Case Information
*1 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA THE ARK INITIATIVE, et al. ,
Plaintiffs,
v. Civil Action No. 14-633 (JEB) THOMAS TIDWELL, Chief, United States
Forest Service, et al. ,
Defendants,
and
ASPEN SKIING COMPANY,
Intervenor-Defendant. MEMORANDUM OPINION
The modern administrative state reaches just about everywhere. Even, as this case demonstrates, into the wilds of the Colorado Rockies.
Federal rules create two special classes of protection for the national forests: “wilderness areas” and “roadless areas.” Designating a parcel “roadless” makes it harder to cut down trees there; “wilderness” makes it harder still. This case involves a decision by the United States Forest Service to remove the “roadless” designation from approximately 8,300 acres of land in Colorado that fall inside the boundaries of permitted ski areas. Having removed that classification, the Service then authorized Aspen Skiing Company to fell trees on approximately 80 acres of that formerly “roadless” land in order to build a new ski trail.
Plaintiffs – two environmental groups and two individuals – filed suit to challenge both the removal of the “roadless” designation from the 8,300 acres and the approval of the 80-acre *2 construction project. They claim that the Service’s actions contravened the Administrative Procedure Act, the Wilderness Act, and the National Environmental Policy Act. Defendants – joined by Aspen as an Intervenor – contend that Plaintiffs lack standing to bring such challenge and that the agency violated no law. The parties have now cross-moved for summary judgment.
The Court concludes that Plaintiffs do have standing to bring this case, but that their claims are fatally flawed on the merits. Although Plaintiffs offer several worthy challenges to the Service’s actions, in the end, the agency made its decision in accordance with the law and following a multi-year, comprehensive, public process. Plaintiffs may have good policy arguments against removing environmental protections from the land in question or approving Aspen’s ski trail, but this Court cannot overturn the Service’s decisions unless they were unlawful. As they were not, the Court will grant Defendants’ and Intervenor’s Motions and dismiss this case.
I. Background
A. The Law of the Wild
Congress passed the Wilderness Act in 1964, Pub. L. No. 88-577, 78 Stat. 890 (1964) (codified at 16 U.S.C. §§ 1131-1136), directing the Forest Service within the next ten years to review whether certain areas in the National Forest System were suitable “for preservation as wilderness.” 16 U.S.C. § 1132(b). The Service was to report those findings to the President, who, in turn, would advise Congress on his recommendations on which regions should be officially designated “wilderness areas.” See id., § 1132(a)-(b). The Act defines “wilderness” as:
[A]n area of undeveloped Federal land retaining its primeval character and influence, without permanent improvements or human habitation, which is protected and managed so as to preserve its natural conditions and which (1) generally appears to *3 have been affected primarily by the forces of nature, with the imprint of man's work substantially unnoticeable; (2) has outstanding opportunities for solitude or a primitive and unconfined type of recreation; (3) has at least five thousand acres of land or is of sufficient size as to make practicable its preservation and use in an unimpaired condition; and (4) may also contain ecological, geological, or other features of scientific, educational, scenic, or historical value.
Id., § 1131(c). Only Congress has the power to designate a wilderness area. See id., § 1131(a);
Wyoming v. Dept. of Agric.,
On the Service’s second attempt to follow through with the Wilderness Act’s command,
an undertaking known as the “Roadless Area Review and Evaluation project” (RARE II), it
finally completed the inventory in 1979, describing the 62 million acres of prospective
wilderness regions it had identified as “roadless areas.” Wyoming,
Around the same time, in 1976, Congress passed the National Forest Management Act, Pub. L. No. 94-588, 90 Stat. 2949 (codified as amended in scattered sections of 16 U.S.C.), which instructs the Forest Service to create and continuously update “land and resource management plans” – also known as “Forest Plans” – for each unit of the National Forest *4 System. 16 U.S.C. § 1604(a). Per the Service’s own regulations, part of the Forest Plan development process includes an evaluation of a unit’s suitability as a wilderness or roadless area. See CRR-008859; 36 C.F.R. § 219.27(b) (2001); 36 C.F.R. § 219.17(a) (1982).
Particularly relevant to this case is the Service’s 1997-2002 evaluation of the White River National Forest in Colorado. There, the Service identified “90 roadless areas . . . totaling 640,000 acres.” BME-04668. “Of these 90 areas, 37 (totaling approximately 298,000 acres) were found capable and available for recommended wilderness. The remaining 53 areas were identified as roadless but lacking sufficient wilderness characteristics.” Id. As part of this evaluation, the Service determined that a 1,700-acre parcel of land within White River known as “Burnt Mountain,” which included the 80 acres of land inside the Snowmass ski-permit area that is the subject of Plaintiffs’ Complaint, was “roadless” but not suitable for designation as “wilderness.” See BME-01041, 04225-26, 04633.
B. Roadless Rules
After Congress reviewed the Forest Service’s RARE II report and designated certain
regions as “wilderness areas,” the agency was left with a large inventory of “roadless areas” that,
while not officially designated “wilderness,” were still “worthy of some level of protection.”
Wyoming,
In 2001, however, the Service decided to take a broader, national approach to the management of its roadless inventory. It thus promulgated a “Roadless Area Conservation *5 Rule,” which sought “to provide, within the context of multiple-use management, lasting protection for inventoried roadless areas within the National Forest System.” 66 Fed. Reg. 3,244, 3,272 (Jan. 12, 2001). The Rule prohibited, with a few exceptions, road construction and timber removal on approximately 58.5 million acres of roadless areas across the country “identified in a set of inventoried roadless area maps.” Id. at 3,244; see also id. at 3,272-73; BME-04667. “These nationally-applied prohibitions superceded [ sic ] the management prescriptions for roadless areas applied through the development of individual forest plans.” CRR-023382.
The maps of the 58.5 million acres subject to the Roadless Rule were based on the
Service’s 1979 RARE II inventory of prospective wilderness areas –
i.e.,
the leftover land that
Congress had not designated as wilderness – along with some regions that the Service had
subsequently designated as roadless as part of its Forest Plan development process. See 66 Fed.
Reg. at 3,246. The Service made clear that although the Rule was intended to conserve roadless
areas, it would not afford the same protection as a “wilderness” designation: “The Roadless Area
Conservation rule, unlike the establishment of wilderness areas, will allow a multitude of
activities including motorized uses, grazing, and oil and gas development.” Id. at 3,249. In
effect, this created three levels of protection for land in the National Forest System.
“Wilderness” receives the most protection, “roadless” the second most, and land with no
designation the least. Cf. Ark Initiative v. Tidwell,
The Roadless Rule quickly became a target for litigation. See BME-04667; Wyoming,
*7 The instant lawsuit involves a challenge to the legality of the Ski-Area Exclusion.
