Court Opinion

ID: 6216638
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-02-08 23:05:48.461537+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:57:10.251901
License: Public Domain

02/08/2022

                                           DA 21-0231
                                                                                           Case Number: DA 21-0231

              IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF MONTANA
                                           2022 MT 26

YELLOWSTONE DISPOSAL, LLC,

               Petitioner and Appellant,

         v.

STATE OF MONTANA, DEPARTMENT
OF ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY,

               Respondent and Appellee.

APPEAL FROM:           District Court of the First Judicial District,
                       In and For the County of Lewis and Clark, Cause No. CDV 2020-1080
                       Honorable Kathy Seeley, Presiding Judge

COUNSEL OF RECORD:

                For Appellant:

                       Matt J. Kelly, Nicholas R. VandenBos, Tarlow Stonecipher Weamer &
                       Kelly, PLLC, Bozeman, Montana

                For Appellee:

                       Nicholas A. Whitaker, Staff Attorney, Department of Environmental
                       Quality, Helena, Montana

                                                   Submitted on Briefs: January 5, 2022

                                                              Decided: February 8, 2022

Filed:
                                 q3,,---, 6mal•-.— 4(
                       __________________________________________
                                         Clerk
Justice Jim Rice delivered the Opinion of the Court.

¶1     Yellowstone Disposal, LLC (Yellowstone Disposal), appeals the dismissal of its

petition for writ of mandamus by the First Judicial District Court, Lewis and Clark County.

¶2     We affirm and address the following issue:

       Did the District Court err by denying Yellowstone Disposal’s petition for writ of
       mandamus?

                  FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

¶3     The Montana Department of Environmental Quality (DEQ) is responsible for

regulating solid waste management systems1 (SWMS) pursuant to The Montana Solid

Waste Management Act (SWMA). Section 75-10-203(2), MCA; § 75-10-204, MCA.

DEQ is statutorily empowered to adopt administrative rules governing “requirements for

the plan of operation and maintenance that must be submitted with an application [for a

license to operate an SWMS].” Section 75-10-204(1), MCA. A company “may not dispose

of solid waste or operate a solid waste management system without a license from [DEQ].”

Section 75-10-221(1), MCA. In addition to its own administrative rules, DEQ is required

to follow the environmental review procedures of the Montana Environmental Policy Act

(MEPA) set forth in § 75-1-208, MCA.

¶4     On June 16, 2015, Yellowstone Disposal applied to DEQ for a Class II SWMS

license (License) to operate a SWMS in Richland County. On November 25, 2015, DEQ

1
  A solid waste management system is “a system that controls the storage, treatment, recycling,
recovery, or disposal of solid waste.” Section 75-10-203(12), MCA. In this case, Yellowstone
Disposal is seeking a license to build a landfill facility.

                                              2
advised Yellowstone Disposal its application was incomplete and required additional

information. Yellowstone Disposal provided the requested information and on March 11,

2016, DEQ notified Yellowstone Disposal its application was complete according to

licensing requirements and contained the information needed to prepare an Environmental

Assessment (EA), which would be subject to a 30-day public comment period. Months

passed and Yellowstone Disposal contacted DEQ about the status of its application. On

August 17, 2016, DEQ responded in writing that it was “currently processing the license

application . . . but has determined that additional time is necessary to complete the

environmental evaluation and publish the [EA]. Therefore, the [Solid Waste Program] is

extending the review time by an additional 90 days.” The letter reiterated the 30-day public

comment requirement, stated DEQ would contact Yellowstone Disposal about the time and

location of the public meeting, and concluded with the assurance that: “The final licensing

decision will be made on or before close of business by December 12, 2016, after the public

comment period has ended and all substantive comments have been evaluated and

addressed.”

¶5     DEQ issued a draft EA for the project on November 28, 2017, over a year after the

letter announcing the “90 day” extension. The draft concluded: “The proposed licensure

of the [Yellowstone Disposal] Facility would meet the minimum requirements of the

Montana Solid Waste Management Act and associated administrative rules regulating solid

waste disposal” and “[c]onstruction and operation of the Facility does not conflict with any

local, state, or federal laws, requirements or formal plans.” The draft was followed by two

public meetings, one held on December 18, 2017, and, after announcing by press release
                                             3
that it was extending the public comment period by another 45 days, DEQ held a second

meeting on March 7, 2018. Following this second meeting, DEQ would not directly

contact Yellowstone Disposal again until January 2019.

