MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
Plaintiffs are six underground coal mine operators who, among them, operate at least fourteen mines. They have brought this action against, inter alia, the Mine Safety and Health Administration, claiming MSHA has violated their constitutional rights. More specifically, Plaintiffs assert that they are being denied due process by MSHA’s lack of appropriate procedures to resolve disputes over mine-ventilation plans. In now moving to dismiss the case, Defendants stress the Court’s lack of jurisdiction to hear claims arising from the Federal Mine Safety and Health Act’s exclusive administrative enforcement regime. Concluding jurisdiction does exist, the Court will permit certain pattern-and-practice claims to proceed, while granting Defendants’ Motion in regard to Plaintiffs’ *12 facial constitutional challenge and other ancillary causes of action.
I. Factual Background
A. The Mine Act
In enacting the Federal Mine Safety and Health Act of 1977 (Mine Act), Congress declared, “[T]he first priority and concern of all in the coal or other mining industry must be the health and safety of its most precious resource — the miner,” and “the existence of unsafe and unhealthful conditions and practices in the Nation’s coal or other mines is a serious impediment to the future growth of the coal or other mining industry and cannot be tolerated.” 30 U.S.C. §§ 801(a) and (d). Congress thus passed the Mine Act to, in part, establish “mandatory health and safety standards” and require that “each operator of a coal or other mine and every miner in such mine comply with such standards.” §§ 801(g)(l)-(2).
The Mine Act “vests broad authority in the Secretary of Labor to promulgate regulations governing the mining industry and to investigate and remedy safety concerns.”
Kerr-McGee Coal Corp. v. Federal Mine Safety and Health Review Commission,
Among the Act’s requirements are that a mine operator submit and obtain approval of a ventilation plan for each operated mine. 30 U.S.C. § 863(o). Section 863(o) provides:
A ventilation system and methane and dust control plan and revisions thereof suitable to the conditions and the mining system of the coal mine and approved by the Secretary shall be adopted by the operator and set out in printed form within ninety days after the operative date of this subchapter. The plan shall show the type and location of mechanical ventilation equipment installed and operated in the mine, such additional or improved equipment as the Secretary may require, the quantity and velocity of air reaching each working face, and such other information as the Secretary may require.
A mine’s ventilation plan must also be reviewed by MSHA every six months. Id.
Once a mine-ventilation plan has been approved by MSHA and adopted by the mine operator, the plan becomes enforceable as a mandatory health and safety standard under the Act.
Zeigler Coal Co. v. Kleppe,
The Mine Act also prescribes the procedures a mine operator must follow to contest the issuance of a citation or unfavorable order. See 30 U.S.C. §§ 815, 816, 823. Such disputes are adjudicated by an independent body — the Federal Mine Safety and Health Review Commission — created by the Act for this purpose. §§ 823, 815(d). The operator must contest the citation or *13 order within 30 days of receiving it by notifying the Secretary. § 815(d). Upon receiving such notification, the Secretary “shall immediately advise the Commission of such notification, and the Commission shall afford an opportunity for a hearing.” Id. This initial hearing may be before an administrative law judge appointed by the Commission. § 823(d). A mine operator may appeal the ALJ’s decision to the Commission as a whole. Id. A mine operator “adversely affected or aggrieved by an order of the Commission issued under this chapter may obtain a review of such order in any United States court of appeals for the circuit in which the violation is alleged to have occurred or in the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit----” § 816(a)(1).
While the Mine Act prescribes the enforcement and appeal procedures governing the relationship between MSHA and a mine operator operating a mine, with an approved ventilation plan, the Act does not explicitly outline the procedures that govern a pre-adoption/approval dispute between a mine operator and MSHA. Perhaps in recognition of this fact, MSHA has published two documents that describe the Agency’s recommended practices: the Mine Ventilation Plan Approval Handbook No. PH92-V-6 (available at http:// msha.gov/READROOM/HANDBOOK/PH 92-V-6.pdf) and MSHA’s Program Policy Manual, Reference V.G-4, Mine Plan Approval Procedures, “Contest of Mine Plan Approval Actions” (available at: http:// www.msha.gov/REGS/COMPLIAN/PPM/ PMMAINTC.HTM) (Policy Manual).
Because the existence and sufficiency of the ventilation-plan dispute-resolution process described in the Policy Manual is at the heart of the dispute in the present case, the Court will reproduce the relevant portions at some length:
In those situations when MSHA can no longer accept a provision of an approved plan, cannot approve a provision in a new plan, or cannot approve a proposed change to an approved plan, operators should be afforded the opportunity to contest MSHA’s denial of approval. Where the operator disagrees with MSHA and indicates the desire to seek a citation to contest before the Federal Mine Safety and Health Review Commission, a citation should be issued.
Id. at 4. When MSHA determines that a plan is no longer adequate, it may revoke approval of the plan:
Upon revocation of approval, a citation must be issued for operating without an approved mine plan. Abatement can then be accomplished by the operator adopting a plan provision satisfying MSHA’s concern. It may be appropriate for the operator to have this acceptable plan provision prepared before the citation is issued so that prompt abatement occurs. With this approach, there is no need to operate in violation of the mine’s approved plan, and the violation would be “technical” in nature.
Id.