Plaintiffs are concerned because, by removing the “roadless” designation from forests that fall
within ski-area boundaries, the Service made it easier for companies like Aspen Skiing to cut
down those trees. See Ark Initiative,
C. The Burnt Mountain Skier-Egress-Trail Project
In 2003, nine years before the issuance of the Colorado Rule, Aspen Skiing asked the
Forest Service for permission to construct the “Burnt Mountain Skier Egress Trail” in the
Snowmass Mountain Ski Area. See BME-00001. Aspen hoped that the Egress Trail would
improve safety and convenience for skiers cruising in the “Burnt Mountain Glades,” see BME-
04635, a set of ski trails in Snowmass that was the subject of prior litigation before this Court.
See id.; Ark Initiative,
Two months later, in April 2006, two of the Plaintiffs in this case – The Ark Initiative and Donald Duerr – along with several other parties, filed an administrative appeal within the Forest Service requesting review of the agency’s decision to approve the Trail. See BME- 03261-458. That appeal was successful; the Service found that, because the Egress Trail fell within the Burnt Mountain roadless area, the decision to approve it required additional analysis of the “impacts” the Trail would have on the region. BME-03535. The 2006 Appeal Decision *8 therefore ordered the Service to prepare a new environmental assessment on the matter, before any work could begin on the project. See id.
Seven years later, in August 2013, the Service completed that assessment. See BME- 04621-732. Although, as the Service emphasized, see BME-04825, the 2012 Colorado Rule had in the interim removed the “roadless” designation from the 80-acre area in question – because it fell within the boundaries of the Snowmass ski-permit area – the Service nevertheless analyzed the Trail’s potential impacts on the parcel’s “roadless characteristics.” See BME-04665-81. The Service concluded that even if the Egress Trail had fallen within a roadless area, it “would not affect the nine roadless area characteristics to the point of altering the characteristics of the Burnt Mountain [roadless area].” BME-04677. It therefore authorized Aspen to construct the Egress Trail. See BME-04818-912. That authorization is another subject of this litigation.
D. The Instant Case
In April 2014, Plaintiffs filed a three-count Complaint (and two months later, an Amended Complaint) challenging both the Ski-Area Exclusion contained in the Colorado Rule and the Service’s approval of the Egress-Trail Project. Plaintiffs allege violations of the Administrative Procedure Act, the Wilderness Act, and the National Environmental Policy Act. See Am. Compl., ¶¶ 62-74. Plaintiffs, Defendants, and Intervenor have all cross-moved for summary judgment. Defendants and Intervenor have further moved to strike Plaintiffs’ Amended Complaint. The briefing was completed on a somewhat expedited schedule as the tree-cutting is slated to begin imminently.
Before turning to the substance of the parties’ arguments, the Court notes that Plaintiffs’ briefs, and to some extent Defendants’, contain a superfluity of footnotes, many of which are quite lengthy and advance substantive arguments distinct from and additional to those contained *9 in the body text. In restricting the length of the parties’ briefs, see Minute Order of June 4, 2014; Minute Order of June 26, 2014, the Court did not intend for them to simply reformat their pleadings by transferring text to single-spaced footnotes. This practice proves both highly distracting to the reader and a transparent effort to circumvent the Court’s page limitations. The Court will therefore focus its analysis on those arguments the parties thought worthy enough to include in the main text of their pleadings.
II. Legal Standard
Challenges under the APA and NEPA proceed under the familiar “arbitrary and
capricious” standard of review. See 5 U.S.C. § 706(2)(A); Baltimore Gas and Elec. Co. v.
Natural Res. Def. Council, Inc.,
The APA requires courts to “hold unlawful and set aside agency action, findings, and
conclusions” that are “arbitrary, capricious, an abuse of discretion, or otherwise not in
*10
accordance with law.” 5 U.S.C. § 706(2)(A). Under this “narrow” standard of review – which
appropriately encourages courts to defer to the agency’s expertise, see Motor Vehicle Mfrs.
Ass’n of United States, Inc. v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co.,
It is not enough, then, that the court would have come to a different conclusion from the
agency. See Nat’l Ass’n of Home Builders v. Norton,
III. Analysis
The Court will begin its analysis by addressing Defendants and Intervenor’s Motion to Strike the Amended Complaint. It will then move on to their contentions concerning the Court’s purported lack of jurisdiction to adjudicate this lawsuit. Finding those arguments wanting, the Court will finally take on the merits of the case.
A. Motion to Strike
The first issue the Court must resolve is the propriety of Plaintiffs’ Amended Complaint. That seemingly innocuous point is particularly hard fought here because the pleading, although it does not add any new claims against Defendants, does include a new Plaintiff – the environmental group Rocky Mountain Wild – who is central to the question of Plaintiffs’ standing to bring this case, a matter discussed further in the next section.
Rule 15(a)(1)(A) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure allows a party to amend its complaint as a matter of course before trial within “21 days after serving it.” Plaintiffs filed their original Complaint on April 16, 2014. See ECF No. 1. Apparently due to some confusion in the Clerk’s Office, however, Defendants and Intervenor were not served with that pleading until June 16 and 17. See ECF Nos. 28, 30; Sur-Reply, Exh. A (Emails). Plaintiffs filed their Amended Complaint on June 5, 2014. See ECF No. 16.
The Amended Complaint was therefore filed at least eleven days before Defendants and
Intervenor were ever served with the original. The practice, in such cases, appears to favor
allowing amendment. See, e.g., McIntrye v. United States, No. 13-2404,
Defendants and Intervenor object, however, that the Amended Complaint contravenes the parties’ Joint Stipulation, approved by the Court at the very beginning of this case. See ECF No. 11; Minute Order, Apr. 28, 2014. There, they all agreed to set the litigation on a 97-day expedited schedule, specifying deadlines for the filing of the administrative record and cross- motions for summary judgment. See Joint Stipulation at 1-3. Plaintiffs filed the Amended Complaint on day 50 of that schedule and moved for summary judgment just two days later, leaving their opponents with only a few weeks to incorporate the new pleading into their cross- motions in order to meet the agreed-upon deadlines.
