memorandum: & order
Bеfore the court are three suits, consolidated for pre-trial purposes only, between Plaintiffs New York State, Damascus Citizens for Sustainability, Inc., (“Damascus Citizens”), Delaware Riverkeeper Network, the Delaware Riverkeeper, River-keeper, Inc., the Hudson Riverkeeper, and the National Parks Conservation Association (collectively, the “DRN Plaintiffs”) against Defendants the United States Army Corps of Engineers, Christopher Larsen, in his official capacity as Army Corps of Engineers Division Engineer, North Atlantic Division, the United States Fish and Wildlife Service, the United States National Park Service, the United States Department of the Interior, the United States Environmental Protection Agency, and the heads of the preceding four agencies, in their official capacities (collectively the “Federal Defendants”) and Defendants Delaware River Basin Commission (the “DRBC”) and its Executive Director, Carol Collier, in her official capacity (collectively the “DRBC Defendants”).
I. BACKGROUND
A. THE DELAWARE RIVER BASIN COMMISSION
The DRBC is a creation of the Delaware River Basin Compact, an agreement among the United States, New York, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, and Delaware, and was approved by Congress in 1961. (DRBC Defs. Mem. (ll-CV-2599 Docket Entry # 76-1) at 1.) The Compact was intended to manage the water resources of the Delaware River Basin. (Id.) The DRBC has the authority to establish standards for the “operation of all projects or facilities in the Basin which affect its water resources.” (Id. at 2.) The DRBC is made up of five commissioners, one for each of the signatory states and the United States government; the governors of the four states serve as the state commissioners and the Division Engineer of the North Atlantic Division of the Army Corps of Engineers is the federal commissioner. (Id.)
The correct characterization of the DRBC as a federal agency or a federal-interstate compact agency is something about which the parties disagree. The Compact declares that the DRBC is created “as an agency and instrumentality of the governments of the respective signatory parties.” Delaware River Basin Compact § 2.1. When Congress approved the Compact, it included reservations that specified that the DRBC would be considered a federal agency as to certain provisions of federal laws but not for others, such as the Administrative Procedures Act (the “APA”). See Delawarе River Basin Compact § 15.1(i)-(m). Congress also specified that the employees of the DRBC would not be considered federal employees. Id. § 15.1(n). Congress then specified that the Compact would not “be deemed to enlarge the authority of any Federal agency other than the commission.” Id. § 15.1(o).
The DRBC is responsible for creating and updating a “comprehensive plan for immediate and long range development and uses of the water resources of the Basin to which federal, state, and local agencies and private parties are bound.” (DRBC Defs. Mem. at 2-3.) If the federal member of the DRBC — that is, the Division Engineer of the North Atlantic Division of the Army Corps of Engineers— “concurs” in the comprehensive plan or in amendments or revisions to it, “the exercise of any powers conferred by law on any officer, agency or instrumentality of the United States with regard to water and related land resources in the Delaware River Basin shall not substantially conflict with any such portion of such comprehensive plan.” Id. § 15.1(s). Of most immediate relevance to the issues that sparked this litigation, “[n]o project having a substantial effect on the water resources of the basin shall [ ] be undertaken by any person, corporation or governmental authority unless it shall have been first submitted to and approved by the commission.” Delaware River Basin Compact § 3.8. The DRBC determines whether to approve a project by evaluating whether the “project would [ ] substantially impair or conflict with the comprehensive plan.” Id. The DRBC is also given the authority to make regulations as necessary to enforce and effectuate the Compact, including regulatory authority to control or abate water pollution in the Basin. (DRBC Defs. Mem. at 4.)
NEPA has “twin aims”: it imposes on federal agencies “the obligation to consider every significant aspect of the environmental impact of a proposed action,” and it “ensures that the agency will inform the public that it has indeed considered environmental concerns in its decision-making process.” Baltimore Gas & Elec. Co. v. Natural Resources Defense Council, Inc.,
(i) the environmental impact of the proposed action, (ii) any adverse environmental effects which cannot be avoided should the proposal be implemented, (iii) alternatives to the proposed action, (iv) the relationship between short-term uses of man’s environment and the maintenance and enhancement of long-term productivity, and (v) any irreversible and irretrievable commitments of resources which would be involved in the proposed action should it be implemented.
