The CONFEDERATED TRIBES OF the GRAND RONDE COMMUNITY OF OREGON, et al., Plaintiffs, v. Sally JEWELL, et al., Defendants.
Civil Action No. 13-849 (BJR)
United States District Court, District of Columbia.
December 12, 2014
As a final matter, the Court notes that it has held that there is an alternative ground for jurisdiction, which has been largely ignored by the parties. This Court originally held that it had subject matter jurisdiction under the expropriation exception to the FSIA,
CONCLUSION
For the reasons stated herein, defendants’ motion to dismiss is denied without prejudice pending the close of fact discovery. A separate Order accompanies this Memorandum Opinion.
John J. Michels, Jr., Lewis Brisbois Bisgaard & Smith, LLP, Chicago, IL, Sarah R. Prins, Daniel Lerman, Lawrence Saul Robbins, Robbins, Russell, Englert, Orseck, Untereiner & Sauber LLP, Shannon K. O‘Loughlin, Lewis Brisbois Bisgaard & Smith, LLP, Donald Christian Baur, Benjamin S. Sharp, Donald Christian Baur, Jennifer A. MacLean, Perkins Coie LLP, Washington, DC, Lawrence Charles Watters, Brent D. Boger, Vancouver City Attorney‘s Office, Vancouver, WA, Eric D. Miller, Perkins Coie, LLP, Seattle, WA, for Plaintiffs.
Gina L. Allery, Kristofor R. Swanson, U.S. Department of Justice, Washington, DC, for Defendants.
MEMORANDUM OPINION
DENYING PLAINTIFFS’ MOTIONS FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT; GRANTING DEFENDANTS’ CROSS-MOTIONS FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT
BARBARA J. ROTHSTEIN
UNITED STATES DISTRICT JUDGE
I. INTRODUCTION
II. BACKGROUND
A. Legal Framework
The Secretary‘s decision was arrived upon consideration of a complex combination of statutes, procedures, and regulations, a brief description of which follows:
1. Indian Reorganization Act of 1934
“The IRA was designed to improve the economic status of Indians by ending the alienation of tribal land and facilitating tribes’ acquisition of additional acreage and repurchase of former tribal domains. Native people were encouraged to organize or reorganize with tribal structures similar to modern business corporations.” 1-1 Cohen‘s Handbook of Federal Indian Law § 1.05. “The overriding purpose of [the IRA] was to establish machinery whereby Indian tribes would be able to assume a greater degree of self-government, both politically and economically.” Morton v. Mancari, 417 U.S. 535, 542 (1974).
Among other things, the IRA provides the Secretary with the authority “to acquire... any interest in lands... for the purpose of providing land for Indians.”
Section 19 of the IRA defines “Indian” to include, inter alia, “all рersons of Indian descent who are members of any recognized Indian tribe now under Federal jurisdiction.”
2. Federal Acknowledgment Process
In 1978, the Department of Interior established a “departmental procedure and policy for acknowledging that certain
The Regulations specified the criteria that a tribe must demonstrate to achieve Federal acknowledgment.
3. Indian Gaming Regulatory Act of 1988
Like the IRA, the IGRA was enacted in large part to promote “tribal economic development, self-sufficiency, and strong tribal governments.”
Of particular relevance here, the IGRA allows gaming if “lands are taken into trust as part of... (ii) the initial reservation of an Indian tribe acknowledged by the Secretary under the Federal acknowledgment process, or (iii) the restoration of lаnds for an Indian tribe that is restored to Federal recognition.”
4. National Environmental Policy Act
NEPA requires federal agencies to issue an Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) for any “major Federal action significantly affecting the quality of the human environment.”
Because the NEPA process “involves an almost endless series of judgment calls... [t]he line-drawing decisions... are vested in the agencies, not the courts.” Coalition on Sensible Transp., Inc. v. Dole, 826 F.2d 60, 66 (D.C. Cir. 1987). Therefore, the “role of the courts is simply to ensure that the agency has adequately considered and disclosed the environmental impact of its actions and that its decision is not arbitrary or capricious.” City of Olmsted Falls, Ohio v. Fed. Aviation Admin., 292 F.3d 261, 269 (D.C. Cir. 2002) (citing Baltimore Gas & Elec. v. Natural Res. Def. Council, 462 U.S. 87, 97-98 (1983)).
B. Factual & Procedural Background
The Cowlitz Indian Tribe (hereinafter, Cowlitz or Tribe) is the successor in interest of the Lower Cowlitz and the Upper Cowlitz Bands of Southwestern Washington. The Tribe has been without land since President Lincoln signed a proclamation in 1863 that opened the Cowlitz lands in southwest Washington to non-Indian settlement. A.R. 8200; A.R. 14048762; Fed. Reg. 8,983-01 (Feb. 27, 1997).
In 2002,2 the Department of Interior federally acknowledged the Cowlitz after finding that the Tribe had existed as an Indian entity on a substantially continuous basis since at least 1878-80, and that it had satisfied the criteria set forth in 25 C.F.R. part 83. 67 Fed. Reg. 607 (Jan. 4, 2002); 65 Fed. Reg. 8,436 (Feb. 18, 2000). Immediately upon receiving federal acknowledgment, the Cowlitz submitted an application requesting that the Secretary take into trust 151.87 acres of land in Clark County, Washington (hereinafter, “the Parcel“) and declare it the Tribe‘s “initial reservation” under the IRA. A.R. 140382. The Tribe claimed its purpose was to “create a federally-protected land base on which the Cowlitz Indian Tribe can establish and operate a tribal government headquarters to provide housing, health care, education and other governmental services to its members, and conduct the economic development necessary to fund these tribal government programs, provide employment opportunities fоr its members, and allow the Tribe to become economically self-sufficient.” A.R. 140383. To further that goal, the Cowlitz Tribe, currently landless, intends to develop the Parcel to establish 20,000 square feet of tribal government offices, sixteen elder housing units, a 12,000 square foot tribal cultural center and a casino-resort complex consisting of 134,150 square feet of game floor; 355,225 square feet of restaurant and retail facilities and public space; 147,500 square feet of convention and multipurpose space; and an eight story 250-room hotel. BIA ROD at 2, 115.
A tribe must seek approval for casino-style gambling from the National Indian Gaming Commission (NIGC), an independent federal regulatory agency within the Department of Interior.
As part of the tribal gaming ordinance review process, the NIGC issued an opinion in November 2005 which found that the Parcel qualified for IGRA‘s ‘restored lands’ exception to the general prohibition on gaming. Id. More specifically, NIGC concluded that “the Cowlitz Tribe is a restored tribe and that if the United States Department of Interior accepts the [Parcel] into trust for the Tribe, such trust acquisition will qualify as the “restoration of lands” within the meaning of the [IGRA].” A.R. 008195. For the Cowlitz to be considered an “Indian Tribe that is restored to Federal recognition,” as that term is used in IGRA, the Cowlitz had to demonstrate “a history of 1) government recognition; 2) a period of non-recognition; and 3) reinstatement of recognition.” A.R. 008198. The NIGC concluded that the Federal government had recognized the Cowlitz during the latter half of the 1800s and then “did not recognize the Cowlitz Tribe as a governmental entity from at least the early 1900s until 2002,” at which point the Tribe received formal Federal acknowledgment under 25 C.F.R. part 83. A.R. 008199.