While this may well violate the spirit of Rule 15(a)(1)(A) and the Joint Stipulation, that
agreement nowhere forbids Plaintiffs from filing an Amended Complaint. Rule 15(a)(1)(A),
moreover, does not empower the Court to deny leave to amend on grounds of undue delay or
prejudice – it permits amendment “as a matter of course.” Cf. Foman v. Davis,
B. Jurisdiction
Having denied the Motion to Strike Plaintiffs’ Amended Complaint and deemed that document filed, thereby adding Rocky Mountain Wild as a Plaintiff to this case, the Court next moves to the question of jurisdiction. The Amended Complaint lodges three counts against Defendants: Count 1 challenges the Service’s application of the Colorado Rule to its Egress-Trail *13 decision, see Am. Compl., ¶¶ 62-66, Count 2 claims that the Egress-Trail approval violated NEPA, see id., ¶¶ 67-71, and Count 3 advances a general attack on the legality of the Colorado Rule. See id., ¶¶ 72-74. Defendants move to dismiss Counts 1 and 3 of the Complaint – the so- called “as-applied” and “facial” challenges to the Colorado Rule – because, they say, none of the Plaintiffs has standing to pursue either of those claims. Defendants appear to concede that Plaintiffs do have standing to bring Count 2. See Def. Mot. at 2, 24.
The doctrine of “standing” reflects the Constitution’s restriction of the power of federal
courts to decide only “cases or controversies.” See Whitmore v. Arkansas,
Having considered the arguments, the Court concludes that, at the very least, Plaintiff
RMW has standing to bring both Count 1 and Count 3. Since “the presence of one party with
standing is sufficient to satisfy Article III’s case-or-controversy requirement,” the Court need
“not determine whether the other plaintiffs have standing.” Rumsfeld v. Forum for Acad. & Inst.
Rights,
1. Count 1: “As-Applied” Challenge Defendants first claim that RMW lacks standing to challenge the Service’s application of the Colorado Rule in the context of its approval of the Burnt Mountain Egress Trail. They rest this argument on three grounds. First, RMW has not suffered a concrete injury as a result of the Egress Trail. Second, RMW failed either to submit a comment on the Egress-Trail Project or to identify any specific concerns with the Burnt Mountain parcel when it submitted comments on the Colorado Rule. And third, RMW failed to exhaust its administrative remedies. The Court will address each point in turn.
a. Injury-in-Fact According to Defendants, the injury RMW will allegedly suffer as a result of the Egress Trail is insufficiently concrete to satisfy the requirements of Article III standing. RMW has claimed “representational standing” to challenge the Trail, submitting two declarations from its staff attorney and member, Matthew Sandler, describing the harm he will suffer if the project is completed. See Pl. Mot., Exh. C (Declaration of Matthew Sandler); see also Pl. Opp., Exh. E (Supplemental Declaration of Matthew Sandler).
In the Declaration, Sandler explains:
As a RMW member, I personally and professionally value and visit wilderness-quality lands and roadless areas in Colorado.
Among other roadless areas adversely affected by the CRR’s ski area exclusion, I have been to the Snowmass ski resort and the area in the vicinity of Burnt Mountain and used it for recreational and other purposes. I have concrete plans to return to this area in January 2015, at which time the egress trail could be constructed absent judicial relief in this case, therefore impairing my ability to continue enjoying this area in its natural, undeveloped condition that existed prior to CRR promulgation.
Sandler Decl., ¶ 8. In his Supplemental Declaration, he offers more specifics:
[W]hen I have visited the Snowmass ski resort, I have often hiked up from the main ski resort, traversed over to Burnt Mountain . . . and skied down Burnt Mountain in a backcountry fashion before traversing back over to the main ski resort and then hiking up to the top of Burnt Mountain again. Although, like most skiers, I do not carry a GPS device when I go backcountry skiing, I can attest that based on my review of maps of Burnt Mountain, I am confident that on several occasions I skied through and otherwise used for recreational purposes the 80-acre parcel that the Service removed from the roadless inventory through the CRR. And, as previously stated, I have concrete plans to return in January 2015 to the Snowmass ski resort, and Burnt Mountain in particular (including the 80-acre parcel), and I will likely continue to return approximately once per year thereafter. The loss of roadless qualities as a result of the CRR ski area exclusion in conjunction with egress trail construction will therefore affect my recreational and aesthetic interests in using this parcel for backcountry skiing and other purposes.
Sandler Supp. Decl., ¶ 3.
This harm confers standing on RMW. “[E]nvironmental plaintiffs adequately allege
injury in fact when they aver that they use the affected area and are persons ‘for whom the
aesthetic and recreational values of the area will be lessened’ by the challenged activity.”
Friends of the Earth v. Laidlaw Environmental Services (TOC),
b. Comments Defendants next maintain that RMW lacks standing because it never submitted a comment expressing its objections to the Egress-Trail Project. Because other commenters articulated similar concerns, however, this argument is unavailing.
The D.C. Circuit has described as “black-letter administrative law that ‘[a]bsent special
circumstances, a party must initially present its comments to the agency during the rulemaking in
order for the court to consider the issue.’” Appalachian Power Co. v. EPA,
Yet the Court of Appeals also quite frequently makes exceptions to this rule, permitting
plaintiffs who did not participate in rulemaking processes to file challenges if, for example, other
commenters raised the same concerns, see, e.g., Sierra Club v. EPA,
Here, although RMW itself did not comment on the Egress-Trail Project, see BME- 03811-04046, a number of other commenters raised the same kind of environmental and administrative concerns alleged in Count 1 of the Amended Complaint. See, e.g., BME-03828- 39, 3967-78. The Court, consequently, finds that RMW has not waived its right to bring this challenge.
c. Exhaustion Defendants last assert – in an almost cursory fashion – that RMW lacks standing because it failed to exhaust its administrative remedies with regard to the Egress-Trail Project. While the three other Plaintiffs in this lawsuit filed an administrative appeal of the Decision Notice for the Project, RMW did not. See Am. Compl., ¶¶ 58-61; BME-03811-4046, 04838. Federal law requires a litigant to “exhaust all administrative appeal procedures established by the Secretary [of Agriculture] or required by law” before he may sue the Forest Service – an agency of the Department of Agriculture – or its officers. 7 U.S.C. § 6912(e)(3).
Against this charge, Plaintiffs note that several district courts have permitted plaintiffs to
pursue claims against the Forest Service, even when they have not exhausted their administrative
remedies, so long as another organization or a co-plaintiff did file an appeal that raised the same
concerns. In such cases, these courts have reasoned, “Since the purpose of the exhaustion
requirement is to ensure that agency ‘be given first shot at resolving a claimant's difficulties,’ . . .
the underlying rationale supporting the exhaustion requirement” has been satisfied. Sierra Club
v. Bosworth,
The Court need not weigh in on this debate. According to the D.C. Circuit, the
exhaustion requirement in § 6912(e) is non-jurisdictional, meaning that a court may in certain
circumstances excuse a plaintiff’s failure to satisfy it, or may bypass the issue if the plaintiff
ultimately loses the case on other grounds. See Munsell v. Dept. of Agric.,
2. Count 3: “Facial” Challenge Defendants raise three related objections to RMW’s standing to bring the “facial” challenge to the validity of the Colorado Rule alleged in Count 3. First, they contend that the APA does not provide for judicial review of the Rule, independent of a challenge to a specific application of it. Second, they argue that RMW cannot use the Egress-Trail Project as a specific application of the Colorado Rule that affects its interests because it failed to comment on the Project and to exhaust its administrative remedies. Finally, they assert that RMW has suffered no injury as a result of the Rule. Because the Court’s holding in the prior section resolves the third point in RMW’s favor, see Part III.B.1.a, supra , and the second is easily dispatched, given *19 that RMW’s co-plaintiffs commented on the Project and RMW submitted extensive comments in opposition to the Colorado Rule, see CRR-016832-71, 106963-7001, 134141-84, 134663-706, 157993-97, the Court need only address Defendants’ first argument.
