AMERICAN WILD HORSE PRESERVATION CAMPAIGN, et al., Plaintiffs, v. Tom VILSACK, Secretary, U.S. Department of Agriculture, et al., Defendants.
Civil Action No. 14-0485 (ABJ)
United States District Court, District of Columbia.
Signed September 30, 2015
AMY BERMAN JACKSON, United States District Judge
leged that the DCOHR issued a “no probable cause” determination on Dorriz‘s administrative complaint before she brought this suit. (Defs. SOF ¶ 7). Plaintiff failed to respond to DDOT‘s factual assertion in her response, nor did she address DDOT‘s argument. Therefore, the court will treat the matter as conceded and grant summary judgment on the DCHRA claims asserted in Count II of the Amended Complaint. See
IV. CONCLUSION
For the reasons set forth above, the court will grant DDOT‘s motion for summary judgment with respect to the claims raised in Dorriz‘s first EEOC Charge. The court will hold in abeyance a ruling on Dorriz‘s retaliation claim over the performance evaluation lowered by Hoffman at the direction of Khalid. The court will grant summary judgment on Count II of the complaint which asserts retaliation claims under the DCHRA.
MEMORANDUM OPINION
AMY BERMAN JACKSON, United States District Judge
Plaintiffs the American Wild Horse Preservation Campaign, Carla Bowers, and Return to Freedom have brought this action against the Secretary of the United States Department of Agriculture, Thomas J. Vilsack; the Chief of the United States Forest Service, Thomas Tidwell; and the Acting Director of the Modoc National Forest, Ann Carlson. Compl. [Dkt. # 1]. The case arises out of the Forest Service‘s 2013 management plan for the Devil‘s Garden Wild Horse Territory (“WHT“). Id.
The Devil‘s Garden WHT is a wild horse territory located in the Modoc National Forest in California. Id. ¶ 1. Plaintiffs acknowledge that the territory consisted of two separate, non-contiguous parcels when it was established in 1975. Id. ¶ 39. However, they allege that at some point in the 1980s, the Forest Service adjusted the borders of the WHT to create a larger, unified territory, and that these more expansive borders were also recognized in a 1991 forest plan. Id. ¶¶ 39-40. In this lawsuit, they claim that the Forest Service acted improperly in 2013, when it adopted a new management plan which delineated the territory‘s borders in accordance with the original 1975 layout and explained that any previous references to one contiguous territory were the result of “administrative error.” Id. ¶¶ 3-4, 48-49. The Forest Service also adjusted the territory‘s minimum wild horse population threshold, called the appropriate management level (“AML“). Id. ¶¶ 5-6, 51-52. Plaintiffs allege that these decisions are contrary to multiple statutes and reflect arbitrary and capricious agency action in violation of the Administrative Procedure Act (“APA“),
Plaintiffs’ first set of challenges to the Forest Service‘s actions are premised upon
With respect to the second issue raised in the complaint, the Forest Service has articulated a rational connection between the facts it found and its choice to broaden the AML range for the Devil‘s Garden WHT. Thus, the Court finds that the challenged actions were not arbitrary and capricious or contrary to law, and it will grant defendants’ cross-motion for summary judgment.
BACKGROUND
The complaint recognizes that the Devil‘s Garden WHT consisted of two separate, non-contiguous parcels, totaling an estimated 236,000 acres, when it was established in 1975. Compl. ¶ 39. Plaintiffs allege that at some point in the 1980s, the Forest Service adjusted the borders of the WHT to create one contiguous territory of roughly 258,000 acres. Id. Plaintiffs further claim that the Forest Service improperly revised those borders in 2013. Id. ¶¶ 3-4. They seek to vacate the Forest Service‘s clarification of the territorial borders and its simultaneous adjustment of the AML as arbitrary and capricious under the APA, and on the grounds that the agency‘s actions violated all of the applicable statutes. Id. ¶ 8.
I. Statutory Framework
Three statutory schemes control the Forest Service‘s management of the Devil‘s Garden WHT and form the basis for plaintiffs’ challenges to the decisions embodied in the 2013 environmental assessment and management plan: the Wild Free-Roaming Horses and Burros Act (“Wild Horses Act“),
The Wild Horses Act, passed in 1971, states that wild horses and burros “shall be protected from capture, branding, harassment, or death; and to accomplish this they are to be considered in the area where presently found, as an integral part of the natural system of the public lands.”
The National Environmental Policy Act requires all federal agencies to analyze the impact of any agency action “significantly affecting the quality of the human environment.”
II. History of the Devil‘s Garden WHT
After the passage of the Wild Horses Act in 1971, the Forest Service established a wild horse territory at Devil‘s Garden, a large, flat plateau located within the Modoc National Forest in northeastern California. See AR02969-70.1 The first formal Devil‘s Garden WHT management plan was issued in 1975. AR02965-97 (the “1975 Management Plan“). It provided for a wild horse territory “broken into two large units which encompasses a gross acreage estimated at 236,000 acres.” AR02970-71.
The two ranges were separated by a strip of land that was not incorporated into the Devil‘s Garden WHT when it was established. See, e.g., AR00157 (depicting the “1975 Wild Horse Territory“). This strip, which the Court will refer to as the “disputed territory,” consisted of the Triangle Ranch and Avanzino Ranch grazing lands, some of which were privately owned. See, e.g., AR00156 (“The Avanzino and Triangle private ranch lands which lay in between the West and East home ranges were not included in the WHT.“). It also included portions of the Carr, Big
The Forest Service revised the Devil‘s Garden WHT management plan in 1980, AR02949-64 (the “1980 Management Plan“), and again described the Devil‘s Garden WHT as a territory “broken into two large units which encompasses a gross acreage estimated at 236,000 acres.” AR02953. In 1982, the Forest Service issued another management plan, AR02839-51 (the “1982 Management Plan“), which again characterized the Devil‘s Garden WHT as a territory “broken into two large units which encompasses a gross acreage estimated at 236,000 acres.” AR02843.2
In 1991, the Forest Service revised the forest plan for Modoc National Forest. AR02838 (the “1991 Forest Plan“).3 It incorporated by reference all existing resource management plans that it found to be consistent with, and appropriate for, the 1991 Forest Plan, which included the existing Wild Horse Management Plan. Id. at 1-1. But this time, the 1991 Forest Plan the draft EA, and prepare the notice of decision and any finding of no significant impact. AR04714.
stated that the Modoc National Forest “has one wild horse territory of about 258,000 acres,” id. at 3-18, and it observed that “[u]nder the Wild Horses and Burros Act, the Forest is legally obligated to manage horses within [that] 258,000-acre wild horse territory.” Id. at 3-17. The plan included a statement that the Forest Service “prepared the Wild Horse Management Plan in 1985,”4 which had “identifie[d] a population objective of 275-335 animals to manage.” Id. at 3-18 to 3-19.