¶6     In the interim, two events occurred that are central to the current dispute. First, in

March 2018, the Richland County Commission passed a resolution creating the McGlynn

Reservoir Citizen Initiated Zoning District. On December 4, 2018, the Richland County

Planner notified DEQ by letter (Zoning Letter) that, under the new zoning district, the

zoning certificate originally issued to Yellowstone Disposal in June 2015 regarding siting

of the proposed landfill was no longer valid. To proceed at that location, Yellowstone

Disposal would need to apply for a conditional use permit. Second, the Federal Aviation

Administration (FAA) determined that Yellowstone Disposal had failed to secure a

necessary exemption in order for its proposed facility to accept putrescible waste.2 In

response, Yellowstone Disposal notified DEQ on August 28, 2018, that it no longer

planned to accept putrescible waste at its proposed facility.3

2
   “Putrescible wastes means solid waste which contains organic matter capable of being
decomposed by microorganisms and of such a character and proportion as to be capable of
attracting or providing food for birds.” 40 C.F.R. § 257.3-8(e)(7) (1979).
3
  The parties disagree as to whether this notification by Yellowstone Disposal constituted a legally
relevant “modification” of the application and whether the alleged modification resulted in the
statutory timeline being “reset” for DEQ to process the application. DEQ argues that its
“compliance with [MEPA time limits] must be measured from the most recent version of the
application submitted by the applicant.” Yellowstone Disposal argues that “DEQ’s ‘modification
= new application timeline’ argument is simply a convenient posture for this litigation.” We
conclude that resolution of the appeal does not require that we address whether the notification
constituted a modification of the application and to what effect. However, for convenience herein,
we refer to the “original application” and the “modified application” to distinguish between the
two.

                                                 4
¶7    On January 8, 2019, DEQ sent Yellowstone Disposal a copy of Richland County’s

Zoning Letter and conveyed the following in an accompanying letter (Stay Letter):

      DEQ has decided to stay its environmental review and licensing
      determination . . . until Yellowstone Disposal submits a new zoning
      certification from Richland County. Without valid zoning certification from
      the appropriate local authority, Yellowstone Disposal’s application for a
      SWMS license is incomplete, and DEQ cannot undertake an adequate
      environmental review or issue a license on an incomplete application.
      Furthermore, Yellowstone Disposal may need to amend its proposal to meet
      the requirements for a conditional use permit from Richland County, and it
      is prudent for DEQ to stay its environmental review until it is determined
      whether any additional amendments are made to the proposal.

¶8    A year passed while Yellowstone Disposal worked with Richland County to resolve

the zoning issue. Yellowstone Disposal had not yet secured a conditional use permit from

Richland County or otherwise resolved the issue when its counsel contacted DEQ on

January 23, 2020, requesting a meeting to discuss three issues: 1) the timeliness of DEQ’s

review of Yellowstone Disposal’s application; 2) DEQ’s rationale for suspending review;

and 3) the current status of the facility and the application. Counsel for Yellowstone

Disposal continued to communicate with DEQ and repeatedly asked for DEQ’s official

position on these issues in writing. DEQ did not provide further written explanation. On

April 24, 2020, Yellowstone Disposal sent a demand letter to DEQ, stating, “Yellowstone

Disposal demands that [DEQ] issue the [License] without further delay,” citing

§ 75-1-208(7)(a), MCA.

¶9    Following the demand letter, Yellowstone Disposal met with DEQ representatives,

including the Department’s Director. On May 13, 2020, DEQ sent a formal written

response to the demand letter, stating its position was that, because Yellowstone Disposal

                                            5
modified its original application, this change “render[ed] DEQ’s initial completeness

determination moot,” essentially “resetting” the statutory deadlines governing its duty to

process the application. It further stated that the Zoning Letter, which arrived before DEQ

had made a completeness determination on the modified application, rendered the

application incomplete, and only complete applications were “subject to the time limits in

§ 75-1-208(4), MCA.” DEQ characterized its Stay Letter as “a written finding that

Yellowstone Disposal’s application was incomplete,” which, “in accordance with ARM

17.50.513(2), postponed processing the application until such time as Yellowstone

Disposal cures the application deficiency.”