The APA provides for judicial review of “[a]gency action made reviewable by statue and final agency action for which there is no other adequate remedy in a court.” 5 U.S.C. § 704. As the Supreme Court has explained:
Some statutes permit broad regulations to serve as the “agency action,” and thus to be the object of judicial review directly, even before the concrete effects normally required for APA review are felt. Absent such a provision, however, a regulation is not ordinarily considered the type of agency action “ripe” for judicial review under the APA until the scope of the controversy has been reduced to more manageable proportions, and its factual components fleshed out, by some concrete action applying the regulation to the claimant's situation in a fashion that harms or threatens to harm him. (The major exception, of course, is a substantive rule which as a practical matter requires the plaintiff to adjust his conduct immediately. Such agency action is “ripe” for review at once, whether or not explicit statutory review apart from the APA is provided.)
Lujan,
Even if RMW were barred from bringing an “independent” challenge to the Colorado
Rule, it may still attack that regulation – and have it invalidated as unlawful – in the context of a
challenge to one of the Rule’s specific applications. The specific application in this case would
*20
be the Egress-Trail Project, which Plaintiffs have alleged was improper both on its own terms
and because the Colorado Rule on which it was based was invalid. Plaintiffs’ challenge to the
Egress-Trail Project, in other words, provides the avenue through which they may attack the
Colorado Rule as well. “As the Supreme Court has made clear, such ‘as applied’ challenges are
the appropriate means by which a party may challenge a broad agency policy document.” Center
for Native Ecosystems v. Salazar,
In sum, the Court concludes that RMW has standing to bring Counts 1 and 3. Because
only one plaintiff needs standing for a case to satisfy Article III, the Court need not inquire into
the remaining Plaintiffs. See Forum,
C. Merits
In considering the merits, the Court will proceed from the specific to the general, first analyzing the Egress Trail and then the Ski-Area Exclusion as a whole.
1. The Egress-Trail Project The Court begins with Plaintiffs’ challenge to the Service’s approval of the Egress-Trail Project. According to their Motion, such approval was unlawful for two main reasons: first, because the Service failed to prepare an Environmental Impact Statement for its decision, as required by the National Environmental Policy Act, 42 U.S.C. § 4321 et seq. , and second, *21 because the Environmental Assessment that the Service did prepare was insufficient. The Court will address each contention separately.
a. Environmental Impact Statement
“NEPA itself does not mandate particular results.” Robertson v. Methow Valley Citizens
Council,
Most relevant to this case, NEPA requires that when an agency is considering an action
that will “significantly affect[] the quality of the human environment,” it must first prepare a
detailed “Environmental Impact Statement” assessing the consequences of that action and any
alternatives that may be available. Dept. of Transp. v. Public Citizen,
In this case, the Service prepared an EA for the Egress-Trail Project and found that no EIS was necessary. See BME-04621-732. It then issued a FONSI documenting that conclusion. *22 See BME-04818-912. Plaintiffs contend that that decision was flawed because, first, the Service’s own regulations require an EIS for all decisions affecting a roadless area, and, second, the Project would in fact “significantly affect” the environment.
On the first point, according to Plaintiffs, Forest Service regulations require the agency to prepare an EIS before making decisions regarding a roadless area that will have a discernable impact on the area’s roadless or wilderness qualities. This proposition is not disputed: Service regulations do mandate an EIS for proposals that “would substantially alter the undeveloped character” of a designated roadless area. 36 C.F.R. §§ 220.5(a)(2), 294.45(a). The problem for Plaintiffs, as Defendant and Intervenor are quick to point out, is that the Burnt Mountain parcel lost its “roadless” designation and was removed from the inventory as a result of the Ski-Area Exclusion in the Colorado Rule. See BME-04673. These regulations therefore no longer apply to the Egress-Trail Project.
Plaintiffs contend, however, that whether a parcel is officially designated “roadless” is
irrelevant; so long as the land is empirically roadless, they say, an EIS is required, regardless of
the administrative label. In support of this position, they cite two Ninth Circuit decisions. In
each case, that court reviewed the sufficiency of an EIS prepared by the Forest Service to
evaluate the effects of a proposed project involving, in one case, two “uninventoried roadless
area[s],” Lands Council v. Martin,
Even if the Court accepted Plaintiffs’ theory of the law, moreover, the Service regulations in question only require an EIS for actions that “substantially alter the undeveloped character” of a roadless area. 36 C.F.R. §§ 220.5(a)(2), 294.45(a) (emphasis added). The EA the Service prepared for the Egress Trail, however, concluded, after 26 pages of analysis, that the project “would not affect the nine roadless characteristics to the point of altering the characteristics of the Burnt Mountain [roadless area].” BME-04677. Given that the regulations and case law do not support Plaintiffs’ claim, and that even if they did, the Service’s conclusions about the effects of the Egress-Trail Project would render an EIS unnecessary, this first argument fails.
Plaintiffs’ second argument for why an EIS was necessary focuses on the so-called NEPA “significance factors,” set out in 40 C.F.R. § 1508.27. Fund for Animals v. Norton, 281 F. Supp. 2d 209, 218 (D.D.C. 2003). As mentioned earlier, under NEPA, an agency must prepare an EIS for actions that will “significantly” affect the environment, which, according to federal regulations, requires consideration of both “context” and “intensity.” 40 C.F.R. § 1508.27(a) & (b). “Context” means “that the significance of an action must be analyzed in several contexts such as society as a whole (human, national), the affected region, the affected interests, and the locality. Significance varies with the setting of the proposed action.” Id., § 1508.27(a). “Intensity” means “the severity of impact,” and is defined in relation to ten factors:
(1) Impacts that may be both beneficial and adverse. A significant effect may exist even if the Federal agency believes that on balance the effect will be beneficial.
(2) The degree to which the proposed action affects public health or safety.
(3) Unique characteristics of the geographic area such as proximity to historic or cultural resources, park lands, prime farmlands, wetlands, wild and scenic rivers, or ecologically critical areas.