The Tribe‘s application to take the Parcel into federal trust prоmpted the NEPA process. The Bureau of Indian Affairs issued a draft Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) concerning the proposed actions surrounding the Parcel. After a period of public comment, the final EIS was issued on May 30, 2008. AR140377; 75768-76440.
In April 2013,4 the Secretary of the Department of the Interior (hereinafter, Secretary) through her designee, the Assistant Secretary of Indian Affairs issued a Record of Decision (“ROD” or “the decision“) accepting the Parcel into trust and declaring that gaming would be allowed on the land. Specifically, the Secretary determined that the Parcel qualified for gaming under IGRA‘s “initial reservation” exception to the general ban on gaming. A.R.140494-518. The ROD did not discuss whether the Parcel would qualify under IGRA‘s “restored lands” exception.
Plaintiffs are entities and individuals who, for varying reasons, oppose the construction of the Cowlitz casino-resort complex. The first action was brought by Plaintiff Confederated Tribes of the Grand Ronde Community of Oregon (“Grand Ronde“) which owns and operates a casino that would compete with any future casino built on the Parcel. The second action was brought by Clark County, Washington, the City of Vancouver, homeowners and community members in the area surrounding the Parcel, and specific businesses (clubs and card rooms) that would also be forced to compete with the future casino (collectively, Clark County Plaintiffs).
Plaintiffs argue that the Secretary violated the APA and NEPA. Specifically, Plaintiffs challenge: (1) the decision to accept into federal trust the Parcel pursuant to Section 5 of the Indian Reorganization Act of 1934(IRA),
II. STANDARDS OF REVIEW
The APA instructs the reviewing court to “hold unlawful and set aside agency action, findings, and conclusions found to be... arbitrary, capricious, an abuse of discretion, or otherwise not in accordance with law.”
If the statute is “silent or ambiguous with respect to the specific issue,” then the court proceeds to the second step of Chevron. Chevron, 467 U.S. at 843. The court must determine whether the agency‘s response to the question at issue is reasonable and based on a permissible construction of the statute. Id. If the agency provides a reasonable interpretation of the statute, the court must defer to the agency‘s interpretation. Am. Library Ass‘n v. FCC, 406 F.3d 689, 699 (D.C. Cir. 2005). The agency‘s interpretation need not be “the only possible interpretation, nor even the interpretation deemed most reasonable by the courts.” Entergy Corp. v. Riverkeeper, Inc., 556 U.S. 208, 218 (2009) (emphasis in original). Moreover, “a court may not substitute its own construction of a statutory provision for a reasonable interpretation made by the administrator of an agency.” Chevron, 467 U.S. at 844. The court is “principally concerned with ensuring that [the Agency] has ‘examine[d] the relevant data and articulate[d] a satisfactory explanation for its action including a rational connection between the facts found and the choice made,’ that the Agency‘s ‘decision was based on a consideration of the relevant factors,’ and that the Agency has made no ‘clear error of judgment.‘” Bluewater Network v. EPA, 370 F.3d 1, 11 (D.C. Cir. 2004) (quoting Motor Vehicle Mfrs. Ass‘n of U.S., Inc. v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co., 463 U.S. 29, 43 (1983)).
Finally, when interpreting an ambiguous statutory provision involving Indian affairs, “the governing canon of construction requires that statutes are to be construed liberally in favor of the Indians, with ambiguous provisions interpreted to their benefit.” Cal. Valley Miwok Tribe v. United States, 515 F.3d 1262, 1266 n. 7 (D.C. Cir. 2008). However, the Indian canon of construction does not apply for the benefit of one tribe if its application would adversely affect the interests of another tribe. Confederated Tribes of Chehalis Indian Reservatiоn v. Washington, 96 F.3d 334, 340 (9th Cir. 1996).
III. ANALYSIS
A. The Secretary Did Not Violate the APA in Concluding that the IRA Authorizes Her to Acquire the Parcel in Trust for the Cowlitz
Plaintiffs argue that the Secretary lacks the authority to acquire land in trust for
1. Recognition
a. The Secretary‘s Decision
As described earlier, the IRA authorizes the Secretary to acquire land in trust for “Indians,” a term which is defined in Section 19 of the IRA to include, inter alia, “members of any recognized Indian tribe now under Federal jurisdiction.”
Ultimately, however, the Secretary did not “reach the question of the precise meaning of ‘recognized Indian tribe.” Id. at 89. The Secretary reasoned that “whatever the precise meaning of the term ‘recognized tribe,’ the date of federal recognition does not affect the Secretary‘s authority under the IRA” because “the IRA imposes no time limit upon recognition,” and “the tribe need only be ‘recognized’ as оf the time the Department acquires the land into trust.” Id. The Secretary concluded that the Cowlitz tribe had been “recognized” since at least 2002, when it received federal acknowledgment, and therefore it satisfied the recognition requirement. Id.
b. Parties’ arguments
Plaintiffs argue that the phrase “now under Federal jurisdiction,” (which under Carcieri strictly refers to tribes under jurisdiction in 1934) modifies the phrase “recognized Indian tribe,” and both phrases should be temporally limited to 1934. In other words, Plaintiffs contend that a tribe must have been not only “under federal jurisdiction” in 1934 but also “recognized” in 1934 to qualify as an “Indian Tribe” under Section 19. Clark Cty Mot. at 10; Grand Ronde Mot. at 9. Plaintiffs point to the plain text as well as legislative history to support that the term “recognized” refers only to tribes “enrolled” in 1934. Grand Ronde Mot. at 10; Clark Cty Mot. at 12-13. Lastly, Plaintiff Grand Ronde argues that reading the phrase “recognized Indian tribe” in the context of the IRA as a whole supports that Congress intended the term “recognized” to mean tribes recognized in 1934. Grand Ronde Mot. at 10.
c. Carcieri v. Salazar
The Supreme Court explained in Carcieri v. Salazar, 555 U.S. 379 (2009), that the phrase “now under Federal jurisdiction” meant that a tribe had to be under federal jurisdiction in 1934, the year the IRA was passed, in order to qualify under Section 19‘s definition of “Indian.” Less clear was whether an Indian Tribe also had to be “recognized” in 1934 to qualify as “Indian” under Section 19. The Carcieri majority makes no attempt to interpret what the word “recognized” means, and instead concerns itself solely with the interpretation of the phrase “now under Federal jurisdiction.” See id. at 382 (holding that “§ 479 limits the Secretary‘s authority to taking land into trust for the purpose of providing land to members of a tribe that was under federal jurisdiction when the IRA was enacted in June 1934“). Had the Carcieri majority believed that an Indian tribe needed to be recognized as of 1934, it could have easily said so and made that part of its holding. However, the majority chose not to follow that course, and instead held only that the phrase “now under federal jurisdiction” means tribes that were under federal jurisdiction in 1934. By ignoring the concept of recognition altogеther, the Carcieri opinion in no way supports Plaintiffs’ position that the term recognized should be read in conjunction with the phrase “now under federal jurisdiction.”
