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Barnes, Presiding Judge. Craig Barrow, III appeals the superior court’s judgment entered against him in this case, wherein he challenged the propriety of a permit issued by Georgia’s Department of Natural Resources, Environmental Protection Division (“EPD”) to the City of Guyton (“City”) for a wastewater treatment facility. For reasons that follow, we reverse the judgment and remand the case for proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.    On October 18, 2013, the EPD (acting through its Director[1]) issued a permit to the City, authorizing the City to build and operate a land application system facility (“LAS”) upon a 265-acre tract of land located in Effingham County (“Site”). In connection therewith, wastewater collected in the City’s sewer system would enter the facility and undergo a series of treatments,[2] after which the treated wastewater would be applied to fields at the Site using spray irrigation. Approximately 44 acres of the Site will be devoted to sprayfield usage, and the sprayfield will operate up to five days each week.The Site is bound on one side by a dirt road, across from which lies Barrow’s 2,400-acre farm. (On the other side of Barrow’s farm is the Ogeechee River.) Barrow uses his farm for pine forestry and recreation; he also promotes wildlife on his property by growing food plots for animals such as turkey and deer. One section of Barrow’s farmland (that lies next to the dirt road) is comprised of wetlands that provide a habitat for, among other things, frogs, toads, salamanders, and turtles.   Complaining that surface water and groundwater traveling from the Site would pollute and degrade the waters on his property and harm the wetlands and various plant and animal life, Barrow administratively appealed the EPD’s issuance of the permit.[3] Among the grounds asserted, Barrow claimed that the EPD had issued the permit without complying with Georgia’s antidegradation rule, Ga. Comp. R. & Regs. 391-3-6-.03 (2) (b). The EPD, and the City as intervenor, claimed that issuance of the permit was not in violation of the antidegradation rule, citing further internal EPD guidelines.Following a determination that Barrow had standing, an administrative law judge (ALJ) conducted an evidentiary hearing on the merits.[4] Thereafter, the ALJ issued a final decision affirming the EPD’s issuance of the permit based on her interpretation of the antidegradation rule. Barrow petitioned for judicial review, maintaining before the superior court that the EPD had issued the permit without compliance with the antidegradation rule. The superior court affirmed the ALJ’s decision, concluding that issuance of the permit was lawful.   In this discretionary appeal, Barrow contends that the superior court erred in affirming the ALJ’s decision.[5] In related claims of error, Barrow argues that the relevant part of the antidegradation rule is unambiguous; that the ALJ’s and the superior court’s interpretation of that rule contradicted the rule’s plain language; and that the EPD’s cited guidelines provided no authority to avoid the clear mandates of that rule.“[T]his Court conducts a de novo review of claimed errors of law in the superior court’s appellate review of an ALJ’s decision. Furthermore, the interpretation of a statute or regulation is a question of law and, thus, is also reviewed de novo on appeal.” (Punctuation and footnotes omitted.) Upper Chattahoochee Riverkeeper v. Forsyth County, 318 Ga. App. 499, 502 (734 SE2d 242) (2012). With these guiding principles in mind, we review first the statutory scheme and rule at issue here.Pursuant to the Federal Clean Water Act, the individual states are permitted to enact and administer their own water-quality programs, subject to certain federal minimum standards. See 33 USC § 1313; see also Upper Chattahoochee Riverkeeper, 318 Ga. App. at 502 (1). Toward that end, the Georgia Water Quality Control Act (Act), OCGA § 12-5-20 et seq., has as a central purpose the prevention of unnecessary degradation of current water quality. Hughey v. Gwinnett County, 278 Ga. 740, 742 (3) (609 SE2d 324) (2004) (interpreting OCGA § 12-5-21 (a), which declares the policy on the State’s water resources).Particularly pertinent here, OCGA § 12-5-30 (b) of the Act sets out:   Any person desiring to erect or modify facilities or commence or alter an operation of any type which will result in the discharge of pollutants[[6]] from a nonpoint source[[7]] into the waters of the state, which will render or is likely to render such waters harmful to the public health, safety, or welfare, or harmful or substantially less useful for domestic, municipal, industrial, agricultural, recreational, or other lawful uses, or for animals, birds, or aquatic life, shall obtain a permit from the director to make such discharge. . . . The director may, after public notice and opportunity for public hearing, issue a permit which authorizes the person to make such discharge upon condition that such discharge meets or will meet, pursuant to any schedule of compliance included in such permit, all water quality standards, effluent limitations, and all other requirements established pursuant to this article.[[8]]   (Emphasis supplied.)Georgia’s Board of Natural Resources is the agency responsible for promulgating rules and regulations governing the issuance of permits for constructing and operating facilities that discharge pollutants into Georgia’s waters. See OCGA § 12-5-23 (a) (1) (C), (J).[9] And pursuant to that responsibility, the Board has promulgated a rule pertaining to the antidegradation of water-quality standards. Ga. Comp. R. & Regs. r. 391-3-6-.03. See Upper Chattahoochee, 318 Ga. App. at 503 (1).The specific question presented to the ALJ that remains contested at this juncture is whether the EPD’s issuance of the City’s permit was in violation of Georgia’s antidegradation rule. In relevant part, that rule provides:   Where the quality of the waters exceed[s] levels necessary to support propagation of fish, shellfish, and wildlife and recreation in and on the water, that quality shall be maintained and protected unless the division finds, after full satisfaction of the intergovernmental coordination and public participation provisions of the division’s continuing planning process, that allowing lower water quality is necessary to accommodate important economic or social development in the area in which the waters are located. In allowing such degradation or lower water quality, the division shall assure water quality adequate to protect existing uses fully. Further, the division shall assure that there shall be achieved the highest statutory and regulatory requirements for all new and existing point sources and all cost-effective and reasonable best management practices for nonpoint source control.

 
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