Court Opinion

ID: 2958600
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2015-09-17 03:05:17.114149+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:00:31.500995
License: Public Domain

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN

                                      NO. 03-11-000102-CV

                                      Sierra Club, Appellant

                                                  v.

  Texas Commission on Environmental Quality and Waste Control Specialists, Appellees

     FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF TRAVIS COUNTY, 201ST JUDICIAL DISTRICT
     NO. D-1-GN-08-003021, HONORABLE LORA J. LIVINGSTON, JUDGE PRESIDING

                                           OPINION

               Sierra Club appeals from a judgment upholding the Texas Commission on

Environmental Quality’s (TCEQ) denial of Sierra Club’s request for a contested-case hearing in a

licensing matter before the agency. On appeal, Sierra Club argues that it was entitled to a contested-

case hearing because its request complied with TCEQ regulations and demonstrated that at least one

member of its organization has an affected justiciable interest in the agency’s proposed action.

Sierra Club also complains that the district court erred by “ignoring” Sierra Club’s newly discovered

evidence. We will affirm the district court’s judgment.

                                         BACKGROUND

               Appellee Waste Control Specialists (WCS) is a waste-control company specializing in

the treatment, storage, and disposal of radioactive, hazardous, and mixed waste. Since 1997, WCS

has held licenses to store, process, and manage certain types of radioactive materials at a 36-acre
waste-disposal facility in Andrews County, Texas. The disposal facility, which is situated on a

14,900-acre former ranch that extends into Lea County, New Mexico, is about 250 feet east of the

Texas–New Mexico state line, five miles east of Eunice, New Mexico, and thirty miles west of

Andrews, Texas.1

               In June 2004, WCS applied to the Texas Department of State Health Services

(TDSHS) for a license to construct a 16-acre landfill on its Andrews County property to dispose of

material it was holding under an existing license to collect, process, and store by-product material.2

The by-product material WCS seeks to dispose of comes from a U.S. Department of Energy facility

in Fernald, Ohio that had produced high-purity uranium metal for U.S. defense programs since 1952.

The Fernald facility was closed in 1989 and designated a federal “Superfund” site under the federal

Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act of 1980 (CERCLA),

Pub. L. No. 96-510, 94 Stat. 2767 (codified as amended at 42 U.S.C. §§ 9601–9626).3 In compliance

       1
          This facility has been and is the subject of numerous lawsuits. See, e.g., In re Sierra Club,
420 S.W.3d 153 (Tex. App.—El Paso Nov. 28, 2012, orig. proceeding); Sierra Club v. Andrews
Cnty., 418 S.W.3d 711 (Tex. App.—El Paso 2013, pet. filed); Texas Comm’n on Envtl. Quality v.
Sierra Club, No. 03-12-00625-CV, 2014 WL 902513 (Tex. App.—Austin Mar. 7, 2014, no pet. h.);
In re Sierra Club, No. 03-12-00712-CV, 2012 WL 6554812 (Tex. App.—Austin Dec. 14, 2012,
orig. proceeding, mem. op.); In re Sierra Club, No. 08-12-00282-CV, 2012 WL 5949789
(Tex. App.—El Paso Nov. 28, 2012, orig. proceeding, mem. op.); Texas Comm’n on Envtl. Quality
v. Sierra Club, No. 03-12-000335-CV (Tex. App.—Austin) (pending).
       2
         “By-product material” is radioactive tailings or wastes produced in connection with
uranium or thorium ore processing. See Tex. Health & Safety Code § 401.003(3)(B) (defining “by-
product material”); 25 Tex. Admin. Code § 289.260 (2007) (TDSHS, Licensing of Uranium
Recovery and Byproduct Material Disposal Facilities).
       3
         CERCLA was “designed to promote the ‘timely cleanup of hazardous waste sites’ and to
ensure that the costs of such cleanup efforts were borne by those responsible for the contamination.”
Burlington N. & Santa Fe Ry. Co. v. United States, 556 U.S. 599, 602 (2009). A CERCLA