In the case of an operator-proposed change to an existing approved mine plan, if approval of the change is denied, the operator could notify the District that, as of a certain date, the mine’s existing approved plan is no longer adopted by the operator, and that the operator intends to adopt the proposed change which is not approved. On that date, a 104(a) citation would be issued for the operator’s failure to have and adopt an approved plan. Abatement would be achieved by the operator promptly adopting the provisions of the most recently approved plan for the mine. Again, there need not be any changes made in the actual mining pro *14 cedures, and the violation would be “technical” in nature.
Id. at 4-5.
The case of a new mine plan with a provision that cannot be approved could be handled in a similar manner. The operator could indicate that mining operations will begin on a particular date, using the plan that contains the provision which is not approved. On the date indicated for starting operations, a citation would be issued for failure to adopt and follow an approved plan, as required by the applicable standard. Abatement would be achieved by the operator promptly adopting provisions that satisfy MSHA’s previously documented concerns. ...
In each of these cases, the operator would have the option of contesting the citation issued and presenting to an administrative law judge the reasons why the disputed plan provision should have been approved.
Id.
B. The Current Action
As the operators of underground coal mines, Plaintiffs are regulated by the Mine Act as enforced by the Secretary of Labor and MSHA. Compl., ¶2. On June 22, 2010, Plaintiffs filed this action against the Department of Labor, MSHA, and three MSHA officials in both their official and individual capacities. Id., ¶¶ 18-22. Plaintiffs assert claims under the Due Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment, the Declaratory Judgment Act, and the Administrative Procedure Act. Id., ¶ 1.
Plaintiffs’ suit centers around the Mine Act’s ventilation-plan approval process. Plaintiffs complain first that the Mine Act is facially unconstitutional because it “does not provide any dispute-resolution mechanism in the event an operator and MSHA cannot agree on the terms of a ventilation plan.” Id., ¶ 4. “Nor does the Mine Act or regulations promulgated by MSHA set any limit on the time for MSHA to review and approve or deny a submitted ventilation plan.” Id. Thus, Plaintiffs allege, “[ojperators are therefore dependent on MSHA to act objectively and in good faith in the plan-approval process. When MSHA fails to act in good faith — either through unreasonable delay in its consideration of a ventilation plan or by conditioning approval on some demand that is not reasonably related to the safety or health of miners at the operator’s mine — an operator has no recourse under the Mine Act and is denied due process of law as guaranteed by the Fifth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.” Id.
As separate counts, Plaintiffs further allege that MSHA has applied the Act in a manner that denies them procedural and substantive due process under the Fifth Amendment. In particular, Plaintiffs contend that “Defendants have through a pattern and practice repeatedly failed to afford the Plaintiffs the process due under the Mine Act inasmuch as [they have] systematically, and without regard to the conditions and mining system of the individual mines, disapproved or failed to approve the Plaintiffs’ ventilation plans unless and until the Plaintiffs have implemented the Defendants’ demands that, inter alia, they not use scrubbers at their mines, [and] they only use exhausting ventilation systems .... ” Id., ¶ 74. “Defendants have deprived the Plaintiffs of such interests without affording the Plaintiffs the necessary opportunity to be heard,” which, Plaintiffs allege, “has left Plaintiffs with having to choose between refusing to implement the Defendants’ demands, in which case they cannot operate and their employees must be put out of work, or implementing the Defendants’ demands and obtaining approval of ventilation plans that are less protective of the safety and health of their miners.” Id., ¶¶ 74-75; see also, id., ¶¶ 81-83.
*15 Finally, Plaintiffs allege that if the Mine Act, including Defendants’ enforcement of it, is constitutional, Defendants have nonetheless acted in excess of their statutory authority (and therefore ultra vires), or, in the alternative, arbitrarily and capriciously in violation of the Administrative Procedure Act. Id., ¶¶ 78, 85-86.
On August 24, 2010, Defendants filed this Motion to Dismiss under Federal Rules of Civil Procedure 12(b)(1), for lack of subject matter jurisdiction, and 12(b)(6), for failure to state a claim. 1
II. Legal Standard
In evaluating Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss, the Court must “treat the complaint’s factual allegations as true ... and must grant plaintiff ‘the benefit of all inferences that can be derived from the facts alleged.’ ”
Sparrow v. United Air Lines, Inc.,
To survive a motion to dismiss under Rule 12(b)(1), Plaintiffs bear the burden of proving that the Court has subject matter jurisdiction to hear their claims.
See Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife,
Rule 12(b)(6) provides for the dismissal of an action where a complaint fails “to state a claim upon which relief can be granted.” When the sufficiency of a complaint is challenged under Rule 12(b)(6), the factual allegations presented in it must be presumed true and should be liberally
*16
construed in plaintiffs favor.
Leatherman v. Tarrant Cty. Narcotics & Coordination Unit,
III. Analysis
Defendants argue as a threshold matter that Plaintiffs’ Complaint must be dismissed because, under the Mine Act’s exclusive administrative enforcement regime, this Court lacks jurisdiction over each of Plaintiffs’ claims. Even if jurisdiction is proper, Defendants contend, Plaintiffs have failed to plead facts sufficient to survive this Motion. The Court will first address Plaintiffs’ constitutional claims. Before discussing the merits, however, the Court will resolve Defendants’ jurisdictional argument.