¶10    On July 13, 2020, Yellowstone Disposal filed a petition for writ of mandamus in the

District Court to compel DEQ to issue the License or, in the alternative, issue a final

decision approving or denying Yellowstone Disposal’s application.          DEQ moved to

dismiss the petition for failure to state a claim under M. R. Civ. P. 12(b)(6). The District

Court recognized that “DEQ took over a year and a half between certifying Yellowstone

Disposal’s Application as complete and publishing its Draft EA. This length of time

greatly exceeded the time limits under both MEPA and SWMA’s administrative rules,” but

nonetheless granted DEQ’s motion and dismissed the petition, concluding that “[d]espite

DEQ’s failure to meet the time limits under MEPA and SWMA, Yellowstone Disposal is

not entitled to a license under MCA 75-1-208(7)(a). DEQ had authority to stay the

processing and review of Yellowstone Disposal’s Application under SWMA and MEPA.”

The District Court reasoned that, due to Yellowstone Disposal’s alleged modification and

the position taken by Richland County in its Zoning Letter,
                                              6
       DEQ’s [Stay Letter] properly postponed Yellowstone Disposal’s Application
       under ARM 17.50.513(2). The Application is incomplete without a valid
       zoning certificate . . . . Because the Application is incomplete, DEQ may
       ‘postpone processing the application’ until Yellowstone Disposal submits the
       necessary materials to render its Application complete . . . . DEQ’s [Stay
       Letter] constituted a written finding that ‘permit issuance . . . would result in
       the violation of a statutory or regulatory requirement’ under MCA § 75-1-
       208(7)(a) . . . . Without a valid zoning certificate, issuing Yellowstone
       Disposal a license would violate SWMA’s administrative rules . . . . As such,
       the court cannot compel DEQ to issue Yellowstone Disposal’s license under
       § 75-1-208(7)(a) despite DEQ’s failure to complete a timely environmental
       review.

The court also noted that MEPA and SWMA required DEQ to incorporate the new

considerations into its environmental assessment and may require amended or

supplemental findings.

¶11    While Yellowstone Disposal raises three issues in challenge to the District Court’s

order dismissing its petition,4 we will focus more generally on whether Yellowstone

Disposal satisfied the requirements for issuance of a writ of mandamus.

                                 STANDARDS OF REVIEW

¶12    A district court’s decision on whether to grant a writ of mandamus is a legal

conclusion we review for correctness. Allied Waste Servs. of N. Am., LLC v. Mont. Dep’t

of Pub. Serv. Regulation, 2019 MT 199, ¶ 12, 397 Mont. 85, 447 P.3d 463 (citing Boehm

v. Park Cty., 2018 MT 165, ¶ 7, 392 Mont. 72, 421 P.3d 789). We review an order granting

4
 Yellowstone Disposal included the following issues in its briefing: 1) The District Court’s alleged
failure to consider Yellowstone Disposal’s alternative request for relief; 2) The District Court’s
alleged “failure to interpret facts in the light most favorable to Yellowstone Disposal”; and
3) Whether DEQ has a clear legal duty to issue Yellowstone Disposal the License because it missed
the statutory time limits.

                                                 7
a motion to dismiss under Rule 12(b)(6) de novo. Barthel v. Barretts Minerals Inc., 2021

MT 232, ¶ 9, 405 Mont. 345, 496 P.3d 541 (citation omitted).

                                         DISCUSSION

¶13    Did the District Court err by denying Yellowstone Disposal’s petition for writ of
       mandamus?

¶14    “‘A writ of mandate is an extraordinary remedy available in only rare cases.’”

Allied Waste Servs., ¶ 19 (quoting Boehm, ¶ 9). “‘The writ is available where the party

applying for it is entitled to performance of a clear legal duty by the party against whom

the writ is sought and there is no speedy and adequate remedy in the ordinary course of law

. . . . If the first part of the standard is not met—that is, if no clear legal duty is established—

issuance of the writ is barred.’” Boehm, ¶ 9 (quoting Best v. Police Dep’t of Billings, 2000

MT 97, ¶ 14, 299 Mont. 247, 999 P.2d 334); see also § 27-26-102, MCA.

¶15    The “clear legal duty” must be a ministerial act that allows the agency no discretion.

