CLAYTON COUNTY, GEORGIA, CLAYTON COUNTY PUBLIC SCHOOLS, FOREST PARK, GEORGIA, RIVERDALE, GEORGIA, LOVEJOY, GEORGIA, MORROW GEORGIA, LAKE CITY, GEORGIA, JONESBORO, GEORGIA, COLLEGE PARK GEORGIA, Petitioners, versus FEDERAL AVIATION ADMINISTRATION, Respondent.
No. 17-10210
IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT
April 24, 2018
Agency No. FAA 2013-0988
[PUBLISH]
Petition for Review of a Decision of the Federal Aviation Administration
(April 24, 2018)
Before WILLIAM PRYOR and JULIE CARNES, Circuit Judges, and ANTOON,* District Judge.
Title
In 2015, Petitioners submitted a plan to the FAA describing how they intended to come into compliance with the FAA‘s recently clarified interpretation of
Petitioners filed this lawsuit challenging the FAA‘s interpretation of
I. BACKGROUND
A. Congress Limits the Permissible Uses of Aviation Fuel Tax Revenues to Aviation-Related Projects.
In 1996, Congress enacted
Local taxes on aviation fuel (except taxes in effect on December 30, 1987) or the revenues generated by an airport that is the subject of Federal assistance may not be expended for any purpose other than the capital or operating costs of—
(1) the airport;
(2) the local airport system; or
(3) any other local facility that is owned or operated by the person or entity that owns or operates the airport that is directly and substantially related to the air transportation of passengers or property.
In 1999, the FAA issued a policy statement interpreting the scope of
In 2013, the FAA issued a notice that it proposed to clarify its 1999 policy statement to make clear that the FAA interpreted
After considering this and other comments, the FAA issued an order in 2014 codifying its proposed clarification. The FAA‘s amended policy states that
B. Petitioners Spend Aviation Fuel Tax Revenues on Projects Unrelated to Aviation.
Petitioners tax aviation fuel sold at Hartsfield-Jackson Airport even though Petitioners neither own nor operate the airport and do not receive federal assistance for it.1 Since 1994, Clayton County has imposed a sales tax on aviation fuel sold at Hartsfield-Jackson. And since 1997, Clayton County Public Schools has levied its own tax on such sales. The revenues from these taxes are spent on local municipal and school projects unrelated to aviation.
In 2015, after the FAA clarified that it interpreted
A year later, Petitioners sent a letter to the FAA that Petitioners labeled as an “Amendment” to their plan. The letter did not change the proposed action plan, but instead argued that the FAA‘s interpretation that
The FAA responded in a letter (the “Letter“) two months later on November 17, 2016. It is this Letter that Petitioners contend constitutes final agency action. In the Letter, the FAA states that it “disagrees” with Petitioners’ interpretation of
In December 2016, after receiving a letter from Georgia congressman David Scott about
Petitioners filed this lawsuit under
II. DISCUSSION
To be judicially reviewable under
will disrupt the administrative process.” Riverkeeper v. EPA, 806 F.3d 1079, 1083 (11th Cir. 2015) (quoting Bell v. New Jersey, 461 U.S. 773, 779 (1983)).
Petitioners argue that the FAA‘s Letter constitutes final agency action in two different ways. They contend that the Letter (1) sets forth a new, binding interpretation of
Petitioners first argue that the Letter constitutes final agency action because it sets forth a new interpretation of
Whether the Letter established a new interpretation or merely restated the FAA‘s earlier interpretation matters because, to be final, the challenged agency action “must be one by which rights or obligations have been determined, or from which legal consequences will flow.” Hawkes, 136 S. Ct. at 1813 (quotation marks omitted). An agency‘s restatement of an already-existing policy or interpretation does not, on its own, determine any rights or obligations and imposes no
Here, the Letter merely restates the FAA‘s interpretation of
alike. For example, it states that ”
Although the clarification does not expressly define “non-sponsor,” the meaning is clear. The FAA‘s earlier 1999 order, which the 2014 policy clarification modified, defines “sponsor” as “the owner or operator of the airport that accepts Federal assistance and executes grant agreements or other documents
required for the receipt of Federal assistance.” 64 Fed. Reg. at 7716. Thus, a non-sponsor is an entity that does not own or operate the airport and does not execute federal grant agreements.
In fact, before filing this lawsuit, Petitioners and others had acknowledged that the FAA‘s policy clarification interpreted
Thus, the FAA‘s Letter merely restates its interpretation of
Second, Petitioners contend that the Letter is final because it determines that the FAA will enforce
Riverkeeper governs here, and we hold that the Letter is not final agency action in the sense that it determines that Petitioners have violated the law or threatens enforcement. The Letter reveals that the FAA has not conclusively determined that Petitioners are in violation of
This conclusion is consistent with the pragmatic concerns at play here, which focus “on whether judicial review at th[is] time will disrupt the administrative process.” Riverkeeper, 806 F.3d at 1083 (internal quotation marks omitted). First, judicial review of the Letter would interfere with the agencies’ ability to consult with and advise regulated parties about how to comply with federal law and regulations. The Letter only sets forth Petitioners’ pre-existing obligation to comply with the FAA‘s interpretation of
CONCLUSION
In the end, Petitioners’ lawsuit is both too late and too early. It comes too late to challenge the FAA‘s policy clarification issued in 2014, and it comes too early to challenge an FAA enforcement action that may never happen. Because the Letter is not final agency action, we DISMISS the petition for lack of jurisdiction.