A. Due Process Claims
1. Rule 12(b)(1)
According to Defendants, Plaintiffs’ claims are nothing more than pre-enforcement challenges that, under §§ 814, 815, and 816, are subject to the Mine Act’s administrative review process and thus the exclusive initial jurisdiction of the Federal Mine Safety and Health Review Commission. Plaintiffs respond that their claims may not properly be classified as either enforcement or pre-enforcement, arguing that they “arise entirely outside of the enforcement scheme” and are thus not subject to the Act’s exclusive administrative review process. Opp. at 6. Instead of seeking this Court’s review of any particular ventilation-plan dispute, Plaintiffs challenge the constitutionality of the administrative review process for ventilation-plan disputes as a whole — claims over which Plaintiffs assert this Court has jurisdiction.
To determine whether a court’s jurisdiction is limited by an administrative review process, that court must consider first, whether the statute at issue in fact provides an exclusive administrative review scheme, and second, whether the claims at issue are of the type that Congress intended to fall within that scheme.
See Sturm, Ruger & Company, Inc. v. Chao,
Neither party disputes, and the language of the statute along with the Supreme Court’s decision in Thunder Basin make clear, that the Mine Act creates an exclusive administrative review procedure for ordinary pre- and post-enforcement challenges to the Act. Section 814 requires the Secretary of Labor to issue a citation “with reasonable promptness” whenever he “believes that an operator of a coal ... mine ... has violated this chapter, or any mandatory health or safety standard, rule, order, or regulation promulgated pursuant to this chapter.... ” Upon receiving a citation, a mine operator must, within 30 days, decide whether to contest the citation. § 815(a). After 30 days, an uneontested “citation and the proposed assessment of penalty shall be deemed a final order of the Commission and not subject to review by any court or agency.” Id. A mine operator wishing to contest a citation must notify the Secretary of his intent to do so, after which “the Secretary shall immediately advise the Commission of such notification, and the Commission shall afford an opportunity for a hearing.” § 815(d). Appeals from the Commission are made directly to the U.S. Court of Appeals. § 816(a)(1).
In
Thunder Basin,
the Supreme Court considered an attempt by a mine operator to circumvent the Mine Act’s administrative review process by seeking an injunction against MSHA’s enforcement of § 813 before the agency issued a citation for the operator’s violation of the Act. The Supreme Court held that “the statutory-review scheme in the Federal Mine Safety and Health Amendments Act of 1977 ... prevents a district court from exercising subject-matter jurisdiction over a pre-enforcement challenge to the Act.”
Not all claims relating to the Mine Act, however, necessarily fall within the Act’s administrative review scheme. The Supreme Court reaffirmed in
Thunder Basin
that district courts retain jurisdiction “over claims considered ‘wholly “collateral” ’ to a statute’s review provisions and outside the agency’s expertise, ... particularly where a finding of preclusion could foreclose all meaningful judicial review.”
Id.
at 212-13,
A fundamental dispute in the present case is whether Plaintiffs’ claims
*18
“are of the type Congress intended to be reviewed within [the Mine Act’s] statutory scheme,” or whether they are wholly collateral to that scheme.
Id.
at 212,
Thunder Basin
involved a dispute over § 813(f) of the Mine Act and a corresponding regulation, which permit employees of a mine to select a representative to accompany the Secretary of Labor during inspections of the mine and to obtain certain health and safety information.
In determining that the district court lacked jurisdiction over Thunder Basin’s claim for injunctive relief, the Supreme Court considered the legislative history of the Mine Act, with special attention to the 1977 amendments: “Congress expressed particular concern that under the previous Coal Act mine operators could contest civil-penalty assessments
de novo
in federal district court once the administrative review process was complete, thereby ‘seriously hampering] the collection of civil penalties.’ ”
Id.
at 210-11,
The procedural posture of Plaintiffs’ claims can be distinguished from Thunder Basin’s claim for injunctive relief. Sections 814 and 815 provide that mine operators who violate the Act receive citations that they must contest, if at all, before the Commission. As Plaintiffs point out, they have not committed a violation of the Act at all, let alone received a citation for violating it.
See
Opp. at 11. They will not, consequently, receive the citation that would allow them access to the Commission and the hearing that they seek, thus foreclosing “ ‘meaningful judicial review.’ ”
Thunder Basin,
A finding of jurisdiction, moreover, would be consistent with decisions since Thunder Basin from the Supreme Court and our Court of Appeals, which have upheld district court jurisdiction over broad constitutional challenges to other statutes with exclusive administrative enforcement regimes. While the outcomes in cases like these rest largely on the language of the statutes at issue, the precedents are nevertheless instructive.
Free Enterprise Fund
presented a clear example of a “wholly collateral” challenge to the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002.
The government argued lack of jurisdiction, claiming that Free Enterprise Fund should have challenged the constitutionality of the Board by seeking Commission review of “the Board’s ‘auditing standards, registration requirements, or other rules,’ ” or by incurring a sanction by ignoring Board requests for documents and testimony in order to appeal the sanction to the Commission.
Id.
at 3150-51. In upholding district court jurisdiction, the Supreme Court rejected both of the government’s suggestions, observing that Free Enterprise Fund “object[s] to the Board’s existence, not to any of its auditing standards” and concluding that its “general challenge to the Board is ‘collateral’ to any Commission orders or rules from which review might be sought.”