In July 2011, the Forest Service issued a scoping notice, seeking comments on proposed updates to the existing Devil‘s Garden WHT management plan, including an adjustment to the AML range of 275 to 335 animals established in the 1991 Forest Plan. AR03911-20. The scoping notice stated that the Devil‘s Garden WHT “is approximately 268,750 acres in size,” AR03911, and it included a map depicting one contiguous territory. AR03919-20.
In August 2012, the Forest Service entered into a cost-sharing agreement with the Modoc County Farm Bureau (“Farm Bureau“) for the development of the new Devil‘s Garden WHT management plan. AR04700-23. The Farm Bureau agreed to collect, summarize, and evaluate all
The Proposed Action also recognized that “[d]uring the mid-1980‘s, the [Forest Service] appears to have adjusted the WHT boundary for administrative convenience,” incorporating the disputed territory into the WHT, “including Triangle Ranch lands acquired in 1976 and the Avanzino Ranch (41 percent of which remains in private ownership).” Id. It stated that “[a]n administrative error was made in expanding the WHT beyond the herd‘s known territorial limits,” and it added that the “[i]nclusion of the Triangle Ranch lands ... was clearly in error.” AR03812. The Forest Service therefore “propose[d] to return to the management of wild horses within the WHT boundary established in 1975,” which did not include the disputed territory. Id. The Proposed Action also included a proposal to amend the 1991 Forest Plan to remove the fixed AML range of 275 to 335 animals and to establish the AML range in the WHT management plan instead, which would be updated as necessary when wild horse population and resource monitoring data suggested the existing AML range was no longer appropriate. AR03815.
Also in December 2012, the Forest Service released the Resource Monitoring Report for the Devil‘s Garden WHT, AR00622-95, in which it again characterized the territory as consisting of two non-contiguous parcels. See AR00627 (discussing “the approximately 232,521 acre Devil‘s Garden Plateau Wild Horse Territory” with map depicting two separate territories).
One month later, in January 2013, the Forest Service published a report evaluating the monitoring data collected to establish a new AML range for the Devil‘s Garden WHT. AR00542-621 (the “AML Evaluation“). This document also stated that the inclusion of the disputed territory in the Devil‘s Garden WHT was the “result of an administrative error,” and it noted that “the AML was established as 0 wild horses” for the disputed territory. AR00547. The AML Evaluation went on to recommend an AML of 206 to 402 horses for the two-unit WHT, with an AML range of 105 to 183 horses on the Western portion and 101 to 219 horses on the Eastern portion. AR00552.
In April 2013, the Forest Service released the draft EA for the proposed changes to the management of the Devil‘s Garden WHT. AR03453-658 (the “Draft EA“). The Draft EA stated that the Devil‘s Garden WHT “comprises approximately 232,520 acres of federal land,” AR03459, and like the Proposed Action, it recognized that the boundary of the Devil‘s Garden WHT appeared to have been adjusted “for administrative convenience” during the 1980s as a result of “an administrative error.” AR03462; AR03465. It proposed “to return to the management of wild horses within the WHT boundary established in 1971.” AR03465.
Incorporating the Final EA by reference, the Forest Service published its Decision Notice and FONSI in August 2013, AR00100-13 (“Decision Notice & FONSI“), in which it found that the boundary correction and the AML adjustment would “not have a significant effect on the quality of the human environment.” AR00106. It formally adopted the proposed action set forth in the Final EA, AR00100, which delineated the boundary of the Devil‘s Garden WHT to be consistent with its original form, with two non-contiguous territories totaling approximately 232,520 acres, and which revised the AML range to 206 to 402 horses. See AR00153; AR00159. Along with the Decision Notice and FONSI, the Forest Service issued a new management plan, which incorporated the new AML range and adopted the territorial boundary as it was established in the 1975 Management Plan. AR00114-45 (the “2013 Management Plan“).
III. Procedural History
During the administrative process, plaintiffs the American Wild Horse Preservation Campaign (“AWHPC“) and Bowers provided comments on both scoping notices and the Draft EA. See AR00315; AR00318-19; AR00353-54. In October 2013, after the release of the Decision Notice and FONSI, the Final EA, and the 2013 Management Plan, plaintiffs AWHPC and Bowers filed a timely administrative appeal. AR00068-94. In January 2014, the Appeal Deciding Officer affirmed the Forest Service‘s actions. AR00001-03. This decision constituted the final administrative determination in this matter. AR00003.
Plaintiffs initiated this action on March 24, 2014. Compl. They bring six claims against defendants, all under the APA. In Counts I, II, and III, plaintiffs allege that the boundary clarification was arbitrary and capricious because it violated the Wild Horses Act, the NFMA, and NEPA, and in Counts IV, V, and VI, they claim that the adjustment to the AML range was arbitrary and capricious because it was contrary to the same three statutes. Id. ¶¶ 58-91.
Plaintiffs filed the instant motion for summary judgment on November 17, 2014. Pls.’ Mot. for Summ. J. [Dkt. # 20] (“Pls.’ Mot.“); Mem. in Supp. of Pls.’ Mot. [Dkt. # 20] (“Pls.’ Mem.“). Defendants filed a cross-motion for summary judgment on January 12, 2015. Defs.’ Mot. for Summ. J. [Dkt. # 22] (“Defs.’ Mot.“); Mem. in Supp. of Defs.’ Mot. [Dkt. # 22] (“Defs.’ Mem.“). The same day, the intervenor-defendants—private landowners with land near the Devil‘s Garden WHT and users of public land resources within the Modoc National Forest—filed their cross-motion for summary judgment. Intervenor-Defs.’
STANDARD OF REVIEW
Summary judgment is appropriate when the pleadings and evidence show that “there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and [that] the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.”
Under the APA, a court must “hold unlawful and set aside agency action, findings, and conclusions” that are “arbitrary, capricious, an abuse of discretion, or otherwise not in accordance with law,” in excess of statutory authority, or “without observance of procedure required by law.”
the agency has relied on factors which Congress has not intended it to consider, entirely failed to consider an important aspect of the problem, offered an explanation for its decision that runs counter to the evidence before the agency, or is so implausible that it could not be ascribed to a difference in view or the product of agency expertise.
In reaching its decision, the agency may rely on comments submitted during the notice and comment period as justification for the action, so long as they are examined critically. See Nat‘l Ass‘n of Regulatory Util. Comm‘rs v. FCC, 737 F.2d 1095, 1124 (D.C. Cir. 1984). It “need not—indeed cannot—base its every action upon empirical data; depending upon the nature of the problem, an agency may be ‘entitled to conduct ... a general analysis based on informed conjecture.‘” Chamber of Commerce of U.S. v. SEC, 412 F.3d 133, 142 (D.C. Cir. 2005), quoting Melcher v. FCC, 134 F.3d 1143, 1158 (D.C. Cir. 1998).
ANALYSIS
I. The Forest Service‘s decision to correct the boundaries of the Devil‘s Garden WHT was not arbitrary and capricious or in violation of the Wild Horses Act, the NFMA, or NEPA.
