OHIO EPA’S ENDLESS LOOP: How Bureaucracy Betrays Galion with Perpetual Deadlines and Fake ComplianceReading Mode


The regulatory framework governing Ohio’s waste and composting facilities is sold to the public as a shield—a rigorous commitment to environmental stewardship and communal safety. However, a harrowing examination of the Ohio Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA) dealings with the City of Galion reveals a starkly different landscape. What should be a firm line of defense has dissolved into a choreographed performance of administrative shadows.

A forensic review of correspondence, inspection reports, and enforcement actions from 2024 through early 2026 unmasks a disturbing pattern of institutionalized inertia. Through a cycle of calculated delays, rolling deadlines, and the strategic use of “pending” status, the Ohio EPA has replaced accountability with a paper trail. By issuing Notices of Violation (NOVs) that are “abated” the moment a late form is filed, and weaponizing granular Notices of Deficiency (NODs) against documents previously deemed acceptable, the agency has created a sanctuary for non-compliance. In the Northwest District, “compliance” is no longer a standard to be met, but a horizon that is perpetually—and intentionally—receding.


The Galion Case Study: A Chronology of Negotiable Deadlines

Galion’s Class IV composting facility handles yard waste such as brush, leaves, and grass clippings. While the environmental risk is lower than a landfill, the regulatory requirements under OAC 3745‑560 remain strict—especially for annual reporting and site mapping.

The 2024 and 2025 reporting cycles show how the Ohio EPA manages non‑compliance through a combination of administrative forgiveness and technical deferral.

In early 2025, the facility missed the February 1 deadline for its 2024 Annual Operational Report. Under OAC 3745‑560‑415(C), this report must be submitted every year.

Instead of issuing a formal notice immediately, the Ohio EPA Northwest District Office—through Environmental Specialist Mary Ann Miller—sent an informal email on April 22, 2025, nearly three months after the legal deadline. The report was submitted the next day.

On May 1, 2025, the agency issued a combined Notice of Violation/Resolution of Violation. This dual‑status letter acknowledges the violation while simultaneously declaring it “abated,” documenting non‑compliance without imposing consequences or creating a deterrent for future delays.

Insert Table 1: Regulatory Response Timeline for Galion Composting (2024–2026)

Event DateAction TakenAgency RepresentativeLegal/Rule CitationOutcome
Feb 1, 2025Regulatory DeadlineN/AOAC 3745-560-415(C)Deadline missed by City of Galion
April 22, 2025Informal EmailMary Ann MillerN/AAgency “nudges” operator for report
April 23, 2025Report SubmissionAndy MuntisOAC 3745-560-04Report filed 81 days late
May 1, 2025NOV / ROVMary Ann MillerORC 3734Violation “abated” upon receipt; no penalty
Feb 9, 2026Report SubmissionAndy MuntisOAC 3745-560-415(C)2025 Report filed near deadline
March 10, 2026NODMary Ann MillerOAC 3745-560-400(B)(2)Drawing found “deficient” after years of use

When the 2025 report was submitted more promptly on February 9, 2026, the agency shifted away from timing issues and instead focused on technical details—specifically the “plan view drawing.”

Although the 2024 review found “no deficiencies,” the March 10, 2026 NOD identified fourteen separate failures in the same drawing that had been accepted for years.

This shift ensures the facility’s compliance status remains “pending,” stretching the 2025 regulatory cycle well into late 2026 or beyond.


The Notice of Deficiency as a Procedural Brake

A Notice of Deficiency (NOD) is typically an informal tool used during permitting to identify missing or incomplete items. But in Galion’s case, the March 2026 NOD functions as a procedural brake.

By requiring a plan view drawing at a 1‑inch‑to‑100‑feet scale and demanding identification of 100‑year floodplains, topography, and all occupied dwellings within 500 feet, the agency imposes a significant technical and financial burden on the operator.

These requirements were already in effect during the 2024 review. The agency simply chose not to enforce them until 2026—long after the drawing had been accepted.