Id.
at 3150. The Court further found, “[W]e do not consider this a ‘meaningful avenue of relief,’ ” noting, “We normally do not require plaintiffs to ‘bet the farm ... by taking the violative action’ before ‘testing the validity of the law.’ ”
Id.
at 3151 (quoting
MedImmune, Inc. v. Genentech, Inc.,
General Electric Company v. EPA,
The D.C. Circuit found that the language of § 113(h) did not bar GE’s challenge to CERCLA in district court. Id. at 191. In enacting § 113(h), Congress, the court found, had only limited federal court jurisdiction over two enumerated types of claims — challenges to § 104 actions and § 106 orders. Id. The court concluded: “GE’s due process challenge to CERCLA’s administrative orders regime is not a challenge to the way in which EPA is administering the statute in any particular removal or remedial action or order, but rather is a challenge to the CERCLA statute itself. As such, GE’s facial constitutional challenge does not fit within the plain text of § 113(h)’s reference to ‘any challenges. ...’” Id. (emphasis added).
In finding the district court had jurisdiction over GE’s facial constitutional challenge, the D.C. Circuit went further, opining, “Even if § 113(h) were ambiguous regarding constitutional challenges, our holding that GE’s constitutional challenge is not barred by § 113(h) would comport with precedent distinguishing between facial, or ‘systematic,’ and as-applied, or particularized challenges.”
Id.
at 192 (citing
Johnson v. Robison,
In
General Electric Company v. Jackson,
GE II,
the D.C. Circuit found, was controlled by the Supreme Court’s decision in
McNary v. Haitian Refugee Center, Inc.,
The D.C. Circuit rejected EPA’s reading of McNary to require that “plaintiffs like GE who seek to bring pattern and practice challenges first show that the statute provides no meaningful judicial review for then’ claims.” Id. at 125. “Properly read,” the court concluded, “McNary’s conclusion that the immigration statute’s jurisdiction-stripping provision presented no bar to a pattern and practice suit did not depend on the unavailability of alternative means of judicial review. Instead, it rested entirely on the Court’s analysis of the jurisdictional provision’s text: ‘Given Congress’ choice of statutory language, we conclude that challenges to the procedures used by INS do not fall within the scope of [the jurisdictional bar]. Rather, we hold that [that provision] applies only to review of denials of individual SAW applications.’ ” Id. at 126.
Plaintiffs are correct that their constitutional due process claims in the present case, like those in Free Enterprise Fund, McNary, and GE I and II, present broad facial and systemic challenges that fall outside the Mine Act’s statutory review scheme. Section 815 describes the review procedure a mine operator must follow to contest “the issuance or modification of an order[,] ... citation[,] ... notification of proposed assessment of a penaltyt,] ... or the reasonableness of the length of abatement time fixed in a citation,” in connection with a “violation” of the Act. Nothing in the language of §§ 814, 815, 816, or 823 precludes broad constitutional due process challenges to the facial validity of the Mine Act’s procedures for adjudicating ventilation-plan disputes, or to MSHA’s polices and practices for administering these procedures, divorced from any individual ventilation-plan dispute.
For these reasons, the D.C. Circuit’s decision in
Sturm, Ruger & Company, Inc. v. Chao,
Significantly and unlike Plaintiffs in the present case, Sturm Ruger did “ ‘not sug
*22
gest[ ] that its claims [could not] be adequately adjudicated in the ... anticipated enforcement proceeding.’”
Id.
at 869. Instead, like Thunder Basin, the D.C. Circuit found that Sturm Ruger sought to short-circuit the administrative process through the vehicle of a district court complaint.
Id.
at 876 (distinguishing
Sturm Ruger
from
National Mining Ass’n v. Department of Labor,
In finding jurisdiction here, the Court does not deny that the Commission may occasionally address constitutional questions in individual enforcement proceedings,
see Thunder Basin,
Unlike Sturm Ruger and Thunder Basin, Plaintiffs in the present case, through their facial and pattern-and-practice due process claims, present broad, systemic constitutional challenges to the Mine Act and MSHA’s administration of it that are not tied to any individual enforcement challenges and through which Plaintiffs do not seek redress for any individual ventilation-plan disputes. The language of the statute does not prohibit Plaintiffs from bringing these claims in this Court; they are not claims of the type that Congress intended to be heard exclusively through the Mine Act’s administrative review process; and, if Plaintiffs are correct that the Mine Act provides no dispute-resolution process when their ventilation-plan negotiations are at an impasse, they are claims for which Plaintiffs will be denied all judicial review if this Court lacks jurisdiction. As a result, jurisdiction over Plaintiffs’ constitutional challenges in Counts I, III, and V is proper. The Court will now turn to the merits of those claims.
2. Rule 12(b)(6)
In addition to contesting jurisdiction, Defendants have also vigorously disputed the merits of Plaintiffs’ constitutional claims. Plaintiffs here have brought both a facial constitutional challenge, as well as as-applied or pattern-and-practice challenges. The Court will consider them separately.
a. Facial Challenge (Count I)
Although the parties did not agree whether jurisdiction was proper here, they do concur that if jurisdiction exists for Count I — Plaintiffs’ facial constitutional challenge to the Mine Act — the question is now ripe for this Court’s review and no discovery is necessary. Hearing Tr. at 11:24-25. Plaintiffs’ facial challenge is brought under the Fifth Amendment and asserts a denial of procedural due process. More concretely, Plaintiffs point to the absence of dispute-resolution procedures for ventilation-plan disputes.