In Count I, plaintiffs contend that when the Forest Service corrected the boundaries of the Devil‘s Garden WHT in the 2013 Management Plan, it disregarded the requirement in the Wild Horses Act that it protect and manage wild horses within the disputed territory. Compl. ¶¶ 58-63. In Count II, plaintiffs claim that the Forest Service violated the National Forest Management Act because it ignored a mandate in the 1991 Forest Plan that the Devil‘s
But all of these counts presuppose that the disputed territory was in fact incorporated into the Devil‘s Garden WHT at some point during the 1980s, or in the 1991 Forest Plan. This premise fails for two reasons, and in sections I.A.1 and I.A.2 below, the Court will take up this defect that is fatal to each of plaintiffs’ three claims, before addressing the specific statutory claims individually in sections I.B, I.C, and I.D.
First, as will be set out in more detail in section I.A.1, plaintiffs can point to nothing in the Administrative Record showing that an actual incorporation ever took place. No formal process was invoked, and there is no record of any official decision. To the extent that the 1980 Map or the 1991 Forest Plan did refer to a single, contiguous WHT that incorporated the disputed territory, there is nothing in the record that casts doubt on defendants’ explanation that this was the result of an “administrative error” and that it did not affect the actual management of the Devil‘s Garden WHT.
Second, as discussed in section I.A.2, it would not have been legally proper or possible to subsume the disputed central parcel into the Devil‘s Garden WHT and create a unified whole, because a significant portion of the disputed territory was, and remains, privately owned, and the Forest Service determined that it was not the territorial habitat of wild horses at the time the Wild Horses Act was passed. So the land could not lawfully have been deemed to be a part of the wild horse territory under the applicable statutes.
For these reasons, the Court finds that it was not arbitrary and capricious for the Forest Service to address the administrative error in the 2013 EA and Management Plan, and it finds that the boundary correction was not contrary to any of the three statutes or the APA. In other words, in the absence of any indication that the creation of a map that failed to exclude the parcel in the 1980s, or the use of those boundaries in a forest plan in the 1990s, was the product of a deliberate decision to expand and unify the territory, it was reasonable for the agency entrusted with these matters to conclude that a mistake had been made that needed to be rectified. Therefore, defendant‘s cross-motion for summary judgment on Counts I, II, and III will be granted.
A. The Forest Service reasonably concluded that the disputed territory was never formally incorporated into the Devil‘s Garden WHT and that any reference to a single, contiguous territory was the result of an administrative error.
Plaintiffs concede that the disputed territory was not part of the Devil‘s Garden WHT when it was first created in 1975. Compl. ¶ 39; Pls.’ Mem. at 5; see also AR00157. However, they claim that “[t]he Forest Service acted quickly to incorporate the [disputed territory] into the WHT,” and that “[a]t some point in the early 1980s, the Forest Service formally modified the boundary of the WHT to include the newly acquired public lands as
Plaintiffs acknowledge, as they must, that they cannot identify any document in the Administrative Record that memorializes such an action or shows exactly when or how the alleged incorporation took place. See id. at 6 n.2 (“While the exact date of the change is not known, it appears to have occurred sometime in the early 1980s.“). They rely on a 1980 map and the 1991 Forest Plan to support their claim that the disputed territory was incorporated into the Devil‘s Garden WHT “at some point in the early 1980s.” Id. at 5-6, 9-10. But the Court is not authorized to undertake its own investigation into whether the disputed territory was in fact made part of the Devil‘s Garden WHT at any point during the relevant time period. Instead, the Court is limited to reviewing the Forest Service‘s conclusion that the references to a single, contiguous wild horse territory were the result of “[a]n administrative error,” see AR00159, and determining whether that 2013 conclusion was consistent with the evidence before the agency at the time the decision was made. The Court finds that it was.
1. The Forest Service‘s conclusion that the references to a single, contiguous territory were the result of an administrative error is not counter to the record evidence.
The Court begins with the 1980 map, which was included as part of the 2013 EA and does not appear separately in the record. See AR00158 (the “1980 Map“). Although the 1980 Map itself is not dated, it is captioned within the 2013 EA as “Figure 2: 1980 Wild Horse Territory.” Id. Plaintiffs contend that it shows that “[a]t some point in the early 1980s, the Forest Service formally modified the boundary of the WHT to include the newly acquired public lands as well as existing public lands in one contiguous WHT.” Pls.’ Mem. at 5-6.
The Forest Service disputes this. The 2013 EA stated that at some point in the mid-1980s, the Forest Service “appears to have adjusted the WHT boundary for administrative convenience,” referring to the 1980 Map. AR00156. It added, though, that “[a]n administrative error was made in expanding the WHT beyond the herd‘s known territorial limits,” and it noted that the “[i]nclusion of the Triangle Ranch lands ... was clearly in error.” AR00159. Defendants now further explain that the 1980 Map was created “[t]o keep track of wild horses roaming outside of the territory in the 1980s.” Defs.’ Mem. at 11. They state that the 1980 Map was designed to enable the Forest Service “to administratively manage horses that had exceeded the actual Territory boundaries,” Reply in Supp. of Defs.’ Mot. [Dkt. # 27] (“Defs.’ Reply“) at 4, and so, it “depicted the general location of these horses” across “a continuous area,” “includ[ing] non-territory lands and significant private lands ... where horses had been observed in the 1980s.” Defs.’ Mem. at 11-12. Thus, defendants contend, “the inclusion of [the disputed territory] in the 1980s map was for administrative convenience and did not formally change the territory boundary established in 1975.” Defs.’ Reply at 11; see also Defs.’ Mem. at 12 (“This map was not approved in any wild horse territory plan.“).
