In this case, we must decide whether the Tampa Electric Company violated OSHAs Hazardous Waste Operations and Emergency Response standard when employees at one of its power plants responded to an ammonia release without donning certain protective gear. Because we conclude that the release of ammonia at Tampa Electrics plant wasnt “uncontrolled” within the meaning of the OSHA standard, we hold that the standard didnt apply to Tampa Electrics response and, therefore, that Tampa Electric didnt violate it.
I
The disposition of this petition for review turns on the interpretation and application of OSHAs Hazardous Waste Operations and Emergency Response standard—for short, “HAZWOPER.” In relevant part, that standard states that “[e]mployees engaged in emergency response and exposed to hazardous substances presenting an inhalation hazard or potential inhalation hazard shall wear positive pressure self-contained breathing apparatus[es] while engaged in emergency response.” 29 C.F.R. § 1910.120(q)(3)(iv) (emphases added).
As our italics indicate, the key term here is “emergency response,” which the regulation defines in three parts. In particular, the first sentence quoted below explains what is an “emergency response,” and the second and third sentences explain what is not an “emergency response”:
Emergency response or responding to emergencies means a response effort by employees from outside the immediate release area or by other designated responders (i.e., mutual aid groups, local fire departments, etc.) to an occurrence which results, or is likely to result, in an uncontrolled release of a hazardous substance. Responses to incidental releases of hazardous substances where the substance can be absorbed, neutralized, or otherwise controlled at the time of release by employees in the immediate release area, or by maintenance personnel are not considered to be emergency responses within the scope of this standard. Responses to releases of hazardous substances where there is no potential safety or health hazard (i.e., fire, explosion, or chemical exposure) are not considered to be emergency responses.
29 C.F.R. § 1910.120(a)(3). The determinative question in this case is whether the release of ammonia at Tampa Electrics plant constituted an “uncontrolled release” within the meaning of the definitions first sentence.
On, then, to the facts. Tampa Electric operates a power plant that uses ammonia as part of its power-generation process. The plant receives ammonia through underground pipes that connect to an aboveground apparatus called a “skid,” which processes the ammonia into usable form. Tampa Electrics plant is designed so that if the pipes transporting the ammonia become overpressurized, some of the ammonia is diverted into a “sump,” an underground water tank that absorbs and neutralizes the excess. If the sump water becomes saturated with ammonia, and is thus unable to absorb any more, the system will begin to release ammonia into the outside air through a vent in the sump.
In May 2017, one of the underground pipes became overpressurized, and, as it was designed to do, the system automatically diverted ammonia from that pipe to the sump. A short while later, ammonia saturated the sump water, and excess ammonia began venting to the outside. The ammonia in the air triggered a sensor at the skid set to alarm if the ambient ammonia reached 50 parts per million.
About 45 minutes after the ammonia began to vent, a security guard heard the alarm sounding at the skid and smelled ammonia. He began having trouble breathing and reported the leak. Once notified, control-room personnel dispatched “rovers”—specially trained response employees—to manage the ammonia release.
Upon arriving at the skid, the rovers called the control room and instructed those there to “isolate” one of the valves regulating the flow of ammonia. Meanwhile, the rovers continued working on other parts of the skid and added water to the sump. Working together, plant personnel stopped the ammonia release, but because the rovers arrived at the skid without “self-contained breathing apparatus[es],” OSHA fined Tampa Electric $9,054 under 29 C.F.R. § 1910.120(q)(3)(iv).
Tampa Electric appealed the citation. The Occupational Safety and Health Review Commission held that Tampa Electrics response to the ammonia release wasnt an “emergency response” within the meaning of the HAZWOPER standard and, therefore, that the company hadnt violated that standard. For the reasons explained below, we agree and thus deny OSHAs petition for review.
1
II
To establish a prima facie case that an employer violated an OSHA regulation, the agency must show “(1) that the regulation applied; (2) that it was violated; (3) that an employee was exposed to the hazard that was created; and importantly, (4) that the employer ‘knowingly disregarded’ the Acts requirements.” Quinlan v. Secy, U.S. Dept of Lab., 812 F.3d 832, 836 (11th Cir. 2016) (quoting ComTran Grp., Inc. v. U.S. Dept of Lab., 722 F.3d 1304, 1307 (11th Cir. 2013)). We begin, and here find we can end, at step one—whether the HAZWOPER standard applied.
We agree with the Commission that Tampa Electrics actions here didnt constitute an “emergency response” within the meaning of 29 C.F.R. § 1910.120(a)(3).
2
As that provisions first sentence explains, to be considered an “emergency response,” the response must be “to an occurrence which results, or is likely to result, in an uncontrolled release of a hazardous substance.” Id. (emphasis added). What does it mean for the release of a hazardous substance like ammonia to be “uncontrolled”? One commonly used dictionary explains that the word “control” means, among other things, “to limit the level [or] intensity” of something or—in the specific context of “a mechanical or scientific process”—to “regulate,” as in “the airflow is controlled by a fan.” Control, Oxford Dictionary of English 379 (3d ed. 2010). Another defines the word “control,” as relevant here, to mean “to exercise restraining or directing influence over” and to “regulate [or] curb,” Control, Websters Third New International Dictionary 496 (1961), and defines that terms derivative “controlled” to mean “restrained, managed, or kept within bounds,” or “conducted or maintained in accordance with fixed rules, restraints, or procedures,” id., Controlled. It follows, therefore, that an “uncontrolled” release is one that isnt regulated, restrained, or directed, or whose level or intensity isnt limited.