This allows the agency to refuse “final” approval of the annual report and keep the facility in administrative limbo.

Insert Table 2: Technical Drawing Deficiencies Identified in the March 2026 NOD

Requirement IDOAC CitationDescription of Required FeatureStatus per Ohio EPA
(a), (b)3745-560-400(B)(2)Property and Facility Boundary LinesDeficient
(d)3745-560-400(B)(2)Topography, contours, and surface watersDeficient
(f)(i-iv)3745-560-400(B)(2)Dedicated areas for Composting, Storage, and ReceivingDeficient
(i)3745-560-400(B)(2)Limits of the 100-year floodplainDeficient
(l), (m)3745-560-400(B)(2)Public/Private wells and drainage sinkholesDeficient
(n)3745-560-400(B)(2)Direction of downward slopes and drainageDeficient

Each of these fourteen items becomes a new opportunity for delay. If the city corrects property lines but misses the “direction of downward slopes,” the agency can issue another NOD—resetting the 30‑day clock.

This iterative correction cycle is a hallmark of Ohio EPA’s enforcement style in Crawford County.


Personnel Consistency and District Strategy

The actions at the Galion facility reflect a broader strategy within the Ohio EPA Northwest District Office. Environmental Specialist Mary Ann Miller has been the primary contact for multiple Crawford County facilities, including the Galion compost site, the Crawford County Landfill, and the Crawford County CDD Landfill.

Her oversight suggests a uniform approach:

  • Local inspectors report “no issues” during physical inspections.
  • The state agency later issues NODs based on paperwork, not physical conditions.

This creates a two‑tier oversight system:

  • Local Tier: Physical inspections, generally positive.
  • State Tier: Desk audits, technical deficiencies, and administrative delays.

Supervisors such as Kristin Tillison and Mike Reiser are routinely copied on these letters, indicating that the practice is institutionalized.

Insert Table 3: Key Personnel in Crawford County Environmental Oversight

NameRoleAgencyImpact on Galion Facility
Mary Ann MillerEnvironmental Specialist 3Ohio EPA (DMWM)Primary author of NOVs and NODs; manages the “loop”
Andy MuntisFacility RepresentativeCity of GalionRecipient of all delay-inducing correspondence
Zachary YoungHealth District InspectorCrawford County HealthConducts field inspections that find “no issues”
John LogueDirectorOhio EPAUltimately responsible for the “final action” of the agency
Kristin TillisonDMWM SupervisorOhio EPAOversees Miller; receives copies of all extension letters

The Legal Architecture of Delay: NOV, NOD, and the Abatement Loophole

Ohio EPA’s enforcement tools fall into “informal” and “formal” categories. NOVs and NODs are informal. Administrative Orders are formal.

At Galion, the agency relies almost exclusively on informal tools—especially the NOV/Resolution format.

By declaring a violation “abated” once late paperwork is submitted, the agency removes any incentive for timely compliance.

When the operator does comply on time, the agency pivots to NODs, which have no firm deadlines and create open‑ended revision cycles.

Insert Table 4: Comparison of Regulatory Actions and Their Delay Potential

Action TypeLegal SignificanceImpact on DeadlinesObserved at Galion
Notice of Violation (NOV)Informal notice of non-complianceDelayed by “abatement” processUsed for 2024 missed report
Notice of Deficiency (NOD)Informal request for infoOpen-ended resubmittal windowUsed for 2025 drawing review
Administrative OrderFormal, enforceable legal dutyFixes a final, non-negotiable dateNever used for Galion
Consent OrderCivil litigation settlementMulti-year schedule of “interim” stepsSeen in other OH facilities

The absence of an Administrative Order is telling. As long as the city keeps responding to informal actions, the agency avoids issuing a formal order—and the facility remains in perpetual pending.


The Crawford County Context: Landfills and Comprehensive Compliance

This pattern is not unique to Galion. The Crawford County Landfill and CDD Landfill show similar dynamics.

Local inspections are “comprehensive” and find no major issues.

