MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
The Preble’s meadow jumping mouse (Zapus hudsonius preblei) (“Preble’s”) is a small rodent endemic to the foothills of southeastern Wyoming and the eastern edge of the Front Range in Colorado. This subspecies of meadow jumping mouse has a very long tail, large hind feet adapted for jumping, and a dark stripe running down its back of otherwise gray to orange-brown fur. Though not a particularly charismatic mammal, of popular interest is Preble’s acrobatic ability to jump up to a foot and a half in the air. Of biological significance is the subspecies’s nocturnality, slow rate of reproduction, and evolutionary history since stranded in the region at the end of the last ice age.
In 1998, finding that the Preble’s was a subspecies
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that was “likely to become endangered within the foreseeable future” in its historic range in both Colorado and Wyoming due to habitat modification and loss, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (“FWS”) listed the Preble’s as a threatened species. Final Rule to List the Preble’s Meadow Jumping Mouse as a Threatened Species, 63 Fed.Reg. 26517, 26526 (May 13, 1998)(codified at 50 C.F.R. pt. 17). In 1999 FWS received several petitions to remove the Preble’s from the Endangered Species Act’s (“ESA”) list of threatened and endangered species pursuant to 16 U.S.C. § 1533(b)(3)(A); however, FWS found that these petitions did not present substantial scientific or commercial information warranting de-listing and declined to proceed with further status review. 90-Day Finding for a Petition to Delist the Preble’s Meadow Jumping
Unlike FWS’s review of the 1999 petitions, FWS concluded that the 2003 petitions presented substantial information that potentially warranted de-listing of the Preble’s. Accordingly, FWS commenced a status review under 16 U.S.C. § 1533(b)(3)(B); see 12-Month Finding on a Petition to Delist the Preble’s Meadow Jumping Mouse (Zapus hudsonius preblei) and Proposed Delisting of the Preble’s Meadow Jumping Mouse, 70 Fed.Reg. 5,404 (Feb. 2, 2005). Pursuant to this status review, FWS, relying in large part on unpublished taxonomic studies indicating that the Preble’s was not a discrete taxonomic entity, issued a proposed rule to remove the Preble’s from the ESA’s list of threatened and endangered species. Following the issuance of this proposed rule, FWS solicited comments and peer reviews; reviewed a contradictory genetic analysis of the Preble’s from the U.S. Geological Survey; and convened a panel of experts to weigh in on competing scientific data. See AR G 1-1 at 010456. On January 4, 2007, the state of Wyoming sued FWS for failure to publish a final de-listing determination. AR G 1-1 at 010456. FWS settled with Wyoming, agreeing to either withdraw the 2005 proposed de-listing or propose a new rule concerning the status of the Preble’s. Id.
Just two months later, however, on March 16, 2007, the Solicitor of the United States Department of the Interior (“Solicitor”) issued a legal opinion that further impacted FWS’s discordant status determinations. Memorandum re: The Meaning of “In Danger of Extinction Throughout All or a Significant Portion of its Range” (Mar. 16, 2007), Doc. 34-2. The memorandum opinion set forth a novel interpretation of the meaning of the statutory phrase “in danger of extinction throughout all or a significant portion of [a species’] range” which is located in the definitions of both “endangered species” and “threatened species” in the ESA. 2 The opinion defines “range” as the range in which a species currently exists, not the historic range of the species. Contrary to DOI’s longstanding policy, the opinion also permits the Secretary to list and de-list a species in less than its presently occupied range. Neither the DOI nor the Solicitor’s office engaged in rulemaking or provided notice of the proposed interpretation or opportunity for public comment prior to the memorandum issuance.