Indeed, the only discussion of the term “recognized” in Carcieri directly contradicts Plaintiffs’ arguments. In his concurrence, Justice Breyer explains that recognition and jurisdiction may be treated as two separate concepts and notes that Section 19 “imposes no time limit upon recognition.” Id. at 399. Additionally, Justices Souter and Ginsburg agreed with Justice Breyer that “[n]othing in the majority opinion forecloses the possibility that the two concepts, recognition and jurisdiction, may be given separate content” and that “the [IRA] imposes no time limit upon recognition.” Id. at 400 (Souter, dissenting). Accordingly, the Carcieri majority opinion does not support that the term “recognized” in Section 19 unambiguously refers only to tribes recognized as of 1934. Moreover, the views expressed by Justices Breyer, Souter and Ginsburg support that, at the very least, Section 19 is ambiguous regarding whether a tribe must be “recognized” as of 1934 in order for its members to qualify as “Indians.”
d. Plain Text
Plaintiffs urge that Section 19‘s plain text demonstrates that the term “recognized” refers to tribes recognized in 1934. Plaintiffs analogize to hypothetical statutes to argue that a tribe cannot be a “recognized Indian tribe now under Federal jurisdiction” in 1934 if it was not a “recognized Indian tribe” in 1934. Grand Ronde‘s Mot. at 10. For instance, Plaintiffs liken Section 19 to a statute that applies to any state resident practicing medicine in 1934. Id. Plaintiffs conclude that this hypothetical statute should not cover an individual who was practicing medicine in 1934 in a foreign country, but only became a state resident many years later. Id. Likewise, Plaintiffs argue, Section 19 should not cover a tribe who was under federal jurisdiction in 1934 but that was only recognized in recent years. Id.
While at first blush such comparisons seem appealing, they ultimately fail to per-
e. Legislative History
The ambiguity of the statutory term “recognized” is further confirmed by a review of Section 19‘s legislative history. The Senate‘s Committee on Indian Affairs discussed Section 19‘s definition of “Indian”5 during both the April 28, 1934 and May 17, 1934 hearings. A.R. 135115. At the April 28th hearing, Senator Elmer Thomas of Oklahoma expressed concern that in the past “when an Indian was divested of property and money” he was legally no longer considered an Indian and, as a result, “numerous Indians have gone from under the supervision of the Indian Office.” Id. The following colloquy resulted between the Commissioner of Indian Affairs, John Collier, and Senator Elmer Thomas:
Commissioner: This bill provides that any Indian who is a member of a recognized tribe or band shall be eligible to Government aid.
Senator Thomas: Without regard to whether or not [the Indian] is now under your supervision?
Commissioner: Without regard; yes. It definitely throws open Government aid to those rejected Indians.
A.R. 135115 (emphasis added). This discussion among the Committee suggests, therefore, that the term “recognized tribe” includes Indians who were not under the Indian Bureau‘s supervision in 1934.6
However, only a couple of weeks later, on May 17, 1934, another exchange took place between the Committee members suggesting just the opposite. Senator Thomas expressed concern that only tribe members “under the authority of the Indian Office” would be covered under the IRA, and “the policy [of the Indian Office] was not to recognize Indians except those already under authority.” A.R. 135298. Senator Thomas viewed the proposed act
Thus, in contrast to the April 28th discussion, the May 17th dialogue supports the notion a “recognized Indian tribe” means a tribe that as of 1934 was “enrolled,” “taken care of” or under the supervision of the Government. “The only conclusion that [the Court] can safely draw from these seemingly contradictory passages is that ‘the little legislative history that exists for [Section 19] is as ambiguous as the statute itself.‘” County of Los Angeles v. Shalala, 192 F.3d 1005, 1015 (D.C. Cir. 1999) (quoting Deaf Smith County Grain Processors, Inc. v. Glickman, 162 F.3d 1206, 1212 (D.C. Cir. 1998)).
f. Statutory Context
Finally, Plaintiff Grand Ronde argues that the term “recognized” in its statutory context supports that it unambiguously refers to tribes recognized in 1934. Grand Ronde Mot. at 11. Grand Ronde points to language in Section 19 and Section 18 to bolster this argument.
Section 19 includes three definitions of Indian, two of which are relevant to Plaintiff Grand Ronde‘s argument. The first, discussed at length above, includes “all persons of Indian descent who are members of any recognized Indian tribe now under Federal jurisdiction.”
Similarly, the Court is not persuaded that Section 18 poses a challenge to the Secretary‘s interpretation of “recognized.” See Grande Ronde‘s Mot. at 11. Section 18 states that the IRA “shall not apply to any reservation wherein a majority of the adult Indians... shall vote against its application” in a special election called one year after the IRA‘s passage and approval.
g. Conclusion
For the above reasons, the Court finds that the term “recognized” does not unambiguously refer to recognition as of 1934, but rather is an ambiguous statutory term. Moreover, given the above discussion and Justice Breyer‘s concurrence in Carcieri, this Court finds the Secretary‘s interpretation of the term “recognized” to be reasonable and defers to it. See Cumberland Coal Res., LP v. Fed. Mine Safety & Health Review Comm‘n., 717 F.3d 1020, 1025 (D.C. Cir. 2013) (explaining that under Chevron, once the court determines that the statute is ambiguous with respect to the specific issue, the court must defer to the Secretary‘s interpretation so long as it is reasonable).
2. “Under Federal Jurisdiction”
The Secretary‘s legal authority to acquire the Parcel in trust also requires a finding that the Cowlitz Tribe was “under federal jurisdiction” in 1934.
a. Secretary‘s Two-Part Test
The Secretary developed a two-part inquiry to determine whether a tribe was under federal jurisdiction in 1934.
The first part of this test is whether the United States had, in 1934 or at some point in the tribe‘s history prior to 1934, taken an action or a series of actions—through a course of dealings or other relevant acts for or on behalf of the tribe or in some instance tribal members—that are sufficient to establish, or that generally reflect federal obligations, duties, responsibility for or authority over the tribe by the Federal Government.
Id. According to the Secretary, “some tribes may be able to demonstrate that they were under federal jurisdiction by showing that Federal Government officials undertook guardian-like action on behalf of the tribe, or engaged in a continuous course of dealings with the tribe.” A.R. 140476. The Secretary also determined that evidence regarding “actions by the Office of Indian Affairs” could satisfy this first stage. Id.
