Case Information
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF IDAHO ALLIANCE FOR THE WILD
ROCKIES, Case No. 2:21-CV-00244-BLW MEMORANDUM DECISION Plaintiff, AND ORDER v.
KIMBERLY PIERSON, Idaho
Panhandle National Forest Supervisor,
and UNITED STATES FOREST
SERVICE, an agency of the U.S.
Department of Agriculture,
Defendants. INTRODUCTION
Before the Court is Plaintiff’s motion for Preliminary Injunction and/or Temporary Restraining Order (Dkt. 3). The Court held a hearing on the motion on July 12, 2021. For the reasons discussed below, the Court will grant the motion.
BACKGROUND
At issue in this case is the Hanna Flats Logging Project. The Project area is located in the Priest Lake Ranger District of the Idaho Panhandle National Forest, within the Priest Geographic Area, and is approximately 25 miles north of Priest River, Idaho. The Priest Geographic Area is, in turn, located in Boundary County, Idaho; Bonner County, Idaho; and Pend Oreille County, Washington; and is bounded on the north by the Canadian Border. The Project includes 1,843 acres of commercial logging, 360 acres of precommercial logging, and 149 acres of prescribed burning only. Approximately 1,109 acres of the commercial logging is “regeneration harvest,” meaning clear cutting or modified clear cutting. The Project also includes temporary road construction, excavated skid trail construction, and road maintenance.
A. Initial Decision Memo and the Previous Action (
Hanna Flats I
)
On October 22, 2018, Defendant United States Forest Service issued a
Decision Memo (“Initial Decision Memo”) approving the Hanna Flats Logging
Project. In a previous action, Plaintiff, Alliance for the Wild Rockies (AWR)
challenging the Initial Decision under the Administrative Procedures Act (APA)
and the Endangered Species Act (ESA).
See Alliance for the Wild Rockies v.
Higgins
, Case No. 2:19-cv-00332-REB,
Following the filing of Hanna Flats I , the USFS completed a Supplemental Information Report that determined additional NEPA analysis was not necessary because the Project was categorically excluded from NEPA analysis. Specifically, the USFS took the position that the because the entire Project area was designated as “wildland urban interface” in the Bonner County wildfire protection plan, the Project area fell within the definition of “wildland-urban interface” under HFRA and the Project was therefore categorically excluded from the NEPA process. Id. at *1-*2.
Magistrate Judge Bush, who was presiding over the case, rejected the USFS’s position, holding that the USFS violated HFRA because it failed to use HFRA’s statutory definition of wildland-urban interface in determining that the Project was categorically exempt from the NEPA process, and that this failure rendered the USFS’s use of the categorical exclusion unlawful. Id. at *12-*15. Judge Bush specifically noted he could not
read out HFRA’s explicit incorporation of at-risk communities in the definition of wildland-urban interface, or ignore HFRA’s simultaneous definition of at-risk communities themselves. To be clear, this is not to say that community wildfire protection plans are not important and cannot be relied upon when assessing wildland- urban interfaces – just the opposite; after all, they too are specifically integrated into the definition of a wildland-urban interface. But a wildfire protection plan’s utility presumes its synergy with HFRA such that, where it does not coincide with HFRA (e.g., when it defines wildland-urban interface differently than HFRA does), it cannot then operate as justification for a categorical exclusion under HFRA. Otherwise, a local county could designate their entire county as wildland-urban interface in a community wildfire protection plan, and then use that designation as the basis to categorically exclude logging projects throughout the county without the protections of NEPA. . . . In sum, it is unclear how the wildland-urban interface was defined here so that it could be confirmed that the Project sits within such an area and therefore qualifies for a categorical exclusion. At the very least, the statutory definition of wildland-urban interface was not used; as a result, the USFS violated HFRA, rendering its use of the categorical exclusion unlawful.
Id . at *14-*15 (internal citations and footnote omitted).
Judge Bush therefore granted summary judgment on this narrow issue in favor of AWR and remanded the action to the USFS with instructions for the USFS to revisit/review its claim that the entire Project area was within the wildland-urban interface and issue a supplemental decision memo that clearly:
(1) states how the wildland-urban interface is defined; (2) applies the wildland-urban interface (using the supplied definition) to a map that concurrently and definitively depicts the Project area; and (3) explains how the Project area falls within the wildland-urban interface under HFRA.