                                                  2
with a cleanup plan established pursuant to CERCLA requirements, Fernald’s uranium by-product

waste—approximately 8,900 cubic yards of slurry—was stabilized with “flyash and Portland

cement,” and the resulting “concrete monoliths” were then sealed in large (6x6 feet), one-inch thick

cylindrical carbon-steel containers meeting federal regulations for shipping radioactive materials,

see 49 C.F.R. §§ 171.1–180.605 (Department of Transportation, Hazardous Materials Regulations),

and transported to WCS’s Andrews County facility on flatbed trailers. WCS’s landfill application

to TCEQ, which included plans for the design, construction, operation, and future closure of the by-

product disposal facility, proposed the construction of a 16-acre below-grade landfill that would

consist of six cells—each lined with clay, synthetic liners, leak-detection systems, and leachate-

collection systems—designed to hold the carbon-steel cylinders shipped from the Fernald site.

WCS’s proposed design for its facility included various other safeguards, including berms to divert

and collect rainwater, groundwater-monitoring systems, surface-water monitoring systems, and air-

quality monitoring systems.

               While TDSHS was conducting its technical review of WCS’s application, the

Legislature transferred regulatory responsibility for issuance of by-product disposal licenses to

TCEQ, which continued and subsequently completed the technical review of WCS’s application

under TDSHS regulations. See Tex. Health & Safety Code § 401.2625 (granting to TCEQ the “sole

and exclusive authority to grant, deny, renew, revoke, suspend, amend, or withdraw licenses for

source material recovery and processing or for storage, processing, or disposal of byproduct

material”); see also id. § 33(k)(1) (requiring TCEQ to complete ongoing reviews using TDSHS

“Superfund site” is a place considered a national priority for environmental remediation because of
known or threatened releases of hazardous substances at that site. See 42 U.S.C. §§ 9601–9626.

                                                 3
regulations); 25 Tex. Admin. Code §§ 289.3–.301 (2007) (TDSHS, Radiation Control) (TDSHS

radiation-control regulations). After completing the technical review of WCS’s application in

accordance with statutory and regulatory requirements, including an environmental analysis, TCEQ

declared WCS’s application administratively complete and issued a draft license for public notice

in October 2007.

               Appellant Sierra Club, among others, timely submitted written comments to the

draft license that, generally stated, challenged WCS’s characterization of the site’s hydrology,

geology, sedimentology, and hydrogeology; raised concerns regarding what Sierra Club considered

to be a lack of site data and improper groundwater monitoring plans; and highlighted what it

considered to be the application’s deficient analysis of the impact of high winds that can occur

at the site. Sierra Club also requested a contested-case hearing on the merits of WCS’s application,

asserting that two of its members who lived in Eunice, New Mexico and relied on water wells in the

area would be affected by the issuance of the proposed license. Specifically, Sierra Club argued that

the proposed permit would harm Gardner, who lives and operates a feed store business four miles

from the proposed facility and owns a florist shop in downtown Eunice, in the following ways:

   • “Negative publicity surrounding the opening of the radioactive waste site” will keep people
from doing business with her;

    • “[a]ny dispersal of radioactive material from the site” or any traffic accident “involving toxic
or radioactive material” will potentially affect her business and health because she travels on a road
near the proposed facility;

    • any groundwater contamination from the facility will contaminate the alfalfa she grows for
her feed business and livestock because the water well she uses is “potentially hydrologically
connected to groundwater resources” in the vicinity of the proposed site;

                                                  4
    • the possibility that “waste from the recently permitted uranium enrichment plant” in
Gardner’s home state of New Mexico could be disposed of at the proposed WCS Texas site because
that waste might be by-product material—even though Sierra Club does not believe this would be
authorized under the proposed license—which would affect Gardner because that waste “could travel
near” Gardner’s home and businesses;

   • any off-site and on-site accidents that occur in connection with the railcar transportation of
by-product materials would affect Gardner because the railroad passes “right near an area that
Ms. Gardner often travels by”;

   • the hydrological formations underlying her home and businesses also underlie the proposed
waste facility; and

    • “[h]igh, single direction winds traveling westward from the site” could affect Gardner’s
property, livelihood, and health because those winds might disperse “radioactive materials and
surface water contaminated by radioactive waste.”

Sierra Club’s request asserted similar adverse effects from the proposed license regarding its other

member, Williams, including alleging that her home is near the railway line and road where traffic

is likely to be heavy, that wind dispersion of radioactive materials would reach her, that groundwater

contamination would affect her wells, and that she and her family have to travel on roads that pass

directly by the proposed site to reach shopping and medical facilities.