The Court finds the Forest Service‘s explanation of the origin of the 1980 Map and its statement that the disputed territory was included in the map for “administrative convenience” to be reasonable and consistent with record evidence. At a minimum, the 1980 Map certainly does not show, as plaintiffs claim, that “[a]t some point in the early 1980s, the Forest Service formally modified the boundary of the
In addition, the 1980 Map is inconsistent not only with the ownership of the land, which will be discussed in section I.A.2 below, but also with the management plans that were in existence around the time it was created. While the 1980 Map depicts one contiguous horse range which includes the disputed territory, both the 1980 Management Plan and the 1982 Management Plan unequivocally refer to the Devil‘s Garden WHT as a territory “broken into two large units which encompasses a gross acreage estimated at 236,000 acres.” Compare AR00158 (the 1980 Map) with AR02953 (the 1980 Management Plan) and AR02843 (the 1982 Management Plan). The Administrative Record also contains a map prepared in connection with an April 1990 wild horse inventory that depicts the WHT in a two-part configuration, with the disputed territory excluded. AR03934-35. In other words, well after the time that plaintiffs contend that the 1980 Map shows that the Forest Service officially expanded the Devil‘s Garden WHT, the Forest Service continued to treat the territory as consisting of two separate and non-contiguous ranges which did not include the disputed territory. Thus, the Court finds that it was not arbitrary and capricious for the Forest Service to determine that the 1980 Map was created for “administrative convenience” and that it does not reflect a formal adjustment of the boundaries of the WHT.6
Plaintiffs also rely on the 1991 Forest Plan in support of their claim that the disputed territory was incorporated into the Devil‘s Garden WHT in the 1980s. Pls.’ Mem. at 9-10, 36-38. While the 1991 Forest Plan does refer to the WHT as a contiguous whole, the Forest Service explained in the 2013 EA that “[a]n administrative error was made in expanding the WHT beyond the herd‘s known territorial limits,” and it added that the “[i]nclusion of the Triangle Ranch lands (which were not acquired by the Forest Service until 1976, nearly five years after the 1971 [Wild
The Court finds the Forest Service‘s explanation of the administrative error and its conclusion that the 1991 Forest Plan does not demonstrate that the disputed territory was ever formally incorporated into the Devil‘s Garden WHT to be reasonable and consistent with the record evidence. The 1991 Forest Plan referred twice to a single, contiguous, 258,000-acre wild horse territory. See 1991 Forest Plan at 3-17 (“[T]he Forest is legally obligated to manage horses within a 258,000-acre wild horse territory.“); id. at 3-18 (“[T]he Forest has one wild horse territory of about 258,000 acres.“). But it does not contain any map of the Devil‘s Garden WHT, let alone a map depicting one contiguous territory, that could provide a source for that acreage figure.
And more importantly, the plan is internally inconsistent in referring to the boundaries and acreage of the Devil‘s Garden WHT. For example, the 1991 Forest Plan stated that it “will supersede most previous Forest resource management plans.” Id. at 1-1. But it then noted that “[a]ll existing resource management plans were re-examined by the Forest‘s interdisciplinary planning team,” and it stated that the planning team found the “Wild Horse Management Plan” to be “consistent with, and still appropriate for, the Forest Plan.” Id. Thus, the 1991 Forest Plan stated that it “incorporated by reference” the existing wild horse management plan. Id. And that plan—the 1982 Management Plan7—
In other words, the 1991 Forest Plan referred to a contiguous 258,000 acre horse territory while simultaneously incorporating a management plan that provided for a non-contiguous, two-part horse territory of 236,000 acres as “consistent with, and still appropriate for, the Forest Plan.” 1991 Forest Plan at 1-1. This internal inconsistency undermines plaintiffs’ insistence that the 1991 Forest Plan recognized that the disputed territory was added to the Devil‘s Garden WHT “[a]t some point in the early 1980s,” Pls.’ Mem. at 5, and it belies the notion that the 1991 Forest Plan was the document through which a formal incorporation was effectuated.
There is additional evidence in the record supporting the Forest Service‘s conclusion that the reference in the 1991 Forest Plan was an administrative error, and that evidence contradicts plaintiffs’ assertion that “the Forest Service managed the WHT as a single, contiguous 258,000-acre protected area from roughly 1980 to 2013.” See Pls.’ Mem. at 1. The record reflects that “an AML was not established” for the disputed territory in the 1991 Forest Plan. AR00156; see also AR00547 (2013 AML Evaluation noting that “[a]lthough the Triangle and Avanzino Ranch lands were included in the WHT boundary in the Forest Plan as a result of an administrative error, the AML was established as 0 wild horses for the two areas“). That means that no wild horses were intended to reside there, even at the time plaintiffs contend that it was part of the WHT. And the management level for the disputed territory remained at zero throughout the relevant period. For example, two wild horse inventories from 2002 and 2010 demonstrate that the designated management herd minimum size for the Avanzino grazing allotment—which falls completely and exclusively within the disputed territory, see AR03927—was set at zero. AR04323; AR04325.
Consistent with its conclusion that the disputed territory was never properly incorporated into the Devil‘s Garden WHT, the Forest Service removed horses from the disputed territory throughout the relevant period. See AR00255 (table showing number of animals gathered between 2003 and 2013 from grazing allotments that overlap with the disputed territory, including Timbered Mountain, Big Sage, Carr, Triangle, and Boles); AR03933 (1990 recommendation that wild horses be captured and removed from Boles Meadow). In other words, well after plaintiffs contend that the disputed territory was incorporated into the Devil‘s Garden WHT, and despite the reference in the 1991 Forest Plan
2. The disputed territory could not have been properly incorporated into the Devil‘s Garden WHT.
As further support for their position, defendants argue that the disputed territory could not have been properly incorporated into the Devil‘s Garden WHT in any event. See Defs.’ Mem. at 2, 19-22; see also Intervenor-Defs.’ Mem. at 8-11, 13-14. The Court agrees.
The implementing regulations for the Wild Horses Act define “[w]ild horse and burro territory” as “lands of the National Forest System which are identified ... as lands which were territorial habitat of wild free-roaming horses and/or burros at the time of the passage of the Act.”
At the time of the passage of the Wild Horses Act, significant portions of the disputed territory were privately held and would not have qualified for inclusion in the WHT. For example, the Triangle Ranch lands were privately owned until 1976, when the Forest Service acquired them in a land exchange, AR03965, and as plaintiffs acknowledge, approximately 41 percent of the Avanzino Ranch lands were privately held in 1971 and remain privately held to this day. Pls.’ Mem. at 7, citing AR00156. Thus, these lands are disqualified from inclusion in the Devil‘s Garden WHT as a matter of law, since the Forest Service can only designate public lands—“lands of the National Forest System“—as wild horse and burro territory. See
Furthermore, the disputed territory does not consist of “lands which were the territorial habitat of wild free-roaming horses and/or burros at the time of the passage of the Act.” Id. The 1975 Management Plan did not include the disputed territory as part of the Devil‘s Garden WHT, and neither did the 1980 or 1982 Management Plans. See AR02965-97; AR02949-64; AR02839-51. And the 2013 EA notes that the 1975 Management Plan recognized that “the Avanzino and Triangle Ranch lands were specifically excluded” from the Devil‘s Garden WHT because “[l]ittle or no use by wild horses of these areas occurred during this time due to the number of fences and the ongoing livestock operations on this privately owned land.” AR00373; see also AR03995 (map showing boundary fences in the disputed territory in 1979). In other words, at the time the Devil‘s Garden WHT was established, the Forest Service concluded that the disputed territory did not qualify as the territorial habitat of wild free-roaming horses.
Plaintiffs contend the disputed territory “is, and always has been, prime
Based on all of these facts and circumstances, the Court finds that the Forest Service has articulated a rational connection between its finding that the references in the 1980 Map and the 1991 Forest Plan to a single, contiguous 258,000-acre territory were the result of administrative error, and its choice in the 2013 EA and the 2013 Management Plan to specify that the correct boundaries of the Devil‘s Garden WHT are those first established for the territory in 1975. As discussed below, this finding is fatal to plaintiffs’ first three challenges under the APA.
B. The Forest Service reasonably determined that it was under no obligation to manage wild horses outside the Devil‘s Garden WHT.