The FWS did, however, solicit comments on the memorandum opinion and its application to the Preble’s when it published its
On July 10, 2008, FWS published its Final Rule, amending the listing determination for the Preble’s to remove legal protections for the mouse in Wyoming. After filing a 60-day notice of intent to sue for violations of the ESA on September 4, 2008, Petitioners now challenge FWS’ (1) de-listing of the Preble’s in Wyoming and (2) listing of the Preble’s as threatened instead of endangered in Colorado. This controversy reaches beyond the grasslands of Wyoming and Eastern Colorado, as Petitioners also challenge (3) the DOI’s interpretation of the ESA phrase “significant portion of its range,” asserting that this interpretation is contrary to the statutory purpose of the ESA and that in its formulation and adoption of this policy DOI failed to comply with the procedural requirements of the ESA.
In their Motion to Supplement the Administrative Record, Doc. 32, Petitioners allege that FWS failed to provide the complete Administrative Record including all materials directly or indirectly considered by FWS decision makers in the decision to amend the Preble’s listing. Petitioners seek to complete and/or supplement 3 the Administrative Record with two categories of materials: (1) documents from consultations between various federal agencies and FWS’ Wyoming Field Office regarding the status and threats to the Preble’s which were referenced in the final rule and (2) documents directly and indirectly considered by the DOI when the Solicitor issued the 2007 Memorandum Opinion. Petitioners urge that the Respondents should be compelled to include these materials in the Administrative Record in order to allow meaningful judicial review of the challenged agency actions. For the reasons stated below, this motion is GRANTED.
LEGAL STANDARDS AND ANALYSIS
Petitioners challenge Respondents’ actions under the Endangered Species Act, 16 U.S.C. § 1531
et seq.
(“ESA”). As this statute fails to define or specify the standard of review to be used in examining Respondents’ actions, the Administrative Procedures Act (“APA”), 5 U.S.C. § 500,
et seq.,
provides the framework for this appeal. Accordingly, I must apply the standards articulated in the APA in eon
Judicial Review of Informal Rulemaking under the APA
Under the APA, I review Respondents’ informal rulemaking to determine if it was “arbitrary, capricious, an abuse of discretion, or otherwise not in accordance with law.” 5 U.S.C. § 706(2)(A). As the Supreme Court held in
Citizens to Preserve Overton Park v.
Volpe,
In conducting my review of Respondents’ actions, I must balance these mandates. In order to afford appropriate deference, I review the administrative agency’s decision as an appellate body.
See Olenhouse v. Commodity Credit Corp.,
Decisions Challenged in the Instant Case
In order to determine the proper scope of the Administrative Record in this case, it is first necessary to determine the nature and scope of the decisions challenged by Petitioners. Respondents argue that Petitioners’ challenge is limited to the Final Rule de-listing the Preble’s throughout the Wyoming portion of its range. Petitioners counter that they are challenging both the Final Rule and the Memorandum Opinion upon which it is based.
As the 10th Circuit directed in
Olenhouse,
“[r]eviews of agency action in the district courts must be processed as appeals,” and “a district court should govern itself by referring to the Federal Rules of Appellate Procedure.”
On its face, the Petition for Review clearly articulates the “orders” for which Petitioners seek review. As both parties acknowledge, the Petition specifies both a challenge to FWS’s decision to de-list the Preble’s in Wyoming and the FWS’ failure
Defendant’s adoption of [the] policy [in the Memorandum Opinion] interpreting the phrase ‘significant portion of its range,’ and specifically its application here, represents a dramatic reversal of longstanding agency policy and practice, is contrary to the plain language of the ESA, and undermines the purposes of the ESA to afford sufficient species protection to not only stave off a species’ extinction, but to bring about the species’ recovery.
Petition for Review, Doc. 1, p. 13. Unless adorned with flashing red-lights, it is unclear how Petitioners could provide Respondents with any more notice that they intended to challenge the substance of the Memorandum Opinion. In light of this language, Petitioners have met their pleading burden under Federal Rule of Appellate Procedure 15(a)(2)(C).
