirty Boyz that these

      10
        In 2002, Rawlins enacted the ordinance that was in effect in 2008 when
Dirty Boyz and Rawlins executed the agreement. Rawlins, Wyo., Code § 8.08.190
(2002).
                                           12
actions violated the agreement, Dirty Boyz argues that the parties’ conduct is

consistent with an understanding that Dirty Boyz had a right to choose disposal sites.

Here, the agreement didn’t expressly prohibit the use of landfills other than

Rawlins’s then-operating landfill. And Rawlins may not have considered Dirty

Boyz’s use of other landfills to violate the agreement. But the absence of a specific

prohibition on using landfills other than Rawlins’s then-operating landfill doesn’t

mean Rawlins assented to an affirmative right to choose any disposal site.

      Second, Dirty Boyz argues that by enacting the flow-control ordinance,

Rawlins showed that it understood the agreement granted Dirty Boyz the right to

choose disposal sites. Dirty Boyz argues that the flow-control ordinance was

unnecessary if the agreement already restricted its right to choose disposal sites. But

the agreement didn’t require or prohibit the use of any particular landfill or transfer

station. As discussed, Rawlins’s decision not to include a specific prohibition doesn’t

mean Dirty Boyz had an unfettered right to choose disposal sites. Plus, because the

flow-control ordinance applies generally to all garbage “generated and/or

accumulated and/or collected” in the city, not just garbage collected by commercial

haulers, its enactment tells us little about Rawlins’s understanding of its agreement

with Dirty Boyz. Rawlins, Wyo., Code § 8.08.030.

      Dirty Boyz has no right under the agreement to choose where it disposes of its

collected garbage. Therefore, the ordinance requiring Dirty Boyz to take garbage it

collects in Rawlins to the city’s transfer station doesn’t impair the agreement between



                                           13
Dirty Boyz and Rawlins.11 And so, the district court properly granted summary

judgment in favor of Rawlins on Dirty Boyz’s Contract Clause claim.

B.    Preemption

      The Supremacy Clause provides that “the Laws of the United States . . . shall

be the supreme Law of the Land . . . any Thing in the Constitution or Laws of any

State to the Contrary notwithstanding.” U.S. Const. art. VI, cl. 2. Accordingly,

“federal law preempts contrary state enactments.” Chamber of Commerce of U.S. v.

Edmondson, 594 F.3d 742, 765 (10th Cir. 2010). Preemption can be express or

implied. Id. When preemption is express, as it is under the FAAAA, we must use

ordinary principles of statutory interpretation to evaluate whether the state law falls

within the scope of the federal provision precluding state action. See id. So we “focus

on the plain wording of the clause, which necessarily contains the best evidence of

Congress’ pre-emptive intent.” EagleMed LLC v. Cox, 868 F.3d 893, 903 (10th Cir.

2017) (quoting Puerto Rico v. Franklin Cal. Tax-Free Tr., 136 S. Ct. 1938, 1946

(2016)). We conclude that state and local regulation of garbage collection doesn’t fall

within the preemptive scope of the FAAAA. And even if it did, the ordinance’s

impact on the routes, rates, and services of garbage haulers is too insignificant to

warrant preemption.



      11
         The district court concluded that the agreement between Dirty Boyz and
Rawlins falls outside the scope of the Contract Clause because it is a license, not a
contract. And on appeal Dirty Boyz argues that the agreement was indeed a contract.
Because we conclude the ordinance doesn’t impair the agreement between Dirty
Boyz and Rawlins, we don’t decide whether the agreement is a contract.
                                           14
       The FAAAA prohibits states from enacting or enforcing laws “related to a

price, route, or service of any motor carrier . . . with respect to the transportation of

property.” 49 U.S.C. § 14501(c)(1). The Supreme Court has interpreted the term

“related to” as “embrac[ing] state laws ‘having a connection with or reference to’

carrier ‘rates, routes, or services,’ whether directly or indirectly.” Dan’s City Used

Cars, Inc. v. Pelkey, 569 U.S. 251, 260 (2013) (quoting Rowe v. N.H. Motor Transp.

Ass’n, 552 U.S. 364, 370 (2008)). “[P]re-emption occurs at least where state laws

have a ‘significant impact’ related to Congress’ deregulatory and pre-emption-related

objectives.” Rowe, 552 U.S. at 371 (quoting Morales v. Trans World Airlines, Inc.,

504 U.S. 374, 390 (1992)). But the Supreme Court has cautioned that the FAAAA

“does not preempt state laws affecting carrier prices, routes, and services ‘in only a

tenuous, remote, or peripheral . . . manner.’” Dan’s City Used Cars, 569 U.S. at 261

(quoting Rowe, 552 U.S. at 371). And “it is not sufficient that a state law relates to

the ‘price, route, or service’ of a motor carrier in any capacity; the law must also

concern a motor carrier’s ‘transportation of property.’” Id.