In Count I, plaintiffs contend that the Forest Service violated the Wild Horses Act by failing to protect and manage wild horses as “integral components” of the disputed territory, by conducting management activities within the disputed territory above the “minimal feasible level,” and by declining to continue the recognition of the disputed territory as a wild horse territory. Pls.’ Mem. at 25-29.
Since the Court finds that the Forest Service reasonably concluded that the disputed territory was never formally incorporated into the Devil‘s Garden WHT, it follows that the Forest Service was not required to manage wild horses on, or to treat them as integral components of, the disputed territory. Further, the Forest Service was not obligated to conduct management activities within the disputed territory “at the minimal feasible level.” See
For those reasons, the Court finds that the Forest Service did not violate the Wild Horses Act when it corrected the boundaries of the Devil‘s Garden WHT in the 2013 EA and the 2013 Management Plan, and defendants are therefore entitled to summary judgment on Count I.
C. The Forest Service reasonably determined the boundary adjustment was not a “significant” amendment under the NFMA.
The National Forest Management Act states that “instruments for the use and occupancy of National Forest System lands shall be consistent with” forest plans developed for the same area.
Under the NFMA, the Forest Service is permitted to make nonsignificant amendments to the Forest Plan “in any manner whatsoever after final adoption after public notice,” while significant amendments require a lengthier and more involved public approval process.
The Court finds that the Forest Service‘s determination that the boundary adjustment was not a significant amendment was reasonable. The Administrative Record shows that the Forest Service has consistently managed the Devil‘s Garden WHT in two separate units and has never managed the disputed territory for the protection of wild horses. See, e.g., AR00255 (table showing horses removed from the disputed territory between 2003 and 2013). Thus, correcting the 1991 Forest Plan‘s erroneous reference to a contiguous territory did not change the actual management of the Devil‘s Garden WHT, and it did not have a “significant” impact on the multiple-use goals of the Modoc Forest Plan. Because the boundary adjustment was not a significant amendment, the Forest Service was not required to follow the more rigorous procedures required for significant amendments under the NFMA. Thus, the Court will grant summary judgment to defendants on Count II.
objectives for long-term land and resource management.” Id.
In the 2013 EA, the Forest Service examined whether the proposed boundary correction would constitute a significant amendment, and it reached the following conclusion:
The proposed amendment which would manage wild horses within the territorial limits established in the 1975 Wild Horse Management Plan would not alter the multiple-use goals and objectives of the Forest Plan. Appropriate management of wild horses to meet the goals and objectives identified in the Forest Plan would occur. The proposed change would bring the Forest Plan into alignment with the 1971 [Wild Horses Act] and would not be NFMA significant. Id.
The Court finds that this conclusion was reasonable. It has already determined that the Forest Service was managing the Devil‘s Garden WHT consistently with the 1982 Management Plan, which provided for a territory “broken into two large units which encompasses a gross acreage estimated at 236,000 acres,” AR02843, that it had established an AML of zero for the disputed territory, AR00547, and that it was removing wild horses from the disputed territory during the relevant time period, even after the adoption of the 1991 Forest Plan. See AR00255 (table showing number of horses gathered between 2003 and 2013 from grazing allotments that overlap with the disputed territory, including Timbered Mountain, Big Sage, Carr, Triangle, and Boles). Thus, the Court finds that it was reasonable for the Forest Service to determine that correcting the boundary description would not result in a significant change in the goals for and use of the Devil‘s Garden WHT, and that it was not required to amend the Forest Plan or go through the more rigorous publicapproval process. Accordingly, the Court finds that the Forest Service complied with the NFMA, and defendants are entitled to summary judgment on Count II.
D. The Forest Service complied with NEPA , and its decision-making process was not tainted by the involvement of the Farm Bureau.
The
Plaintiffs challenge the boundary correction under
1. The Forest Service reasonably determined that the boundary correction would not significantly affect the quality of the human environment under NEPA .
Plaintiffs argue that the 2013 EA “contains no analysis as to the basis for
The D.C. Circuit has identified the following criteria for a court reviewing an agency‘s decision to forego the preparation of an EIS:
First, the agency must have accurately identified the relevant environmental concern. Second, once the agency has identified the problem it must have taken a “hard look” at the problem in preparing the EA. Third, if a finding of no significant impact is made, the agency must be able to make a convincing case for its finding.
Sierra Club v. U.S. Dep‘t of Transp., 753 F.2d 120, 127 (D.C.Cir.1985). The Court finds that the Forest Service complied with these requirements and with
First, the Forest Service examined the relevant environmental concern with respect to the border adjustment—the potential impact on wild horses living in the Devil‘s Garden WHT—and second, it took the necessary “hard look” at the issue while preparing the EA. See AR00252-83 (examining “affected environment” and “environmental impacts” of the various alternatives proposed in the 2013 EA on the wild horse population); see also AR00171 (explaining that the amendment “[e]stablish[es] a boundary for the WHT based on the long-term needs of the Devil[‘]s Garden wild horse herd and within the herd‘s known territorial limits“). In light of its finding that the boundary adjustment simply corrected an administrative error and resulted in the continued management of the disputed territory as distinct from the Devil‘s Garden WHT, the Court finds that the Forest Service made a convincing case for its determination that “this amendment has no effect on wild horses or their habitat.” AR00271.
“[F]ederal agencies have discretion to decide whether a proposed action is significant enough to warrant preparation of an EIS....” Grand Canyon Trust v. FAA, 290 F.3d 339, 341-42 (D.C.Cir.2002) (internal quotation marks omitted). Here, the Forest Service reasonably determined that correcting the references to the boundaries of the Devil‘s Garden WHT would not have any significant environmental impact, because the management of the Devil‘s Garden WHT would remain the same and because no territory was actually being removed from the wild horse range. Plaintiffs’ disagreement with the Forest Service‘s decision is not sufficient grounds for this Court to find that its action was arbitrary and capricious or in violation of
2. Plaintiffs fail to show that the NEPA analysis was predetermined or tainted by a conflict of interest due to the Farm Bureau‘s involvement.