The second part of the Secretary‘s test is “to ascertain whether the tribe‘s jurisdictional status remained intact in 1934.” Id. As part of this inquiry, the Secretary
b. The Secretary‘s Two-Part Test Is Entitled to Deference
Plaintiffs argue that the Secretary‘s interpretation of “under federal jurisdiction” contravenes the plain text of § 479 as well as its legislative history. First, Plaintiffs contend that the text of § 479 does not allow the Secretary to determine whether a tribe is “under federal jurisdiction” by looking at the actions taken by the Federal government towards individual tribal members. For instance, Grand Ronde faults the Secretary for considering the fact that the Federal government provided medical attention to individual Cowlitz Indians and allowed individual Cowlitz Indians to attend BIA-operated schools. Grand Ronde Mot. at 28. Plaintiffs insist that the statutory text requires the Secretary to focus exclusively on Federal actions taken for the tribe as a whole.8 Clark Cty Mot. at 16; Grand Ronde Mot. at 21.
Next, Plaintiffs argue that the Secretary‘s interpretation of “under federal jurisdiction” contravenes legislative intent because Congress intended the “under federal jurisdiction” requirement to narrow the tribal groups that qualify as Indians under § 479. Clark County Plaintiffs contends that the Secretary‘s interpretation does not allow the phrase “under federal jurisdiction” to act as a limiting factor since almost all tribes have members that “interacted with or received benefits from the United States.” Clark Cty Mot. at 17. Similarly, Grand Ronde further argues that § 479 should be interpreted as narrowing the types of tribal groups to only those “tribes that were under ‘Government supervision and control” in 1934, and faults the Secretary for finding that “mere dealings” with a tribe and its individual tribal members would suffice to show such supervision and control over a tribe. Grand Ronde Mot. at 28.
Defendants, for their part, insist that the Secretary‘s interpretation of “under Federal jurisdiction” is a permissible construction of the IRA and informed by the agency‘s expertise in Indian affairs, which they argue should be given deference. Cowlitz Mot. at 14.
Section 479 defines Indians as “members of any recognized Indian tribe now under Federal jurisdiction.”
The Court is similarly unpersuaded that the legislative history for § 479 renders the Secretary‘s test erroneous. According to the May 18, 1934 hearing transcript, the phrase “under federal jurisdiction” was suggested by Commissioner Collier after a colloquy between Senator O‘Mahoney and Chairman Wheeler. Chairman Wheeler expressed his concern that some “so called tribes” were composed of “white people essentially,” and yet because they were “under the supervision of the Government of the United States,” they would receive benefits under the act. A.R. 135301. Senator O‘Mahoney suggested in turn that the committee include a separate provision “excluding from the benefits of the act certain types.” Id. At this point, Commissioner Collier proposed to add the phrase “now under Federal jurisdiction” after the words “recognized Indian tribe.” Id. After this proposal, the hearing immediately ended and the phrase is not discussed any further.
This colloquy, as the Secretary‘s decision noted, is “ambiguous and confused.” A.R. 140475. It remains entirely unclear what the legislators meant by the phrase “under Federal jurisdiction.” While the legislative history suggests that the phrase “under federal jurisdiction” was added to narrow the types of tribes that qualify for benefits under the IRA, it is not clear as to what tribes the legislators intended to exclude.9
Plaintiffs insist that the Secretary‘s interpretation of “under federal jurisdiction” defies the legislative intent because “[v]irtually any tribal group will have members who have interacted with or received benefits from the United States.” Clark Cty Mot. at 17. But such an argument falsely portrays the Secretary‘s test as one that automatically grants “under federal jurisdiction” status once a tribe can show that its members received federal benefits and services in 1934. This is a distortion of the test employed by the Secretary, which considers the federal services and benefits received by individual tribe members among other types of evidence, and asks if the evidence, when taken as a whole, is “sufficient to establish, or [ ] generally reflects federal obligations, duties, responsibility for or authority over the tribe by the Federal Government.” A.R. 140476.
In sum, the Court finds the legislative history to be exceedingly unhelpful, except
c. The Secretary‘s Application of the Two-Part Test to the Cowlitz Tribe
In the Record of Decision, the Secretary found that the United States’ 1855 treaty negotiations with the Lower Band of Cowlitz Indians were “the first clear expression that the Cowlitz Tribe (or its predecessors) was under federal jurisdiction.” A.R. 140478. The proposed treaty called for the Cowlitz and the other tribes in the area to “cede all their claims to territory covering much of the southwestern Washington in exchange for a single reservation to be provided later, most likely on the Pacific Ocean.” Id. The Secretary determined that although the treaty negotiations failed, the government took the land, and “at a minimum, it demonstrates that the Federal Government acknowledged responsibility for the Tribe (or its predecessors).” Id.
According to the Secretary, for approximately a decade after the failed treaty negotiations, the Department of Interior recognized that Indian title to the Cowlitz‘s land had never been properly ceded. In 1904, the Cowlitz “began a prolonged effort to obtain legislation to bring a claim against the United States for the taking of their land.” A.R. 140481. And although ultimately unsuccessful, the Tribe received support from both the Special Indian Agent who was tasked by the Department of Interior to review the claim and the local Superintendent. Id.
The Secretary further notes that from the mid-1850s until 1934, the Federal government continued a “course of dealings” with the Cowlitz Tribe. For instance, in 1868, Federal officials attempted to distribute goods and provisions to the Cowlitz Indians. A.R. 140479. In 1878, the Federal government “deemed it necessary to formally acknowledge two individuals to be ‘chiefs’ of the Lower and Upper Bands of the Cowlitz,” and communicated with the Tribe through these individuals until 1912, when the chiefs died. Id. The Secretary also observes that the “local Superintendent also enumerated the members of both bands and then listed them together in that year‘s statistical tabulation,” thereby demonstrating “unambiguous federal jurisdiction.” A.R. 140479.
The Secretary further states that the Federal government provided for the Cowlitz‘s education and medical needs from the late 19th cеntury and this “continued into the 20th century.” A.R. 140479-140480. For instance, Cowlitz children attended schools operated by the Bureau of Indian Affairs and the Department of Interior authorized money for “health services, funeral expenses, or goods at a local store on behalf of Cowlitz Indians.” A.R. 140480. Moreover, the Secretary notes that “[t]he local Indian Agency representatives repeatedly included Cowlitz Indians as among those for whom they believed they had supervisory responsibilities.” Id. For instance, “during the 1920s
Next, the Secretary notes that the Federal government issued “public domain” allotments to some Cowlitz Indians in the late 1800s and “took actions in support of these allotments,” such as supervising the sale of lands and protesting a tax sale of land held in trust. A.R. 140482-140483. Some Cowlitz Indians also received allotments due to “the Act of March 4, 1911” which directed the Secretary to make allotments to members of tribes in the State of Washington “who are affiliated with the Quinaielt and Quileute tribes.” A.R. 140483. In its 1931 decision, Halbert v. United States, the Supreme Court determined that the Cowlitz members were entitled to such allotments. Id. (citing Halbert v. United States, 283 U.S. 753, 51 S.Ct. 615, 75 L.Ed. 1389 (1931)). The Secretary points to the history of the Federal government granting allotments to the Cowlitz members as further evidence that the Tribe was “under federal jurisdiction” in 1934. A.R. 140484.