3
Assessing whether a particular release was “uncontrolled” will often turn on the specific facts and circumstances of the situation. In making the uncontrolled-release determination, a court must inquire whether the entity charged with violating HAZWOPER meaningfully regulated, restrained, or directed the release by limiting the amount of the substance emitted or the intensity of its emission. Contrary to the strongest version of Tampa Electrics position, it is not a complete answer that a plant facility operated according to plan. If, for instance, a plant were designed so that if a pipe became overpressurized, it would simply explode along a weak seam—thereby indiscriminately spewing its contents into the air—the plant owner couldnt defend by arguing that it had fashioned the pipe to explode just so, that its facility had performed precisely as designed, and therefore, that the release wasnt “uncontrolled.” See Oral Arg. at 17:00–17:25, 33:02–33:20.
On the flip side, though, it cant be, as OSHA has at times insisted, that any release of a gaseous substance into the air, no matter how carefully regulated, restrained, and directed, is by definition “uncontrolled” simply because the gas may well disperse. See id. at 06:23–06:30. Thats so for two reasons—one legal and the other practical. As a matter of law, OSHAs sweeping theory effectively reads the word “uncontrolled” out of the regulation, at least as it applies to releases of gas, contrary to the usual rule that “[i]f possible, every word and every provision is to be given effect” and “[n]one should be ignored.” Antonin Scalia & Bryan A. Garner, Reading Law: The Interpretation of Legal Texts 174 (2012). And as a matter of practice, it seems to us indisputable that a plant owner can take responsible steps to meaningfully limit the amount of gas released into the atmosphere and thereby mitigate harm.
Due to the myriad ways in which a release may occur, we doubt the existence of a bright-line rule for determining when a release is uncontrolled. Here, though, we are satisfied that Tampa Electric designed a response system to manage when, how, and to what extent ammonia would be emitted in the event of a pipe overpressurization and thereby adequately “[ ]controlled” the release. A “release” is as much an ongoing “process” as a one-time event, see Release, Oxford Dictionary of English at 1500, and we hold that at each stage of the process here, Tampa Electric meaningfully regulated, restrained, and directed the release of ammonia at its plant. When the pipe overpressurization occurred, Tampa Electrics plant design controlled the release by (1) initially diverting some of the ammonia into the sump to be neutralized and then (2) venting excess, unabsorbable ammonia into the air. In so doing, Tampa Electric limited the amount of ammonia that was released into the air at any given time and prevented the overpressurized pipe from rupturing and releasing all its contents at once. And once the excess ammonia was in the air, Tampa Electrics rovers further controlled the release by isolating the ammonia valve and adding water to the sump so that the sump could absorb more of the chemical.
Accordingly, we hold that the release here was controlled—or, in the words of the regulation, that it wasnt “uncontrolled.” Because the release wasnt uncontrolled, the response to it wasnt an “emergency response,” and the HAZWOPER standard didnt apply to the rovers’ conduct. And because the HAZWOPER standard didnt apply, Tampa Electric didnt violate it.
The petition for review is DENIED and the order of the Commission is AFFIRMED.
FOOTNOTES
1
. We review the Commissions factual findings for “substantial evidence” and its legal determinations for whether they are “arbitrary, capricious, an abuse of discretion, or otherwise not in accordance with the law.” Quinlan v. Secy, U.S. Dept of Lab., 812 F.3d 832, 836 (11th Cir. 2016) (quoting 5 U.S.C. § 706(2)(A) and ComTran Grp., Inc. v. U.S. Dept of Lab., 722 F.3d 1304, 1307 (11th Cir. 2013) (holding that the Commission and ALJs are bound to follow the law of the circuit where the case is most likely to be appealed)).
2
. Although the Secretary of Labor has asked us to defer to his interpretation of the HAZWOPER regulation, we decline to do so. Generally, we defer to an agencys interpretation of its own regulation only if (1) the regulation is “ ‘genuinely ambiguous,’ ” (2) the agencys interpretation is “ ‘reasonable,’ ” and (3) “ ‘the character and context’ ” of the interpretation entitle it to controlling weight. See Rafferty v. Dennys, Inc., 13 F.4th 1166, 1179 (11th Cir. 2021) (quoting Kisor v. Wilkie, ––– U.S. ––––, 139 S. Ct. 2400, 2415–16, 204 L.Ed.2d 841 (2019)). For reasons explained in text, once the “traditional tools of construction” are brought to bear, the HAZWOPER regulations “uncontrolled release” requirement is not genuinely ambiguous. Rafferty, 13 F.4th at 1179.
3
. It should be noted that § 1910.120(a)(3)’s first sentence makes clear that it is the “release” itself, not the underlying “substance,” that either was or wasnt “uncontrolled.” The provisions second sentence, which effectively creates an exception to the first, operates a bit differently, making the “substance”—rather than the “release”—the object of “control[ ].” That sentence, again, states that “[r]esponses to incidental releases of hazardous substances where the substance can be absorbed, neutralized, or otherwise controlled at the time of release by employees in the immediate release area, or by maintenance personnel are not considered to be emergency responses within the scope of this standard.” OSHA seems to conflate the first two sentences, arguing that Tampa Electric was engaged in an “emergency response” because the ammonia was “uncontrolled” once released. See Br. of Appellant at 33; Oral Arg. at 04:05–07:28. For better or worse, thats just not how the regulation operates, at least as promulgated. Because we conclude that the “release” itself wasnt “uncontrolled” within the meaning of § 1910.120(a)(3)’s first sentence—and thus the regulations rule—we have no occasion to consider whether the “substance” (i.e., the ammonia) “c[ould] be ․ controlled” within the meaning of the second sentences exception.
Newsom, Circuit Judge: