Before the Court is [47] plaintiffs' motion for reconsideration of [45] the Court's March 29, 2018 order transferring this case to the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Georgia pursuant to
BACKGROUND
This litigation concerns a March 2017 update to the plan followed by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (the "Corps") for managing five dams in the Apalachicola-Chattahoochee-Flint River Basin (the "ACF River Basin"), a region that spans much of Georgia and parts of eastern Alabama and the Florida panhandle. See Pls.' Compl. [ECF No. 1] ¶¶ 23, 72, 75. Shortly after the update took effect, the State of Alabama filed a lawsuit challenging the Corps's decision to reallocate water from Lake Lanier, a reservoir in northern Georgia, to accommodate the needs of nearby metropolitan Atlanta. See Alabama,
The State of Georgia and a group of Georgia water supply providers intervened as defendants in both actions and moved to transfer the cases to the Northern District of Georgia, where Lake Lanier is located. See Alabama,
DISCUSSION
In this circuit, it is settled that the "physical transfer of the original papers in a case to a permissible transferee forum deprives the transferor circuit of jurisdiction to review the transfer." Starnes v. McGuire,
As an initial matter, the Court notes that the D.C. Circuit's decision in Starnes dealt specifically with the transfer of prisoner suits brought against federal officials located in Washington, D.C. See
Indeed, the only case cited by plaintiffs in which a court in this district expressly relied on Starnes's 20-day rule was a suit brought by a pretrial detainee in Oklahoma against federal officials in D.C. See Nichols v. U.S. Bureau of Prisons,
Moreover, even if Starnes's 20-day rule were applicable here, the D.C. Circuit has expressly rejected the notion that a violation of that rule is itself grounds for post-transfer review. See In re Briscoe,
*130This is particularly so here, where the informal return of the case "would needlessly delay [an] already protracted proceeding." In re Briscoe,
Plaintiffs urge the Court to disregard this D.C. Circuit precedent in light of the Supreme Court's recent decision in Hamer v. Neighborhood Housing Services of Chicago, --- U.S. ----,
The Court agrees that plaintiffs did not inappropriately "wait" to prepare and file their reconsideration motion-which, after all, spans seventeen pages and raises numerous grounds for reconsideration. Pls.' Reply at 6. But plaintiffs did assume that transfer would be delayed for fourteen days, see
Notes
See, e.g., Dec. 1, 2014 Min. Entry, Defs. of Wildlife v. Jewel,
As already noted, plaintiffs' chief ground for seeking reconsideration is that the Court purportedly paid insufficient attention to aspects of this case that distinguish it from the Alabama case. See Pls.' Recons. Mot. at 5-8. For example, plaintiffs assert that unlike in Alabama, where the specific issue was the Corps's decision to reallocate water from Lake Lanier, plaintiffs here are concerned about the impact that the entire updated water management plan-which plaintiffs allege was created in violation of various environmental statutes-will have on ecosystems in Florida. See id. at 6 ("An entire economy, culture and way of life is at stake for Floridians in the Apalachicola ecosystem."); see also Pls.' Compl. at 55 (seeking, among other things, an "injunction against implementation of the updated [plan] until the Corps properly evaluates the impact[ ] of its actions on the Apalachicola ecosystem"). But the fact remains that both lawsuits challenge the same action by the same agency: the Corps's March 2017 update to its water management plan for the ACF River Basin. As a result, the bulk of the factors that supported the Court's decision in Alabama also apply here. See, e.g., Alabama,