               Both TCEQ’s executive director and WCS recommended that Sierra Club’s hearing

request be denied. The Office of Public Interest Counsel4 recommended granting the hearing request

because it felt that Sierra Club had complied with the requirements for associational standing. After

a public hearing addressing these and other public comments and hearing requests, TCEQ’s

commissioners voted to deny Sierra Club’s request for a contested-case hearing and grant the

requested license to WCS—License R05807.

       4
         The Office of Public Interest Counsel “represent[s] the public interest as a party to matters
before [TCEQ].” Tex. Water Code § 5.271.

                                                  5
               After exhausting its administrative remedies, Sierra Club filed this suit for judicial

review in Travis County District Court, asking the district court to reverse and remand TCEQ’s

decision to deny Sierra Club’s hearing request and to grant the by-product license or, in the

alternative, to remand the matter to TCEQ for a contested-case hearing on Sierra Club’s hearing

request. During the district court proceedings, Sierra Club filed a motion for partial summary

judgment on the issue of whether TCEQ erred in denying Sierra Club’s request for a contested-case

hearing. Although neither TCEQ nor WCS filed cross-motions for summary judgment, they fully

briefed the issue, and the record indicates that the district court treated the subsequent summary-

judgment hearing as a full trial on the merits. Specifically, the district court denied Sierra Club’s

summary-judgment motion and ordered that Sierra Club take nothing on its claims related to

TCEQ’s denial of its hearing request. In response, Sierra Club filed a motion for reconsideration

and, while that motion was pending, filed a motion seeking to present new evidence it alleged to

have recently discovered—i.e., two internal TCEQ memos that were not part of the administrative

record—relating to its hearing request and the permit. In a final order, the district court denied

Sierra Club’s pending motions, reaffirmed its judgment against Sierra Club, and granted TCEQ’s

and WCS’s pending pleas to the jurisdiction and motions to dismiss. It is from this final order that

Sierra Club now appeals.

                                           ANALYSIS

               On appeal, Sierra Club challenges (1) TCEQ’s decision to deny its contested-case

hearing request and (2) the district court’s refusal to consider Sierra Club’s newly discovered

evidence.

                                                 6
Did TCEQ err in denying Sierra Club’s hearing request?

                 Sierra Club argues that it was error for TCEQ to deny its request for a contested-

case hearing because Sierra Club’s request complied with the relevant statutory and regulatory

requirements for a contested-case hearing request and demonstrated that at least one of its

members has a justiciable interest affected by TCEQ’s proposed permit. See 30 Tex. Admin. Code

§§ 55.250–.256 (Requests for Contested Case Hearings).5 Such a facially conforming request,

Sierra Club argues, is not subject to any deeper inquiry, especially into any matters that might go to

the underlying merits of the license—e.g., the likely effects of the proposed license permit on the

requestor—because those merits issues are properly the subject of a contested-case hearing.

Relatedly, Sierra Club argues that TCEQ was required to hold a contested-case hearing on any fact

issues raised by Sierra Club’s hearing request—i.e., TCEQ does not have the authority to resolve

factual disputes on its own. We disagree.

        Contested-case hearing requests

                 The Texas Radiation Control Act (TRCA) governs the development, use, storage,

processing, and disposal of radioactive materials in Texas, including the by-product material at

issue in this case. See Tex. Health & Safety Code §§ 401.001–.002 (TRCA’s policy and purposes);

see also id. §§ 401.261–.272 (TRCA provisions specific to by-product materials). TRCA gives

TCEQ the sole authority over licenses “for storage, processing, or disposal of by-product material.”

See id. § 401.2625. Under TRCA, TCEQ must hold a contested-case hearing on the merits of an

        5
            All citations to Title 30 of the Texas Administrative Code are to rules promulgated by
TCEQ.

                                                  7
application for a by-product disposal license if a “person affected” requests such a hearing. See id.