       Property is the operative term. To determine whether garbage collection falls

within the preemptive scope of the FAAAA, we must decide whether garbage is

property. Congress didn’t define property. And the meaning of the term is not

apparent from the context of the statute. “If the statute’s plain language is ambiguous

as to Congressional intent, we look to the legislative history and the underlying

public policy of the statute.” Russell v. United States, 551 F.3d 1174, 1178 (10th Cir.

2008) (quoting United States v. Manning, 526 F.3d 611, 614 (10th Cir. 2008)).

                                            15
      The legislative history of the FAAAA helps us glean Congress’s intent about

state regulation of garbage collection:

      The conferees further clarify that the motor carrier preemption provision
      does not preempt State regulation of garbage and refuse collectors. The
      managers have been informed by the Department of Transportation that
      under [the Interstate Commerce Commission’s] case law, garbage and
      refuse are not considered “property”. [sic] Thus garbage collectors are
      not considered “motor carriers of property” and are thus unaffected by
      this provision.

H.R. Rep. No. 103–677, at 85 (1994) (Conf. Rep.), as reprinted in 1994

U.S.C.C.A.N. 1715, 1757.12 This legislative history reflects a congressional intent

against preempting state regulation of garbage collection. And “preemption is

ultimately a question of congressional intent.” US Airways, Inc. v. O'Donnell, 627

F.3d 1318, 1324 (10th Cir. 2010). So we conclude that state and local regulation of

garbage collection doesn’t fall within the preemptive scope of the FAAAA. See

Mass. Delivery Ass’n v. Coakley, 769 F.3d 11, 23 (1st Cir. 2014) (“[T]he FAAAA is

carefully tailored to preempt only those statutes that affect a motor carrier’s

transportation of property. This excludes, for example . . . statutes that affect a motor

carrier’s transportation of garbage . . . .”); AGG Enters., 281 F.3d at 1330 (“[T]he

FAAAA does not preempt local regulation of the collection of mixed solid waste.”);

Kelley v. United States, 69 F.3d 1503, 1508–09 (10th Cir. 1995) (“[A]lthough

      12
          Congress was told that the Interstate Commerce Commission’s case law
didn’t consider garbage and refuse to be property, but the Ninth Circuit determined
that the case law is actually equivocal about whether the Commission considers
garbage to be property or not. AGG Enters. v. Washington Cty., 281 F.3d 1324, 1329
(9th Cir. 2002). Ultimately, the Ninth Circuit concluded it was irrelevant because the
preemption analysis is concerned with what Congress, not the Commission, intended.
Id.
                                           16
plaintiffs claim that § 601 will preempt state legislation of garbage and recyclable

collection, representatives from Congress, as well as the Interstate Commerce

Commission, have indicated it will not.”).

       Turning to Dirty Boyz’s next argument, we conclude that even if garbage

collection fell within the preemptive scope of the FAAAA, the ordinance’s effect on

prices, routes, and services would be too insignificant to warrant preemption. When

Congress enacted the preemption provision of the FAAAA, it “did so upon finding

that state governance of intrastate transportation of property had become

‘unreasonably burden[some]’ to ‘free trade, interstate commerce, and American

consumers.’” Dan’s City Used Cars, 569 U.S. at 256 (alteration in original) (quoting

City of Columbus v. Ours Garage & Wrecker Serv., Inc., 536 U.S. 424, 440 (2002)).

“The target at which [Congress] aimed was ‘a State’s direct substitution of its own

governmental commands for competitive market forces in determining (to a

significant degree) the services that motor carriers will provide.’” Id. at 263 (quoting

Rowe, 552 U.S. at 372). And so, the FAAAA doesn’t preempt state laws that have too

insignificant an effect on motor carriers’ prices, routes, or services. Id. at 261.

       Dirty Boyz argues the ordinance has a significant impact on Congress’s

deregulatory objectives because the ordinance controls the routes Dirty Boyz must

take by requiring a stop at Rawlins’s transfer station. And Dirty Boyz’s rates are

likely to increase because of the transfer-station fee. But imposing flow control is too

far removed from Congress’s deregulatory purpose to warrant preemption. Requiring

that all garbage collected in the city be taken to Rawlins’s transfer station would

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neither significantly determine what services garbage haulers in Rawlins will provide

nor require garbage haulers to provide a service not available in the market. Because

the flow-control ordinance has only a tenuous effect on the prices, routes, and

services of garbage haulers, the FAAAA doesn’t preempt the ordinance. And so, the

district court properly granted summary judgment in favor of Rawlins on Dirty

Boyz’s preemption claim.

                                   CONCLUSION

      For these reasons, we affirm the district court’s grant of Rawlins’s motion for

summary judgment and the district court’s denial of Dirty Boyz’s motion for partial

summary judgment.




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