A “ ‘facial challenge to a legislative Act is, of course, the most difficult challenge to mount successfully.’ ”
GE II,
The Due Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment mandates, “No person shall ... be deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law.” The first inquiry in every due process challenge is “whether the plaintiff has been deprived of a protected interest in ‘liberty’ or ‘property.’ Only after finding the deprivation of a protected interest do we look to see if the [government’s] procedures comport with due process.’ ”
GE II
at 117 (quoting
Amer. Mfrs. Mut. Ins. Co. v. Sullivan,
The parties hotly contest the question of whether Plaintiffs have adequately pled a protected property interest. In their Complaint, Plaintiffs allege: “When in the course of a ventilation plan approval process MSHA refuses to approve the Plaintiffs’ ventilation plans, or conditions approval of such plans on arbitrary grounds, the Plaintiffs are deprived of their constitutionally protected interests in a safe and healthy workforce, the economic viability of their operations, and the right to develop and implement ventilation plans suitable to their particular mine.” Compl., ¶ 61. Although the Supreme Court has suggested that mine operators may possess some private property interests,
see Thunder Basin,
The Court need not decide now whether Plaintiffs have in fact suffered a deprivation of a protected property interest. Even if they could so prove, they cannot show that there exists no set of circumstances in which the government’s procedures for resolving and reviewing mine-ventilation-plan disputes comportwith due process.
In Count I, Plaintiffs allege one primary due process deficiency with the Mine Act’s ventilation-plan approval process — namely, that the “Mine Act does not provide for any dispute-resolution procedure with respect to ventilation plan approvals in the event the Plaintiffs and MSHA reach an impasse regarding one or more plan provisions[,] ... or MSHA refuses to approve a submitted plan or adopts an arbitrary position with respect to the plan that is based on generic beliefs unrelated to the specific conditions or mining system at the mine.... ” Compl., ¶ 62.
Defendants dispute Plaintiffs’ assertion that mine operators have access to no dispute-resolution process to redress their grievances stemming from MSHA’s conduct during the ventilation-plan approval process. When a mine operator and MSHA “reach an impasse concerning one or more ventilation plan provisions^] ... the operator may initiate the administrative review process [§§ 815 and 816] by *24 refusing to adopt the plan and requesting that the Secretary issue a citation for what is known as a ‘technical violation.’ ” Mot. at 5. By seeking a “technical citation” from the agency, Plaintiffs can convert a dispute over a mine-ventilation plan into an enforcement action in order to obtain administrative and, eventually, judicial review.
Plaintiffs respond that the “technical violation” avenue to review in ventilation-plan disputes is “a fiction” that cannot provide meaningful relief. Opp. at 23-24. They suggest three primary arguments for why MSHA’s technical-violation review procedures fail to comport with due process. First, Plaintiffs argue that because the Mine Act itself does not explicitly authorize the Commission to hear ventilation-plan disputes, these disputes are outside the Commission’s jurisdiction.
Id.
at 26. Plaintiffs “recognize that the Commission has, on occasion, assumed jurisdiction over ‘plan disputes’ through the ‘technical violation’ process described by MSHA.”
Id.
(citing
C.W. Mining,
Although not explicitly considering whether they comport with the Due Process Clause, the D'.C. Circuit has referred with approval to MSHA’s ventilation-plan approval and review procedures, and, describing the path to administrative review very like MSHA’s “technical violation” option, determined that the Mine Act strikes an appropriate balance in ventilation-plan negotiations between a mine operator and MSHA. In
Zeigler Coal Co.,
that court considered whether permitting MSHA to enforce ventilation plans as mandatory health and safety standards would allow the Agency to circumvent the rigorous procedures it must follow under § 101 to pass such standards. In other words, the Plaintiff there challenged MSHA’s ability to simply insist on the inclusion of the new standards in the various mine plans operators must adopt.
The Zeigler. Court described the limits on MSHA’s control over the content of mine-ventilation plans, as well as an appeal mechanism like the one Defendants point to in the present case: “While the plan must also be approved by the Secretary’s representative, who may on that account have some significant leverage in determining its contents, it does not follow that he has anything close to unrestrained power to impose terms. For even where the agency representative is adamant in his insistence that certain conditions be included, the operator retains the option to refuse to adopt the plan in the form required.” Id. at 406-07. “The agency’s recourse to such a refusal to adopt a particular plan appears to be the invocation of the civil and criminal penalties of [§ 814], which require an opportunity for public hearing and, ultimately, appeal to the courts.” Id. at 407. An “[attempted inclusion of [particular plan provisions] could be successfully contested by the operator in an enforcement action brought by the Secretary.” Id. “Thus an operator might contest an action seeking to compel adoption of a plan, on the ground that it contained terms relating not to the particular *25 circumstances of his mine, but rather imposed requirements of a general nature which should more properly have been formulated as a mandatory standard, under the provisions of [§ 811].” Id.
While Zeigler supports Defendants’ argument that there has been judicial scrutiny, Defendants also maintain that current practice demonstrates that due process is afforded. They point to numerous cases before the Commission and on appeal before the D.C. Circuit, in which parties followed MSHA’s recommended course of action in this case: incurring a citation for operating a mine without an approved plan for just long enough to contest the resulting citation and then seeking relief in the underlying plan dispute from the Commission.
For example, in
Secretary of Labor v. Carbon County Coal Co.,
The requirement that the Secretary approve an operator’s mine ventilation plan does not mean that an operator has no option but to acquiesce to the Secretary’s desires regarding the contents of the plan. Legitimate disagreements as to the proper course of action are bound to occur. In attempting to resolve such differences, the Secretary and an operator must negotiate in good faith and for a reasonable period concerning a disputed provision. Where such good faith negotiation has taken place, and the operator and the Secretary remain at odds over a plan provision, review of the dispute may be obtained by the operator’s refusal to adopt the disputed provision, thus triggering litigation before the Commission.