(4) The degree to which the effects on the quality of the human environment are likely to be highly controversial.
(5) The degree to which the possible effects on the human environment are highly uncertain or involve unique or unknown risks.
(6) The degree to which the action may establish a precedent for future actions with significant effects or represents a decision in principle about a future consideration.
(7) Whether the action is related to other actions with individually insignificant but cumulatively significant impacts. Significance exists if it is reasonable to anticipate a cumulatively significant impact on the environment. Significance cannot be avoided by terming an action temporary or by breaking it down into small component parts.
(8) The degree to which the action may adversely affect districts, sites, highways, structures, or objects listed in or eligible for listing in the National Register of Historic Places or may cause loss or destruction of significant scientific, cultural, or historical resources.
(9) The degree to which the action may adversely affect an endangered or threatened species or its habitat that has been determined to be critical under the Endangered Species Act of 1973.
(10) Whether the action threatens a violation of Federal, State, or local law or requirements imposed for the protection of the environment.
Id., § 1508.27(b). “Some courts have found that ‘[t]he presence of one or more of these factors
should result in an agency decision to prepare an EIS.’” Fund for Animals, 281 F. Supp. 2d at
218 (quoting Pub. Citizen v. Dept. of Transp.,
Plaintiffs train their sights on three significance factors in particular. First, they say the Project will affect the land’s “[u]nique characteristics” and “ecologically critical areas” by degrading the parcel’s roadless and wilderness qualities and fragmenting habitat used by elk, lynx, and other species. 40 C.F.R. § 1508.27(b)(3). Second, they claim it will set a “precedent *25 for future actions with significant effects” because it is the first-ever site-specific application of the Colorado Rule’s Ski-Area Exclusion. Id., § 1508.27(b)(6). Finally, they argue that the Project may “adversely affect an endangered or threatened species” because it will erode the habitat of the Canadian lynx. Id., § 1508.27(b)(9). Plaintiffs raised these three issues in their comments on the Project, see BME-04798-801, but, they claim, “[r]ather than seriously grapple with these concerns, the agency brushed them aside.” Mot. at 48.
The administrative record, however, tells a different tale. The EA and FONSI for the
Egress-Trail Project separately addressed each and every significance factor, including the three
noted by Plaintiffs, and concluded that none was triggered. With respect to Plaintiffs’ first point,
the EA, after significant analysis, found that the Project would not alter the roadless or
wilderness characteristics of the Burnt Mountain parcel. See BME-04656-81. The FONSI
noted, further, that “[t]he area affected by the approved project elements does not . . . contain . . .
ecologically critical areas,” and that “[t]he relatively small amount of habitat loss” would not
interfere with elk or lynx habitat. BME-04829-30; see also BME-04845, 04860. On the second,
the FONSI observed that the Egress Trail would be the first-ever application of the Ski-Area
Exclusion, but noted that “[t]he precedent was set by the [Colorado Rule], which eliminated the
roadless area designation” for the land in question, and that “similar projects have occurred on
NFS lands since NEPA was enacted.” BME-04846. Finally, the EA examined the impact the
Project would have on the Canadian lynx and found that while “there would be a loss of some
lynx habitat, . . . the surrounding habitat would be capable of providing lynx movements and
year-round foraging.” BME-04677; see also BME-04675, 04690-92. Though Plaintiffs may
disagree with these conclusions on their merits, the Court’s job is to decide only whether they are
*26
“arbitrary, capricious, or an abuse of discretion.” Cabinet Mountains,
b. Environmental Assessment Plaintiffs are uncowed. Even if no EIS was required for the Egress Trail, they say, the EA and FONSI the Service prepared were themselves inadequate. According to Plaintiffs, although the EA may have analyzed the impact of the project on the 80-acre parcel where the Trail would be constructed, it failed to consider the impact of the Project on the land adjacent to that parcel – the region known as Burnt Mountain. Plaintiffs are particularly concerned about increased human recreation on Burnt Mountain and the impact it may have on the area’s prospects for future designation as a “wilderness area.” Defendants and Intervenor question whether any of this analysis was necessary. Yet even if it was, the administrative record once more belies Plaintiffs’ position on this matter.
A look at the EA and the FONSI shows that the Service repeatedly considered the effect
of the Egress Trail on the adjacent Burnt Mountain area, and that it concluded that any such
impact would be minimal. See BME-04649 (“Alternative 3 would not create a significant effect
to the Roadless Area Characteristics of the adjacent Burnt Mountain [roadless area].”); 04677
(“The action alternatives would not affect the nine roadless area characteristics to the point of
altering the characteristics of the Burnt Mountain [roadless area].”); 04873 (“The EA discloses
that the action alternatives would not affect the 9 Roadless area characteristics of the adjacent
[Burnt Mountain roadless area].”). The EA notes, further, that “skier visitation is not
contemplated to measurably increase overall,” BME-04685; see also BME-04845, and that the
Burnt Mountain area had already been judged “not capable and not available” for wilderness
designation. BME-04855-56 (internal quotation marks omitted). Again, Plaintiffs may disagree
*27
with these conclusions, but the only question for the Court is whether the analysis the Service
used to reach them was “arbitrary, capricious, or an abuse of discretion.” Cabinet Mountains,
2. The Colorado Rule’s Ski-Area Exclusion Having found Plaintiffs’ challenge to the specific Egress-Trail Project wanting, the Court next moves to their broader attack on the Colorado Rule’s Ski-Area Exclusion. Plaintiffs advance this assault along three tracks. First, they claim that the Service’s decision to remove the “roadless” designation from land falling within ski-area boundaries is arbitrary and capricious, in violation of NEPA. Second, they argue that the decision contravenes substantive provisions of the Wilderness Act. Finally, Plaintiffs complain that they were not invited to participate in the decisionmaking process for the Colorado Rule, a supposed violation of NEPA. As before, the Court will take each of these arguments in sequence.
a. Arbitrary and Capricious Plaintiffs offer several reasons why the Ski-Area Exclusion in the Colorado Rule was arbitrary and capricious. Before the Court can address those points, however, it must first deal with Defendants’ surprising suggestion that such a claim is somehow “not justiciable.” Def. Mot. at 31.
i. Justiciability According to Defendants, “A court cannot evaluate” whether an agency action is arbitrary and capricious without “an underlying statutory obligation” against which to measure its rationale. Id. They thus deride this part of Plaintiffs’ challenge as a “free-floating” or “stand- alone” APA claim, contending that because Plaintiffs have not identified a particular substantive *28 statute that the Service violated, their claim must be dismissed. Id.; Def. Reply at 13. Intervenor, it should be noted, has declined to present this defense. That is a wise choice, since Defendants’ argument contradicts clear statutory text and repeatedly affirmed Supreme Court and D.C. Circuit precedent.