Lastly, the Secretary considered as “important” evidence of jurisdiction, the Department of Interior‘s 1932 approval of an attorney contract for the Cowlitz Tribe. By law, attorney contracts between Indian tribes and attorneys had to be approved by the Commissioner of Indian Affairs and the Secretary. Thus, the Superintendent from the Taholah Agency was sent by the Commissioner to observe meetings between the Cowlitz Tribe and the attorneys who planned to bring claims on behalf of the Tribe against the United States. Ultimately, the Commissioner and Secretary‘s First Assistant approved these attorney contracts. A.R. 140484.
The Secretary, after her detailed and extensive historical review, concludes that “[a]ll of this evidence, taken together, supports [the agency‘s] conclusion that prior to and including 1934 the Cowlitz Tribe retained and did not lose its jurisdictional status as a tribe “under federal jurisdiction.” A.R. 140484.
d. The Secretary‘s Application of the Two-Part Test to the Cowlitz Did Not Violate the APA
According to Plaintiffs, the Secretary erred when she found that the Cowlitz Tribe was “under federal jurisdiction” as a result of the failed treaty negotiations. Grand Ronde Mot. at 27; Clark Cty at 19-20. According to Plaintiffs, “[a] failed treaty could never serve to bring a tribe under federal jurisdiction, because such failed negotiations create no ‘obligations, duties, responsibility for or authority over the tribe’ by the United States.” Clark Cty Mot. at 20.
The Cowlitz Tribe argues in response that the treaty negotiations show that the Tribe was under federal jurisdiction because, upon the tribe‘s refusal of the treaty‘s terms, the United States “exercised its ultimate jurisdiction by simply dissolving the Tribe‘s aboriginal title [to its land] through an Executive Order.” Cowlitz Mot. at 16. Similarly, the Government observes that the Upper Chehalis and Chinook tribes also took part in the same failed treaty negotiations as the Cowlitz,
As an initial matter, the Court agrees that the failed treaty negotiations do not, in and of themselves, “establish, or... generally reflect federal obligations, duties, responsibility for or authority over the tribe by the Federal Government.” However, the Secretary relies on much more than the failed treaty negotiations to establish that the Cowlitz Tribe was “under federal jurisdiction” in 1934. More specifically, the Secretary relies on the “course of dealings” that came after those failed treaty negotiations—e.g., the granting of allotments to Tribal members, the approval of thе Tribe‘s attorney contracts, and the other federal services provided to the Tribe and its members up to and including 1934. See supra Part III.A.2.c. The Secretary‘s determination that the Cowlitz were “under federal jurisdiction” prior to and including 1934 was based on “[a]ll of this evidence, taken together.” A.R. 140484.
Moreover, the Cowlitz‘s rejection of the proposed treaty does not mean that the Tribe was not under federal jurisdiction in 1934. If anything, the fact that the Federal Government ignored the Tribe‘s demands and ultimately took its tribal lands without compensation, corroborates that the Federal Government treated the Cowlitz as though the Tribe was under its authority. For these reasons, the Court finds the Secretary‘s determination that the Cowlitz Tribe was “under federal jurisdiction” prior to 1934 was reasonable and not in violation of the APA.
Next, Plaintiff‘s contend that the Cowlitz could not have been under federal jurisdiction in 1934 because the Tribe‘s relationship with the Federal Government had already been “terminated“—as found by the NIGC in its Restored Lands opinion. Grand Ronde Mot. at 22; see also Clark Cty. Mot. at 19-20, 24-46. Plaintiffs insist that termination “is the antithesis of ‘Federal jurisdiction‘” because it denotes the cessation of federal supervision and control over an Indian tribe. Grand Ronde Mot. at 22; see also Clark Cty Mot. at 21. In response, Defendants argue that a “termination” in the NIGC‘s restored lands opinion refers to an “administrative termination” by the Department of Interior under IGRA, which is the statute that the NIGC interprets in issuing a Restored Lands opinion. Such an “administrative termination,” Defendants maintain, is different than a termination by Congress, which is the only entity that could legally terminate federal jurisdiction over a tribe.
The Court finds the NIGC‘s Restored Lands opinion to be of questionable value in determining whether the Cowlitz Tribe was “under federal jurisdiction” in 1934. The NIGC determined in its Restored Lands opinion that the Cowlitz qualified for the IGRA‘s restored lands exception because the Tribe had been ignored by the Department of Interior and the Department “no longer had a government-to-government relationship with the Tribe.” A.R. 8200. In other words, the Cowlitz Tribe was no longer formally recognized from “at least the early 1900s” and was therefore deemed “terminated” under the IGRA. A.R. 8199. As the Secretary explained, modern notions of “federal reсognition” and its inverse, “termination,” are concepts that evolved in the 1970s, after the Department promulgated procedures
Using the NIGC‘s legal conclusions and findings, Plaintiffs argue that the Tribe cannot be “under federal jurisdiction” under the
Finally, Plaintiffs cоntend that the Secretary erred by dismissing unfavorable evidence that they claim shows the Cowlitz were not “under federal jurisdiction” in 1934. Specifically, Plaintiffs point to a 1924 statement in which the then-Secretary opposed legislation that would have allowed the Cowlitz to file a claim against the federal government. The Secretary stated that that the Cowlitz Indians “are without any tribal organization, generally self-supporting, and have been absorbed into the body politic.” Plaintiffs also note a 1933 letter from the Commissioner Collier denying enrollment to an individual person in the Cowlitz tribe; in this letter Collier states that the Cowlitz was not in existence as it did not have a reservation or tribal funds on deposit under the government‘s control.11 Clark Cty Mot. at 22.
The Secretary did not ignore the evidence cited by Plaintiffs, but rather found that it was not persuasive in light of the rest of the record. With respect to Commissioner Collier‘s 1933 letter, the Secre
3. Cowlitz‘s Membership Numbers
The Cowlitz Tribe increased its tribal members from 1,482 at the time it was first federally acknowledged in 2002, to 3,544 members in 2007. Pls. Clark Cty‘s Mot. at 24. Clark County Plaintiffs argue that the Secretary neglected her duty under
Plaintiffs point to communications—one newspaper editorial and two legal correspondences—in which they took issue with the Cowlitz Tribe‘s membership expansion. Clark Cty. Reply at 16. In these communications, Clark County Plaintiffs argued that the BIA had tarnished the integrity of the NEPA process by relying on Cowlitz Tribe‘s overstated membership figures. See A.R. 92207; A.R. 86688; A.R. 572. More specifically, the Clark County Plaintiffs argued that the public should be given an opportunity to provide comments and challenge the membership figures. Id. Insofar as Clark County Plaintiffs challenge the integrity of the NEPA process before this Court (arguments which are discussed in detail later in this opinion), such arguments are preserved.
