120 Wash. App. 434 | Wash. Ct. App. | 2003
— The Kettle Range Conservation Group and the Lands Council (collectively Kettle Range) appeal two decisions of the Forest Practice Appeals Board (Board) in Kettle Range’s action to require environmental regulation compliance before Stimson Lumber Company harvests timber in the LeClerc Creek watershed: (1) the Board’s grant of partial summary judgment to the Washington State Department of Natural Resources (DNR), and (2) its affirmance of the DNR’s approval of the LeClerc Creek Watershed Analysis (WSA) and related modified determination of nonsignificance (MDNS). Kettle Range argues that (1) the DNR failed to comply with the State Environmental Policy Act (SEPA)
Acknowledging the Ninth Circuit’s recent decision in Selkirk Conservation Alliance v. Forsgren,
I. LeClerc Creek Watershed Analysis
Many tributaries join to form the Pend Oreille River in northeastern Washington. Among them is LeClerc Creek near Usk in Pend Oreille County. The LeClerc Creek watershed area was heavily logged in the past, resulting in significant soil erosion and stream sedimentation, especially along old logging roads.
In 1996, anticipating eventual logging of the area, Plum Creek Timber Company (Plum Creek) initiated a watershed analysis for the LeClerc Creek watershed. Plum Creek then sold its timber holdings in the LeClerc Creek watershed to Stimson Lumber Company.
Stimson completed Plum Creek’s watershed analysis, using a resource team comprising six analysts
A. Forest Practices Prescriptions
A “prescription”
Both DNR field managers from other regions and the general public reviewed the LeClerc Creek watershed analysis. Under the terms of the WSA, Stimson completed a Road Maintenance and Sediment Reduction Plan (Road Plan) to guide future compliance with the WSA prescriptions for the roads.
B. SEPA Checklist
As required by WAC 222-22-080(5),
The DNR responsible SEPA official
After the bull trout was listed as “threatened” under the federal Endangered Species Act,
II. Summary Judgment
Kettle Range Conservation Group and the Lands Council appealed to the Board.
After clarifying the issues,
During a hearing on the remaining issues, the parties presented additional SEPA compliance information, including: the impact of future forest practices, reduction of sediment delivery to area streams, classification of the Middle Branch Road, “rocking”
A. Forest Practices
Kettle Range disputed that the DNR complied with its duty to evaluate adverse impacts under SEPA, and it specifically disagreed with the DNR’s future forest practices assessment. Relying on Alpine Lakes Protection Society v. Department of Natural Resources (ALPS II), 102 Wn. App. 1, 979 P.2d 929 (1999), and Plum Creek Timber Co. v. Washington State Forest Practices Appeals Board (ALPS III), 99 Wn. App. 579, 993 P.2d 287 (2000), the Board found “sound policy reasons” for the DNR’s evaluation process. ALPS II required the DNR to consider “future forest practices” when reviewing a WSA under SEPA, and the Board was satisfied that Stimson satisfied this burden.
First, the Board found the DNR’s assumption — that eventually the entire LeClerc Creek watershed would be logged — revealed environmental consequences throughout the watershed. Second, alternatively requiring a list of specific future harvests, which would likely change in response to market conditions, might not accomplish the
The Board concluded that ALPS III placed the burden on Kettle Range to show how requiring SERA review for individual forest practices would afford greater environmental protection. The Board concluded that Kettle Range had failed to satisfy this burden.
B. Reduction of Sediment Delivery
The DNR’s watershed analysis manual (Manual) noted that if there were a reduction in sediment delivery to streams to a level 50 percent above “background,”
Even Kettle Range’s expert, Dr. Timothy Abbe, agreed that it would be hard to distinguish between 100 and 150 percent of background sediment delivery. The Board ultimately agreed that the “50 percent standard” was the minimum level of detectability for change to natural sedimentation conditions.
C. Middle Branch Road Classification
The appropriate classification for Middle Branch Road was also an issue during the summary judgment hearing.
According to Manual standards, Middle Branch Road was classified for “moderate traffic,” which includes major spur roads receiving log haul traffic up to 50 percent of the time.
D. Rocking of Middle Branch Road
The Board concluded that rocking an existing road is considered a Class I activity under WAC 222-16-050(3)(g). Conclusion of Law V; AR at 62. Middle Branch Road was an existing road.
Stimson presented Dwight Opp’s testimony to discredit Kettle Range’s argument that rocking would cause a significant adverse impact on LeClerc Creek. Opp testified about the quality of the rock used for the process and offered an exhibit showing that the rock exceeded United States Forest Service (Forest Service) standards.
The DNR’s witness, Loren Torgerson, also testified that the rocking process can benefit an area when performed correctly. Kettle Range’s own exhibit, a letter from the United States Fish and Wildlife Service (Fish & Wildlife), recognized that rocking results in a “much improved road surface” and, after a settling period, rocking “can be expected to minimize sediment input to Middle Branch [Road].” AR at 2662. Consequently, the Board found that
E. Armoring of LeClerc Creek
The Forest Service placed boulders in LeClerc Creek to armor the stream bank for erosion control. A federal fisheries biologist helped with the armoring project. The rock was specially selected for its hardness, large size,
Kettle Range alleged that placing boulders into the stream constituted a deposit of sediment into the stream, for which the Road Plan did not account and which violated the WSA. The Board disagreed, concluding that (1) the rocks placed in the creek were not “fine sediment” and (2) Kettle Range failed to offer sufficient evidence that the rock is “materially harmful to any element of the environment.”
F. Soil Prescription Errors
Stimson and the DNR provided extensive evidence supporting their belief that the prescriptions met regulatory requirements.
Witnesses testified about the effectiveness of the prescriptions. Nancy Sturhan, from the DNR, stated that the prescriptions were protective. JoAnn Metzler, a member of the assessment team, testified that the prescriptions would effectively prevent delivery of sediments to the streams at levels likely to cause harm. Stimson expert Dale McGreer also noted that the prescriptions were adequate to prevent significant harm to public resources from road erosion.
Kettle Range provided other evidence demonstrating that the prescriptions were insufficient to minimize negative impacts on the environment. The LeClerc Creek WSA indicated that (1) roads were already a major contributor of sediment to the streams in the area and (2) where road sediment was a concern, sediment control needed to focus on high-traffic roads located adjacent to stream channels. Kettle Range also identified roads omitted from the road inventory in the soil erosion prescriptions. Dale McGreer countered that the assessment/prescription team had not missed anything. This assertion turned out to be incorrect.
When Kettle Range questioned McGreer about the roads missing from his team’s assessment report, he admitted that in making the assessment, he and his team had not actually walked the roads in the LeClerc Creek area. Rather, the Stimson team assessed the LeClerc Creek watershed primarily by car.
In contrast, Dr. Abbe, Kettle Range’s expert, had walked the roads. In so doing, he had discovered roads missing from both Stimson’s assessment report and the soil erosion prescriptions. Dr. Abbe noted that the effects of the omitted roads on sediment production would be “significant.” He opined that overall the scientific quality of the work in the WSA was “grossly inadequate.”
There were also errors in the sediment calculations in prescription number five. McGreer originally estimated a 65.5 percent sediment delivery level along Middle Branch
In contrast, Paul Kennard, an expert for Kettle Range, calculated the length of Middle Branch Road delivering sediment to LeClerc Creek and found an 85 percent delivery level. Kennard attributed the increased sediment delivery level to the increase in traffic on Middle Branch Road corresponding with logging in that area.
After Kennard’s testimony, McGreer recalculated the sediment delivery level along Middle Branch Road. Using his original data sheets, he calculated a revised sediment delivery rate of 69 percent, but he offered no explanation for the deviation from original figures that he reported previously for use in formulating the soil-erosion prescriptions.
McGreer also failed to remove the coarse-sediment amounts from his calculation of background sediment levels, which set the baseline for the accepted 150 percent sediment-delivery level. Correcting this calculation changed the sediment-delivery hazard from low to high, requiring the team to modify the prescriptions.
IV. Board Decision
The Board agreed with Stimson and the DNR, finding insufficient evidence that the prescriptions would fail to satisfy either chapter 222-22 WAC or chapter 76.09 RCW. It affirmed approval of the LeClerc Creek WSA and Stimson’s forest practice applications.
The Board concluded that (1) the DNR properly classified the road-rocking as a Class I forest practice, (2) the DNR correctly classified the three forest-practice applications as Class III, (3) the holdings in ALPS II and III are instructive and not altered by RCW 43.21C.260(2), (4) the SEPA procedure the DNR used was consistent with ALPS II and III, (5) Kettle Range failed to show that the MDNS was
V. Judicial Appeal
Kettle Range petitioned for judicial review under the Washington State Administrative Procedure Act (APA).
ANALYSIS
I. Forest Practices Act
The legislature promulgated the Forest Practices Act to manage commercial harvest of “public and private commercial forest lands” “consistent with sound policies of natural resource protection.” RCW 76.09.010(1); see also ALPS III, 99 Wn. App. at 582-83. Stated another way, the legislature found:
that coincident with maintenance of a viable forest products industry, it is important to afford protection to forest soils, fisheries, wildlife, water quantity and quality, air quality, recreation, and scenic beauty.
RCW 76.09.010(1).
A. Rule Promulgation and Enforcement
Consistent with the legislature’s stated purpose, the Forest Practices Act of 1974, chapter 76.09 RCW,
The Forest Practices Act authorizes the Forest Practices Board to adopt forest practice rules. RCW 76.09.040(1),
The Forest Practices Board also establishes by rule which forest practices fit into each of four defined classes, based on their potential environmental impacts. Class IV forest practices,
The legislature also required that the Department of Ecology, in its SEPA rules “provide for certain circumstances where actions which potentially are categorically exempt require environmental review.” RCW 43.21C.110-(l)(a).
B. Watershed Analyses
In 1992, the Forest Practices Board and Ecology adopted major changes to the Forest Practices Rules, a major component of which is the watershed analysis — a process for gathering environmental information about watershed administrative units (WAU). WAUs are discrete hydrological units defined by the DNR in cooperation with other watershed experts. WAC 222-22-020. The DNR sets minimum qualifications for the analysts, specialists, and field managers who conduct watershed analyses; the DNR also registers them and monitors their performance. WAC 222--22-030.
The purpose of the watershed analysis is (1) to evaluate and to mitigate the cumulative effects of forest practices on fish, water, and capital improvements by the state and its political subdivisions; and (2) to preserve and to protect these valuable public resources while maintaining a viable forest products industry. WAC 222-22-010(1). The rules are
intended to be applied and should be construed in such a manner as to minimize the delay associated with the review of individual forest practice applications and notifications by increasing the predictability of the process and the appropriate management response.
WAC 222-22-010(5).
1. Resource assessment
A watershed analysis entails several steps. The first step is resource assessment by qualified scientists. Resource assessment involves gathering and interpreting data about the watershed and assessing resource conditions in order to identify, to define, and to map areas of resource sensitivity based on the risks to fish, water, and public capital improvements from the cumulative effects of forest practices. WAC 222-22-050(2)(a), (b), (d).
2. Prescriptions
In identified resource-sensitive areas, standard forest practices rules alone do not adequately protect the resource. Thus, these areas require a “management response.” WAC 222-22-050(2)(d), (f); WAC 222-22-070(3).
3. SEPA review
Third, the DNR reviews the draft watershed analysis and circulates copies for review and comment to Ecology, Fish and Wildlife, affected tribes, local governments, other landowners in the watershed administrative units, and the public. WAC 222-22-080(1). Under the watershed analysis rules, Class I, II, and III forest practices are generally exempt from a SEPA threshold determination. RCW 76.09.050(l)(e). Class IV forest practices are those that are not Class I, II, or III forest practices and include those that “have a potential for a substantial impact on the environment.” RCW 76.09.050(l)(e). Class IV practices require SEPA review. See RCW 76.09.050(1) (Class IV); RCW 43.21C.037(3).
For Class IV Forest Practices, the DNR reviews the proposed prescriptions and issues a threshold SEPA determination according to the SEPA rules. WAC 197-11-310 through -360. Before issuing a threshold determination, however, the DNR must consider cumulative effects of the proposed action on the environment, namely, changes to the environment as a result of natural ecosystems interacting with the effects of two or more forest practices. WAC 222-12-046.
The DNR cannot make a determination of significance unless the proposed prescriptions, compared to rules
4. Approval
Finally, the DNR must approve the draft watershed analysis unless it finds that (1) the assessment team failed to follow the approved methodology, (2) the team could not reasonably have come to the conclusion it did in the analysis, or (3) the prescriptions will not accomplish their specified purposes. WAC 222-22-080(3).
C. Water Quality
Ecology and the Board work together to adopt forest practice rules affecting water quality. RCW 76.09.040(l)(e). RCW 90.48.420(1) requires that adoption of forest practice rules pertaining to water quality “shall be accomplished so that compliance with such forest practice [s] rules will achieve compliance with water pollution control laws.” Similarly, RCW 90.48.425 provides that the Forest Practices Act, chapter 76.09 RCW, and the forest practices regulations that relate to water quality protection, shall satisfy the planning and program requirements of the federal Water Pollution Control Act, 33 U.S.C. §§ 1251-1387.
D. Appeals
The Forest Practices Appeals Board hears appeals of DNR actions under the Forest Practices Act. RCW 76-.09.220(7).
A. Administrative Appeals
The APA governs appeals from Forest Practices Appeals Board decisions. RCW 76.09.230(5). Accordingly,
we may overturn the [Board’s] decision only if “[t]he agency has erroneously interpreted or applied the law” or [t]he order is not supported by evidence that is substantial when viewed in light of the whole record before the court.” RCW 34.05.570(3)(d), (e).
ALPS III, 99 Wn. App. at 588.
In reviewing administrative decisions, such as those by the Board, we stand “in the same position as the superior court.” Swoboda v. Town of La Conner, 97 Wn. App. 613, 617, 987 P.2d 103 (1999), review denied, 140 Wn.2d 1014 (2000). Thus, we apply the standard of review directly to the same administrative record that the superior court reviewed. Wilson v. Employment Sec. Dep’t, 87 Wn. App. 197, 200, 940 P.2d 269 (1997). The entire record is open to judicial scrutiny, and we must consider the public policy and environmental values of SEPA as well. Sisley v. San Juan County, 89 Wn.2d 78, 84, 569 P.2d 712 (1977).
We review an administrative agency’s factual findings under the “substantial evidence” test set forth in RCW 34.05.570(3)(e). Evidence is substantial when there is “a sufficient quantity of evidence to persuade a fair-minded person of the truth or correctness of the order.” City of Redmond v. Cent. Puget Sound Growth Mgmt. Hearings Bd., 136 Wn.2d 38, 46, 959 P.2d 1091 (1998).
Additionally, the DNR’s threshold SEPA determination is entitled to “substantial weight.” RCW 43.21C.090. Upon reviewing such threshold determination, the Board must affirm unless it finds the determination to be “clearly erroneous.” Norway Hill Pres. & Prot. Ass’n v. King County Council, 87 Wn.2d 267, 275, 552 P.2d 674 (1976).
In reviewing the Board’s approval of a threshold determination, we apply the error of law standard set out in
B. Summary Judgment
Summary judgment is appropriate only if there is no issue of material fact and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. CR 56(c). We review summary judgment de novo, viewing the facts and all reasonable inferences in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party. Wilson v. Steinbach, 98 Wn.2d 434, 437, 656 P.2d 1030 (1982).
The APA does not expressly authorize summary judgments, but case law has established that agencies may employ summary proceedings. See Eastlake Cmty. Council v. City of Seattle, 64 Wn. App. 273, 276, 823 P.2d 1132, review denied, 119 Wn.2d 1005 (1992). Thus, the Board’s regulations allow motions for summary judgment in accordance with CR 56. WAC 223-08-148(1).
Consequently, we consider the APA standard of review together with the summary judgment standard of review, viewing disputed facts in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party while considering whether the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law if based on undisputed facts. ALPS II, 102 Wn. App. at 13-14.
III. Clean Water Claims
Kettle Range argues that the Board erroneously determined on summary judgment that the Board did not have jurisdiction to hear Kettle Range’s claim that the DNR
Kettle Range contends that the Board’s ruling permitted Stimson and the DNR to “exempt themselves from state water quality standards.” Bill Bidstrup, DNR aquatic resources specialist, testified that he knew the water quality in the LeClerc Creek basin was not in compliance with existing standards. He also testified, however, that (1) the clean water acts delegated authority to the Forest Practices Board to promulgate rules to comply with the state’s clean water standards and (2) therefore, the clean water standards applied only to forest practices under the Forest Practice Rules.
The Board deemed Kettle Range’s argument a challenge to chapter 222-22 WAC and concluded that challenges to the Forest Practices Rules were not properly before it. We agree with the Board.
The Forest Practices Board and Ecology jointly promulgate the Forest Practice Rules determining water quality standards. RCW 76.09.040(l)(e). The rules are adopted such that “compliance with such forest practice [s] rules will achieve compliance with water pollution control laws.” RCW 90.48.420(1).
Under the APA, such a challenge to the validity of an administrative rule must be brought as a petition for declaratory judgment in Thurston County Superior Court. RCW 34.05.570(2)(b). This Kettle Range failed to do. Accordingly, the Board correctly concluded that it had no jurisdiction to hear Kettle Range’s claim that the forest practice rules at issue here do not comply with water pollution control laws. RCW 34.05.570(2).
IV. Future Forest Practices
A. Selkirk Conservation Alliance v. Forsgren
Before commencing the watershed analysis here, Plum Creek, Stimson’s predecessor-in-interest, sought an easement from the Forest Service to access one of its parcels in Colville National Forest. Although that easement is not part of this appeal, the proceedings for granting that easement provide a helpful context for the issues before us.
In 1993, Stimson worked with the U.S. Forest Service and Fish and Wildlife . Service (Fish & Wildlife) to acquire the easement. Selkirk Conservation Alliance v. Forsgren, 336 F.3d 944, 949 (9th Cir. 2003). The land Stimson sought to access was within the LeClerc Bear Management Unit (BMU).
Fish & Wildlife put the opinion on hold while it, the Forest Service, and Plum Creek negotiated a multiparty Conservation Agreement to mitigate the project’s effects. Selkirk, 336 F.3d at 949. The Conservation Agreement dictated how Stimson would manage all of its land in the LeClerc BMU, not just those lands accessed by the easement.
Ultimately, the Forest Service prepared a draft EIS. 336 F.3d at 950. Stimson, the Forest Service, and Fish & Wildlife revised the Conservation Agreement, creating “an ecosystem-based management plan throughout the LeClerc BMU.” 336 F.3d at 950. The Conservation Agreement addressed impacts on grizzly bear, caribou, and the newly listed threatened bull trout, with numerous detailed provisions designed to preserve habitat and to lower bear mortality in the LeClerc BMU. 336 F.3d at 964.
In 2000, the Forest Service issued a final EIS. 336 F.3d at 950. The EIS did not reference the impact of at least six
In 2001, Fish & Wildlife issued its final biological opinion, finding that Stimson’s project would not jeopardize threatened and endangered species in the area. 336 F.3d at 952. Both the Forest Service and Fish & Wildlife had concerns about potentially harmful effects of the project on grizzly
A number of conservation groups (the Groups), including Kettle Range Conservation Group, appealed the Forest Service’s grant of the easement to Stimson. The district court granted summary judgment in the agencies’ favor, and the Groups appealed. 336 F.3d at 953. The Groups argued, inter alia, that (1) the Forest Service violated the National Environmental Policy Act of 1969 (NEPA), 42 U.S.C. §§ 4321-4370Í in failing to consider reasonably foreseeable Stimson activities in the EIS cumulative impacts analysis; and (2) Fish & Wildlife violated the Endangered Species Act in failing to consider reasonably foreseeable activities in its 2001 biological opinion. 336 F.3d at 954.
Affirming, the Ninth Circuit held that the Forest Service had adequately considered future forest practices when it presumed that Stimson would eventually log all of its lands, thus “reducing] the need to list, map, and discuss every pending Stimson harvest plan” individually. 336 F.3d at 961. The court also held that the Endangered Species Act does not require Fish & Wildlife to “list, detail, and discuss each and every forest practices application,” as long as Fish & Wildlife considers the impacts of the future activities. 336 F.3d at 964. The court reasoned that Fish & Wildlife’s use of the Conservation Agreement to analyze cumulative impacts was sufficient under the Endangered Species Act. 336 F.3d at 964-65. The crux of these holdings is that because the Conservation Agreement governs all of Stimson’s activities in the LeClerc BMU, the mitigating measures will apply to all future projects uniformly and, thus, wildlife and the environment will be protected.
B. Selkirk and the LeClerc Watershed Analysis
Selkirk resolves two main issues here: (1) whether the DNR sufficiently considered the effects of future forest
1. Future Forest Practices and the LeClerc WSA
The Ninth Circuit did not decide Selkirk until after oral argument in the case before us. Consequently, both parties relied on ALPS II, 102 Wn. App. 1, 979 P.2d 929 (1999), and ALPS III, 99 Wn. App. 579, 993 P.2d 287 (2000), in discussing whether future impacts were sufficiently addressed here. But neither ALPS II nor ALPS III provide direction about what constitutes sufficient consideration of future forest practices. Moreover, Stimson subsequently cited Selkirk as supplemental authority here. Thus, we look to Selkirk for guidance.
Adopting the Ninth Circuit’s reasoning in Selkirk, we hold that (1) the DNR sufficiently considered future forest practices when it issued the MDNS and approved the WSA; and (2) the record contains substantial evidence to support this conclusion. As was the case in Selkirk, the DNR assumed, for MDNS and WSA purposes, that Stimson would eventually log all of the land.
The Board made the same assumption.
The Conservation Agreement and its attendant EIS discussed in Selkirk also inform our holding. We agree with the Ninth Circuit that the Conservation Agreement and the EIS sufficiently address future forest practices in the LeClerc BMU. First, the Conservation Agreement is land specific, not project specific; consequently, the Conservation Agreement restrictions and requirements apply to all of Stimson’s activities in the LeClerc BMU, both current and
Both the Conservation Agreement and the EIS were before the Board when it reviewed the LeClerc Creek WSA. The Ninth Circuit’s holding in Selkirk obviates the need for preparation of another EIS.
2. Grizzly Bear Protection
As we noted above, the primary purpose of the Conservation Agreement was to address and to ameliorate the impacts of Stimson’s activities on wildlife — particularly grizzly bear — in the LeClerc BMU. The Conservation Agreement aims to “minimize displacement of grizzly bear from spring range[
The Conservation Agreement imposes many restrictions on the timing and nature of activities in the LeClerc BMU, designed to diminish impacts on the grizzly bear. The Conservation Agreement provides that (1) there will be no net gain in open roads, which negatively impact bear habitat, (2) newly constructed roads will be closed to public motorized access, and (3) there will be only limited access to several restricted roads. 336 F.3d at 957.
Based on our own reading and the Ninth Circuit’s characterization of the Conservation Agreement, we conclude that the Conservation Agreement adequately addresses
In assessing the significance of the Agreement, we note that Stimson owns thousands of acres of land within the LeClerc BMU, only a fraction of which will be accessed by the Stimson Project. But the Agreement establishes standards of timber management that Stimson must follow on all of its LeClerc lands, not just those lands to be accessed by the Stimson Project. Absent the Agreement, Stimson would be free to harvest timber and build roads on its LeClerc holdings in whatever manner Stimson chose, so long as Stimson complied with state and federal timber regulations. The Agreement thus imposes obligations on Stimson that go far beyond state and federal laws.
336 F.3d at 955 (emphasis added).
Applying the clearly erroneous standard of review, Kettle Range has not shown that the DNR inadequately considered the impact of future forest practices on grizzly bear.
V. Sedimentation Calculations
Kettle Range argues that the soil erosion prescriptions are insufficient to satisfy the purpose and requirements of WAC 222-22-010 and -070(3). WAC 222-22-070(3) provides that the prescriptions “be reasonably designed to ‘minimize’ or to prevent or avoid ... the likelihood of adverse change and deliverability that has the potential to cause a material, adverse effect to resource characteristics.” The DNR counters that even with the proposed new forest practices, the prescriptions are an improvement over existing, ongoing environmental damage caused by previous, nonmitigated forest practices.
But even assuming that these prescriptions provide more environmental protection than does the status quo, this fact does not satisfy the legal requirement that the prescriptions must meet minimum protective standards. WAC 222-22-070(3). Thus, we agree with Kettle Range on this point.
Kettle Range asserts that the DNR’s soil prescriptions violate WAC 222-22-080(3)(b) because they will not adequately protect public resources. Several omissions in the soil erosion prescriptions led the DNR to issue a threshold determination of nonsignficance, unwittingly based on incorrect information.
Contrary to the Board’s finding, the record contains substantial evidence that inadequate soil erosion prescriptions will probably lead to additional damage to the very natural resources that the prescriptions are intended to protect, namely, the streams in the LeClerc watershed. For example, the record shows omissions of roads
The prescriptions were drafted to ameliorate adverse impacts from fewer roads than Stimson’s proposal contemplates. Dr. Abbe testified that the omission of roads from the calculations will have “significant” impact on sediment production. Consequently, the prescriptions do not address the presumptive increase in sedimentation from the omitted roads, which sedimentation will potentially reach watershed waterways and adversely affect water quality and fish habitat.
On the record before us, we cannot determine whether these omissions are so significant as to render inadequate the prescriptions, which are based on defective data.
1. Roads omitted from soil prescriptions
It is uncontroverted that segments of road likely to produce and to deliver sediment into the streams and rivers in the watershed were omitted from the road inventory. The record shows that introduction of this unaccounted-for
When Kettle Range questioned Stimson’s expert about these overlooked road segments, McGreer admitted that in making the watershed and sediment assessment, he and his team had not walked the LeClerc Creek area roads. As a result, the assessment team developed the soil prescriptions based on McGreer’s incorrect road-number calculation, as well as inaccurate, or at least incomplete, data about road location in relation to streams. Clearly, the prescriptions did not take into account these omitted roads.
2. Erroneous sediment-delivery-level calculations
There were also errors in the sediment calculations discussed in prescription five. Using the same data Stimson had provided to the DNR, Kettle Range’s calculations varied greatly from Stimson’s. When Stimson recalculated the sediment-delivery rate during trial, it produced a result different from the one it had provided to the prescriptions team. Thus, the sediment reduction for the Middle Branch calculated in the prescriptions is overly optimistic and likely will not meet the stated goal of less than 50 percent over background. Similarly, Stimson’s inability to reproduce the rate-of-sedimentation calculation that it previously provided to the DNR calls into question whether Stimson correctly formulated the sediment calculations on which the sedimentation prescriptions were based.
Based on inaccurate sedimentation calculations, the prescriptions are potentially inadequate to prevent or to control the resultant negative effects on public resources. In other words, the prescriptions could allow more sediment to reach watershed waterways than the amount allowable under the Forest Practices Act.
Public review of the prescriptions revealed that McGreer had failed to remove the coarse sediment fraction in calculating the sedimentation background.
In sum, there is sufficient evidence in the record to call into question whether the soil prescriptions will protect public resources as contemplated by the DNR and required by law. Thus, absent information to the contrary, these prescriptions violate WAC 222-22-080(3)(b).
B. Road Maintenance and Sediment Reduction Plan
As the WSA required, Stimson prepared the Road Plan to detail its strategy for sediment reduction. The WSA required that the Road Plan “identiffy] . . . specific road segments owned or controlled by the landowner and amount of sediment produced by each.” AR at 3917. The Road Plan specified the amount of reduction required based on the road segments Stimson owns. The Road Plan identifies Stimson roads by exhibit number — the same exhibits that Kettle Range’s expert identified as containing roads not accounted for in the WSA.
The Road Plan quantifies sedimentation tonnage based on calculations from existing roads’ sediment delivery.
On remand, Stimson must accurately identify all existing roads, calculate existing sediment delivery levels based on this corrected road inventory, and then recalculate the necessary level of sediment reduction in tonnage.
C. Impacts on Bull Trout
Kettle Range challenges the DNR’s issuance of the Addendum to the MDNS, arguing that the Addendum inadequately addressed the impacts of Stimson’s proposed activities on the threatened bull trout. But as all of the testifying experts generally agreed, it is difficult to detect a change in sediment delivery below the 50 percent threshold. Thus, on remand, Stimson must revise its prescriptions and Road Plan to ensure that sediment-delivery levels remain within 150 percent of background, the level at which there should be no detectable adverse effect of sedimentation on bull trout.
VI. Attorney Fees
Kettle Range requested attorney fees below.
First, we must decide whether Kettle Range is the prevailing party. We have affirmed the Board’s conclusion that no EIS is necessary. Thus, this case differs from ALPS II, where the court reversed and remanded for preparation of an EIS after determining that the DNR had not considered future forest practices at all. ALPS II, 102 Wn. App. at 19. Kettle Range does not prevail on this issue.
Second, we hold that the DNR sufficiently considered the impacts of future forest practices. Thus, Stimson and the DNR are the prevailing parties on this issue, not Kettle Range.
But we reverse the Board’s approval of the WSA and the MDNS, and we remand for corrections. This remand resolves a significant issue
We hold that the DNR was substantially justified in approving the WSA. There is no evidence that the DNR was aware of the omitted roads or the sediment-calculation flaws when it approved the WSA. Instead, the DNR based its approval on the thorough and detailed WSA that was the result of concerted efforts by the Resource Assessment Team and the Prescriptions Team, comprising at least 12 specialists from the DNR, the Kalispel Tribe, and industry. And although the WSA noted that 10 percent of the roads had not been evaluated in the field, it also noted that any errors in the modeling of these remaining roads would likely be on the conservative side.
A reasonable person would believe that the road inventory and calculations were correct as did the DNR. ALPS II,
CONCLUSION
We hold that there was sufficient evidence in the record to support the Board’s finding that the WSA sufficiently considered future forest practices and their impact on wildlife, especially the grizzly bear. Thus, we affirm in part.
But we also hold that the Board clearly erred in affirming the DNR’s issuance of the MDNS and its approval of the LeClerc Creek watershed analysis and prescriptions, which were based on acknowledged factual errors and miscalculations. Therefore, we reverse the Board’s decision and remand to the DNR (1) to correct the sedimentation calculations, prescriptions, and Road Plan and (2) then to determine if, as revised, the WSA and Road Plan comply with the Forest Practices Rules and the rules for WSA approval.
Seinfeld and Houghton, JJ., concur.
Motion for reconsideration of respondent Department of Natural Resources granted, opinion modified, and motion for reconsideration of respondent Stimson Lumber Company denied March 16, 2004.
Review denied at 152 Wn.2d 1026 (2004).
Chapter 43.21C RCW.
Chapter 76.09 RCW.
Selkirk Conservation Alliance v. Forsgren, 336 F.3d 944 (9th Cir. 2003).
The DNR sets minimum qualifications for analysts participating in watershed resource assessment. WAC 222-22-030(1). Each resource assessment team should include analysts qualified in forestry; forest hydrology; forest soil science or geology; fisheries science; and geomorphology. WAC 222-22-050(1).
The primary objectives of the “mass wasting” module were to identify the geomorphic circumstances where landslides are most likely to occur, to identify and to map their locations, to identify any management practices contributing to landslides within the watershed analysis unit, and to help managers develop management prescriptions to minimize future landslide occurrences.
“Prescriptions” are additional restrictions that exceed and supplement standard Forest Practices Rules on harvesting, road building, or other forest activities
The four prescriptions are numbers 5, 6, 11, and 12. Administrative Record (AR) at 33.
To ensure that WSAs comply with SEPA, WAC 222-22-080(5) requires that “[a]ll watershed analyses must be reviewed under SEPA on a nonproject basis.”
This designated SEPA oificial represents the lead agency, here, the DNR, and is responsible for ensuring adequate environmental analysis and compliance with SEPA procedural requirements. SEPA Handbook, ch.2, § 2.4, available at http:// www.ecy.wa.gov/programs/sea/sepa/handbk/hbch02.html#TheLeadAgency (last visited Nov. 26, 2003).
The distribution list included the Pend Oreille County Planning Director, the Washington State Department of Ecology, the Washington State Department of
Comments in response to the 1997 DNS related to the riparian function module and its prescriptions. The United States Fish and Wildlife Service sent comments in 1998 concerning the water temperature in areas containing bull trout. Kettle Range’s comments focused on future forest practices and their potential effects on listed species, including grizzly bear, to which DNR responded with a finding that the prescriptions would mitigate any probable significant adverse impacts (generally, with no specific mention of grizzlies), and that Stimson’s forest practices proposal would not have a probable significant adverse impact on the environment. Kettle Range’s letter to the DNR did not challenge the road inventory or prescription calculations.
Congress enacted the Endangered Species Act in 1973 to address the impact of economic growth and development on fish, wildlife, and plants. 16 U.S.C. §§ 1531-1544 (2000 & Supp. 2003). Under 16 U.S.C. § 1532(20), “[t]he term ‘threatened species’ means any species which is likely to become an endangered species within the foreseeable future throughout all or a significant portion of its range.” “ ‘[E]ndangered species’ means any species which is in danger of extinction throughout all or a significant portion of its range.” 16 U.S.C. § 1532(6) (2000).
Kettle Range also appealed Stimson’s approved forest practice permits Nos. 3004448 and 3004464 for the LeClerc Creek Watershed, moved for an emergency stay, and then moved for a preliminary stay. The Board denied both motions.
The Board consolidated the appeals of these two permits with the prior appeal
Originally there were four issues before the Board. Issues 1 and 2 were: (1) whether the WSA will have a probable significant, adverse effect on the environment, requiring an EIS; and (2) whether the DNR’s threshold SEPA determination is clearly erroneous because it failed to consider specifics about the timing, scope, context, or intensity of future forest practices. The Board directed Kettle Range to clarify issues 3 and 4, which Kettle Range distilled into the following: (1) whether the WSA fails to comply with WAC 222-22-050(2) because it violates the Clean Water Act, 33 U.S.C. §§ 1251-1287, and causes degradation of water quality and fish and wildlife habitat; (2) whether the watershed analysis rules require consideration of environmental, aesthetic, recreational, or wildlife concerns; (3) whether the WSA rules permit alternatives to the prescriptions; (4) whether the WSA’s failure to require monitoring of the implementation of the prescriptions violates WAC 222-22-010 and RCW 76.09.010; (5) whether prescription 10 is inadequate for failing to prescribe cattle grazing activity; and (6) whether prescription 11 is inadequate because it fails to prescribe use or replacement of a county road. AR at 1927-28.ff
The Board’s regulations allow motions for summary judgment in accordance with CR 56. WAC 223-08-148(1). We discuss summary judgment procedure as it relates to Board decisions in further detail in Analysis section II. B. infra.
Citing this ruling, the Board precluded Kettle Range from eliciting testimony or offering evidence in support of this claim at the subsequent hearing. See Analysis infra section III.
Neither the ROW nor the WAC defines the term “rock” or “rocking.” It appears, however, that “rocking” is a method of surfacing or resurfacing a road in order to reduce sedimentation. The surfacing rock, of various sizes and coarseness, is spread over the road, crushed, and compacted.
“Armoring” is another term that neither the RCW nor the WAC defines. Dwight Opp, Stimson’s fee land manager, testified that rocks of varying sizes were placed along the stream banks to protect the surfacing rock placed on top of the road. As the term implies, “armoring” creates a shield and “minimizefs] any further entry of sediment into the creek.”
“Background” refers to the level of sediment that would naturally occur absent any forest practices. Br. of Stimson at 37.
In contrast, “heavy” use, as defined in the Manual, describes a mainline logging road, where logs are hauled every few minutes for a sustained period.
The boulders varied in size from that of a loaf of bread to the size of a small desk.
WAC 222-22-080(3)(b) requires that the DNR reject any prescriptions that do not accomplish the purposes and practices of chapter 222-22 WAC and chapter 76.09 RCW, the Forest Practices Act, to protect the environment while still encouraging viable forest practices.
“Delivery level” reflects the amount of sediment that reaches waterways. For example, the higher the percentage, the more sediment Middle Branch Road will contribute to waterways in the LeClerc Creek watershed.
Chapter 34.05 RCW. Kettle Range sought judicial review under RCW 76.09.230(5) and RCW 34.05.510-.598.
Legislative finding and declaration found in RCW 76.09.010:
(1) The legislature hereby finds and declares that the forest land resources are among the most valuable of all resources in the state; that a viable forest products industry is of prime importance to the state’s economy; that it is in the public interest for public and private commercial forest lands to be managed consistent with sound policies of natural resource protection; that coincident with maintenance of a viable forest products industry, it is important to afford protection to forest soils, fisheries, wildlife, water quantity and quality, air quality, recreation, and scenic beauty.
*450 (2) The legislature further finds and declares it to be in the public interest of this state to create and maintain through the adoption of this chapter a comprehensive statewide system of laws and forest practices rules which will achieve the following purposes and policies:
(a) Afford protection to, promote, foster and encourage timber growth, and require such minimum reforestation of commercial tree species on forest lands as will reasonably utilize the timber growing capacity of the soil following current timber harvest;
(b) Afford protection to forest soils and public resources by utilizing all reasonable methods of technology in conducting forest practices;
(c) Recognize both the public and private interest in the profitable growing and harvesting of timber;
(d) Promote efficiency by permitting maximum operating freedom consistent with the other purposes and policies stated herein;
(e) Provide for regulation of forest practices so as to avoid unnecessary duplication in such rules;
(f) Provide for interagency input and intergovernmental and tribal coordination and cooperation;
(g) Achieve compliance with all applicable requirements of federal and state law with respect to nonpoint sources of water pollution from forest practices;
(h) To consider reasonable land use planning goals and concepts contained in local comprehensive plans and zoning regulations;
(i) Foster cooperation among managers of public resources, forest landowners, Indian tribes and the citizens of the state; and
(j) Develop a watershed analysis system that addresses the cumulative effect of forest practices on, at a minimum, the public resources of fish, water, and public capital improvements of the state and its political subdivisions.