Plaintiffs also allege that the results of the
The standard for proving that a
Plaintiffs contend that the Forest Service‘s contract with the Farm Bureau shows that the Forest Service agreed that it would prepare a FONSI, instead of an EIS, before the
In addition to their predetermination claim, plaintiffs allege that the involvement of the Farm Bureau represented a conflict of interest that so compromised the
In assessing whether a conflict of interest should invalidate the results of a
For many of the same reasons discussed above, the Court finds that the “objectivity and integrity of the
Other than general speculation about the motives the Farm Bureau‘s members based on their alleged “vested financial interests adverse to wild horses,” Pls.’ Mem. at 32, plaintiffs do not offer any evidence to show that the Forest Service‘s review of the Farm Bureau‘s specialists’ reports and draft EA was in any way tainted, or that there was an “agreement, enforceable promise or guarantee of future work” that would give rise to a conflict of interest. Aurora, 153 F.3d at 1128. They have not “pointed to any inaccuracies” in the draft or final EA, but have “merely speculated” that the Farm Bureau‘s involvement was improper “due to the interests of the proponents.” See Nat‘l Wildlife Fed‘n v. FERC, 912 F.2d 1471, 1485 (D.C.Cir.1990). “Such a speculation, without more, is insufficient to undermine the [Forest Service‘s] independent determination” that a FONSI was the appropriate approach under
Thus, the Court finds that plaintiffs have not shown that the outcome of the
II. The Forest Service‘s decision to adjust the AML range for the Devil‘s Garden WHT was not arbitrary and capricious.
In Counts IV, V, and VI, plaintiffs object to the Forest Service‘s decision to broaden the appropriate management level range for the Devil‘s Garden WHT from 275 to 335 animals to a new AML range of 206 to 402 animals. Compl. ¶¶ 75-91. The 2013 EA provides for a range of 105 to 183 horses in the Western portion of the territory and a range of 101 to 219 horses in the Eastern portion. AR00124.
Plaintiffs contend that the removal of the disputed territory renders the low-end of the new AML range invalid per se under the
A. The Forest Service complied with the Wild Horses Act in adjusting the AML for the Devil‘s Garden WHT.
Plaintiffs contend that “the adoption of an AML of zero for the [disputed territory] was legally impermissible” because the AML evaluation “present[ed] no genuine analysis” of the disputed territory. Pls.’ Mem. at 39-40. But as with Counts I, II, and III, this claim is entirely contingent upon a finding that the Forest Service acted improperly by removing the disputed territory from the Devil‘s Garden WHT, as plaintiffs appear to recognize in their memorandum. See id. at 39 (“If the Court finds that the Forest Service‘s elimination of the [disputed territory] was unlawful, then the new reduced AML is also defective because it is based on only those portions of the WHT that lie outside of the [disputed territory].“) (first emphasis added). Thus, because the Court has already found that the Forest Service reasonably determined that the disputed territory was never formally incorporated into the Devil‘s Garden WHT, it similarly finds that the agency had no duty to consider the disputed territory in conducting its AML analysis or to establish a non-zero AML for that territory, and thus, this aspect of Count IV must fail.
Although they do not expand upon this argument in their summary judgment pleadings, plaintiffs also allege in the complaint that the Forest Service failed “to account for—much less analyze—the forage requirements of private livestock when taking the drastic action to reduce the low AML,” and that its AML adjustment “violates the WHA‘s requirement that desig- nated
And in any event, the Forest Service did not fail “to account for—much less analyze—the forage requirements of private livestock,” as plaintiffs contend. See id. The Forest Service explicitly compared livestock use of the territory to wild horse use, AR00228, and it conducted a thorough analysis of the “environmental consequences” of “livestock grazing” in the 2013 EA. See AR00223-30; see also infra section II.C.2. Therefore, to the extent that plaintiffs object to the adjustment of the AML range with respect to the rest of the Devil‘s Garden WHT beyond the disputed territory, based on the agency‘s purported failure to consider the impact of livestock grazing, the Court finds that the AML adjustment was not arbitrary and capricious or in violation of the Wild Horses Act, and that defendants are entitled to summary judgment on Count IV.
B. The Forest Service reasonably concluded that the AML range adjustment did not constitute a “significant” amendment under the NFMA.
Plaintiffs also contend that that the Forest Service violated the NFMA because it did not analyze whether adjusting the AML range was a “significant” change to the 1991 Forest Plan. Compl. ¶¶ 80-84; see also Pls.’ Mem. at 44-45; Pls.’ Reply at 42-43. They argue that “the Forest Service was required either to formally amend/revise the 1991 Forest Plan when significantly reducing the wild horse AML, or set forth specific evidence establishing that ‘such amendment would [not] result in a significant change in such plan.‘” Pls.’ Mem. at 45 (alteration in original), quoting
The Court‘s review of the Forest Service‘s decision is “[h]ighly deferential,” AT & T Corp., 220 F.3d at 616, and the Court must not “substitute its judgment for that of the agency.” State Farm, 463 U.S. at 43, 103 S.Ct. 2856. Under that standard, the Court finds that the Forest Service reasonably concluded that the AML adjustment was not a significant change to the 1991 Forest Plan, and that it provided sufficient justification for its decision. In making its significance determination, the Forest Service stated:
The proposed amendments to remove establishment of the AML for wild horses from the Forest Plan and instead delineate a process by which AML would be established and revised as necessary in the [territory management plan] would allow for a more efficient and adaptable process to meet the stated Forest Plan goals and objectives.... The proposed changes would make it easier to achieve Forest Plan objectives and multiple-use goals and would not be NFMA significant.
AR00161-62.
The 2013 EA set forth specific evidence, based on “a site-specific and in-depth evaluation of the available population invento- ry,
The AML lower limit is set to allow the wild horse population to grow at the average annual population growth rate to the upper limit over an extended period of time (four or more years) without the need for interim gathers to remove excess animals. This should lead to fewer gathers to maintain wild horse population size over time. Fewer animals also would need to be removed during each gather. Less frequent gathers would result in less stress to individual animals and the herd and fewer potential impacts to the herd‘s social structure as compared to the existing situation.
AR00553.
Plaintiffs point to nothing that would contradict the Forest Service‘s finding that the adjusted AML range would benefit the wild horse population and would not alter the goals and objectives of the 1991 Forest Plan, other than their own speculation that the new AML range would lead to “two isolated, inbred populations with serious genetic issues.” Pls.’ Reply at 42. Their assessment is contradicted by the Forest Service‘s prediction that the average population of wild horses under the new AML range is actually expected to be higher than the population would have been under the prior AML range. Compare AR00272 (noting that, with an AML range of 275 to 335 horses, “it is expected that animal numbers would range between 280 and 409 animals (with a median of 343 head) over the next 20 years“) with AR00276 (noting that, with an AML range of 206 to 402 horses, “it is expected that animal numbers would range between 263 and 500 animals (with a median of 368 head) over the next 20 years“). Considering that a court must “show considerable deference ... where the agency‘s decision rests on an evaluation of complex scientific data within the agency‘s technical expertise,” Troy Corp. v. Browner, 120 F.3d 277, 283 (D.C.Cir.1997), and in light of the lack of any contrary evidence in the record, the Court defers to the agency‘s expertise.
Plaintiffs also argue that the Forest Service failed to consider the impact of grazing livestock on the Devil‘s Garden WHT in evaluating whether the AML range should be adjusted for the wild horses. Compl. ¶ 82; see also Pls.’ Mem. at 45 (stating that the Forest Service refused to address whether “a significant reduction of the wild horse AML is legally or scientifically warranted where far more of the rangeland damage and resource consumption derives from private livestock using this federally protected wild horse territory“). But as discussed, the 2013 EA demonstrates that the Forest Service did conduct an analysis of the impact of grazing livestock in determining that the AML adjustment was justified. See AR00223-30; see also infra section II.C.2. Thus, the Court finds that the Forest Service reasonably concluded that the AML adjustment was not significant and that formal amendment of the 1991 Forest Plan was not required, and defendants are entitled to summary judgment on Count V.
C. The Forest Service complied with NEPA in determining that the AML range adjustment was warranted.
Finally, plaintiffs contend that the Forest Service violated
1. The Forest Service reasonably concluded that the adjusted AML range would provide for sufficient genetic diversity.
Plaintiffs concede that “the Forest Service correctly identified genetic diversity as an environmental concern to be considered,” Pls.’ Mem. at 40, citing AR03911, the first step required in a
i. The Forest Service took the required “hard look” at the impact of the AML adjustment on the diversity of the Devil‘s Garden wild horse population.
In the 2013 EA, the Forest Service found that “[a] minimum population size of 50 effective breeding animals (i.e., a population size of about 150-200 animals) is currently recommended to maintain an acceptable level of genetic diversity within reproducing [wild horse and burro] populations.” AR00273. The adjusted AML range for the Devil‘s Garden WHT, as set by the 2013 Management Plan, is 206 to 402 wild horses. AR00124. However, the AMLs for each portion of the territory—the Eastern and Western ranges—are set at 101 to 219 horses, and 105 to 183 horses, respectively. Id. Thus, plaintiffs contend that because “the WHT now consists of two isolated units between which no genetic interchange will take place,” the relevant AML is not the range for the entire Devil‘s Garden WHT, but the ranges for each of the two separate Eastern and Western portions of the territory. Pls.’ Mem. at 40-42. Because those range-specific AMLs provide for less than the minimum population size of 50 effective breeding animals—or 150 to 200 total animals—for each range, and because the Forest Service failed to analyze the AML adjustment in this context, plaintiffs assert that the AML adjustment violated NEPA. Id.
Under the APA, “we review scientific judgments of the agency ‘not as the chemist, biologist, or statistician that we are qualified neither by training nor experience to be, but as a reviewing court exercising our narrowly defined duty of holding agencies to certain minimal standards of rationality.‘” Troy Corp., 120 F.3d at 283, quoting Ethyl Corp. v. EPA, 541 F.2d 1, 36 (D.C.Cir.1976). “[O]fficials receive significant discretion to choose the wild horse and burro populations the range can support,” and this “discretion extends to choosing the target wild horse and burro populations.” Cloud Found., Inc. v. Salazar, 999 F.Supp.2d 117, 125 (D.D.C.2013), citing Fund for Animals, Inc. v. U.S. Bureau of Land Mgmt., 460 F.3d 13, 16 (D.C.Cir.2006).
Especially in light of the substantial deference the Court must afford to the Forest Service‘s scientific evaluation of these issues, it finds that the agency took the required hard look at the AML adjustment and reasonably determined that it would not have a significant impact on the genetic diversity of the Devil‘s Garden herd. As a threshold matter, the Court notes that plaintiffs offer only their own unsupported opinion on the effect of the AML range adjustment, and they do not accurately
Further, plaintiffs provide no support for their assertion that there can or will be no interaction between the horses in the Eastern and Western portions of the Devil‘s Garden WHT, and that the two populations will be so isolated that the two AMLs must be viewed separately. In fact, in support of their claim that the disputed territory had been incorporated into the Devil‘s Garden WHT at one point, plaintiffs specifically asserted that horses range freely across the disputed territory and into and out of the two separate, noncontiguous parcels. See, e.g., Pls.’ Mem. at 10 (“[T]here are ‘no geographical boundaries that would normally prohibit wild horses from using the [disputed territory]’ for forage and water and to travel between the eastern and western portions of the WHT.“), quoting AR04133.
Given these circumstances, the Court finds that the Forest Service took a sufficiently hard look at the impact of the AML adjustment across the two non-contiguous ranges, and it reasonably found that the effects would not be significant. In discussing the adjusted AML range, it found that “impacts to genetic diversity would be similar” to the impact of retaining the old AML. AR00276. Both alternatives were “expected to retain a sufficient number of individuals in each home range and provide for adequate movement between the areas to maintain a healthy and genetically diverse population of wild horses over the long-term.” AR00273 (emphasis added); AR00276. And in response to concerns that fencing within the Devil‘s Garden WHT would “prevent horses from mingling (reducing gene flow),” the 2013 EA noted that the 2013 Management Plan “call[s] for the widening of gates that would provide even greater opportunity for animal movement” than was previously possible. AR00365. Therefore, the Forest Service specifically concluded that “[t]he proposed AML, coupled with known movement of animals between each allotment and pasture, is expected to maintain an acceptable level of genetic diversity.” AR00553.11
And even if there turns out to be limited interaction between the two separate populations, the Court finds that it was reasonable for the Forest Service to determine that the adult breeding population of the Eastern and Western ranges—the number of “[w]ild horses within a population that are 1 years of age and older,” AR02177—will still be sufficient to maintain genetic diversity. The effective population size—the number of effective breeding animals required “for maintenance of genetic variation in endangered species or managed populations“—is 50 animals. AR01414. Because “the effective population size is generally 1/4th to 1/3rd of the census population,” “a census population size of 150 to 200 is required to achieve the minimum effective population size.” Id. (emphasis added). In other words, for genetic diversity to be maintained, each of the two home ranges must have a census population generally within the range of 150 to 200 total horses.
Importantly, while the census population comprises all horses within the territory, the AML reflects only “[t]he number of adult horses” to be managed within a territory, AR02177, excluding the current year‘s foals. AR00177. Thus, the AML ranges established in the 2013 Management Plan—101 to 219 horses in the Eastern range, and 105 to 183 horses in the Western range—reflect only the adult horses in those ranges, and do not account for the foals present in the herd.
Plaintiffs speculate that if there is no crossover between the populations on the Eastern and Western ranges, and if the Forest Service manages each range‘s adult population to the absolute minimum of the AML range, and if the rate of foals born
Thus, the Court concludes that the Forest Service has shown a rational connection between the facts it found relating to the genetic health of the horse population within the Devil‘s Garden WHT and its decision to expand the AML range to 206 to 402 wild horses.
ii. The Forest Service was not required to perform genetic testing prior to adjusting the AML range.
Plaintiffs also complain that the Forest Service “undertook no genetic study before deciding to adopt” the new AML range, and they challenge the agency‘s decision “to conduct genetic sampling ‘[d]uring the initial removal(s) to achieve [the new] AML’ instead.” Pls.’ Mem. at 41, quoting AR00125. They concede that ”
Under
As noted above, the Forest Service rationally concluded that the adjusted AML ranges for the Eastern and Western portions of the Devil‘s Garden WHT would maintain wild horse populations at or above the required census population to ensure the genetic diversity of the herd. And the Forest Service identified “other evidence” indicating that the adjusted AML poses little risk to the herd‘s genetic survival. “Based on observations of animals gathered and removed from the WHT,” the Forest Service found that “no problems have been identified that could
Even with this observation, the Forest Service implemented safeguards to ensure that the genetic diversity of the Devil‘s Garden herd does not dip below acceptable levels. The 2013 EA states that “[b]aseline genetic diversity would be determined by sampling a portion of the herd during the first gather cycle,” and “[f]urther samples would be taken at a minimum of every other gather (e.g., 8-10 years) to detect any change in genetic diversity from the baseline.” AR00176. As the expert relied upon by the Forest Service stated, it takes 1 or 2 generations—or about 10 to 20 years, see AR00176—for a significant loss of diversity to occur. AR01414. Thus, if samples will be taken at the first gather and then every 8 to 10 years, then the diversity of the Devil‘s Garden herd will be assessed at a minimum of once every generation.