State-level desk audits later identify technical deficiencies in paperwork, not physical operations.

This allows the agency to maintain oversight indefinitely—even for facilities that have not accepted waste in years.


The Duty to Reapply and the Interim Status Trap

Ohio EPA uses a similar strategy in hazardous waste and wastewater permitting. Under OAC 3745‑50‑40(D) and 3745‑50‑58(B), a facility that submits a “timely and complete” renewal application can continue operating under an expired permit indefinitely if the agency has not issued a new one.

This “interim status” loophole mirrors the Galion situation:

  • The 2024 report was late but “abated.”
  • The 2025 report was on time but “deficient.”

Every year becomes an interim year.

Insert Table 5: Loophole Mechanisms in Ohio Environmental Permits

MechanismRule/ReferenceHow it Pushes DeadlinesResult for the Facility
Interim StatusOAC 3745-50-58(B)Allows operation under expired permits if renewal is “pending”Avoids new standards
Abatement PleadingORC 3734Resolves NOV immediately upon late submittalAvoids penalties for lateness
Technical IterationOAC 3745-560-400Demands corrections for items previously ignoredKeeps status as “Pending Review”
Informal NudgingDMWM ProcedureUses emails instead of formal legal noticesPrevents start of legal timelines

The Economic and Strategic Rationale for Delay

The Northwest District Office has several incentives to maintain perpetual pending status:

  • It justifies staffing and budget needs.
  • It avoids the political fallout of closing facilities.
  • It maintains leverage over operators through open‑ended technical demands.

The language in correspondence reinforces this dynamic. Letters routinely warn that the review “does not constitute a waiver of potential violations not discovered,” keeping operators in a defensive posture.


The Plan View Drawing: A Case Study in Arbitrary Precision

The March 2026 NOD’s focus on the plan view drawing illustrates how technical requirements can be used to stall administrative finality.

The agency identified fourteen requirements—including property lines, drainage direction, and identification of nearby wildlife areas—that had never been enforced before.

The timing is arbitrary. The facility footprint has not changed. The agency already has GIS data for many of the required features.

Requiring the city to hire professionals to produce a 1:1200 map ensures months of delay.

Insert Table 6: Comparison of Agency Assessment of Galion (2024 vs. 2026)

Assessment Category2024 Review (May 2025 Letter)2025 Review (March 2026 Letter)Implications of Change
Annual Report StatusLate but “no deficiencies”On time but “deficient”Lateness is forgiven; quality is the new hurdle
Site Map / DrawingImplicitly accepted14 items found “deficient”Moving the goalposts on technical requirements
Compliance StatusViolation “Abated”Revisions “Necessary”Perpetual cycle of resubmittal
Agency ActionResolution of ViolationNotice of DeficiencyShift from penalty-avoidance to info-stalling

Conclusion: The Case Against Procedural Finality

The records of the Ohio EPA do not merely document the oversight of the Galion composting facility; they archive a masterclass in procedural escapism. By trapping the city in a feedback loop of immediate “abatements” and endless technical revisions, the Northwest District Office has successfully decoupled regulation from results.

This is not a failure of the system—it is the system functioning exactly as designed. Under the guidance of specialists like Mary Ann Miller, the agency has perfected a “middle ground” where:

  • Finality is the enemy: Approval would end the agency’s leverage and justify less departmental attention.
  • Paperwork is the priority: A 1:1200 map becomes a higher priority than the actual, physical state of the facility.
  • Accountability is an abstraction: When every violation is instantly forgiven and every submission is infinitely “deficient,” the law loses its teeth and the public loses its protection.

For the residents of Crawford County, this administrative strategy is a betrayal. They are left with a regulatory body that prioritizes the “loop” over the goal, ensuring that no final map is ever approved, no penalty is ever truly felt, and no facility is ever fully compliant. The Galion case study stands as a chilling reminder that when an agency values the process of oversight more than the purpose of it, the environment is left to fend for itself in a desert of “pending” files.

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