§ 401.264(a). A “person affected” is “a person who demonstrates that the person has suffered or

will suffer actual injury or economic damage.” See id. § 401.003(15). Relatedly, TCEQ’s enabling

statute, Chapter 5 of the Texas Water Code, prohibits TCEQ from “grant[ing] a request for a

contested case hearing unless the commission determines that the request was filed by an affected

person,”6 and directs TCEQ to adopt rules specifying the factors that must be considered in

determining affected-person status. See Tex. Water Code § 5.556; 30 Tex. Admin. Code § 55.256

(Determination of Affected Person). Thus, the critical or threshold question in contested-case

hearing requests is whether the person requesting the hearing is an “affected person.”7 See Texas

Comm’n on Envtl. Quality v. City of Waco, 413 S.W.3d 409, 417 (Tex. 2013) (describing question

as “threshold”).

        6
          An “affected person” under the Water Code is “a person who has a personal justiciable
interest related to a legal right, duty, privilege, power, or economic interest affected by the
administrative hearing. An interest common to members of the general public does not qualify as
a personal justiciable interest.” Tex. Water Code § 5.115(a). Although this definition differs from
TRCA’s, they can (and should) be read together to require hearing requestors to establish that they
have standing in the matter: “a concrete and particularized injury in fact, not common to the general
public, that is (1) actual or imminent; (2) fairly traceable to the issuance of the permit as proposed;
and (3) likely to be redressed by a favorable decision on its complaint.” Texas Comm’n on Envtl.
Quality v. City of Waco, 413 S.W.3d 409, 417 (Tex. 2013).
        7
           TCEQ rules governing contested-case hearing requests also require that the request be in
writing, identify the personal justiciable interest affected by the application, including the requestor’s
location and distance relative to the proposed activity, and how and why the requestor will be
affected by the activity in a manner not common to members of the general public. See 30 Tex.
Admin. Code § 55.251(c)(2) (Request for Contested Case Hearing, Public Comment). Further, when
a group files a hearing request, such as Sierra Club did here, the rules require that group to show that
at least one of its members is an “affected person,” the interests the organization seeks to protect are
germane to the organization’s purpose, and the claim or relief requested does not require the
participation of the individual. See id. § 55.252 (Request by Group or Association).

                                                    8
               Whether a requestor is an “affected person” is principally controlled by the factors

created by TCEQ pursuant to statutory directive:

       (a)     For any application, an affected person is one who has a personal justiciable
               interest related to a legal right, duty, privilege, power, or economic interest
               affected by the application. An interest common to members of the general
               public does not qualify as a personal justiciable interest.

       ...

       (c)     All relevant factors shall be considered, including, but not limited to, the
               following:

               (1)    whether the interest claimed is one protected by the law under which
                      the application will be considered;
               (2)    distance restrictions or other limitations imposed by law on the
                      affected interest;
               (3)    whether a reasonable relationship exists between the interest claimed
                      and the activity regulated;
               (4)    likely impact of the regulated activity on the health, safety, and use of
                      property of the person;
               (5)    likely impact of the regulated activity on use of the impacted natural
                      resource by the person; and
               (6)    for governmental entities, their statutory authority over or interest in
                      the issues relevant to the application.

30 Tex. Admin. Code § 55.256. If, upon consideration of these factors at a Commission meeting,8

the TCEQ commissioners determine that the person seeking the contested-case hearing is an affected

person and otherwise meets the regulatory requirements regarding contested-case hearings, the

commissioners must grant the hearing request and refer the application to SOAH for a contested-case

       8
          Upon receiving a hearing request, TCEQ’s executive director must schedule the hearing
request for consideration at a commission meeting and allow the executive director, OPIC, and the
permit applicant to file responses to the hearing request, and the hearing requestor an opportunity
to reply. See id. § 55.254(c)(2), (e)–(f) (Hearing Request Processing).

                                                 9
hearing. See id. § 55.255(a)(3) (Commission Action on Hearing Request). Conversely, if the TCEQ

commissioners determine that the requestor is not an affected person or that the hearing request

does not otherwise meet the regulatory requirements, the commissioners may, as they did here, deny

the hearing request and act on the permit application without a contested-case hearing, see id.

§ 55.255(a)(1), or they may schedule additional public hearings before acting on the application,

see id. § 55.255(a)(2).