42 U.S.C. § 4332(c).
NEPA is implemented through regulations promulgated by thе Council on Environmental Quality (the “CEQ”). These regulations call for an agency to “commence preparation of an environmental impact statement as close as possible to the time the agency is developing or is presented with a proposal.” 40 C.F.R. § 1502.5. Further, “[f|or informal rulemaking the draft environmental impact statement shall normally accompany the proposed rule.” Id. § 1502.5(d). However, the CEQ makes clear that “judicial review of agency compliance with these regulations [should] not occur before an agency has filed the final environmental impact statement, or has made a final finding of no significant impact [ ], or takes action that will result in irreparable injury.” Id. § 1500.3.
After NEPA was enacted in 1970, the DRBC promulgated regulations implementing it as to its own operations. (NGO Pis. Mem. (ll-CV-2599 Docket Entry # 79-1) at 4-5.) The CEQ’s guidelines on preparing EISs published in the 1970s included the DRBC as a federal agency. (Id. at 5.) The DRBC performed NEPA analyses during that decade. (Id.) In 1980, however, the DRBC suspended its NEPA-implementing regulations due to lack of financial resources and indicatеd it would rely on an agency of the federal government to serve as “lead agency” and perform EISs for DRBC projects. (Id.) In 1997, the DRBC repealed its NEPA regulations. (Id.)
C. NATURAL GAS DEVELOPMENT
Part of the Delaware River Basin is above the Marcellus Shale geological formation, which contains natural gas. (Silver Decl. (ll-CV-2599 Docket Entry # 77-5) ¶ 7.) Extraction of such gas would require horizontal drilling and the use of hydraulic fracturing (“hydrofracking”), a “technique that liberates the natural gas by pumping millions of gallons water, sand, and chemicals [] under high pressure deep underground.” (Id.) Any hydrofracking that were to occur within the Delaware River Basin could affect the Basin’s water resources in at least three ways: an extraction operation would require large amounts of fresh water from
On December 8, 2010, the DRBC voted (with New York’s commissioner opposed) to release draft regulations for public comment. (NGO Pis. Mem. at 7-8.) In April of 2011, the New York Attorney General submitted comments to the DRBC requesting it perform a NEPA analysis along with its draft regulations, and wrote to the Division Engineer of the Army Corps of Engineers, with copies to the other Federal Defendants, arguing that one of the Federal Defendants should create an EIS. (NYS Mem. (ll-CV-2599 Docket Entry # 77-1) at 7.) The Division Engineer responded with a letter denying any obligation to perform a NEPA analysis as part of the DRBC’s regulatory drafting. (Id.) In November of 2011, the DRBC released revised draft regulations. (NGO Pis. Mem. at 8.) That same month, two of the DRBC commissioners indicated that they would likely vote against the adoption of the regulations. (Id.) The DRBC cancelled its meeting scheduled for consideration of the regulations and there has been no change in the status of the draft regulations since then. (Id.) The moratorium on natural gas development in the Delaware River Basin remains in place.
Concerns about the potential effects of natural gas development in the Basin have been expressed in several ways. The United States Fish and Wildlife Service and the National Park Service have noted that development in the Basin could have individual and cumulative effects on the resources those services manage, which include migratory birds that pass through the region and the national park properties that are part of the Upper Delаware River Basins. (Silver Decl. ¶ 9.c.) Defendant Environmental Protection Agency is conducting a study of the risks hydrofracking may pose to drinking water supplies. (Id. ¶ 9.d.) The New York Department of Environmental Conservation has recommended that natural gas development be banned in the New York City Watershed, which includes part of the Delaware River Basin, to preserve the watershed’s supply of clean, unfiltered water. (Id. ¶ 9.f.) The Council of the City of Philadelphia has expressed concerns about the risks hydrofracking in the Basin poses to its drinking water supply, which comes from the Delaware and its tributaries. (Philadelphia City Council Mem. (ll-CV-2599 Docket Entry # 83) at 5-7.)
Plaintiffs provide descriptions of the hydrofracking process itself. Hydrofracking uses both water and chemical additives; many of these additives are compounds
Plaintiffs offer examples of when hydrofracking by-products have contaminated surface waters in Pennsylvania, where hydrofracking is permitted outside the Delaware River Basin. For example, eleven public water suppliers that drew their water from a certain river were affected when wastewater treatment plants along that river were unable to sufficiently treat drilling well wastewater and released that water into the river. (Id. ¶ 23.) Three spills at one well adversely affected the drinking water of the homes of nineteen families. (Id. ¶ 26.) Another well failed and contaminated a creek, forcing the evacuation of seven families. (Id. ¶ 25.) Another well produced polluted water that flowed across the border into a state park in New York, leading to violations of state water quality standards. (Id. ¶ 24.)
