sugarfatpie's picture

Is avoiding industrial disasters a "discretionary function?"

It protects government agencies from claims based on the performance or failure of performance of a discretionary function of the government, chiefly in the realm of policy.

The TVA issued a statement regarding its pursuit of a declaration of immunity. That statement outlined various efforts underway to clean up the spill but did not provide a legal justification for how the ash spill falls under the discretionary function exemption.

I don't see how TVA can argue this. Can anyone else?

-Sugarfatpie (AKA Alex Pulsipher)

"X-Rays are a hoax."-Lord Kelvin

rikki's picture

I don't see how TVA can

I don't see how TVA can argue this. Can anyone else?

The basic concept of citizens not being able to sue their own government for doing what it democratically opted to do makes sense to me. The problem here is not so much with the legal reasoning as with the nature of TVA itself. The government really shouldn't be operating coal plants. Unfortunately, part of TVA's mandate was to support itself through power sales, so its power generation operations would seem to fall under immunity.

With the NC case, it was not merely operating coal plants that got TVA in trouble; it was their failure to install scrubbers and other pollution-reduction devices. They were acting contrary to democratically enacted regulations, so they blew their immunity. Some sort of similar disregard for public policy will probably need to be proved in this case, but since EPA failed to enact reasonable standards for coal ash storage, that will be hard. Of course, with all the prior warnings TVA had about the risk of these ponds failing, proving disregard may not be impossible.

sugarfatpie's picture

TVA should be sued

The basic concept of citizens not being able to sue their own government for doing what it democratically opted to do makes sense to me.

Where's the democracy in what TVA did and is doing regarding coal ash?
TVA has never been interested in democracy, having been designed to impose "modernization" on a once backward area. TVA's non-action that lead to the coal ash disaster is just one case in point among many.

Some sort of similar disregard for public policy will probably need to be proved in this case, but since EPA failed to enact reasonable standards for coal ash storage, that will be hard.

Regarding EPA, TVA violated the clean water act.
(link...)
Hence TVA can be sued regardless of the absence of coal ash storage standards.
Granted, fines are awarded to the Govt, not citizen plaintiffs, though you can get your attorney's fees paid.

One could argue that TVA's claim of government immunity is not in the spirit of today's environmental laws, such as the CWA, which was designed to allow citizen lawsuits against the government. And suits against governments are increasing dramatically.
(link...)

Like it or not, lawsuits make organizations change their behavior. And lawsuits against the government have often lead to stricter environmental standards. Take stormwater for example. We wouldn't even have stormwater regulations if the NRDC hadn't sued the EPA to get them.

TVA's behavior towards United Mountain Defense shows that TVA is obsessed with systematically shutting down public scrutiny of its disastrous activities. When a government agency behaves in this way what else, short of a a lawsuit, will make them change?

-Sugarfatpie (AKA Alex Pulsipher)

"X-Rays are a hoax."-Lord Kelvin

Anonymous's picture

It would be more useful to

It would be more useful to see the Memorandum in Support (the legal brief that actually makes the movant's argument) rather than just the motion. Has anybody already obtained that before I spend fifty cents on Pacer?

knoxrebel's picture

TVA's brief is well written

TVA's brief is well written and its going to be tough to get past. TVA used this same defense in the suit NC filed against it for polluting NC's air. In NC, they lost in the district court and took an interlocutory appeal to the 4th Circuit, where they lost again. That case was tried in December and NC won, with the district court ordering TVA to fix the problem. However, the 4th Circuit also cited cases from the 6th Circuit where the discretionary function doctrine was applied. In its brief in our case, TVA cites a recent case where Judge Varlan dismissed claims against TVA under the discretionary function defense. Judge Varlan is going to allow us to take some depositions of TVA personnel to use in our response to TVA's motion, which is due in June.

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