       Standard of Review

               Although the TRCA waives sovereign immunity for judicial review of a TCEQ

affected-person determination, see Tex. Health & Safety Code § 401.264(e) (making affected-person

determination in by-product licensing matters subject to judicial review), it does not provide

a standard of review for that determination. Cf. id. § 401.240 (mandating “substantial evidence”

review for TCEQ actions in low-level radioactive waste licensing matters). Nevertheless, in

two recent decisions involving similar issues—i.e., TCEQ denials of contested-case hearing requests

in licensing matters where no standard of review was specified by the underlying statute—the

Texas Supreme Court reviewed TCEQ’s decisions to deny the hearing requests for an abuse of

discretion. See City of Waco, 413 S.W.3d at 411, 420, 424 (referring to discretion TCEQ enjoys in

determining need for contested-case hearing and holding that TCEQ did not abuse that discretion);

see also Texas Comm’n on Envtl. Quality v. Bosque River Coal., 413 S.W.3d 403, 404 (Tex. 2013)

(describing its decision in City of Waco as concluding that TCEQ “did not abuse its discretion in

denying a contested case hearing to an interested party, who claimed a right to such a hearing under

                                                10
the Texas Water Code”).9 TCEQ’s discretion in this matter arises generally from TCEQ’s statutorily

granted exclusive jurisdiction over certain types of permits for regulated activities—here the

exclusive jurisdiction to issue by-product disposal licenses, see Tex. Health & Safety Code

§ 401.2625—and more specifically from its authority to determine the need for a contested hearing

on the merits of any license application under its jurisdiction. See id. § 401.264 (requiring TCEQ

to determine need for contested-case hearing, including affected-person status); Tex. Water Code

§ 5.115(a) (directing TCEQ to adopt factors it must consider in determining affected-person status);

see also Tex. Water Code § 5.556 (allowing reconsideration of decision to hold a contested-case

hearing and specifying that TCEQ must determine affected-person status); City of Waco, 413 S.W.3d

at 420 (noting “the discretion the statute confers on [TCEQ] in determining the need for a [contested-

case] hearing”).

               The Legislature has granted this discretion to TCEQ in part because of TCEQ’s

expected expertise in the subject matter of the licenses under its jurisdiction. See Gerst v. Nixon,

411 S.W.2d 350, 360 n.8 (Tex. 1966). But that expected expertise has value only if it is used as

       9
           Although Bosque and City of Waco were ultimately decided under statutory hearing
exceptions that are not applicable to by-product licensing cases, see Tex. Water Code § 26.028(d)
(regarding water-quality permits), they nevertheless inform our decision here. City of Waco
discusses with approval a prior opinion from this Court addressing a standard of review for TCEQ’s
disposition of a contested-case hearing request. See City of Waco, 413 S.W.3d at 423–24 (citing
Collins v. Texas Natural Res. Conservation Comm’n, 94 S.W.3d 876 (Tex. App.—Austin 2002,
no pet.)). Further, the contested-case hearing framework analyzed in the City of Waco and Bosque
is the framework applicable to all hearing requests under TCEQ’s jurisdiction, including
provisions from Chapter 5 of the Water Code and TCEQ regulations in Chapter 55 of Title 30
of the Texas Administrative Code. See Texas Comm’n on Envtl. Quality v. Bosque River Coal.,
413 S.W.3d 403, 406–09 (Tex. 2013); City of Waco, 413 S.W.3d at 416–25. As such, and given
the lack of supreme court jurisprudence in this area, these two recent opinions firmly guide our
disposition of this appeal.

                                                 11
the Legislature has directed. Id. Thus, an agency abuses its discretion in making a decision if it

“(1) fails to consider a factor the Legislature directs it to consider; (2) considers an irrelevant factor;

or (3) weighs only relevant factors that the Legislature directs it to consider but still reaches a

completely unreasonable result.” City of El Paso v. Public Util. Comm’n, 883 S.W.2d 179, 184

(Tex. 1994) (citing Gerst, 411 S.W.2d at 360 n.8); see also Downer v. Aquamarine Operators, Inc.,

701 S.W.2d 238, 241–42 (Tex. 1985) (the test for an abuse of discretion is whether “the trial court

acted without reference to any guiding rules and principles” or “whether the act was arbitrary

or unreasonable”).