“We consider an act to be ministerial where the law prescribes and defines the duty to be

performed with such precision and certainty as to leave nothing to the exercise of discretion

or judgment.” Beasley v. Flathead County Bd. of Adjustments, 2009 MT 120, ¶¶ 16-17,

350 Mont. 171, 205 P.3d 812 (citing Smith v. County of Missoula, 1999 MT 330, ¶ 28, 297

Mont. 368, 992 P.2d 834).

¶16    Yellowstone Disposal argues “[t]he expiration of [the MEPA statutory deadlines]

imposed a clear legal duty on DEQ to issue Yellowstone Disposal’s requested license,”

citing § 75-1-208(7)(a), MCA, which provides:

       [I]f an agency has not completed the environmental review by the expiration
       of the original or extended time period, the agency may not withhold a permit
                                                 8
       or other authority to act unless the agency makes a written finding that there
       is a likelihood that permit issuance or other approval to act would result in
       the violation of a statutory or regulatory requirement.

¶17    DEQ does not dispute that it failed to meet the statutory and administrative time

limits governing its environmental review of Yellowstone Disposal’s original application.

However, it argues it has no “present, clear legal duty” to issue the License or make a final

decision on the application because, without a valid zoning certificate, the modified

application is incomplete. Therefore, DEQ is not required at this point to “process the

application in accordance with the timeframes of § 75-1-208(4), MCA (‘[a]ll time limits

are measured from the date the agency receives a complete application’), or ARM

17.50.513.” Further, DEQ argues it is “obligated under the []SWMA and MEPA to

evaluate both Yellowstone Disposal’s application modifications and the effect of Richland

County’s recission of its zoning certification.”

¶18    The parties also dispute whether DEQ’s Stay Letter properly postponed its review

of Yellowstone Disposal’s application under ARM 17.50.513(2) (“If an application [for an

SWMS] is incomplete, the department shall notify the applicant in writing within 15 days

after the initial review is completed and shall postpone processing the application until the

material necessary to complete the application is received and the application is determined

to be complete.”). DEQ asserts it appropriately exercised its authority to postpone review

once it determined Yellowstone Disposal’s application was incomplete as lacking a valid

zoning certificate, and that its Stay Letter satisfied the requirement of “a written finding

that there is a likelihood that permit issuance or other approval to act would result in the

violation of a statutory or regulatory requirement” under § 75-1-208(7)(a), MCA, therefore
                                              9
authorizing DEQ to properly withhold the License. Yellowstone Disposal disagrees,

arguing DEQ “rescind[ed] its completeness determination” and “indefinitely postpone[d]

review” of its application, which it describes as an “ultra vires act by the agency.”

¶19    An agency “shall comply” with the MEPA environmental review procedure,

including adhering to the time limits outlined in the statute. Section 75-1-208(1)(a), MCA.

“[A]n agency is subject to the time limits” in order to “ensure a timely completion of the

environmental review process”; “[a]ll time limits are measured from the date the agency

receives a complete application.” Section 75-1-208(4)(a), MCA. Once DEQ certifies an

application as complete, it has 60 days to complete the public scoping process and 90 days

to complete an environmental review. Section 75-1-208(4)(a)(i),(ii), MCA. “The agency

may extend the time limit one time, and the extension may not exceed 50% of the original

time period [stated in the statute].” An extension is obtained “by notifying the project

sponsor in writing that an extension is necessary and stating the basis for the extension.”

Section 75-1-208(5), MCA. Therefore, DEQ can only unilaterally extend the public

scoping process by up to 30 days and the time to complete an environmental review by up

to 45 days. After one extension, any further delay must be upon mutual agreement between

DEQ and the applicant. Section 75-1-208(5), MCA.

¶20    DEQ notified Yellowstone Disposal that its original application was complete and

then was silent for about 160 days, at which point it notified Yellowstone Disposal it was

extending the review time by another 90 days. DEQ did not “stat[e] the basis for the

extension,” as required by § 75-1-208(5), MCA. Following this extension, DEQ took 468

days to issue the draft EA. From the time Yellowstone Disposal advised DEQ that it would
                                             10
modify its application in response to the FAA determination, DEQ took 133 days to

respond with the Stay Letter. Both Yellowstone Disposal’s notification to DEQ about

altering its application to no longer accept putrescible waste, and the receipt of Richland

County’s Zoning Letter, occurred well after the statutory time for DEQ to decide on the

original, complete application had expired. None of DEQ’s actions on the application were

completed within the statutory deadlines proscribed by the Legislature.