D. PROCEDURAL HISTORY
Plaintiff New York State filed suit against the Federal Defendants on May 31, 2011. (NYS Compl. (ll-CV-2599 Docket Entry # 1).) On August 4, 2011, the DRN Plaintiffs brought suit against the DRBC, its federal representative, and the Army Corps of Engineers. (DRN Pis. Compl. (ll-CV-3780 Docket Entry # 1).) On August 10, 2011, Damascus Citizens for Sustainability, Inc., brought suit against the DRBC and the Federal Defendants. (Damascus Citizens Compl. (ll-CV-3857 Docket Entry # 1).) The latter two cases were reassigned to the undersigned from District Judge Dora L. Irizarry. (Aug. 5, 2011 Reassignment Order; Aug. 11, 2011 Reassignment Order.) All three cases were consolidated for pre-trial purposes. (Aug. 10, 2011 Minute Entry.) The Oil and Gas Industry filed a motion to intervene as a Defendant in the three cases shortly thereafter. (Mot. to Intervene (ll-CV-2599 Docket Entry # 13).) New York later filed an Amended Complaint that added claims against the DRBC. (NYS Am. Compl. (ll-CV-2599 Docket Entry # 51).)
The Defendants have moved to dismiss the three Complaints under both Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(1), arguing Plaintiffs lack standing, present unripe claims, and that the Federal Defendants have not waived their sovereign immunity, and Rule 12(b)(6), arguing that NEPA does not apply to Federal Defendants’ actions in this context, that there is no final action as defined by the APA, that the DRBC is not a federal agency, and that NEPA cannot be enforced except through the APA; the Federal Defendants have moved in the alternative for summary judgment. (Fed. Defs. Mot (ll-CV-2599 Docket Entry #75); DRBC Defs. Mot. (ll-CV-2599 Docket Entry # 76).) New York State has filed an opposition and a cross-motion for summary judgment on liability, and the two sets of NGO Plaintiffs have filed a single opposition and cross-motion. (NYS Mem.; NGO Pis. Mem.)
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
“A case is properly dismissed for lack of subject matter jurisdiction under Rule 12(b)(1) when the district court lacks the statutory or constitutional power to adjudicate it.” Makarova v. United States,
A district court must resolve challenges to the Article III standing of a party and other Article Ill-based challenges to its jurisdiction before it may rule on the merits of a case. Alliance for Envtl. Renewal, Inc.,
A court must accept as true all material factual allegations in a complaint when evaluating whether the complaint has properly invoked federal subject matter jurisdiction. Shipping Fin. Servs. Corp. v. Drakos,
Because consolidation of cases under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 42(a) is a “procedural device,” “[i]t does not change the rights of the parties in the separate suits” and a court must consider “the jurisdictional basis of each complaint.” Cole v. Schenley Indus., Inc.,
III. DISCUSSION
A. SOVEREIGN IMMUNITY
The court considers Defendants’ 12(b)(1) arguments in the order presented by the Federal Defendants. The first argument is that thе Federal Defendants are protected from suit by sovereign immunity and so they must be dismissed from these suits. (Fed. Defs. Mem. (ll-CV-2599 Docket Entry # 75-1) at 5.) “It is axiomatic that the United States may not be sued without its consent and that the existence of consent.is a prerequisite for jurisdiction.” United States v. Mitchell,
The second sentence of 5 U.S.C. § 702 states that “an action in a court of the United States seeking relief other than money damages and stating a claim that an agency or an officer or employee thereof acted or failed to act in an official capacity or under color of legal authority shall be not be dismissed nor relief therein be denied on the ground that it is against the United States.” The Second Circuit has characterized this language as “waiv[ing] the federal government’s sovereign immunity in actions [for non-monetary relief against an agency or officer thereof] brought under the general federal question jurisdictional statute.” Sharkey v. Quarantillo,
The court agrees with the Trudeau court. The waiver embraces equitable actions against agencies of the United States generally; any failure on the part of Plaintiffs to allege a final action as that term is used in the APA is properly an argument that Plaintiffs have failed to state a claim, not that the Federal Defendants are immune from suit.
B. STANDING
The Defendants challenge Plaintiffs’ Article III standing to bring suit. The test for constitutional standing requires a plaintiff to show that there is: 1) an injury-in-fact, that is, an actual or imminent, and conсrete and particularized, invasion of some legally protect interest of the plaintiffs; 2) a fairly traceable causal connection between the actions of the defendant and the injury-in-fact; and 3) a likelihood that a favorable decision will redress plaintiffs complained-of injury. See Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife,
The court considers the interests New York offers first. New York, like other states, may bring suit to protect interests of at least three different categories: sovereign, quasi-sovereign, and proprietary. Alfred L. Snapp & Son, Inc. v. Puerto Rico ex rel. Barez,
New York is not asserting any interest involved in protecting the New York City Watershed or in preventing drilling in New York State. The parties agree that, regardless of what the DRBC does, New York State retains the authority to regulate natural gas development within its own borders, including the New York City Watershed. (NYS Mem. at 16; Fed Defs. Mem. at 17-8.) Therefore the court cannot consider those interests in evaluating whether New York has standing.