Respondents further argue that, even if the Petition provided notice of Petitioners’ substantive challenge to the Memorandum Opinion, such a challenge is an inappropriate facial challenge. Though Respondents are correct in their articulation of the relevant law, the restriction on facial challenges does not apply in this case.
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In their First Claim for Relief Petitioners clearly state that they are challenging
the application
of the policy articulated in the Memorandum Opinion as applied in the decision to de-list the Preble’s in Wyoming.
Id.
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.
See Ohio Forestry Ass’n v. Sierra Club,
Having determined that the Administrative Record in this case properly contains documents relating to both the Final Rule de-listing the Preble’s in the Wyoming portion of its range and the substance of the Memorandum Opinion upon which the decision was based, I now turn to the sufficiency of the record submitted by Respondents.
Judicial Review of the Sufficiency of the Administrative Record
The APA directs that “the court shall review the whole record or those parts of
In accordance with my role in reviewing agency action under § 706, I begin my review of the sufficiency of the submitted Administrative Record by applying a “presumption of regularity” to the record as it is designated by the agency. In order to ensure a “probing inquiry” and a “thorough, probing, in-depth review,” however, I also consider the exceptions by which Petitioners may prove the insufficiency of a record as designated by the agency and introduce additional documentation and evidence. Though courts differ in their formulation and application of these exceptions, 6 such documentation and evidence generally takes two distinct, yet often confused, forms: (1) materials which were actually considered by the agency, yet omitted from the administrative record (“completing the record”); and (2) materials which were not considered by the agency, but which are necessary for the court to conduct a substantial inquiry (“supplementing the record”). 7
In the instant controversy, though their motion is described as an effort to “supplement the record,” Petitioners first seek to “complete the record” with documents they assert were before the agency decision makers at the time they made the
Completing the Record
In order to decide whether the administrative record submitted by Respondents is complete I must determine whether the record contains “all documents and materials directly or indirectly considered by the agency.”
Bar MK Ranches v. Yuetter,
To overcome the presumption of regularity and meet the burden of proving that the record designated by the agency is incomplete, Petitioners must clearly set forth in their motion: (1) when the documents were presented to the agency; (2) to whom; (3) and under what context.
WildEarth Guardians v. Salazar,
The rationale for limiting the record to those documents directly or indirectly considered by relevant agency decision makers is grounded in the need to afford adequate deference to agency expertise while ensuring meaningful judicial review of the full administrative record. Id. at 739. Determining whether and what documents and materials were directly considered by the relevant decision makers in the decision making process, based on clearly alleged facts, is ordinarily a straightforward proposition. See, e.g., id. at 739-40 (finding relevant decision makers to be those individuals specified in the agency’s established decision making process). Substantial review must reach these materials because they clearly underlie any rational basis for the decision.
Despite Respondents’ argument to the contrary, the whole record also includes documents besides those which “literally pass[ed] before the eyes of the final agency decisionmaker[s].”
Clairton Sportsmen’s Club v. Pa. Turnpike Comm’n,
Petitioners seek to complete the record with documents (1) relating to the formulation of the Memorandum Opinion and (2) with the Biological Assessments (“BAs”) and Biological Opinions (“BiOps”) associated with formal and informal consultations between various government agencies and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service concerning impacts of various projects in Wyoming on the Preble’s. 9
With respect to the documents relating to the formulation of the Memorandum Opinion, Petitioners need not meet the clear evidence standard as Respondents acknowledge that they have not designated an Administrative Record for that decision. As the agency has completely failed to designate a record for this decision, it is appropriate and necessary to remand to the agency so that it may, consistent with this decision, compile the appropriate Administrative Record consisting of the documents and materials “directly and indirectly considered” by the relevant decision makers. 10
With respect to the relevant BAs and BiOps, however, Petitioners have failed to adequately set forth (1) when the BAs and BiOps were presented to the agency; (2) to whom; (3) and under what context. Petitioners do not meet their burden of providing clear evidence that the agency has failed to properly designate the Administrative Record “by asserting, speculatively, that documents were relevant or before the agency at the time it made its decision.”