¶21      Perhaps more concerning is DEQ’s nonchalance about the statutory time

requirements.5 DEQ missed every deadline but offers no explanation or justification for

its actions, and the record reflects apparent indifference to the consequences—failing to

satisfy the Legislature’s directive to “ensure a timely completion of the environmental

review process” and imposing long delays upon the applicant.6 Section 75-1-208(4)(a),

MCA. The Legislature provided a clear procedure for extension of the statutory deadlines

for review when necessary, but DEQ also failed to comply with that procedure. Section

75-1-208(5), MCA. Under either the original application or the modified application, DEQ

failed to meet time limits provided by statute and administrative rule.

¶22      However, the determinative question here is whether DEQ had a clear legal duty to

issue the License at the time Yellowstone Disposal petitioned for mandamus. For its part,

Yellowstone Disposal mostly maintained the pace of DEQ, failing to press its timeliness

5
  DEQ’s own administrative rules follow this same timeline. ARM 17.50.513(3), (4). “The
environmental review process for the department’s proposed action must follow [MEPA rules].”
ARM 17.50.513(5).
6
    Yellowstone Disposal describes DEQ’s delayed process as “administrative purgatory.”

                                               11
concerns until after the potential licensure problems arose. Had Yellowstone Disposal

sought mandamus before Richland County changed its zoning regulations, upon DEQ’s

determination that its application satisfied governing statutes and regulations, and upon the

expiration of the time for review, DEQ may well have had a clear legal duty to issue the

License under § 75-1-208(7)(a), MCA. However, during that window, an event occurred

that critically impacted the status of the application—the ostensible loss of Yellowstone

Disposal’s zoning approval.

¶23    A complete application under MEPA “contains all data, studies, plans, information,

forms, fees, and signatures required to be included with the application sufficient for the

agency to approve the application under the applicable statutes and rules.” Section

75-1-220(3), MCA. “An owner or operator of a solid waste management system shall

construct, maintain, and operate that system in conformance with the requirements of . . .

all local zoning . . . provisions, and any other legal requirements that may be in effect.”

ARM 17.50.1116(1).        DEQ’s administrative rules for SWMS licensing require an

application to include “zoning information” and “vicinity maps . . . delineat[ing] . . . zoning

and existing and allowed land use” within one mile of the proposed facility. ARM

17.50.508(1)(m),(o)(i). DEQ included in its draft EA a map provided by Yellowstone

Disposal in its original application, stating, “Zoning: There is no zoning in Richland

County outside of Sidney and Fairview city limits,” at the proposed location of the facility.

However, this zoning assessment is no longer accurate in light of Richland County’s

actions, and therefore DEQ can no longer rely on this portion of Yellowstone Disposal’s

application, or upon its own determination in the draft EA that “[c]onstruction and
                                              12
operation of the Facility does not conflict with any local, state, or federal laws,

requirements or formal plans.”      In sum, DEQ no longer possesses all the materials

“required to be included with the application sufficient for the agency to approve the

application under the applicable statutes and rules.” Section 75-1-220(3), MCA. We must

conclude that DEQ did not then have a clear legal duty to act, and that Yellowstone

Disposal did not satisfy the requirements for mandamus. See Allied Waste Servs., ¶ 19.

¶24    Both parties cite Bostwick Props. v. Mont. Dep’t of Natural Res. & Conservation,

2009 MT 181, 351 Mont. 26, 208 P.3d 868, in support of their respective positions.

Bostwick applied to the Department of Natural Resources and Conservation (DNRC) for a

water use permit. Bostwick, ¶ 2. DNRC exceeded the statutory time limit for deciding to

“grant, deny, or condition” the application, and Bostwick petitioned for a writ of mandamus

to compel DNRC to approve the permit. Bostwick, ¶¶ 8-9. Shortly afterwards, DNRC

issued a “statement of opinion” concluding that Bostwick’s application failed to meet the

requirements for permit issuance. Bostwick, ¶ 10. The District Court granted the writ

because DNRC “had failed to take proper action on Bostwick’s permit application within

the [statutory timeframes] in spite of the fact that it had all the information required to do

so.” Bostwick, ¶ 12.