B. The Secretary Did Not Violate the APA in Concluding that the Parcel Qualifies for Gaming under the IGRA
As described above, Section 20 of the
Plaintiffs argue the Secretary erred in her determination that the Parcel is eligible for gaming under the “initial reservation” exception of the
Defendants counter that the regulations “do not require that the land be previously ‘owned or possessed’ by the tribe, or be at the center of its historic territory,” but rather the Cowlitz need only show historic use and occupancy in the vicinity of the Parcel. Cowlitz Reply at 21. Defendants further argue that ICC-determined boundaries cannot demark the lands where the Cowlitz have “significant connections” because the ICC‘s boundaries are based on stricter standards, i.e. a tribe must show actual, exclusive, and continuous use and occupancy of the land. Id. at 45-46. Additionally, Defendants insist that the Secretary‘s decision is consistent with the agency‘s prior decisions that address the “significant historical connections” requirement under the
1. The Secretary‘s Interpretation of “Significant Historical Connection” Did Not Contravene the Plain Language of the Regulations or the IGRA‘s Purpose
The Secretary determined that the Parcel qualifies as the Cowlitz‘s “initial reservation.” Specifically, the Secretary found that the Cowlitz Tribe had demonstrated its significant historical connection to the Parcel through evidence that the Tribe had occupied or used land in the vicinity of the Parcel. ROD 126; A.R. 140507. Plaintiffs fault the Secretary‘s interpretation of “significant historical connection” as overly broad. According to Plaintiffs, a tribe that seeks to demonstrate its “significant historical connections,” must show that its occupancy or use of the land was “long-term” and took place on the land itself or “adjacent” to it, and that the tribe had some “claim of ownership ... to the land.” Grand Ronde Reply at 34. However, the plain language of
Indeed, during the notice and comment process for the rule, the agency specifically considered аnd rejected several changes to the definition of “substantial connection,” which would have aligned with the Plaintiffs’ stricter interpretation. One commenter expressed concern that “the word ‘area,’ as it relates to the term ‘significant historical connection’ is too broad,” and sought to limit gaming to ancestral homelands. 73 Fed.Reg. 29,354, 29,360. In refusing to adopt the recommendation, the agency noted that “the actual land to which a tribe has significant historical connection may not be available.” Id. Other comments suggested that “the significant historical connection requirement should be uninterrupted connection” or “show historically exclusive use,” but the agency rejected both recommendations because such requirements “would create too large a barrier to tribes in acquiring lands and they are beyond the scope of the regulations and inconsistent with IGRA.” Id. In sum, the agency rejected a more restrictive definition of “significant historical connection” because, among other reasons, it did not comport with the
As the D.C. Circuit explained, the purpose of the “initial reservation” exception is to “ensur[e] that tribes lacking reservations when the IGRA was enacted are not disadvantaged relative to more established ones.” Citizens Exposing Truth about Casinos, 492 F.3d at 467 (quoting City of Roseville v. Norton, 348 F.3d 1020, 1030 (D.C.Cir.2003)). A stricter approach to defining a significant historical connection may arguably frustrate this objective by making it more difficult to allow gaming on newly established reservations, thereby hurting the economic development of newly recognized tribes.
Plaintiffs argue that the Secretary‘s interpretation violates the
2. The Secretary Did Not Depart from Prior Decisions in Her Interpretation of “Significant Historical Connection”
Plaintiffs argue that the Secretary‘s decision departs from agency precedent which they claim “had consistently required petitioners to show that their desired gaming site was within their historical territory.” Grand Ronde Mot. at 37. In support, Plaintiffs note prior decisions where the Secretary relied on the location of the gaming site “within territory that the tribe ceded to the United States, settled on, or aboriginally controlled (or some combination of the three.).” Id. at 37. Plaintiffs also argue that the Secretary‘s prior decision, Scotts Valley Band of Pomo Indians, requires the Cowlitz to demonstrate that its tribal members used or occupied the Parcel itself and not just the land 14 miles outside of the Parcel. Id. at 39.
As discussed above, the regulations do not require the Cowlitz to demonstrate that the Parcel is within the Tribe‘s “historical territory,” or that the Tribe used or occupied the Parcel itself. The regulations simply require that the Parcel be located within an area where the tribe has significant historical connections, which, in turn, can be demonstratеd through tribal use or occupancy of land in the vicinity of the Parcel. Nevertheless, “[i]t is textbook administrative law that an agency must provide a reasoned explanation for departing from precedent or treating similar situations differently.” West Deptford Energy, LLC v. FERC, 766 F.3d 10, 21, 2014 U.S.App. LEXIS 16406, *25 (D.C.Cir.2014). Therefore, the Court turns to investigate whether the agency departed from its precedent in deciding that the Cowlitz Parcel qualified as an initial reservation.
In Scotts Valley Band of Pomo Indians, the agency elaborated on the regulatory meaning of “vicinity,” explaining that a tribe‘s “subsistence use and occupancy requires something more than a transient or occasional presence in the area,” and rejecting a definition of vicinity based solely on the land‘s proximity to the parcel. Doc. 23-7 at 218-19. The agency explained that “significant historical connection” may be found even if the “tribe lacks any direct evidence of actual use or ownership of the parcel itself.” Id. at 219 (“[I]t would be unduly burdensome and unrealistic to require a tribe to produce direct evidence of actual use or occupancy on every parcel within a tribe‘s historic use and occupancy area.“). The agency further elaborated that
a determination of whether a particular site with direct evidence of historic use or occupancy is within the vicinity of newly acquired lands depends on the nature of the tribe‘s historic use and occupancy, whether those circumstances lead to the natural inference that the tribe used or occupied the newly ac
quired land. This analysis is, necessarily, fact-intensive, and will vary based on the unique history and circumstances of any particular tribe.
Id. at 219, n.59. Thus, contrary to the Plaintiffs’ argument, the Scotts Valley opinion did not require the Cowlitz to show direct evidence of historic use or occupancy of the Parcel itself, but rather that the Parcel was in the vicinity of “a particular site with direct evidence of historic use or occupancy.”
The Secretary applied the Scotts Valley standard in finding that the Cowlitz had demonstrated “significant historical connections” to the Parcel. A.R. 140507 (quoting Scotts Valley). The Secretary begins her analysis by adopting the ICC‘s findings that the land 14 miles north of the Parcel was exclusively used and occupied by the Cowlitz. A.R. 140507. The Secretary explained that the ICC boundaries demarcated an area of exclusive use and occupancy by the Cowlitz, but did not encompass all of the land that the Tribe historically occupied and used for subsistence. A.R. 140517. Applying Scotts Valley, the Secretary then turned to “look at how the Cowlitz Indians used and/or occupied the lands to the south of the exclusive use and occupancy area determined by the ICC,” and ultimately concluded that there was sufficient evidence of use and occupancy in that area to support the natural inference that the Cowlitz used or occupied the Parcel as well. A.R. 140508.