Id. at 1371. The Commission there reviewed the facts of the parties’ negotiations, the ventilation-plan proposals, and the particular circumstances present at the mine in question, ultimately determining that “MSHA’s decision ... was not based upon particular circumstances at the [mine], but rather was imposed as a general rule applicable to all mines.” Id. at 1375. Thus, the Commission found, “MSHA’s insistence upon the [additional] provision, MSHA’s revocation of Carbon County’s ventilation plan, and MSHA’s subsequent citation of Carbon County for a violation of section 75.316 were not in accord with applicable Mine Act procedure.” Id.
Similarly, in
Secretary of Labor v. Peabody Coal Co.,
Peabody appealed the Commission’s ruling to the District of Columbia Circuit.
Peabody Coal Co. v. Federal Mine Safety and Health Review Commission,
Plaintiffs’ second argument relates to the manner in which disputes are resolved. They argue that they cannot be required to violate the law — as they must at least declare their intent to do in order to receive a citation under MSHA’s “technical violation” procedures — so that they may get their grievance heard by the Commission. Opp. at 24 (citing
Free Enterprise Fund,
In
MedImmune Inc.,
the Supreme Court explained: “Our analysis must begin with the recognition that, where threatened action by government is concerned, we do not require a plaintiff to expose himself to liability before bringing suit to challenge the basis for the threat — for example, the constitutionality of a law threatened to be enforced. The plaintiffs own action (or inaction) in failing to violate the law eliminates the imminent threat of prosecution, but nonetheless does not eliminate Article III jurisdiction.”
Free Enterprise Fund
and
Medlmmune
derive from the Supreme Court’s long standing holding in
Ex Parte Young,
In the present case,
Ex Parte Young
does not render MSHA’s technical-violation review process for mine-ventilation-plan disputes unconstitutional. Plaintiffs conceded that for a mine operator who obtains a technical citation to obtain review of a plan dispute, but ultimately loses before the Commission and the Court of Appeals, because “it’s been a cooperative process [with MSHA], the penalties probably usually are fairly small. It is not meant to be punitive.” Hearing Tr. at 9:6-9. Plaintiffs do not suggest that, for those mine operators who succeed in obtaining technical violations, “the penalties for [re
*27
fusing to adopt MSHA’s suggested plan provisions] are by fines so enormous ... as to intimidate the company” from seeking review.
Ex Parte Young,
But even if the fines were sufficiently large to raise concerns under
Ex Parte Young,
as Plaintiffs suggest they might be if the citation is not for a “technical violation,” but rather for an intentional violation of the Mine Act, the Supreme Court in
Thunder Basin
explicitly addressed and dismissed this concern on the ground that the statute afforded mine operators sufficient procedural safeguards.
See
Nor will petitioner face any serious prehearing deprivation if it refuses to post the designations while challenging the Secretary’s interpretation [of § 813]. Although the Act’s civil penalties unquestionably may become onerous if petitioner chooses not to comply, the Secretary’s penalty assessments become final and payable only after full review by both the Commission and the appropriate court of appeals. 30 U.S.C. §§ 820(i) and 816. A mine operator may request that the Commission expedite its proceedings, § 815(d), and temporary relief of certain orders is available from the Commission and the court of appeals. §§ 815(b)(2) and 816(a)(2).
Id.
at 217-18,
Plaintiffs’ third and final complaint is that the technical-citation process is found only in MSHA’s policy guidelines and is not codified in any statute or regulation; it is thus not binding on the Agency. Opp. at 27 (citing
Brock v. Cathedral Bluffs Shale Oil Co.,
This argument, however, does not belong in Plaintiffs’ facial challenge, as it raises factual questions about how the Agency actually administers the Mine Act — questions that are more properly considered in an as-applied challenge. Plaintiffs must show that “no set of circumstances exists” in which the Mine Act’s review procedures for ventilation-plan disputes are constitutional; as such, they cannot carry their burden by proving that in some circumstances MSHA refuses to follow its policy of giving citations for “technical violations” or prevents a mine operator from timely reaching the Commission.
Because the Court therefore finds that the Mine Act is facially constitutional, Count I will be dismissed.
b. Pattern-and-Practice Challenge (Counts III and V)
Although the Court finds that the Mine Act is facially constitutional, Plaintiffs maintain, in the alternative, that MSHA has a pattern and practice of administer *28 ing the Act in such a way as to deny them procedural and substantive due process. Plaintiffs identify these claims as as-applied constitutional challenges, but stress that they are “broader than just a single one-off plan dispute,” and instead concern “how the agency interfaces with the regulated community” “consistently throughout dealings with plan disputes.” Hearing Tr. at 13:14-25. As with Count I, Defendants move to dismiss the pattern-and-practice claims under Rule 12(b)(6) on the grounds that Plaintiffs fail to plead both the deprivation of any protected property interest and the actual denial of due process. Mot. at 21, 27.
In evaluating Defendants’ challenge to Counts III and V, the Court must accept all well-pled facts in Plaintiffs’ Complaint as true and give them the benefit of all reasonable inferences that can be drawn therefrom. To support their allegations that they have been deprived of a protected property interest in Counts III and V, Plaintiffs plead the same facts as in Count I. Specifically, Plaintiffs allege: “When in the course of a ventilation plan approval process MSHA refuses to approve the Plaintiffs’ ventilation plans, or conditions approval of such plans on arbitrary grounds, the Plaintiffs are deprived of their constitutionally protected interests in a safe and healthy workforce, the economic viability of their operations, and the right to develop and implement ventilation plans suitable to their particular mine.” Comph, ¶ 61; see also, id., ¶¶ 59, 70, 81.