                TCEQ’s discretion over contested-case hearing requests naturally includes its

“threshold” determination of whether the person seeking the hearing is an affected person. See

City of Waco, 413 S.W.3d at 410, 417. And in making that particular decision, TCEQ enjoys the

discretion to weigh and resolve matters that may go to the merits of the underlying application,

including the likely impact the regulated activity—here, underground disposal of by-product

material—will have on the health, safety, and use of property by the hearing requestor and on the use

of natural resources. See 30 Tex. Admin. Code § 55.256(c); City of Waco, 413 S.W.3d at 420

(noting overlap between affected-person factors and exemption found to be dispositive in that case).

TCEQ’s inquiry into these and the other factors may include reference to the permit application,

attached expert reports, the analysis and opinions of professionals on its staff, and any reports,

opinions, and data it has before it. See City of Waco, 413 S.W.3d at 420–21 (describing these

evidentiary items as relevant to inquiry and holding that there was evidence in record to support

TCEQ’s determination). And importantly, the existence of substantial evidence in the record

supporting TCEQ’s decision is a factor—often a dispositive factor—in determining whether

                                                    12
TCEQ abused its discretion. See id. at 424–25; see also Quixtar Inc. v. Signature Mgmt. Team, LLC,

315 S.W.3d 28, 35 (Tex. 2010) (per curiam) (holding that trial court’s forum-non-conveniens

dismissal “was not an abuse of discretion in light of the evidence before it”); Texas Health Facilities

Comm’n v. Charter Med.-Dallas, Inc., 665 S.W.2d 446, 454 (Tex. 1984) (noting that “the existence

of substantial evidence has been equated with fair and reasonable conduct on the part of the agency,”

while “agency decisions that are unsupported by substantial evidence have been deemed

arbitrary and capricious”); cf. Tex. Health & Safety Code § 401.240 (making affected-person

determination subject to “substantial evidence” review). This is so regardless of whether TCEQ held

an evidentiary hearing, as long as the hearing requestor was afforded its regulatory rights to express

his dissatisfaction with the proposed license and the agency did not refuse to consider the evidence

offered in support of that dissatisfaction. See Bosque River, 413 S.W.3d at 408 (noting, in its

determining of whether TCEQ abused discretion in denying hearing request, that there was “no

indication that [TCEQ] refused to consider any evidence tendered to substantiate the[] asserted

deficiencies” in requested permit); City of Waco, 413 S.W.3d at 423–24 (reversing contrary holding

in the underlying opinion while citing with approval Collins v. Texas Natural Res. Conservation

Comm’n, 94 S.W.3d 876, 884–85 (Tex. App.—Austin 2002, no pet.), that agency’s denial of hearing

request was supported by substantial evidence regardless of fact that evidentiary hearing not held).

       TCEQ’s evaluation of Sierra Club’s hearing request

               Our review of the record indicates that TCEQ was within its discretion to determine

that Sierra Club’s members were not affected persons. The record indicates that, upon receipt of

Sierra Club’s hearing request, the Executive Director set the matter for consideration at a

                                                  13
TCEQ meeting, allowed responses, and allowed Sierra Club to file a reply to those responses. In

considering the request, TCEQ had before it, among other items, the Executive Director’s response,

the application, and an environmental analysis conducted by TCEQ staff and the Bureau of

Economic Geology at The University of Texas at Austin. Among many other things, there was

evidence in the record that:

   •       Gardner and Williams live more than three miles from the proposed facility and neither
           “work or spend any substantial time in or around the [proposed] facility”;

   •       the proposed license complies with Texas statutes and rules regarding migration of
           radioactive materials from floods, high winds, railway accidents, and traffic accidents;

   •       the application provides all required information on the characterization of the geology
           and hydrology of the proposed site to show that the proposed activities would not affect
           the area groundwater;

   •       Gardner’s and Williams’s concerns about general contamination in Eunice and traffic
           accidents are interests common to the members of the general public;

   •       computer modeling done by WCS and by TCEQ staff in reviewing WCS’s application
           “suggest[s] that there will be no detrimental radiological impact to a potential off-site
           resident at the property boundary—even less so for those residing in Eunice, New
           Mexico”;