The Court begins with basic administrative law. Section 706(2)(A) of the APA
empowers a reviewing court to “hold unlawful and set aside agency action . . . found to be . . .
arbitrary, capricious, an abuse of discretion, or otherwise not in accordance with law.” 5 U.S.C.
§ 706(2)(A); see also Citizens to Preserve Overton Park v. Volpe,
The scope of review under the “arbitrary and capricious” standard is narrow and a court is not to substitute its judgment for that of the agency. Nevertheless, the agency must examine the relevant data and articulate a satisfactory explanation for its action including a rational connection between the facts found and the choice made. In reviewing that explanation, we must consider whether the decision was based on a consideration of the relevant factors and whether there has been a clear error of judgment. Normally, an agency rule would be arbitrary and capricious if 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.
Motor Vehicle Mfrs. Ass’n of U.S. v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co.,
Nowhere in that description is any mention of the need for the reviewing court to identify
and apply a substantive underlying statute, as Defendants claim. That makes sense, since, as the
D.C. Circuit has explained, “Reasoned decisionmaking is not a procedural requirement . . . It
*29
stems directly from § 706 of the APA.” Butte County, Cal v. Hogen,
Against all this, Defendants offer only a novel interpretation of the APA, along with a D.C. Circuit case that they have seriously misunderstood.
First, Defendants invoke § 702 of the APA, which creates a right of action for persons
“suffering legal wrong because of agency action, or adversely affected or aggrieved by agency
action within the meaning of a relevant statute.” 5 U.S.C. § 702. Defendants focus on the last
piece of that phrase – “within the meaning of a relevant statute” – arguing that it “indicates that it
is some other statute, not the APA, that provides a basis for the cause of action.” Def. Reply at
13. Leave aside for a moment that such a reading flies in the face of established precedent. See,
e.g., Md. Dep’t of Human Res. v. Dep’t of Health & Human Servs.,
Second, Defendants cite Trudeau v. Federal Trade Comm’n,
ii. Merits Moving on to the merits of Plaintiffs’ claim, they offer four main reasons why promulgation of the Ski-Area Exclusion was arbitrary and capricious: (1) Its proffered justification was insufficient; (2) It abandoned established agency practice regarding roadless- inventory management; (3) It treated similarly situated industries differently; and (4) It created a “disjointed, contradictory nationwide roadless management system.” Pl. Mot. at 42. None succeeds in demonstrating that the Service’s decision was either arbitrary or capricious.
First, Plaintiffs claim that the Service’s explanation of its decision was inadequate. Much
of this argument stems from Plaintiffs’ contentions that “the only reason” for the Exclusion was
because the State of Colorado had requested it, see Pl. Opp. at 24 – an allegedly insufficient
justification for such a major change – and also that the Service’s “controlling, if not sole,
rationale” for the Exclusion was the economic interests of the ski industry, see Pl. Mot. at 25 –
also a purportedly inappropriate consideration. Obviously, those two points are in tension: either
the Service included the Exclusion in the Colorado Rule solely at the request of the Rocky
Mountain State, or it included the Exclusion solely for economic reasons, but not both. Happily
for Defendants, the answer is neither. During a prior round of litigation, in fact, Ark Initiative
itself recognized an additional justification the Service had offered for the Exclusion: that the
8,300 acres of land at issue “are in fact degraded and thus are no longer roadless.” Ark Initiative,
A look at the administrative record confirms that the Service offered several different reasons, some concededly overlapping, for its decision to exclude areas within ski-area boundaries from the roadless inventory:
• Facilitating recreational use of the land, see 77 Fed. Reg. at 39,578 (Colorado’s “22 ski areas received about 11.7 million skier visits during the 2010-2011 ski season.”); CRR-153483 (“Colorado has the highest number of ski areas under permit on national forests . . . and the highest number of annual skier visits on national forests of any state.”).
• Assisting Colorado’s ski industry, an important source of
revenue for the State, see
• Responding to a request by the State of Colorado, see 77 Fed. Reg. at 39,578 (The Exclusion addresses “one of the State- specific concerns identified by the State of Colorado.”); CRR- 106429 (“The State requested that the Forest Service take this action in order to better balance the social and economic importance of ski areas with the need to protect roadless area characteristics.”);
• Removing degraded areas from the roadless inventory, see 77 Fed. Reg. at 39,578 (“The final rule inventory excludes approximately 8,300 acres of permitted ski area boundaries or ski area management allocations from CRAs, which include roadless acres with degraded roadless area characteristics and due to the proximity to a major recreational development.”); and
• Making only a minor impact, see id. (area removed from the roadless inventory “is less than 0.2% of the [total roadless area in Colorado]”); CRR-153148-49 (“Even though these areas are removed from the roadless inventory, site-specific NEPA would be required for potential development . . . both prior to development within permitted acres . . . and before any acres are added to a ski area permit that are not currently within the permit . . . All ski area expansion would require site-specific analysis and have to be consistent with the Forest Plan[,] both processes involve public participation.”).
These diverse justifications make clear that the Service’s decision was neither arbitrary nor capricious. They also vitiate Plaintiffs’ related argument – that the Exclusion was not necessary to serve the agency’s “only rationale” of benefiting Colorado’s ski industry. Pl. Opp. at 27.
Plaintiffs’ second argument is that, by promulgating the Exclusion, the Service both
contravened its “Land Management Planning Handbook,” see CRR-013684-728, and abandoned
*33
past agency practice, all without recognizing or explaining this “dramatic shift in roadless
management.” Pl. Opp. at 28; see FCC v. Fox Television Stations,
Start with the Handbook. The section in question, Chapter 70, “describes the process for identifying and evaluating potential wilderness in the National Forest System . . . [that is] used by the Forest Service to determine whether areas are to be recommended for wilderness designation by Congress.” CRR-013698. Plaintiffs note that, according to the Handbook, the Service should identify and inventory potential wilderness areas based on the four criteria enumerated in the Wilderness Act, 16 U.S.C. § 1131(c). See CRR-013698-702. Those criteria do not include the economic factors the Service considered in adopting the Ski-Area Exclusion, and Plaintiffs, accordingly, cry foul.
Even assuming that the Service’s “roadless inventory” is the same as its “potential wilderness inventory,” however, this argument comes up short. The chapter of the Handbook Plaintiffs cite plainly does not apply to the task at hand: it governs an area’s initial placement on the potential-wilderness inventory, but does not constrain the Service’s ongoing management of that inventory. The agency’s decision to recategorize a portion of its already-inventoried areas, therefore, did not contradict the Handbook.