In particular, the Secretary found the following evidence of the Cowlitz occupancy and use in the vicinity of the Parcel to be credible: (1) the Cowlitz‘s occupancy, namely hunting camp sites and “treaty-time” villages, at Warrior‘s Point, a site on the Columbia River and only three miles from the Parcel; (2) the Cowlitz reliance on the natural resources of the Columbia River for subsistence use and trade; (3) Cowlitz “extensive and intensive” trading activities at both Bellevue Point (ten miles from the Parcel), and the intersection of the Lewis River and Columbia River (three miles from the Parcel);16 (4) a major battle between the Cowlitz and the Chinook at a site three miles from the Parcel; (5) historical report about an individual Cowlitz who used the Lewis River area for subsistence hunting, (about 6 miles from the Parcel); (6) the fact that Cowlitz were expert boatmen and helped guide large boats carrying goods through
Plaintiffs argue that the evidence relied on by the Secretary cannot satisfy the significant historical connections requirement because, under agency precedent, the Parcel must be “within the Cowlitz “historical” territory, “as opposed to the fringes.” Grand Ronde Mot. at 37. Plaintiffs specifically take issue with the fact that the Parcel is 14 miles from the ICC boundaries. Id. at 38. The Secretary reasonably explained, however, that the ICC boundaries demarked lands over which the Cowlitz had shown “actual, exclusive, and continuous use and occupancy,” and that, while such a strict legal standard was required to establish aboriginal title before the ICC, it was not required to demonstrate “significant historical connections” under the regulations. A.R. 140501-502.
Naturally, if a proposed gaming site falls within a tribe‘s aboriginal title area, the Secretary will highlight that fact when determining that a tribe has significant historical connections to the site—i.e., if a tribe can demonstrate actual, exclusive, and continuous use and occupancy, the tribe will a fortiori meet the less stringent standard for significant historical connections, which only requires occupancy or subsistence use in the vicinity of the land. Thus, it is unsurprising that Plaintiffs can list several prior agency decisions where the significant historical connections were found to exist because proposed gaming site was “within territory formerly occupied or controlled by [the] tribe.” See Grand Ronde‘s Reply at 40 (table compiling agency precedent). However, this does not mean that a tribe must demonstrate that the proposed gaming site is within its aboriginal title area in order for the agency to find significant historical connections with the site. Nor do Plaintiffs point to conflicting agency precedent that invokes such a legal standard.17 Finally, the Secretary‘s decision notes that it had previously determined that the Karuk Tribe of California had established significant historical connections “where the parcel owned by the Tribe was 38 miles from the tribal headquarters and not in an area
For the above stated reаsons, the Court finds that the Secretary‘s decision was not inconsistent with agency precedent, and does not violate the APA in her interpretation of “significant historical connection,” nor in finding that the Cowlitz had demonstrated the Parcel qualified as an initial reservation under
C. Environmental Challenges
Plaintiffs raise a host of challenges regarding the Secretary‘s compliance with
1. Grand Ronde Lacks Standing to Pursue its NEPA Claims
The Government argues that Grand Ronde lacks standing to raise its
Grand Ronde argues that it has standing due to “its deep cultural and historic connections to the land on the north shore of the Columbia River, including Clark County.” Grand Ronde Reply at 43. More specifically, Grand Ronde states that its “tribal members are buried in that area,” and that it “considers Clark County to be part of its “Non-Treaty Homelands” and “Cultural Interest Lands.”18 Id. Grand Ronde concludes that it “has important aesthetic and recreational interests in maintaining its historic ties to this land—and in having the land unaltered,” and that such interests “would unquestionably” be injured by the Cowlitz development. Id. at 44.
Grand Ronde refers the Court to two documents highlighting its “historic and cultural connections to the north shore of the Columbia River.” A.R. 8616, see also A.R. 8558-59. The first document was prepared by Grand Ronde and entitled “The La Center Casino Fiasco: a brief look at the legal and factual errors fatal to the Cowlitz Casino Project in La Center, Washington.” A.R. 8609. Grand Ronde specifically points the Court to three bullet points which address Grand Ronde‘s “historic and cultural connection to the north shore of the Columbia River.” A.R. 8616. The first bullet point notes the Willamette Valley Treaty of 1855 which “recognize[s] that bands to the south of the Columbia River have a legitimate claim to lands on the north shore of the River.” The next bullet point observes that “Grand Ronde‘s tribal members are buried at Fort Vancouver on the north side of the Columbia River in Washington.” Id. The last bullet point states that “Grand Ronde considers Clark County, Washington part of its ‘Non-Treaty Homelands’ and ‘Cultural Interest Lands.‘” Id.
The second document that Grand Ronde brings to the Court‘s attention is a 2007 letter from Grand Ronde to a Senior Cultural Resources Specialist employed by Analytical Environmental Services, a company that assisted in the agency in producing the Environmental Impact Statement. A.R. 8558. This letter states that Grand Ronde has historical and cultural connections to the Parcel, and specifically mentions the Willamette Valley treaty already described above. A.R. 8558.
Similarly, Grand Ronde neglects to provide any evidence—by affidavit or otherwise—that demonstrates how the proposed action would affect its recreational or esthetic interests in the Parcel. Instead, Grand Ronde simply asserts in its brief that “[a]llowing the Cowlitz to establish a reservation and build a casino on this site would unquestionably injure [its recreational and esthetic] interests.”19 Grand
Ronde Reply at 44. As discussed above, such generalized, vague notions of harm do not meet the injury in fact element required for
2. Clark County Plaintiffs’ Environmental Challenges
a. The Secretary Reasonably Relied on the Environment, Public Health and Safety Ordinance
By way of background, in 2004, Clark County and the Cowlitz entered into a memorandum of understanding (MOU), whereby the County agreed to provide services (e.g., law enforcement, fire protection, emergency medical services) and in return the Tribe agreed to abide by Clark County‘s codes and ordinances and pay the County to offset County expenditures and impacts to County revenues. A.R. 140389. However, subsequent litigation unrelated to the instant case called into question the legal enforceability of the MOU. Id. As a result, the Tribe enacted an Environment, Public Health and Safety (EPHS) Ordinance in 2007. Id.
According to the Secretary, the EPHS Ordinance:
(i) obligated the Tribe to perform mitigation measures equivalent to those in the MOU, (ii) grants an irrevocable limited waiver of the Tribe‘s sovereign immunity to Clark County to allow an enforcement action by the County in state court, (iii) provides that the Tribe will not revoke or modify either the waiver of sovereign immunity or the environment, health and safety mitigation provisions of the Ordinance, and (iv) creates a Tribal Enforcement and Compliance Officer (TECO), whose duty is to ensure implementation and compliance with the EPHS Ordinance.
A.R. 140389-90. In addition, the Tribe “passed a Gaming Ordinance Amendment that amеnded the Tribe‘s existing gaming ordinance and incorporated the entire Tribal EPHS Ordinance.” A.R. 140390. The NIGC approved this Gaming Ordinance Amendment in 2008. Id. Eventually, Clark County and the Tribe agreed to rescind the MOU and exclusively rely on the EPHS Ordinance and the Gaming Ordinance “to provide the same mitigation of impacts as was provided in the MOU.” Id.