   •       because TCEQ is not authorized to regulate or control traffic and the draft license does
           not authorize receipt of materials by rail, concerns about traffic or railway accidents
           could not be addressed in a contested-case hearing;

   •       a contested-case hearing could not address concerns regarding negative publicity because
           the activity is regulated to ensure the protection of the environment and health and safety,
           not manage publicity;

   •       Gardner and Williams live west of the proposed facility, and the groundwater flow is to
           the south/southwest;

   •       independent modeling by both WCS and TCEQ indicates that “the proposed facility
           would contain and isolate by-product wastes for at least 200 years under conservative
           assumptions”;

                                                 14
•      prevailing winds in the area are southerly and shifting from the north in winter, while
       Gardner and Williams live to the west of the proposed facility;

•      modeling indicates “no detrimental impact to a potential off-site resident at the property
       boundary”;

•      the draft permit “prohibits disposal of bulk non-containerized by-product material to
       address, in part, the concerns about assessment of worst-case wind conditions”;

•      the application includes appropriate characterizations of meteorological and climate
       conditions at the proposed site;

•      the proposed design includes “a run-on control berm to direct water away from the
       operating disposal facility, final grading after closure to direct run-off away from the
       closed facility, and drainage controls within the disposal facility”;

•      the draft license addresses weather events at the site to be protective of human health and
       the environment; and

•      the main surface water drainage in the area is a “southward draining ephemeral stream
       about three miles west of the proposed facility and is situated between the facility” and
       Eunice.

               The above information supports a conclusion that WCS’s application for a by-

product disposal license met the statutory requirements for such a facility and, more importantly,

that the actual operation of the facility as licensed is not likely to adversely contaminate the

groundwater, surface water, air, or soils in the region with radioactive material, at least not in

amounts that are prohibited under the law. For that reason, it would have been reasonable, and

thus within TCEQ’s discretion, to conclude that Gardner and Williams are not affected persons

because the licensed activity will have minimal effect on their health, safety, use of property,

and use of natural resources. See 30 Tex. Admin. Code § 55.256(c)(4)–(5). Likewise, it would

have been reasonable for TCEQ to determine that Gardner’s and Williams’s stated concerns

over possible traffic and railway accidents involving by-product materials were not reasonably

                                             15
   related to the disposal of byproduct at the WCS site because TCEQ has no jurisdiction over the

   transportation of radioactive materials and because the permit does not allow WCS to receive

   by-product material by rail. See id. § 55.256(c)(3). Relatedly, it would have been reasonable

   for TCEQ to determine that Gardner is not an affected person given that her concern

   regarding the effects of possible negative publicity on her business is not reasonably related

   to the WCS facility because the relevant regulations involve public health, safety, and the

   environment—not publicity. See id. Finally we would note, as did the Executive Director, that

   Gardner’s and Williams’s concerns about the licensed activity are shared by the general public.

   See id. In sum, we cannot say that TCEQ abused its discretion in deciding that neither Gardner

   nor Williams is a person who would be affected by the proposed permit under the relevant

   factors. Accordingly, it was within TCEQ’s discretion to deny the hearing request, see

   Tex. Health & Safety Code § 401.264 (requiring TCEQ to hold contested-case hearing regarding

   by-product license if requested by person affected), and in fact, it would have been an abuse of

   TCEQ’s discretion to grant the hearing request upon such a determination, see Tex. Water Code

   § 5.115 (“The commission may not grant a request for a contested case hearing unless the

   commission determines that the request was filed by an affected person . . . .”). We overrule

   Sierra Club’s first issue on appeal.10

       10
          Although Sierra Club’s stated issue on appeal is whether it was entitled to a contested-
case hearing simply because it submitted a hearing request that met the applicable statutes and
regulations, our discussion above of City of Waco and Bosque makes it clear this cannot be the end
of our analysis. Accordingly and because this case was submitted before the supreme court issued
these decisions, we have addressed this as an appeal challenging the overall propriety of
TCEQ’s denial.