Plaintiffs observe that the Service invoked the Handbook in a different section of the
Colorado Rule, when it denied a request from the oil and gas industry to exclude from the
roadless inventory areas with high potential for extractive development. See 77 Fed. Reg. at
39,588. That may well be true, but because, as the Court just explained, the Handbook does not
*34
govern the Service’s administration of its roadless inventory, the real victim here would be the
oil and gas industry, not Plaintiffs. Even if the Handbook did apply, moreover, this Court must
“uphold a[n agency] decision of less than ideal clarity if the agency’s path may reasonably be
discerned.” Bowman Transp.,
Moving next to past practice, Plaintiffs note that the Service’s prior roadless inventories
used objective criteria to identify qualifying roadless areas, without relying on economic
considerations, and that the Service previously declined to categorically remove from its roadless
inventory areas that fell within ski-area boundaries. See CRR-01131. Once again, however, this
argument is flawed. Even if the difference between the Colorado Rule and the Service’s
previous roadless-area management strategies qualified as a “chang[ed] position” that the agency
would be required to recognize and give “good reasons” for, Fox,
Third, Plaintiffs contend that the Exclusion is arbitrary and capricious “because it prospectively and needlessly creates a disjointed, contradictory nationwide roadless management system, whereby inventory inclusion or exclusion is based on different eligibility factors in one state – Colorado – as compared to all other states which are managed pursuant to the [2001 Roadless Rule].” Pl. Mot. at 42. Plaintiffs fail to explain, however, precisely why the Court *35 should consider it arbitrary or capricious for the Service to manage its roadless inventory through a more federalist, decentralized process, instead of mandating a uniform standard for the entire National Forest System. Indeed, federal law seems to encourage just this kind of state-by-state approach to forest management. See, e.g., 16 U.S.C. §§ 530, 1604(a). This charge against the Ski Area Exclusion, therefore, fails as well.
Finally, Plaintiffs attack the Ski-Area Exclusion as arbitrary and capricious on the ground that the Service declined to also remove the roadless categorization from lands with high potential for oil and gas development. Plaintiffs claim that the oil and gas industry is “similarly situated” to the ski industry, Pl. Opp. at 31, and that it was thus inconsistent for the Service to recategorize roadless areas within ski-area boundaries while refusing to do the same for roadless areas with extractive promise.
This is a strange argument. The oil and gas industry differs significantly from the ski industry; indeed, the old adage about “comparing apples and oranges” does not quite seem to do the situation justice. The Court need not condescend to the reader by listing the manifold differences between a ski resort and an oil well. The Service adequately explained its decision not to recategorize roadless areas that had potential for oil and gas development, see 77 Fed. Reg. at 39,588, and any variance in treatment between the oil and gas industry and the ski industry did not require special recognition or explanation. There is, in short, nothing arbitrary or capricious here.
Wrapping up, none of Plaintiffs’ arguments concerning the arbitrary and capricious
nature of the Ski-Area Exclusion hits the mark. The Service provided a well-reasoned
explanation for its decision to recategorize roadless areas that fell within ski-area boundaries and
thereby satisfied the requirements of the APA. See State Farm,
b. The Wilderness Act Plaintiffs next claim that the Ski-Area Exclusion is invalid because it violates the Wilderness Act. Unfortunately for Plaintiffs, however, that statute simply does not apply to the Service’s management of its roadless inventory. Such an attack on the Service’s decision, therefore, rings hollow.
To recap briefly, the Wilderness Act, passed in 1964, defines “wilderness” as land that
meets four criteria: it appears affected primarily by the forces of nature rather than humanity, it
has outstanding opportunities for solitude or unconfined recreation, it is at least five thousand
acres, and it has scientific, educational, scenic, or historical value. See 16 U.S.C. § 1131(c). The
Act instructs that within ten years of its enactment, the Forest Service should conduct a survey of
land in the National Forest System that meets those criteria and report its findings to the
President, who will then make recommendations to Congress about which areas should be
officially designated “wilderness.” See id., § 1132(b). The Service satisfied that obligation in
1979. See Wyoming,
Merely explaining the Wilderness Act is practically enough to reveal the flaws in
Plaintiffs’ argument. The Act defines “wilderness areas,” not “roadless areas” – the latter,
apparently, is simply a label invented by the Service to cover lands that Congress had declined to
designate as the former. See Wyoming,
Perhaps recognizing the absence of any direct connection between the Wilderness Act and the Service’s management of its roadless inventory, Plaintiffs offer a more atmospheric argument to support their cause:
[T]o be clear, Plaintiffs are not arguing that the [Colorado Rule] constituted a wilderness suitability evaluation concerning any specific parcel . . . Nor, for that matter, are Plaintiffs asserting that management of roadless areas [i]s equivalent to management [of] wilderness or that the Wilderness Act trumps the authorizing statutes. Rather, Plaintiffs have simply made the straightforward argument that the roadless inventory was created in direct response to the Wilderness Act for the explicit purpose of helping to guide the implementation of the Act, and . . . the inventory still serves as a critical starting point in each forest plan revision process under NFMA for evaluating every inventoried roadless area for potential future wilderness designation. On that basis, Plaintiffs have demonstrated that it would contravene Congress’s intent in passing the Act if the Service could totally disregard the Wilderness Act’s criteria in excluding unroaded, unaltered areas from the roadless inventory and in the process foreclose their consideration for wilderness suitability in future NFMA reviews.
Pl. Opp. at 35 (internal quotation marks omitted).
Plaintiffs’ theory, boiled down, is that even though the Wilderness Act has no official
connection to the roadless inventory, the two have a conceptual relationship that this Court
*38
should ratify. That, however, is not how courts decide cases. “The plain meaning of legislation
should be conclusive, except in the rare cases [in which] the literal application of a statute will
produce a result demonstrably at odds with the intentions of its drafters.” Engine Mfrs. Ass’n v.
EPA,
Grasping at straws, Plaintiffs offer two alternative theories for how the Ski-Area Exclusion might contravene the Wilderness Act.
First, they invoke the 1980 Colorado Wilderness Act, in which Congress followed
through on the original promise of the 1964 Wilderness Act by officially designating certain land
in the State as “wilderness areas.” Pub. L. No. 96-560, § 102(a), 94 Stat. 3265, 3265 (Dec. 22,
1980). Plaintiffs claim that this Act “mandated that the Service conduct wilderness suitability
determinations of [roadless areas in Colorado] . . . when revising forest plans” in the State. Pl.