As Plaintiffs point out, the “ ‘types of interests protected as property are varied and, as often as not, intangible, relating to the whole domain of social and economic fact.’ ” Opp. at 33 (quoting
Logan v. Zimmerman Brush Co.,
Plaintiffs have similarly pled sufficient facts in support of their contention that MSHA’s procedures do not “comport with due process” to survive Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss and reach discovery regarding MSHA’s alleged pattern and practice of unconstitutionally administering their ventilation-plan dispute-resolution polices.
See GE II,
Defendants complain that Plaintiffs do not plead more specific facts about individual ventilation plans that they believe MSHA negotiated unlawfully: “Noticeably absent from the Complaint are any specific allegations of fact concerning Defendants’ supposed violations of Plaintiffs’ rights. The Complaint does not identify by date, case number, or any other descriptor the submissions allegedly submitted by Plaintiffs to which the Complaint is supposed to relate.” Mot. at 9-10. If Plaintiffs sought relief from the Court with respect to any of these individual ventilation-plan disputes, the Court could well find the lack of specificity in Plaintiffs’ Complaint concerning. But Plaintiffs notably seek no such *29 relief; rather, they seek only a declaratory judgment that Defendants’ general handling of Plaintiffs’ ventilation plans denies them due process.
With respect to the process Plaintiffs claim they are due, they plead that generally, “ ‘due process’ requires that a party be given a hearing before being deprived of a liberty or property interest by the federal government.... Such process typically means a hearing at which the legal basis for the government’s action can be evaluated, challenged, and judged, and the aggrieved party made whole if it prevails.” Compl., ¶ 71. “The Mine Act,” Plaintiff allege, “affords no such protections to operators with respect to the ventilation plan approval process and any disputes arising from that process between the operator and MSHA.” Id, ¶72.
Defendants argue that the premise of Plaintiffs’ claims alleging the “lack of a dispute-resolution procedure under the Mine Act” for ventilation-plan disputes is “verifiably incorrect.” Mot. at 17-18. They chide Plaintiffs for failing to acknowledge in their Complaint the ability of mine operators to obtain administrative review from the Commission in a ventilation-plan dispute by “simply requesting] entry of a technical violation.” Id. at 18. Plaintiffs respond that as the “technical violation” procedure is described only in MSHA’s Policy Manual — and not codified in statute or regulation — it cannot provide meaningful relief because “MSHA is not bound to comply with its policy.” Opp. at 27-28. More significantly, they claim MSHA routinely does not comply.
This Court granted Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss Count I because there exist circumstances in which the Mine Act can be applied constitutionally — for example, when MSHA responds to a dispute with a mine operator over a ventilation plan by issuing a citation and giving the operator access to the Commission and then judicial review.
See, e.g., Zeigler,
At the hearing, counsel for Plaintiffs conceded, “[I]f I accept for the sake of argument that we have the right to go to the Commission to be heard on these disputes,, then we lose.” Hearing Tr. at 38:14-16. “But,” he argued, “that has to be a guaranteed right. And the absence of the guaranteed right is the l[i]nchpin to our case.” Id. at 38:14-18. Nothing in the administrative review scheme described in §§ 815, 816, and 823 of the Act, Plaintiffs plead in their Complaint, provides a “dispute resolution procedure to resolve disputes over ventilation plans submitted for approval or recourse if MSHA acts arbitrarily, unlawfully, or ultra vires with respect to such plans,” because “MSHA is free, over the mine operator’s objection, to do literally nothing in response to a ventilation plan submitted for its approval, or may adopt a blanket and arbitrary position that does not take into consideration the specific conditions” at an individual mine. Compl., ¶ 42.
From the facts pled in Plaintiffs’ Complaint, this Court can reasonably infer that Plaintiffs are claiming, as they suggested at the hearing, that “because there is nothing that compels MSHA to issue that [technical] citation, if they don’t feel that you are at an impasse” in the plan negotiation process, they can — and consistently do — decline to issue a technical citation, resulting in Plaintiffs being denied the process they are due. Hearing Tr. at 10:5-10.
As Plaintiffs point out in their Opposition, “the balance of the classic due process analysis set out in Mathews v. Eldridge is fact-dependent and cannot be decided at this juncture.” Opp. at 41. The Court does not attempt to apply this test *30 at the present time, but finds only that, viewing the Complaint in the light most favorable to Plaintiffs, they have alleged facts sufficient to survive Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss their pattern-and-practice claims. 2
B. The APA and Ultra Vires Conduct (Counts VI and TV)
Plaintiffs also allege two counts not based on the Due Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment — claims that Defendants have violated the Administrative Procedure Act, 5 U.S.C. § 701, et seq., and acted ultra vires, in excess of their statutory authority. Defendants move to dismiss both these counts as well on the grounds that Thunder Basin precludes this Court’s jurisdiction over them and that Plaintiffs have failed to allege facts sufficient to support their claims.
Section 706 of the APA empowers courts to “(1) compel agency action unlawfully withheld or unreasonably delayed” and “(2) hold unlawful and set aside agency action, findings, and conclusions found to be — (A) arbitrary, capricious, an abuse of discretion, or otherwise not in accordance with law; (B) contrary to constitutional right, power, privilege, or immunity; or (C) in excess of statutory jurisdiction, authority, or limitations, or short of statutory right....”