                                               16
   Sierra Club’s “new evidence”

                    In its second issue, Sierra Club challenges the district court’s denial of its “Motion

   for Remand to Consider Material New Evidence.” The new evidence offered by Sierra Club in

   this motion consisted of two internal TCEQ memos written in 2007 by TCEQ staff members.11

   Sierra Club contends that these two memos reveal that the author of each memo opposed

   issuance of the by-product disposal license to WCS because the author felt that WCS had

   failed to comply with regulatory requirements. Sierra Club argues that this type of information

   is material to the WCS license application and, as such, should have factored into TCEQ’s

   evaluation of its hearing request; thus, Sierra Club maintains, the district court should have

   granted its request to remand the matter to TCEQ. We disagree.

                    Sierra Club based its motion for remand—and its challenge on appeal—on

   section 2001.175(c) of the Administrative Procedure Act (APA), which allows the reviewing

   court to remand to the underlying agency for evaluation of new evidence under certain

   circumstances:

            A party may apply to the court to present additional evidence. If the court is
            satisfied that the additional evidence is material and that there were good reasons
            for the failure to present it in the proceeding before the state agency, the court
            may order that the additional evidence be taken before the agency on conditions
            determined by the court. The agency may change its findings and decision by
            reason of the additional evidence and shall file the additional evidence and any
            changes, new findings, or decisions with the reviewing court.

       11
           Sierra Club’s motion to the district court urged consideration of additional new evidence,
but it limits its appeal to the two memos addressed here.

                                                   17
Tex. Gov’t Code § 2001.175(c). But even if we assume without deciding that these two memos

are material and that Sierra Club had good reasons for its failure to present the evidence to

TCEQ, see id., section 2001.175 simply does not apply to the circumstance presented here.

Section 2001.175 is in Subchapter G of the APA, which is titled, “Contested Cases: Judicial

Review,” see id. §§ 2001.171–.178. By its own terms, Subchapter G applies only to judicial

review from contested-case hearings: “A person who has exhausted all administrative remedies

available within a state agency and who is aggrieved by a final decision in a contested case

is entitled to judicial review under this chapter.” Id. § 2001.171 (emphasis added). TCEQ’s

evaluation of Sierra Club’s hearing request and its decision to deny that hearing request is

not a contested-case hearing subject to the APA. See 30 Tex. Admin. Code § 55.255(a) (“The

determination of the validity of a hearing request is not, in itself, a contested case subject to the

APA.”); City of Waco, 413 S.W.3d at 417. Accordingly, it was not error for the district court to

refuse to remand the case under APA section 2001.175(c).

                Even if section 2001.175 applied here, however, we would not agree that the

proffered evidence is material to TCEQ’s decision on the hearing request. See Tex. Gov’t Code

§ 2001.175(c) (requiring reviewing court be satisfied that new evidence is material). Additional

evidence is material under this provision if, among other considerations, its presentation to the

agency could have caused the agency to reach a contrary conclusion. See Texas Oil & Gas Corp.

v. Railroad Comm’n, 575 S.W.2d 348, 352 (Tex. Civ. App.—Austin 1978, no writ). As noted

by Sierra Club in its appellate brief here and in its motion for partial summary judgment to the

district court, the TCEQ commissioners were aware of dissent from some TCEQ staff: one of

the TCEQ commissioners expressed concern in the TCEQ meeting that agency staff members

                                               18
had raised questions in the media about WCS’s application and about whether TCEQ was

suppressing full review of the application. Stated another way, even without the memos in

front of them, the TCEQ commissioners were aware that some TCEQ staff disagreed with

the Executive Director’s recommendation to issue the license. Accordingly, we cannot say that

having these two staff memos in evidence would have caused the agency to reach a contrary

conclusion. Finally, we also note that Sierra Club’s motion offers no explanation for why it

failed to present the evidence to TCEQ. See Tex. Gov’t Code § 2001.175(c) (requiring “good

reasons for the failure to present” evidence to agency). Instead, Sierra Club simply asserted to

the district court that it had “become aware of new, material evidence” since the district court’s

judgment. On that basis alone, and again assuming that section 2001.175 would even apply here,

the district court could have denied Sierra Club’s motion.

               We overrule Sierra Club’s second issue on appeal.

                                        CONCLUSION

               Having overruled both of Sierra Club’s issues on appeal, we affirm the district

court’s judgment.

                                               ________________________________________
                                               Jeff Rose, Justice

Before Justices Puryear, Rose, and Goodwin

Affirmed

Filed: April 4, 2014

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