(3) The legislature further finds and declares that it is also in the public interest of the state to encourage forest landowners to undertake corrective and remedial action to reduce the impact of mass earth movements and fluvial processes.
(4) The legislature further finds and declares that it is in the public interest that the applicants for state forest practices permits should assist in paying for the cost of review and permitting necessary for the environmental protection of these resources.
As the legislature directed, the Department of Ecology adopted the SEPA rules, chapter 197-11 WAC, which the Forest Practices Board, in turn, adopted by reference, except for “those rules that may not be applicable.” WAC 222-10-050. See also ALPS III, 99 Wn. App. at 583-84.
See also RCW 76.09.040(l)(e) and water quality rules discussion in Analysis section I. C. infra.
“The [Forest Practices Board] determines, by rule, which forest practices are Class IV and therefore subject to SEPA.” ALPS III, 99 Wn. App. at 583.
Congress enacted the Federal Water Pollution Control Act Amendments in 1972. After amendments in 1977, the law became commonly known as the Clean Water Act. The Act established the basic structure for regulating discharges of pollutants into the waters of the United States. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Clean Water Act, at http://www.epa.gov/r5water/cwa.htm Oast visited Nov. 26, 2003). It is located in Title 33 of the United States Code.
The State’s clean water act is codified at chapter 90.48 RCW and is titled the water pollution control act. The act provides:
It is declared to be the public policy of the state of Washington to maintain the highest possible standards to insure the purity of all waters of the state consistent with public health and public enjoyment thereof, the propagation and protection of wild life, birds, game, fish and other aquatic life, and the industrial development of the state, and to that end require the use of all known available and reasonable methods by industries and others to prevent and control the pollution of the waters of the state of Washington.
RCW 90.48.010.
We reject Kettle Range’s argument that RCW 90.48.420 is ambiguous; thus, we do not consider the statute’s legislative history.
Most of the LeClerc Creek watershed lies within the Selkirk Mountain Grizzly Bear Recovery Area, as designated by the Interagency Grizzly Bear Committee. Each grizzly bear recovery area is divided into several grizzly bear management units, which are used for habitat evaluation and population monitoring. The LeClerc watershed includes a large portion of the LeClerc BMU, and maps of the watershed show the location of grizzly bear habitat in or near the area Stimson proposes to log.
See Selkirk, 336 F.3d at 949, for a thorough and detailed analysis of the Conservation Agreement requirements.
On appeal, the various groups challenging the project cited 17 proposed projects that had not been considered in the EIS. Selkirk, 336 F.3d at 961.
In support of this assumption, Dwight Opp testified that the intent behind completion of the WSA was to log all of Stimson’s land.
The DNR would not need to prepare a separate EIS in any event. When “an adequate detailed statement has been previously prepared pursuant to [NEPA]... said prepared statement may be utilized in lieu of a separately prepared statement under RCW 43.21C.030(2)(e).” RCW 43.21C.150.
Kettle Range argued on summary judgment that the Conservation Agreement and EIS are inadequate to address the issues on all of Stimson’s land because they were limited to land in the LeClerc BMU, which is only a portion of Stimson land. But the EIS did consider the proposed 15 miles of new roads, reconstruction of old roads, and the 1,577 acres of timber harvest. Thus, the EIS seems to have considered the most contentious activities in the watershed, whether they lie inside or outside of the BMU.
“Spring range” refers to the areas of spring bear habitat identified in Attachment C to the Conservation Agreement. Spring use areas “are the most critical and limiting habitats for grizzly bear survival.” Bear roam the spring range in the post-denning spring period, a critical time of year for bear. See also Selkirk, 336 F.3d at 952.
In 1994, the Interagency Grizzly Bear Committee produced a report that included recommendations for standardizing how to classify roads in grizzly recovery habitat (i.e., open, restricted, or reclaimed/obliterated). “Reclaimed” or “obliterated” roads are those that are not safely drivable or roads that are brushed in. “Restricted” roads have been physically blocked with a gate or other device but are otherwise driveable. Most roads are physically closed throughout the LeClerc BMU in order to meet the seclusion standard.
Each BMU requires at least 70 square miles of “seclusion habitat” to be maintained at all times. “Seclusion habitat” is defined as areas lying beyond a one-quarter-mile “zone of influence” around open roads, high-use trails, and campgrounds. Within the zone of influence, bear are most prone to being disturbed and displaced from suitable habitat by encounters with vehicle traffic or people on foot.
In Selkirk, the agencies agreed that the most critical time of the year for the bear is April 1 to June 15, which is the post-denning period.
This road omission is critical to the sedimentation calculations in the prescriptions and Road Plan because roads are a major producer of sedimentation in the waterways on Stimson land.
The parties do not explain why removal of the coarse sediment fraction is necessary for calculating background. Presumably, by leaving the coarse sediment levels in, the overall background level will increase, allowing a greater allowable sediment delivery under the 150 percent scheme.
It does not include a blanket requirement that all roads, whether specified or not, comply with the 150 percent sedimentation standard.
The superior court’s order simply affirmed the Board’s order and did not address the attorney fees issue. Br. of DNR, Ex. H.
See also Moen v. Spokane City Police Dep’t, 110 Wn. App. 714, 721, 42 P.3d 456 (2002); Hunter v. Univ. of Wash., 101 Wn. App. 283, 294, 2 P.3d 1022 (2000), review denied, 142 Wn.2d 1021 (2001).
Cf. Citizens for Fair Share v. Dep’t of Corr., 117 Wn. App. 411, 436, 72 P.3d 206 (2003) (denying attorney fees when citizen’s group prevailed only on one “relatively minor” issue).