In order to properly state a claim under the APA, however, Plaintiffs must first identify the final agency action being challenged. 5 U.S.C. § 704 (judicial review is limited to agency action made renewable by statute and “final agency action for which there is no other adequate remedy in court”). The APA defines “agency action” as including “the whole or a part of an agency rule, order, license, sanction, relief, or the equivalent or denial thereof, or failure to act.” § 551(13). Final agency action must “mark the consummation of the agency’s decision-making process, and must either determine rights or obligations or occasion legal consequences.”
Alaska Dep’t of Envtl. Conservation v. EPA,
Defendants argue that Plaintiffs’ APA claim must be dismissed because it fails to identify one or more final agency actions that Plaintiffs ask this Court to review under § 706. Mot. at 32. Defendants are correct that, “[u]nder the terms of the APA, [Plaintiffs] must direct [their] attack against some particular ‘agency action’ that causes [them] harm,” rather than seeking “wholesale improvement” of an agency program “by court decree, rather than in the offices of the [agency] or the halls of Congress, where programmatic improvements are normally made.”
Lujan v. National Wildlife Federation,
In support of their APA claim, Plaintiffs allege that “[e]ach instance of the Defendants ... denying the Plaintiffs the right to ventilate their respective mines in a manner consistent with prudent mining engineering and safety and health practices suitable to the conditions and mining systems at those mines constitutes a final agency action reviewable by this Court under the APA, 5 U.S.C. § 706.” Compl., ¶ 85. Plaintiffs further allege that “Defendants have repeatedly and systematically refused to consider the conditions and mining systems of the Plaintiffs’ mines in prohibiting the Plaintiffs from[, for example,] using scrubbers at their mines, [and] prohibiting the Plaintiffs from using blowing *31 ventilation systems.” Id., ¶ 86. Plaintiffs assert first, that “[s]uch a generic, one-size-fits all approach to ventilation plan review is arbitrary, capricious, an abuse of discretion”; second, that “the Defendants actions are unconstitutional and in excess of statutory jurisdiction (i.e., ultra vires)”; and third, “Defendants’ actions fail to comply with the plan-approval criterion required by law, ie., they rely on a generic view of ventilation plans without regard to the conditions and the mining system of the coal mine for which the plan has been submitted, as required by the Mine Act.” Id.
While these complaints may describe what Plaintiffs believe to be “programmatic” deficiencies with MSHA’s ventilation-plan review-and-approval process, they do not identify any discrete, final agency actions that this Court can review. Plaintiffs’ allegations that “Defendants have refused to approve ventilation plans providing for the use of scrubbers based on reasons that have nothing to do with the specific conditions or circumstances at the given mine,” and that Plaintiffs have “been denied the right to use scrubbers” in a number of their mines similarly fail to allege facts showing a final agency action. Id., ¶ 50.
While “detailed factual allegations” are not necessary to withstand a Rule 12(b)(6) motion,
Twombly,
For these same reasons, the Court cannot find Defendants acted in excess of their statutory authority (ultra vires) during the ventilation-plan approval process. Relying for support on the same general allegations as in Count VI, Plaintiffs in Count IV assert merely that “Defendants are not authorized by any provision of the Mine Act to deny the Plaintiffs their right ... to ... use scrubbers” in their mines, and have therefore acted in excess of their statutory authority. Compl., ¶ 78. Plaintiffs’ claims that Defendants engaged in ultra vires conduct is thus similarly too vague to survive under Iqbal.
At the hearing on this Motion, Plaintiffs requested that, in the event the Court found their APA and
ultra vires
claims insufficiently pled, they be granted leave to amend their complaint to more specifically allege final agency action. Hearing Tr. at 43:2-10. To allow such amendment would be futile, however, because neither count could withstand a motion to dismiss under Rule 12(b)(1).
See James Madison Ltd. v. Ludwig,
Plaintiffs’ APA and
ultra vires
claims both articulate, in slightly different ways, complaints that MSHA unlawfully denied them the use of scrubbers and other specific mine-ventilation devices, without regard to the individual conditions of then-mines. Counts IV and VI thus present
*32
fact-based, particularized disputes over mine-ventilation plans themselves, rather than the higher-level procedural questions about the ventilation-plan approval-and-review process encapsulated in Plaintiffs’ constitutional claims.
See GE II,
The Court must thus conclude that Plaintiffs’ APA and
ultra vires
claims are not wholly collateral to the Mine Act’s administrative review regime. As a result, they fall within the Commission’s exclusive jurisdiction under
Thunder Basin.
Questions such as whether a particular ventilation device is appropriate for the conditions of an individual mine are well within the Commission’s expertise and are the type of questions that the Commission has frequently resolved in the past.
See, e.g., Peabody Coal Co.,
IV. Conclusion
The Court, therefore, ORDERS that:
1) Defendants’ Motion is GRANTED IN PART and DENIED IN PART;
2) Counts I, II, IV, and VI are DISMISSED; and
3) Defendants shall file an answer to the remaining counts on or before September 1, 2011.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. The Court has reviewed Plaintiffs' Complaint, Defendants' Motion to Dismiss, Plaintiffs' Opposition, and Defendants' Reply. In addition, the Court held a hearing on July 22, 2011.
. Because the Court denies Defendants’ Motion with respect to Counts III and V, Plaintiffs’ corresponding Declaratory Judgment Act claim, Count VII, also survives.