Id. at *16. Judge Bush suspended the Project until the review was completed, and the supplemental Decision Memo was issued, with the USFS to provide a 30-day notice before beginning or resuming any Project-related implementation activities. Id. Judge Bush also instructed the parties that if AWR sought to challenge the Project following remand, it was to do so by filing a separate action. Id. at *2 n.6.
B. Supplemental Memo and the Present Action ( Hanna Flats II ) On May 28, 2021, the USFS issued a Supplemental Memo. [2] On June 1,
2021, the USFS informed AWR that it had complied with the remand order in Hanna Flats I and that it may begin logging under the Project as soon as July 2, 2021. [3]
On June 7, 2021, AWR filed the present action ( Hanna Flats II ), alleging that the Project is unlawful as currently authorized under the Initial Decision Memo and the Supplemental Memo. (Dkt. 1.) AWR alleges that the final decision approving the Project is arbitrary and capricious, an abuse of discretion, and/or is otherwise in violation of NEPA, the NFMA, and the APA.
On June 8, 2021, AWR filed a motion for preliminary injunction and/or temporary restraining order, seeking to maintain the status quo until the Court has an opportunity to issue a final decision on the merits of this case. That motion for preliminary injunction and/or temporary restraining order is currently before the Court for decision.
LEGAL STANDARD
The purpose of a preliminary injunction is to preserve the status quo and
prevent the “irreparable loss of rights” before a final judgment on the merits, while
the purpose of a temporary restraining order is to preserve the status quo until a
hearing may be held on the appropriateness of a preliminary injunction.
See Textile
Unlimited, Inc. v. A. BMH and Co.
,
The standards for both a temporary restraining order and a preliminary
injunction are the same. The plaintiff “must establish that [it] is likely to succeed
on the merits, that [it] is likely to suffer irreparable harm in the absence of
preliminary relief, that the balance of equities tips in [its] favor, and that an
injunction is in the public interest.”
Id
. at 20. “[S]erious questions going to the
merits and a balance of hardships that tips sharply towards the plaintiff can support
issuance of a preliminary injunction, so long as the plaintiff also shows that there is
a likelihood of irreparable injury and that the injunction is in the public interest.”
Alliance for the Wild Rockies v. Cottrell
,
“For the purposes of injunctive relief, ‘serious questions’ refers to questions
which cannot be resolved one way or the other at the hearing on the injunction and
as to which the court perceives a need to preserve the status quo lest one side
prevent resolution of the questions or execution of any judgment by altering the
status quo.”
Republic of the Philippines v. Marcos
,
ANALYSIS
A. There are serious questions going to the merits . Under HFRA, a qualifying forest restoration treatment project may be categorically excluded from the requirements of NEPA. See 16 U.S.C. § 6591b(a), (b), (c). However, to fall within this categorical exclusion, the project must meet certain, delineated requirements, including that the project area be located in either (1) “the wildland-urban interface” or (2) in specified fire regime groups outside the wildland-urban interface. 16 U.S.C. § 6591b(a), (b), (c)(2)(A), (B). Here, the USFS contends that the Project falls within the first category—that the Project area is entirely within the wildland-urban interface—and that the Project is therefore categorically excluded from NEPA.
HFRA defines the “wildland-urban interface,” in relevant part, as an area “within or adjacent to” a community that is an “at-risk community that is identified in . . . a community wildlife protection plan.” [4] 16 U.S.C. § 6511(16).
An “at-risk community” is, in turn, defined by HFRA, in relevant part, as an area that is comprised of either (i) an “interface community” as defined by 66 Fed. Reg. 753 or (ii) “a group of homes and other structures with basic infrastructure and services (such as utilities and collectively maintained transportation routes) within or adjacent to Federal land.” [5] 16 U.S.C. § 6511(1).
(i) an area extending ½ -mile from the boundary of an at-risk community; (ii) an area within 1 ½ miles of the boundary of an at-risk community, including any land that--
(I) has a sustained steep slope that creates the potential for wildfire behavior endangering the at-risk community;
(II) has a geographic feature that aids in creating an effective fire break, such as a road or ridge top; or
(III) is in condition class 3, as documented by the Secretary in the project-specific environmental analysis; and
(iii) an area that is adjacent to an evacuation route for an at-risk community that the Secretary determines, in cooperation with the at-risk community, requires hazardous fuel reduction to provide safer evacuation from the at-risk community.
16 U.S.C. § 6511(16).
[5] The full HFRA definition of “at-risk community” is one (A) that is comprised of--
(i) an interface community as defined in the notice entitled “Wildland Urban Interface Communities Within the Vicinity of Federal Lands That Are at High Risk From Wildfire” issued by the Secretary of Agriculture and the Secretary of the Interior in accordance with title IV of the Department of the Interior and Related Agencies Appropriations Act, 2001 (114 Stat. 1009) (66 Fed. Reg. 753, (Continued)
1. Wildland-Urban Interface In the Supplemental Memo, the USFS explains that it determined that the project area falls within the wildland-urban interface under HFRA because the project area “is entirely within the Bonner County WUI [wildland-urban interface] as it is defined in the County’s CWPP [community wildfire protection plan] . . . .” (Dkt. 3-2 at 7.) In other words, the USFS relies exclusively on the Bonner County CWPP’s determination of the wildland-urban interface in determining that the Project area is within the wildland-urban interface. Notably missing from the Supplemental Memo is any analysis of the Project area using HFRA’s definition of the wildland-urban interface, see 16 U.S.C. § 6511(16), including whether the Project area is in or adjacent to an “at-risk community” as defined by HFRA, see 16 U.S.C. § 6511(1), (16).
January 4, 2001); or
(ii) a group of homes and other structures with basic infrastructure and services (such as utilities and collectively maintained transportation routes) within or adjacent to Federal land;
(B) in which conditions are conducive to a large-scale wildland fire disturbance event; and
(C) for which a significant threat to human life or property exists as a result of a wildland fire disturbance event.
16 U.S.C. § 6511(1).
The USFS thus, once again, failed to apply HFRA’s definition of wildland- urban interface in determining whether the Project area is excluded from the NEPA requirements. Instead, the USFS relied exclusively on Bonner County’s community wildfire protection plan’s determination of the wildland-urban interface. As explained in Hanna Flats I , Bonner County’s CWPP uses a definition that is inconsistent with HFRA’s definition of the wildland-urban interface. 2021 WL 1630546, at *14. Although a county’s wildfire protection plan can be relied upon in assessing the wildland-urban interface, where, as here, a wildfire protection plan defines the wildland-urban interface differently than HFRA, the wildfire protection plan definition cannot provide the “justification for a categorical exclusion under HFRA.” Id.
The USFS’s exclusive reliance on the Bonner County CWPP’s definition of the wildland-urban interface, and failure to conduct an analysis using the HFRA definition, raise serious questions regarding the USFS’s determination that the Project is categorically excluded from NEPA requirements and whether the USFS failed to comply with the remand instructions.
The USFS asserted during the July 12, 2021, hearing, that the needed analysis that demonstrates that the Project area is in the wildland-urban interface under HFRA is contained within the Bonner County 2017 Hazard Mitigation Plan, which incorporates the Bonner County CWPP. In support, the USFS cited to the Administrative Record at FS32304, which is the USFS’s Supplemental Memo. ( See AR FS32304.) The Supplemental Memo, in turn, cites to the Bonner County 2017 Hazard Mitigation Plan, and specifically to the portion of the Hazard Mitigation Plan located at AR FS30030-30052. This portion of the Hazard Mitigation Plan discusses general hazardous conditions in Bonner County. Relevant to the present case, the Hazard Mitigation Plan states that Bonner County adopted the following definition of wildland-urban interface:
WUI Definition – Is an area where developed lands interact with undeveloped lands and includes the infrastructure and natural resources communities rely on for existence.
Location – It is found in remote scattered development areas to highly developed urban areas and everywhere in between.
AR FS030047. This definition is followed by the “rationale” for the adoption of the definition. ( See id. ) Nowhere in that rationale is an analysis of, or application of, HFRA’s definition of the wildland-urban interface, or HFRA’s definition of “at-risk community.” ( See AR FS030048-52.) Instead, the rationale is limited to a discussion of the hazards of wildfire and the high risk of wildfire to Bonner County, and concludes that “the majority of the communities in Bonner County [have been designated] at high risk of wildfire . . .” and that “all areas are at high risk to wildfire.” (AR FS30050.)
Thus, the Hazard Mitigation Plan engages in an examination of whether areas of Bonner County, including communities located therein, are at risk of wildfire. Missing, however, from both the Hazard Mitigation Plan and the USFS’s Supplemental Memo, is any discussion or analysis of the Project area using HFRA’s definition of the wildland-urban interface, including whether the Project area is in or adjacent to an at-risk community as defined by HFRA. ( See AR FS32304, FS030030-52.)
The USFS contends that HFRA’s definition of wildland-urban interface does
not require that a community meet the “at-risk community” definition, and that it is
enough if the community is identified as at risk by a community wildfire protection
plan. The USFS would thus have the Court read HFRA’s definition of the
wildland-urban interface as requiring that the community be
either
an at-risk
community
or
be identified in a community wildfire protection plan. The Court
rejects this approach because it is inconsistent with the plain language of HFRA,
which defines the wildland-urban interface, in relevant part, as an area within or
adjacent “to an at-risk community that is identified in” a community wildfire
protection plan. 16 U.S.C. § 6511(16);
see Hanna Flats I
,
2. At-Risk Communities The USFS argues that the Supplemental Memo demonstrates that the communities of Nordman and Lamb Creek [6] —both of which are mapped and identified in the Supplemental Memo—comply with the HFRA definition of “at- risk community” set out in both subsection (i) and subsection (ii) of § 6511(1)(A). The Court disagrees.
a. Subsection (i) Turning first to subsection (i), this subsection defines an “at-risk community” as including “an interface community as defined in” 66 Fed. Reg. 753 (“Wildland Urban Interface Communities notice”). 16 U.S.C. § 6511(1)(A)(i). An “interface community” is, in turn, defined by 66 Fed. Reg. 753 as one “where structures directly abut wildland fuels,” and where there are “usually 3 or more structures per acre, with shared municipal services,” or a “population density of 250 or more people per square mile.” [7] 66 Fed. Reg. 753. The Federal Register lists three categories of communities in the “urban wildland interface,” only one of which is “interface communities. 66 Fed. Reg. 752-53. The other two categories of urban wildland interface communities are “intermix communities” and “occluded communities. 66 Fed. Reg. 753. The Federal Register goes on to provide an “Urban Wildland Community List” but does not designate into which of the three categories each of the listed communities falls. See 66 Fed. Reg. 753; see also 66 Fed. Reg. 43384 (noting that is an updated list to the initial list in 66 Fed. Reg. 751). In other words, a community can be included on the list if it is either an interface community, an intermix communities, or an occluded community, and there is no designation into which category each community falls.
The USFS claims that subsection (i)’s definition of an at-risk community applies to the communities of Nordman and Lamb Creek, but the Supplemental Memo fails to actually apply that definition. Instead, the USFS simply notes that the communities of Nordman and Lamb Creek are included in the list of communities identified in 66 Fed. Reg. 43384, which, as noted, provides an update to the list of communities in 66 Fed. Reg. 753. However, as noted above, this list is not limited to interface communities, but also includes intermix communities and occluded communities. Thus, the mere fact that the communities of Norman and Lamb Creek are include on the list of communities does not demonstrate that they are interface communities as required under subsection (i)’s definition of an at-risk community.
Moreover, subsection (i)’s definition does not incorporate the list of communities contained in 66 Fed. Reg. 751 (or the updated list in 66 Fed. Reg. 43384). Instead, the definition provides that, to be an at-risk community, that community must fall within the definition of interface community as set forth at 66 Fed. Reg. 753. See 16 U.S.C. § 6511(1)(A)(i).
In sum, that a specific community is listed in 66 Fed. Reg. 753, or in the update provided by 66 Fed. Reg. 43384, is insufficient to make the community an “at-risk community” under subsection (i)’s definition. Instead, subsection (i) requires that the community meet the definition of an interface community set out at 66 Fed. Reg. 753. The Supplemental Memo fails to apply this “interface community” definition. Thus, the Supplemental Memo is insufficient to demonstrate that the communities of Nordman and Lamb Creek are “at-risk communities” under HFRA. [8]
b. Subsection (ii)
Turning to subsection (ii), this subsection defines an “at-risk community” as including “a group of homes and other structures with basic infrastructure and services (such as utilities and collectively maintained transportation routes) within or adjacent to Federal land.” 16 U.S.C. § 6511(1)(A)(ii). The USFS argues that subsection (ii) applies here “because Bonner County found that the majority of these communities [Nordman and Lamb Creek] are all at-risk communities identified in the Federal Register,” and the “Decision Memo also notes that these rural areas are at high risk of wildfire and cites Bonner County’s analysis of data.” (Dkt. 10 at 13; see Dkt. 3-1 at 2 (Supplemental Memo).) The USFS’s argument fails for several reasons.
First, just because Bonner County, and the Bonner County CWPP, has
provides a distinct, separate definition for an “interface community,” as opposed to an “intermix
community,” and an “occluded community.” This explicit incorporation of the definition of
“interface community” in subsection (i) demonstrates an intent to distinguish between the three
categories of communities listed in 66 Fed. Reg. 753, and to include only “interface
communities” as at-risk communities under HFRA, and exclude the other two categories of
communities listed in 66 Fed. Reg. 753. Further, if, as the
Marten
decision found, subsection (i)
was intended to incorporate all three categories of urban wildland interface communities, rather
than only those defined as “interface communities,” Congress could have easily done so. It did
not, and this Court declines to go beyond the plain language of subsection (i) to infer such an
intention.
See Stenberg v. Carhart
,
Second, to be an at-risk community under subsection (ii), the community must be “within or adjacent to Federal land.” 16 U.S.C. § 6511(1)(A)(ii). Here, the record demonstrates that neither of the communities relied on by the Supplemental Memo are within or adjacent to the Federal land at issue here—the Project area. Specifically, Lamb Creek is a mile away from the Project area ( see Dkt. 10 at 2) and Nordman is approximately three miles away from the Project area ( see Dkt. 3- 1 at 6). Thus, there are, at minimum, serious questions as to whether the communities relied upon in the Supplemental Memo are “within or adjacent” to the Federal land at issue here—the Project area—as required by the definition of at- risk community under subsection (ii). See 16 U.S.C. § 6511(1)(A)(ii).
3. Within or Adjacent to the Project Area
The USFS does not dispute that neither Nordman nor Lamb Creek border
the Project area. Instead, the USFS argues that HFRA does not require the at-risk
community to border the Project area. (
See
Dkt. 10 at 14.) In support of this
argument, the USFS cites
First, subsection (ii)’s definition of an at-risk community explicitly includes the requirement that the group of homes and other structures be “within or adjacent to Federal land.” 16 U.S.C. § 6511(1)(A)(ii). That the Federal Register states that the wildland urban interface is not limited to communities in the vicinity of Federal land does not negate the requirement that, to be an at-risk community under subsection (ii), the community must be “within or adjacent to Federal land.” See id.
Second, the Federal Register statement cited by the USFS must be reviewed in the context of the surrounding language. In context, the statement reads:
It is important to note that the urban wildland interface is not limited to communities in the vicinity of Federal land. Many States, particularly in the East, submitted revised community lists that included all interface communities in their State, regardless of their relationship to Federal land. These States felt strongly that the full, nationwide scope of the urban wildland interface problem must be conveyed.
Due to the specificity of Congressional direction, the list set out at the end of this notice contains only those communities identified by the States or Tribes as “in the vicinity of Federal land.” 66 Fed. Reg. 43384. Viewed in this context, it is clear that the statement—“the urban wildland interface is not limited to communities in the vicinity of Federal land”—merely points out that there are urban wildland interface problems all over the nation and that the problem is not limited to those areas that are in the vicinity of Federal land. Again, this statement in the Federal Register regarding the urban wildland interface does not in any manner negate the explicit requirement of the subsection (ii) definition that, to be an at-risk community , the community must be “within or adjacent to Federal land.” See 16 U.S.C. § 6511(1)(A)(ii).
Finally, the error of the USFS’s argument is made clear by a review of the
distinction made by HFRA between an area that has a community wildfire
protection plan and an area that does not have a community wildfire protection
plan. Specifically, for an area with a wildfire protection plan, such as Bonner
County, the wildland-urban interface is limited to the area “within or adjacent to an
at-risk community.” 16 U.S.C. § 6511(16)(A). In contrast, for an area that does not
have a wildfire protection plan, the wildland-urban interface is defined as including
areas up to 1 ½ miles from the boundary of an at-risk community.
[10]
See
16 U.S.C.
§ 6511(16)(B)(i), (ii). The use of the “within or adjacent to an at-risk community”
for those areas with a wildfire protection plan, and distances of up to 1 ½ miles
from an at-risk community for areas without a wildfire protection plan
demonstrates an intent to treat areas with fire protection plans differently from
those without a fire protection plan.
See S.E.C. v. McCarthy
,
Bonner County has a wildfire protection plan. Thus, under the plain language of HFRA, and contrary to the USFS’s argument, the at-risk community must be “within or adjacent to,” i.e., border or “abut,” the Federal land at issue, i.e., the Project area. See 16 U.S.C. § 6511(1)(A)(i), (ii); 66 Fed. Reg. 753. And, to be wildland-urban interface, the Project area must be within or adjacent to an at- risk community. 16 U.S.C. § 6511(16)(A).
As discussed above, the communities identified in the Supplemental Memo—Nordman and Lamb Creek—are three miles away and one mile away, respectively, from the Project area. The communities do not, therefore, support the USFS’s determination that the Project area is entirely located within the wildland- urban interface.
In sum, there are, at minimum, serious questions as to whether the USFS has adequately demonstrated that the Project area falls within HFRA’s statutory definition of the wildland-urban interface, and thus whether the USFS’s invoking of HFRA’s categorical exclusion is unlawful.
B. Irreparable Harm
The Court finds that AWR has also made the requisite showing that there is a likelihood that irreparable injury will result if this Project is allowed to proceed without an evaluation of the environmental impact of the Project or an adequate explanation of how the Project area qualifies for the categorical exclusion under HFRA. As discussed previously, the Project involves 1,843 acres of commercial logging, including clear cutting or modified clear cutting; 360 acres of precommercial logging; and 149 acres of prescribed burning only. The Project also includes temporary road construction, excavated skid trail construction, and road maintenance.
AWR has submitted evidence that its members use the Idaho Panhandle National Forest, including the Project area where the planned logging, burning, road and trail construction, and road use is to occur; that its members’ use is for both work and recreational purposes, such as hiking, skiing, nature study, wildlife observation, quiet contemplation in nature, and other activities; that its members use these areas frequently and on an ongoing basis, and plan to continue that use into the future; and that its members’ interests will be irreparably harmed by the Project. ( See Dkt. 3-7 at 12.) This irreparable harm includes harming members’ ability to view, experience, and utilize the areas in an undisturbed state; and harming members’ interests in the naturally functioning ecosystems of the Forest and the Project area, including their interests in looking for, viewing, studying, and enjoying elk, moose, grizzly bears, lynx, bull trout, and other wildlife species undisturbed in their natural surroundings. ( Id. )
The Court finds that this evidence satisfies the “likelihood of irreparable
injury” requirement for issuance of preliminary injunctive relief.
See Amoco Prod.
Co. v. Vill. of Gambell, AK
,
C. Public Interest and Balance of Equities Finally, the Court recognizes that there are strong public interests on both sides but finds that the public interest and balance of equities tip in favor of AWR and support the issuance of preliminary injunctive relief. [11]
There is a “broad[] public interest in the preservation of the forest and its
resources.”
Earth Island Inst. v. U.S. Forest Serv.
,
The USFS has provided evidence of the public interest favoring the Project
proceeding without delay, including the reduction in wildfire risk to people, private
lands, and critical infrastructure; restoration of forest ecosystems and resiliency;
and the provision of local jobs and critical funding for restoration efforts. All of
these factors are in the public interest.
See Pac. Rivers Council v. U.S. Forest Serv
.,
Given the strength of AWR’s showing that there are serious questions going to the merits of whether the USFS’s categorical exclusion of the Project area from NEPA requirements is lawful, the strong showing of the likelihood of irreparable harm, and the strong public interest in ensuring that the Project proceed only if the USFS has complied with HFRA and NEPA, the Court finds that the balance of
equities tips sharply in favor of AWR and the issuance of an injunction. ORDER
IT IS ORDERED that:
1. Plaintiff’s Motion for Preliminary Injunction and/or Temporary Restraining Order (Dkt. 3) is GRANTED .
2. The Hanna Flats Project is SUSPENDED until further order of the Court.
DATED: July 23, 2021
_________________________ B. Lynn Winmill U.S. District Court Judge
Notes
[1] AWR also contended that the USFS violated the Forest Plan Access Amendment and thus violated the ESA, the National Forest Management Act, the Healthy Forest Restoration Act, NEPA, and the APA.
[2] The May 28, 2021, Supplemental Memo is designated as the USFS’s Supplemental Decision Memo. However, AWR argues that the Supplemental Memo does not meet the NEPA requirements for a supplemental decision memo. The Court need not reach that issue because, as discussed below, there are serious questions as to whether the Supplemental Memo is sufficient to support the USFS determination that the entire Project area is within the wildland-urban interface as required under HFRA for categorical exclusion from NEPA. Thus, the Court will assume, for purposes of deciding the present motion, that the Supplemental Memo meets NEPA’s requirements for a supplemental decision memo.
[3] The USFS subsequently stated in its briefing, and confirmed during the July 12, 2021, hearing, that it will not allow operations on the Project to begin until August 2, 2021.
[4] The full HFRA definition of a “wildland-urban interface” is: (A) an area within or adjacent to an at-risk community that is identified in recommendations to the Secretary in a community wildfire protection plan; or (B) in the case of any area for which a community wildfire protection plan is not in effect-- (Continued)
[6] Although the USFS also cites to Priest Lake/Priest Lake Ranger Station, the
Supplemental Memo only lists the at-risk communities included in the Federal Register as Lamb
Creek and Nordman; it does not include Priest Lake/Priest Lake Ranger Station. (
See
Dkt. 6-1 at
6, 7.) The USFS’s reliance on Priest Lake/Priest Lake Ranger Station is therefore rejected.
See
Burlington Truck Lines, Inc., v. United States
,
[7] The full definition is as follows: The Interface Community exists where structures directly abut wildland fuels. There is a clear line of demarcation between residential, business, and public structures and wildland fuels. Wildland fuels do not generally continue into the developed area. The development density for an interface community is usually 3 or more structures per acre, with shared municipal services. Fire protection is generally provided by a local government fire department with the responsibility to protect the structure from both an interior fire and an advancing wildland fire. An alternative definition of the interface community emphasizes a population density of 250 or more people per square mile. 66 Fed. Reg. 753.
[8] The USFS cites to
Alliance for the Wild Rockies v. Marten
,
[9] The Supplemental Memo asserts that the “Bonner County steering committee found that the majority of communities in Bonner County are ‘at risk’ communities under subsection (ii) of the HFRA definition because they consist of a group homes and structures with basic infrastructure services within or adjacent to Federal land.” (Dkt. 3-1 at 2.) However, the Supplemental Memo provides no citation to the Administrative Record to support this assertion. ( See id. )
[10] It also includes areas adjacent to an evacuation route for an at-risk community under certain conditions. 16 U.S.C. § 6511(16)(B)(iii).
[11] Where, as here, the Government is a party, the analyses of public interest and balance
of equities merge.
See Drakes Bay Drakes Bay Oyster Co. v. Jewell
,