And if the genetic diversity value for the herd falls outside of acceptable ranges, the Forest Service will implement the following management actions: “maximizing the number of breeding age wild horses (animals aged 6-10 years) within the herd, adjusting the sex ratio in favor of males to increase the number of harems and effective breeding males, and releasing 1-2 young mares from similar habitats every generation (about 10 years).” AR00176. Thus, this is not a situation where, as plaintiffs claim, “the agency‘s promise to conduct ‘comprehensive’ genetic testing every 8-10 years will likely be too little, too late [because] the irreversible damage to the population‘s gene pool will already have been inflicted.” See Pls.’ Reply at 34-35, quoting Defs.’ Reply at 38.
Plaintiffs point to no material from which the Court could conclude that the Forest Service‘s observations of a healthy and genetically diverse population were contrary to record evidence. And they have not convinced the Court that the Forest Service acted unreasonably in determining that adverse impacts to the genetic diversity of the wild horse population were not “likely,” and that a genetic study was therefore not warranted. Thus, the Court finds that the Forest Service complied with
2. The Forest Service properly analyzed the cumulative impact of livestock on conditions in the Devil‘s Garden WHT.
Under
The 2013 EA identified “livestock grazing” as one of “several ongoing and future activities ... that are not specifically related to the management of the Devil‘s
Manage grazing use in a manner that achieves and maintains satisfactory ecological condition and protects soil, water, and streamside-dependent resources. Forage is made available for use by livestock, wild horses and wildlife. Actual grazing use by livestock, wild horses and wildlife remains in balance with the available capacity.
AR00168.
Further, the 2013 EA summarized historic and current livestock use of the Devil‘s Garden WHT and discussed the grazing allotments within the WHT affected by the proposed changes. AR00223-28. It also compared the permitted, authorized, and actual use of the territory by livestock with the allocated and actual use by wild horses. AR00227; see also AR00259 (chart comparing actual and permitted livestock use to wild horse use for allotments within the Devil‘s Garden WHT from 2006 to 2012); AR00363-64 (observing that “actual use by livestock during 2006-2012 averaged 18,548 AUMs or 69% of that permitted,” but that “[d]uring the same period, use by wild horses averaged 10,257 AUMs or 233% of the AUMs [animal unit months] allocated for wild horses“). And it analyzed the environmental impacts of each of the four proposed actions and examined the direct, indirect, and cumulative effects of each action, including how each would impact forage availability and livestock grazing. AR00228-30.
Ultimately, the 2013 EA found that the proposed action—the boundary correction and the AML range adjustment—would result in “the reallocation of 1,390 AUMs from permitted livestock to wild horse forage if found necessary,” and that “reduced competition between livestock and wild horses for the available forage and water would be expected.” AR00229; see also AR00195-96 (listing “livestock grazing” as a “potential impact to social and economic factors” and noting that, under the proposed action, “an estimated 1,390 AUMs of livestock forage could be lost due to the increase in authorized wild horse use (AML)“). Thus, the Court finds that the 2013 EA does not consist of “a mere listing of activities” that lacks “an analysis of the impacts of these activities,” as plaintiffs allege. See Pls.’ Reply at 39, quoting Defs. of Wildlife v. Babbitt, 130 F.Supp.2d 121, 127 n. 8 (D.D.C.2001). Rather, the effects of wild horse and livestock grazing were “considered together” in the 2013 EA so that the Forest Service “could determine the combined impact” of those animals on the territory. See Fund for Animals v. Clark, 27 F.Supp.2d 8, 14 (D.D.C.1998).
To the extent that plaintiffs contend that the Forest Service was required to consider modifying livestock grazing levels instead of, or in addition to, adjusting the AML range for the wild horse population in the 2013 EA, see Pls.’ Mem. at 43-44; Pls.’ Reply at 39 (“[T]he agency admits that it never asked the most obvious question: are there too many cattle in the WHT?“), that is beyond the scope of what
Here, the action at issue was the management of the wild horses living within the Devil‘s Garden WHT, and not the modification of grazing permits for livestock, which is addressed through a separate process. See AR00202 (“The Forest Service and the BLM will manage livestock grazing in compliance with the standards and guidelines in their land management plans and grazing permit terms and conditions. These determine the timing, duration, and intensity of grazing.“). Thus, while the 2013 EA clearly contemplated some adjustment to the permitted grazing levels within the territory, see AR00248 (“Managing wild horse population size within the established AML, coupled with some adjustments in the authorized livestock grazing use, would be expected to meet Forest Plan utilization standards and achieve the desired conditions.“) (emphasis added), because the 2013 EA “address[ed] population levels for wild horses only,” the Forest Service stated that “[a]ny necessary adjustment to livestock management and/or use levels are outside the scope of this document and will be addressed ... during the grazing permit renewal process.” AR00364. This approach is consistent with
Plaintiffs complain that the Forest Service is guilty of a “bait-and-switch: the agency assessed the impacts of a horse population at historically high levels in order to justify reducing the AML to a historically low range.” Pls.’ Reply at 40-41. But whatever the reason for the high wild horse population at the time the Forest Service decided to adopt the 2013 changes, agency “officials receive significant discretion to choose the wild horse and burro populations the range can support,” and this “discretion extends to choosing the target wild horse and burro populations.” Cloud Found., 999 F.Supp.2d at 125, citing Fund for Animals, 460 F.3d at 16. The Court has found no reason to disturb that exercise of discretion here.
Plaintiffs may disagree with the Forest Service‘s decision to adjust the AML range instead of modifying grazing permits and livestock management plans, but ”
CONCLUSION
Because the Forest Service reasonably concluded that the disputed territory was never formally incorporated into the Devil‘s Garden WHT, and that any references to one contiguous territory were the result of administrative error, the Court finds that it was not arbitrary and capricious or in violation of the law for the Forest Service to act to correct the boundary in the 2013 EA and the 2013 Management Plan. Thus, defendants are entitled to summary
A separate order will issue.
AMERICAN CIVIL LIBERTIES UNION OF SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA, Plaintiff, v. UNITED STATES CITIZENSHIP AND IMMIGRATION SERVICES, Defendant.
Civil Action No. 13-cv-861 (TSC)
United States District Court, District of Columbia.
Signed September 30, 2015