WildEarth Guardians v. Salazar,
Even if I were to find that Petitioners’ showing constituted “clear evidence,” however, Petitioners have failed to adequately establish that the BAs or BiOps were di
Petitioners also fail to adequately establish that these documents were indirectly considered by the relevant decision makers. As noted above, for purposes of inclusion in the record, documents are indirectly considered where they are the work and recommendations of subordinates upon which the relevant decision makers based their decision.
WildEarth Guardians v. Salazar,
At first glance, Petitioners’ argument that the Colorado Field Office constructively considered the underlying BiOps and BAs when staff considered a summary of these consultation documents is persuasive. Upon further investigation, however, it is apparent that this argument lacks merit. The summary, cursory at best, lists in table form the names and dates of fourteen projects or actions regarding which the Wyoming Field Office consulted with other federal agencies. The column relevant to the Preble’s status is that marked “Amt. Take.” A typical entry in the “Amt. Take” column is that for a FHWA/WYDOT project at Antelope Gap Rd.: “1 acre-temp loss, 0.33 acre-perm, loss, 215 ft riparian hbtt temp.” Although the BiOps and BAs may have served as the basis for this table, it is quite a leap (even for the Preble’s) to infer that anyone reading this table relied so heavily on the underlying reports that they had constructively considered the underlying consultation documents.
In effect, petitioners argue that if a document considered by the relevant agency decision maker contains references to other documents, those underlying documents must be included in the record because they were indirectly considered (often referred to as “consideration through citation”). In accordance with the majority of courts, I find that the consideration through citation argument stretches the chain of indirect causation to its breaking point and cannot be a basis for compelling completion of an Administrative Record.
WildEarth Guardians v. Salazar,
A party attempting to convince a reviewing court to expand the scope of its review properly bears a sizeable burden if it is to convince the court to forego the customary deference owed an agency’s determination of what constitutes the record. Petitioners have failed to meet this burden, and these documents are not properly admitted as “completing the record.” Whether the relevant agency decision makers should have properly considered these underlying reports in order to provide a rational basis for the decision to de-list the Preble’s in Wyoming is a mouse of a different tail.
Supplementing the Record with Extra-Record Evidence
Consistent with the “presumption of regularity” noted above, I am generally reluctant to allow parties to supplement the record with evidence not considered by the agency in reaching its challenged decision. As the D.C. Circuit has noted, “To review more than the information before the Secretary at the time she made her decision risks our requiring administrators to be prescient or allowing them to take advantage of post hoc rationalizations.”
Walter O. Boswell Mem’l Hosp. v. Heckler,
As two commentators argued nearly fifteen years after the Court’s decision in
Overton Park,
“courts have developed so many unwritten exceptions to the doctrine of record review, that industrious advocates now can introduce any evidence they choose in cases reviewing informal administrative action.” Steven Stark and Sarah Wald,
Setting No Records: The Failed Attempts to Limit the Record in Review of Administrative Action,
36 Admin. L.Rev. 333, 336 (1984). Though this proclamation is arguably overstated,
12
the truth remains that courts have expanded the exceptions under which they will allow parties to supplement the record upon judicial review.
See, e.g., American Mining Cong. v. Thomas,
Unfortunately, lower courts have failed to articulate coherently and consistently the exceptions which justify supplementation of the record. For example, though the 10th Circuit recognized five possible exceptions in
Custer County Action Ass’n v. Garvey,
It is not my province to articulate the standard governing the admission of extra-record evidence throughout this circuit. I note this confusion, however, in hoping that the 10th Circuit will grasp the nettle and provide a clear articulation of the exceptions allowing district courts in this circuit to supplement the Administrative Record with extra-record evidence. Having noted this confusion, and entered my plea for clarity, I now turn to the exception most relevant to this case — an agency’s failure to consider relevant evidence.
