HIGHWAY J CITIZENS GROUP, WAUKESHA COUNTY ENVIRONMENTAL ACTION LEAGUE, and JEFFREY M. GONYO v. UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION, et al.
No. 17-1036
United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit
June 5, 2018
Before EASTERBROOK, ROVNER, and HAMILTON, Circuit Judges.
ARGUED OCTOBER 24, 2017 — DECIDED JUNE 5, 2018. Appeal from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Wisconsin. No. 15-cv-994-PP — Pamela Pepper, Judge.
The Federal Highway Administration approved the environmental repоrt and federal funding in 2015, finding that it is unnecessary to prepare an environmental impact statement. See
One local rеsident and two groups filed this suit, contending that more study is essential. After denying a motion for a preliminary injunction, see 2016 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 132388 (E.D. Wis. Sept. 27, 2016), the district judge read into the record an oral opinion granting summary judgment for the defendants. The judge concluded that the environmental report shows that the project fits the criteria for categorical exclusion from the need for a more comprehensive study. Plain-tiffs have appealed. They want Wisconsin to abandon the project, contending that reducing the speed limit to 45 miles per hour would do enough to curtail accidents. But this suit concerns environmental effects, not the project’s wisdom. Plaintiffs offer two principal arguments: that the Agency’s failure to write a decision separate from the report shows that it has yet to give the project independent consideration, and that the report does not analyze cumulative effects of multiple highway-renovation projects.
Categorical exclusion means a category of actions which do not individually or cumulatively have a significant effect on the human environment and which have been found to have no such effect in procedures adopted by a Federal agency in implementation of these regulations (§1507.3) and for which, therefore, neither an environmental assessment nor an environmental impact statement is required. An agency may decide in its procedures or otherwise, tо prepare environmental assessments for the reasons stated in §1508.9 even though it is not required to do so. Any procedures under this section shall provide for extraordinary circumstances in which a normally excluded action may have a significant environmental effect.
Section 1508.4, promulgated by the Council on Environmental Quality, covers all federal agencies. The Federаl Highway Administration implemented it through
The report concludes that the renovation of Highway 164 would not have a significant environmental effect. After the work is done it will be the same road, in the same place, with the same two lanes, and a little wider so that larger vehicles can safely use the shoulders (and are less likely to hit eaсh other if they veer from the middle of a lane). Widening the road and improving sight lines by clearing some obstructions at roadside will use 38 acres of land in total (or 5 acres per mile of road). Of thosе 38 acres, 1.655 are wetlands, which will be filled; that’s bad for some animals and plants, but the state will create 2.825 acres of new wetlands at another site. No threatened or endangered speсies would be adversely affected. The area through which the highway runs would remain hilly and forested. All in all, the report concluded, not much bad could happen, while drivers and their passengers wоuld become safer. The report added that reducing the speed limit on this stretch of road might endanger drivers, because although some would obey the lower limit many would not, and data show that a variance in different vehicles’ speeds is a major cause of accidents.
Plaintiffs tell us that, by signing off without writing a separate explanation, the Administration showed that it had not taken this matter sеriously. Yet neither a statute nor a rule requires the agency to write its own analysis. (Approving federal funding for a highway is neither adjudication nor rulemaking subject to the Administrative Procedure Act’s requirеments under
It would be unwarranted to infer from the lack of a separate writing that the subject has been slighted. District judges and magistrate judges frequently sign search warrants without writing opinions, but no one should infer that judges are automata who sign whatever is placed in front of them. They read and think but often find that the papers speak for themselves. Or consider this court. The vast majority of decisions are issued by three-judge panels, yet only one judge signs the opinion; the other two join silently. (In the United Kingdom, by contrast, every judge writes in many cases. Seriаtim opinions were common in the United States, too, until John Marshall became Chief Justice.) Silence by a majority of the judges does not imply inattention, however. To the contrary, all members оf the court read the materials carefully and ensure that each decision is sound before they approve it. Just so with the Federal Highway Administration. The Administration’s staff was active in preparing the report, commenting on drafts and making suggestions. Only when the whole process was complete, to its satisfaction, did the Administration sign off. No statute or rule requires more.
As for the argument that the 141-page report didn’t analyze the cumulative effects of many different highway-repair projects: that’s true but irrelevant. The Administration must analyze cumulative effects when deciding whether the cаtegory (renovating highways) comes within the exclusion. That’s what the first sentence of
Trying to include all cumulative effects of every project when analyzing any рroject is not feasible. And Kleppe v. Sierra Club, 427 U.S. 390, 409–15 (1976), holds that the exercise is not necessary. The Justices wrote that, although cumulative effects matter, the agency has discretion to consider when and how they are considered. It is not necessary to look at the Big Picture when evaluating every proposed project, the Court held. They said that about a huge project entailing the development of millions of coal-rich acres in the Powder River Basin; the point is no less true about a road project in Wisconsin that uses 38 acres of land and adds about one net acre of wetlands.
One final subject calls for brief mention. Section 771.117(b)(2) requires analysis when a project occasions “[s]ubstantial controversy on environmental grounds“. Plaintiffs say that their own opposition to the project, coupled with letters from several other organizations, adds up to “[s]ubstantial controversy on environmental
AFFIRMED