¶25    We agreed that “[o]nce Bostwick submitted an application which was ‘correct and

complete,’ and thus eligible to go forward in the permit consideration process, DNRC had

a clear, legal duty to process that application in accordance with the applicable timeframes

and procedures.”       And, similar to our reasoning here, we explained that “DNRC

clearly failed to uphold this duty and could have been commanded to make a decision one
                                             13
way or another as soon as those timeframes had lapsed.” Bostwick, ¶ 22. Nonetheless, we

reversed the writ’s issuance, holding:

       Because Bostwick has not satisfied [the] criteria [for permit issuance], as a
       matter of law DNRC is simply not under a mandatory legal duty to issue the
       water permit at this time . . . . the issuance of the water permit itself does not
       become a clear, legal duty until Bostwick proves, by a preponderance of the
       evidence, that the required criteria have been satisfied. This has not yet
       happened as is clear from DNRC’s statement of opinion.

Bostwick, ¶¶ 21-22 (emphasis added).

¶26    Yellowstone Disposal’s situation is similar. Although DEQ is prohibited under

§ 75-1-208(7)(a), MCA, from withholding a license upon expiration of the statutory time

period without making “a written finding that there is a likelihood” that issuance of a

license “would result in the violation of a statutory or regulatory requirement,”

Yellowstone Disposal must nonetheless satisfy the criteria for issuance of the License.

DEQ plainly missed the deadlines, but the agency must still be able to legally take the

action requested. The zoning action that took place after the expiration of the deadline and

before issuance of the License rendered DEQ legally unable to do so.

¶27    Yellowstone Disposal alternatively argues DEQ has a clear legal duty “to issue a

statutorily compliant decision on Yellowstone Disposal’s Application,” that is, to act on

the application “one way or another.” It cites the requirements DEQ must fulfill before

denying an application for an SWMS license, but here DEQ stayed the processing of the

application pending receipt of the new zoning certificate, and did not deny the application.

DEQ was therefore not yet subject to those requirements. In its Stay Letter, DEQ informed

Yellowstone Disposal: “DEQ has decided to stay its environmental review and licensing

                                              14
determination . . . until Yellowstone Disposal submits a new zoning certification from

Richland County.” (Emphasis added.) While Yellowstone Disposal contends that DEQ

“indefinitely postpone[d] further review” of its application without authority to do so,

leaving it with no option but to pursue mandamus, we disagree.                    DEQ clearly

communicated what Yellowstone Disposal needed to do to complete its application and for

review to resume, and thus Yellowstone Disposal was not left with no other option.

“[F]ailure to exhaust administrative remedies precludes the issuance of a writ of mandate

because there is otherwise a plain, speedy, and adequate remedy of law.” Boehm, ¶ 18

(citations omitted). Yellowstone Disposal relies on the language in Bostwick that DNRC

“could have been commanded to make a decision one way or another as soon as those

timeframes had lapsed,” Bostwick, ¶ 22, but that language was referencing the duties of a

different agency under § 85-2-310, MCA (2009), which imposes a different requirement

upon the agency than the statutes at issue here.7

¶28    In the event Yellowstone Disposal provides the necessary materials for its

application, DEQ is statutorily mandated to complete its environmental review as required

by § 78-1-208, MCA. Or, if Yellowstone Disposal advises DEQ that it cannot or will not

provide any additional information in support of its application, then DEQ likewise can

7
  We decline to further consider whether DEQ’s Stay Letter was a proper exercise of authority to
postpone review under § 75-1-208(7)(a), MCA, and ARM 17.50.513(2), because of our precedent
that “[a]n action already done cannot be undone by mandamus, however erroneous it may have
been.” Beasley, ¶ 15 (citing State ex rel. Popham v. Hamilton City Council, 185 Mont. 26, 29, 604
P.2d 312, 314 (1979)). The validity or invalidity of the Stay Letter does not alter the ultimate
conclusion that DEQ did not have a present, clear legal duty to issue the License.

                                               15
proceed on the application. If DEQ determines to deny it, it must follow the procedure in

§ 75-10-224, MCA, and give Yellowstone Disposal written notice and an opportunity to

be heard. See Bostwick, ¶ 22. If Yellowstone Disposal disagrees with DEQ’s action on

the application, it can appeal administratively and then, if necessary, to the District Court.

See Boehm, ¶ 18.

¶29    Affirmed.

                                                  /S/ JIM RICE

We concur:

/S/ MIKE McGRATH
/S/ JAMES JEREMIAH SHEA
/S/ BETH BAKER
/S/ INGRID GUSTAFSON

                                             16