A court’s review under “Section 706(2)(A) [of the APA] requires a finding that the actual choice made was not ‘arbitrary, capricious, an abuse of discretion, or otherwise not in accordance with law.’ 5 U.S.C. § 706(2)(A). To make this finding the court must consider whether the decision was based on a consideration of the relevant factors and whether there has been a clear error of judgment.”
Overton Park,
In deciding to de-list the Preble’s in Wyoming, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service found that the “Preble’s populations in Wyoming are more widespread and threats to the subspecies less severe than those known at the time of listing.” 73 Fed.Reg. 39790. As one of the BiOps cited by Petitioners states, however:
Habitat loss and fragmentation resulting from human land uses have adversely impacted Preble’s populations, and continue to do so. Preble’s populations in Colorado and Wyoming are threatened by ongoing and increasing urban, industrial, agricultural, ranching and recreational development; ongoing and increasing wetland/riparian habitat destruction and/or modification, small size of known populations; and inadequacy or lack of government protection for the species and its habitats.
Fish and Wildlife Service, Programmatic Biological Opinion for the Wyoming Bureau of Land Management’s Rawlins Resource Management Plan, Doc. 32-3, 22 (emphasis added). As Respondents argue, and Petitioners have failed to rebut, the relevant decision makers did not possess or consider, directly or indirectly, either this or any of the other consultation documents that Petitioners seek to add to the record in the context of promulgating the Final Rule. As noted above, however, it is appropriate to allow supplementation of an Administrative Record “where necessary ... for determining whether the agency considered all relevant factors including evidence contrary to the agency’s position.”
Franklin Savings Ass’n v. Office of Thrift Supervision,
Though I do not speculate as to the Respondents’ motives in failing to consider these documents, it is apparent that they are relevant to the decision to de-list the Preble’s in Wyoming. The BAs and BiOps contain detailed information and analysis relating to the Preble’s.
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As in
Kent County,
these documents were created by the agency’s own experts and are relevant to the decision challenged in this case. Nevertheless, Respondents argue that, unlike the agency in
Kent County,
they
intentionally
decided not to consider the substance of the consultation documents to which Petitioners refer.
16
Accordingly, al
I am not convinced by Respondents’ attempt to distinguish between negligent and deliberate exclusion of records. As a threshold matter, it is contrary to subsequent decisions which explicitly hold that
Kent County
applies where “the agency
deliberately or negligently
excluded documents that may have been adverse to its decision.”
James Madison Ltd. v. Ludwig,
The BAs and BiOps relating to the various formal and informal consultations between various government agencies and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service concerning impacts of various projects in Wyoming on the Preble’s are relevant to the decision to de-list the Preble’s in Wyoming. As Respondents should have but failed to consider these relevant documents, they are properly admitted into the Administrative Record.
When the Administrative Record is inadequate, “the proper course, except in rare circumstances, is to remand to the agency for additional investigation or explanation.”
Sierra Club-Black Hills Group v. U.S. Forest Serv.,
CONCLUSION
In conducting review of agency action under § 706 of the APA, a reviewing court may not substitute its judgment for that of the agency. Where an agency decision is not “arbitrary, capricious, or otherwise not in accordance with the law,” it is entitled to deference. In some cases, however, a party challenging an agency action may overcome the presumption of regularity upon a showing that the agency has, in some manner, abused its discretion. This framework applies to all agency actions— including the agency’s designation of the Administrative Record which forms the basis for judicial review.
Petitioners have met their burden in demonstrating that Respondents have failed to designate the Administrative Record for the Solicitor’s Memorandum Opinion. The agency shall, consistent with this decision, compile the appropriate Administrative Record consisting of the documents and materials “directly and indirectly considered” by the relevant decision makers in the formulation of the Memorandum.