Opp. at 37. “[B]y preemptively stripping the roadless inventory protections from 8,260
empirically unroaded acres,” Plaintiffs contend, the Ski-Area Exclusion “contravenes Congress’s
intent” in the Colorado Wilderness Act “that parcels satisfying the [wilderness] suitability
criteria, as a factual matter, . . . must be considered and analyzed by the Service for wilderness
suitability.” Id. at 37-38 (citing Pub. L. No. 96-560, § 107(b)(2),
A look at the provision in question, however, undermines Plaintiffs’ argument. The law
states only that the Service’s 1979 wilderness-suitability review of national forests in Colorado
“shall be deemed for the purposes of the initial land management plans required for such lands to
be an adequate consideration of the suitability of such lands for inclusion [as wilderness areas],
and the [Service] shall not be required to review the wilderness option prior to the revision of the
initial plans.” Pub. L. No. 96-560, § 107(b)(2),
Second, Plaintiffs again invoke the Service’s “Land Management Planning Handbook.” See CRR-013684-728. They note that the Handbook incorporates the Wilderness Act’s four- point definition of “wilderness” and that Defendants have conceded that those criteria “were utilized as a starting point for the Colorado roadless inventory.” Def. Mot. at 29. Plaintiffs therefore assert that Defendants have “conced[ed] the pertinence of the Wilderness Act . . . to the [Colorado Rule].” Pl. Opp. at 39. This argument fails for two reasons, already explained by the Court. First, the Handbook, by its own terms, covers only the initial placement of land on the roadless inventory, not the Service’s ongoing management of land in that inventory. Second, Plaintiffs have still failed to identify any actual connection between the Wilderness Act and the Service’s administration of its roadless inventory. Defendants’ admission that the Service *40 referred to the Wilderness Act when it crafted the Colorado Rule does not mean that the agency was legally bound by that Act. Once more, Plaintiffs come up snake eyes.
Having determined that the Wilderness Act did not restrict the Service’s decision to
remove from its roadless inventory lands falling within ski-area boundaries in Colorado, the
question remains: Did the agency have the statutory authority to take such action? For an
answer, the Court looks to the two statutes the agency cited in promulgating the Colorado Rule:
the Organic Act and the Multiple-Use Sustained-Yield Act. See
The Organic Act, 16 U.S.C. §§ 473-82, 551, enacted in 1897, created the predecessor to
the Forest Service, authorizing the agency to “make such rules and regulations . . . as will insure
the objects of [the National Forest System]” and to “regulate their occupancy and use and to
preserve the forests thereon from destruction.” Id., § 551. The Act thus “gives the Forest
Service broad discretion to regulate the national forests.” Wyoming,
These statutes “delegated authority to the agency generally to make rules carrying the
force of law,” United States v. Mead Corp.,
Applying step one of Chevron, it is clear that neither the Organic Act nor the MUSYA
addresses how the Forest Service should manage its roadless inventory, nor whether it may
remove land from that inventory based in part on economic considerations. Both laws give the
agency “broad discretion” to decide how best to administer the National Forest System.
Wyoming,
Summing up, Plaintiffs’ contention that the Ski-Area Exclusion violated the Wilderness Act does not prevail. The Service, moreover, was empowered to promulgate the Exclusion under both the Organic Act and the MUSYA. Plaintiffs have thus failed to present any reason for the Court to invalidate the Exclusion on these grounds.
c. Notification For their last assault on the Colorado Rule, Plaintiffs take issue with the Service’s failure to notify them about its decisionmaking process. Federal regulations require an agency engaged in a NEPA-related rulemaking to “[i]nvite the participation of affected Federal, State, and local agencies, any affected Indian tribe, the proponent of the action, and other interested persons (including those who might not be in accord with the action on environmental grounds).” 40 C.F.R. § 1501.7(a)(1). Plaintiffs claim that their successful 2006 challenge to the Service’s authorization of the Egress Trail made them “interested persons” entitled to a personal invitation to participate in the administrative process for the Colorado Rule. See 5 U.S.C. § 706(2)(D) (providing that agency action undertaken “without observance of procedure required by law” may be set aside).
The law requires no such thing. Nothing in the cited regulation demands that an agency
individually notify each and every potentially “interested person” about a NEPA-related
rulemaking process, and Plaintiffs have failed to identify a single case so holding. They have
invoked one decision in support of their argument, Northwest Coalition for Alternatives to
Pesticides v. Lyng,
Here, by contrast, Plaintiffs’ participation in the 2006 Egress Trail case involved an entirely different decisionmaking process from the Colorado Rule, and they therefore were not “litigant[s] earlier in this action” entitled to personal notice. Id. at 595. It is not enough, as Plaintiffs insist, that the 2006 case may have had some influence on the Service’s decision to promulgate the Colorado Rule – if that were so, agencies considering new rules would be obliged to personally notify the numberless parties who could have possibly played some role in influencing federal policymaking. No regulation would be safe from subsequent review and invalidation on such grounds. Even if Plaintiffs were entitled to personal notice, moreover, they have failed to show – or even mention – how the lack of notice in this case prejudiced them. See id. at 595. This is particularly true since RMW did comment on the Colorado Rule.
As Defendants and Intervenor have documented, the Forest Service went to great lengths to involve the public – and Plaintiffs – in the decisionmaking process for the Colorado Rule. This included:
• Five formal public-involvement processes, generating a total of
312,000 public comments,
• Numerous notices published in the Federal Register, among them a notice of intent to prepare an EIS on roadless-area conservation in national forests in Colorado, a proposed rule to establish State-specific management direction for roadless areas in Colorado, a notice of availability for the draft EIS, a revised proposed rule and notice of availability for the revised draft EIS, and a notice of availability for the final EIS, see id.; and • Three Roadless Area Conservation National Advisory Committee meetings, open to the public, in which both the Forest Service and the State of Colorado participated. See id. The Service’s impressive efforts to reach out to the public as it worked out the contours of the Colorado Rule were sufficient to satisfy its notice obligations to Plaintiffs. Their final attack on the Rule is therefore unconvincing.
IV. Conclusion
The Court does not intend its decision in this case to minimize the natural beauty of Colorado’s mountainsides, nor the imperative of conserving them for future generations. Instead, what the Court holds here is that, as a steward of these lands, the Forest Service has ultimately arrived at a well-considered and lawful decision. As a result, the Court will issue a contemporaneous Order that will deny Defendants’ and Intervenor’s Motion to Strike the Amended Complaint and grant their Motions for Summary Judgment. /s/ James E. Boasberg
JAMES E. BOASBERG United States District Judge Date: August 18, 2014
Notes
[1] Because there are two agency decisions at issue in this case – the promulgation of the Colorado Rule and the approval of the Egress-Trail Project – there are two administrative records. The record for the Colorado Rule is denoted with the citation “CRR,” and the record for the Egress-Trail Project is denoted “BME.”
[2] Although the Ninth Circuit subsequently struck down the State Petitions Rule and reinstated the 2001 Roadless
Rule, see California ex rel. Lockyer v. Dept. of Agric.,