In her decision, the Secretary concluded that by incorporating the EPHS Ordinance, the Gaming Ordinance Amendment “includes mitigation measures equivalent to those in the MOU as part of the Tribe‘s gaming ordinance, giving the Federal Government enforcement authority to ensure that the mitigation measures are implemented.” Id. Clark County Plaintiffs argue that the Secretary acted arbitrarily and capriciously in her conclusion that the EPHS Ordinance mitigated the “environmental and jurisdictional impacts” related to the Parcel‘s development. Clark Cty Mot. at 32. More specifically, Clark County Plaintiffs insist that “the EPHS Ordinance is revocable and ... NIGC will not enforce it.” Id. at 37. Furthermore, Clark County Plaintiffs argue that the Secretary violated the
Second, the Secretary explains in her decision that “the NIGC has the authority and ability to enforce” the EPHS Ordinance because it is part of a Gaming Ordinance and the NIGC has the power to close the gaming operation. A.R. 140412. Clark County Plaintiffs are concerned that the NIGC lacks the authority to enforce the EPHS Ordinance if the Cowlitz Tribe revokes or amends the Ordinance. A.R. 140412. However, assuming arguendo that the Cowlitz Tribe revokes the EPHS Ordinance, the regulations would allow NIGC to issue a Notice of Violation which may ultimately result in temporary closure of the gaming operation. See
While Clark County Plaintiffs may have preferred a more detailed decision, the Court finds that the ROD contains a reasonable explanation as to why the Secretary believed the EPHS was irrevocable and enforceable and, accordingly, Chevron deference is warranted. Miller v. Lehman, 801 F.2d 492, 497 (D.C.Cir.1986) (“While the Secretary could have provided a more detailed explanation of his reasoning, we are required to uphold a decision of less than ideal clarity if the agency‘s path may reasonably be discerned. In addition, if the necessary articulation of basis for administrative action can be dis
b. Secretary Considered Reasonable Alternatives as Required by NEPA
Clark County Plaintiffs argue that the Secretary violated
Defendants maintain that the Secretary complied with
Here, the agency‘s reasonably identified its objective in its FEIS:
to establish a Tribal Headquarters from which [the Cowlitz] Tribal Government can operate to provide housing, health care and other government services, and from which it can conduct the economic development necessary to fund these Tribal Government services and provide employment opportunities for its members.
A.R. 75837. Clark County Plaintiffs and Defendants do not disagree that this broad purpose statement invites “a very wide range of alternatives.” Clark Cty Mot. at 39; see Govt‘s Mot. at 51. Indeed, the agency originally identified 19 possible project locations. A.R. 75882. The agency then applied specific criteria to narrow 19 alternatives down to the 11 alternatives that were deemed feasible.22 Such action was proper, since the agency was only required to consider feasible alternatives. City of Grapevine, 17 F.3d at 1506. (“The range of alternatives that the agency must consider is not infinite, of course, but it does include all “feasible” or “reasonable” alternatives to the proposed action.“). The FEIS discusses each of these alternatives and briefly provides reasons for dismissing all but one of the alternatives to the Parcel.23 A.R. 75882-75886; City of Grapevine, 17 F.3d at 1506 (The “rule of reason governs both which alternatives the agency must discuss, and the extent to which it must discuss them.“).
Clark County Plaintiffs specifically take issue with the agency‘s exclusion of five alternative sites that were located farther north than the Parcel. The agency commissioned three individual market studies which found that these alternative sites were too “inconvenient to both the Seattle and Portland/Vancouver markets” and therefore could “not adequately meet the economic objectives and needs of the Tribal government.”24 A.R. 75886. Given that economic development of the Tribe was the main objective of the project, this explanation is plainly reasonable. See Citizens Against Burlington, 938 F.2d at 196 (an agency is required to “take into account the needs and goals of the parties involved in the application“).
c. The Secretary Sufficiently Addressed Water Issues26
By way of background, the East Fork Lewis River is “the primary surface water
within the vicinity” of the Parcel. A.R. 75913. McCormick Creek is also “within the watershed” in which the Parcel is located. A.R. 75916. Both of these bodies of water are listеd as “impaired waters” based on their fecal coliform numbers and temperature issues. A.R. 75916. Impaired waters are regulated under the Clean Water Act using Total Maximum Daily Loads (TMDLs). A TMDL is a calculation of the maximum amount of a pollutant that a water body can receive and still meet water quality standards.
The
Clark County Plaintiffs argue that the FEIS‘s consideration of water impacts is inadequate because it does not address the “highly likely possibility” that the Cowlitz will be unable to obtain a National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (NPDES) permit for the casino-resort development. Clark Cty Reply at 40; Clark Cty Mot. at 42. According to Clark County Plaintiffs, the FEIS cannot “simply state[] that the Tribe will comply with the Clean Water Act and NPDES requirements,” but rather, under
Defendants respond that the agency satisfied
The critical issue here is whether
In reversing the Ninth Circuit‘s decision, the Supreme Court clarified an agency‘s duties under
The FEIS describes the quality of surface water (i.e., the East Fork Lewis River, McCormick Creek, and an unnamed stream by the proposed casino site) by reporting in detail on fecal coliform, ammonia, turbidity, and temperature conditions. A.R. 75913-75918. The FEIS also thoroughly discusses wastewater treatment programs and the expected quality of treated wastewater, again addressing anticipated fecal coliform, ammonia, turbidi
d. Supplemental EIS is Not Required
A supplemental EIS is required when “[t]here are significant new circumstances or information relevant to environmental concerns and bearing on the proposed action or its impacts.”
IV. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the Court denies Plaintiffs’ motions for summary judgment and grants Defendants’ cross-motions for summary judgment. An Order consistent with this Memorandum Opinion is separately and contemporaneously issued.
Notes
Again, Plaintiffs are reading in additional requirements to the regulatory language. While the text of
In City of Grapevine v. Department of Transportation, the petitioners similarly argued that the Federal Aviation Administration reacted to criticism to the draft EIS by “manipulat[ing] the statements of need and purpose to avoid considering any alternatives except for those that achieve what has been the FAA‘s unmistakable goal from day one.” 17 F.3d 1502, 1506 (D.C.Cir.1994). The D.C. Circuit “pass[ed] over the facile implication that the [agency] harbored an improper motive for changing the statement of purpose in the FEIS.” Id. The Circuit explained that “[t]he very purpose of a DEIS is to elicit suggestions for change,” and that “[t]he resulting FEIS must be evaluated for what it is, not for why the drafter may have made it so.” Id.
Thus, like City of Grapevine, the agency here was permitted to change the purpose and need statement after the draft EIS. So long as the agency provided a reasoned consideration to the alternatives, NEPA is satisfied. Id. (stating that a “hard look” is all that was required, even when the agency had changed the purpose statement in reaction to criticism after the draft EIS).