Notes
. Under the Endangered Species Act, the definition of "species” includes “any subspecies of fish or wildlife or plants, and any distinct population segment of any species of vertebrate fish or wildlife which interbreeds when mature.” 16 U.S.C. § 1532(16).
. "The term 'endangered species’ means any species which is in danger of extinction throughout all or a significant portion of its range other than a species of the Class Insecta determined by the Secretary to constitute a pest whose protection under the provisions of this Act would present an overwhelming and overriding risk to man.” 16 U.S.C. § 1532(6). "The term ‘threatened species’ means any species which is likely to become an endangered species within the foreseeable future throughout all or a significant portion of its range.” 16 U.S.C. § 1532(20).
. As will be discussed infra at pp. 1274-75, Petitioners misuse the word "supplement.” For a discussion of the differences between “supplementing” and “completing” the record, see infra n. 7.
. Respondents argue that the procedural challenge to the Memorandum Opinion is "a purely legal claim” for which the production of documents is not necessary. Though I am not convinced that such a limitation exists, I find it unnecessary to address this issue given my finding that Petitioners have raised a permissible substantive challenge to the Memorandum Opinion.
. Respondents cite two cases in support of their argument,
Rocky Mountain Oil & Gas Ass'n v. Watt,
. As illustration of the different approaches taken by courts in conducting review under § 706,
compare Cronin v. U.S. Dep't of Agric.,
. Such confusion has significant consequences for courts and litigants. There are meaningful differences between the standard for establishing that an agency should be required to "complete the record” with documents it actually considered versus the showing required to establish that a court should "supplement the record” with materials which were not before the agency when it made the challenged decision. For an excellent discussion of the differences between "completing the record” and “supplementing the record”
see Cape Hatteras Access Pres. Alliance v. U.S. Dep’t of Interior,
. As with all agency actions, the identification of relevant decision makers is entitled to deference and is presumed proper absent clear evidence to the contrary. Though Petitioners argue “many more agency officials 'worked on’ this highly controversial rulemaking than the government acknowledges,” this does not necessarily expand the universe of relevant decision makers. Such proof may, however, be relevant to the extent Petitioners argue that documents and materials were indirectly considered. See
WildEarth Guardians v. Salazar,
. Under the ESA, these BAs and BiOps must include detailed information on the proposed action and its potential effects on the Preble’s and address whether the proposed action will jeopardize the continued existence of the Preble's or impair any critical habitat. 16 U.S.C. § 1536.
. I recognize that some of these documents may be protected by the attorney-client and/or deliberative process privileges. Whether such materials are protected by privilege will be determined on an
ad hoc
basis.
Cf. Amfac Resorts,
at a minimum ... the author or origin of the document; any documents or materials attached to the document; all recipients of the document, including addresses and persons or entities receiving copies; the date of origin of the document; and a description of the contents of the document in sufficient detail as to reveal why it is subject to the asserted privilege.
Carbajal v. Lincoln Benefit Life Co.,
. See supra n. 8.
. For a critique of the overly expansive view of Stark and Wald, see Gordon G. Young, Judicial Review of Informal Agency Action on the Fiftieth Anniversary of the APA: The Alleged Demise and Actual Status of Overton Park's Requirement of Judicial Review “On the Record," 10 Admin. L.J. Am. U. 179 (1996).
. Such confusion is not exclusive to the 10th Circuit.
Compare Esch,
. Further confusing matters, both of these opinions include an exception where an agency considers factors which it left out of the Administrative Record. Such evidence, however, should be considered "completing the record.” As such, in order to reduce the likelihood of confusion, it should not be listed under the exceptions under which parties may "supplement the record.” For more discussion of the problems related to confusion between the terminology and standards relating to the admission of these two different forms of evidence, see supra n. 7.
. See supra note 9.
. Respondents allege that they only specifically considered two BiOps; accordingly, they have included those BiOps in the Administrative Record. They only considered the re