One set of interests that New York does assert relate to maintaining the status quo in the Upper Delaware River, a portion of the Delaware River that forms the boundary between part of Pennsylvania and New York. (Rudge Decl. (Docket Entry #78) ¶ 5.) The Upper Delaware is home to various mussel species, some of which are endangered; various fish species; and Bald Eagle populations. (Id. ¶¶ 8-14.) New York claims ownership of the shellfish, fish, birds, and other animals that live wild on New York’s land and in its waters. (Id. ¶ 15.) New York also owns land, facilities, and the rights to conservation easements along the Upper Delaware, that it makes available to New York residents and others interested in recreational opportunities such as camping, hiking and bird watching. (Id. ¶¶ 16-19.) These property rights give New York concrete proprietary interests that relate to the health of the Upper Delaware.
New York’s other asserted interest is tied to preventing increases in ozone (03) concentrations over New York’s populations. Ozone is a molecule that can form from atmospheric reactions of nitrogen oxides (NOx) and volatile organic compounds (VOCs). (Chinkin Decl. (Docket Entry # 77-7) ¶ 14.) These compounds are produced during natural gas development. (Id. ¶¶ 27-33.) Molecules in the atmosphere, such as ozone, may form over one location and move into the airspace above another location. (Id. ¶ 18.) Ozone can cause respiratory health problems. (Schwartz Decl. (Docket Entry # 77-9) ¶¶ 9-12.) Chief among those problems are asthma attacks. (Id. ¶¶ 17-19.) Ozone may also be linked to higher mortality rates. (Id. ¶¶ 24-28.) Asthma attacks, such as those associated with higher atmospheric concentrations of ozone, are sometimes treated through hospital and emergency room admissions. (Id. ¶ 19.) Asthma attacks and hospital visits are higher in the population of people enrolled in Medicaid than in the general population. (Id. ¶ 22.) Because Medicaid is in part state-financed, New York pays part
The court next turns to analyzing the claims of the NGO Plaintiffs to determine whether they have identified concrete interests. “An association has standing to bring suit on behalf of its members when its members would otherwise have standing to sue on their own right, the interests at stake are germanе to the organization’s purpose, and ... the claim asserted [does not] require[ ] the participation of individual members in the lawsuit.” Friends of the Earth, Inc.,
Plaintiff Damascus Citizens for Sustainability, Inc., puts forward declarations of three of its members in support of its standing. All three own properties close to the Delaware River. (Westfall Deck (NGO Pis. 56.1 Statement Ex. N (Docket Entry # 79-3)) ¶ 1; Arrindell Deck (NGO Pis. 56.1 Statement Ex. 0) ¶ 1; Levine Deck (NGO Pis. 56.1 Statement Ex. P) ¶ 1.) One declarant avers to fishing, swimming, and boating in the River and using water from a well on his property for drinking and crop irrigation. (Westfall Deck ¶¶ 2-3.) A second declarant avers to swimming and boating and using water from a well located on her property for drinking and irrigation of a garden that supplies a large portion of hеr sustenance. (Arrindell Deck ¶¶ 1-2.) A third declarant avers to hiking, cross-country skiing, and snow-shoeing in the River Basin and canoeing, kayaking, fishing, and swimming in the River. (Levine Deck ¶ 2.) These property rights and recreational and sustenance-related activities provide these declarants concrete interests in the health of the Upper Delaware River and its Basin, and preserving the integrity of water wells in the Basin. Through them, Damascus Citizens for Sustainability, Inc., has concrete interests as well.
The Delaware Riverkeeper Network puts forward declarations from several members who live in the Upper Delaware River Basin. One declarant avers she uses private well water for business and drinking purposes and uses the River recreationally. (Weiner Deck (NGO Pis. 56.1 Statement Ex. B) ¶¶ 11, 14.) Two members aver they operate an organic farm on land close to and adjacent to the River, using water from private wells, and use the River for swimming, canoeing, fishing, and bird watching. (Swartz Deck (NGO Pis. 56.1 Statement Ex. C) ¶¶ 4, 24; Kowalchuk Deck (NGO Pis. 56.1 Statement Ex. D) ¶¶ 4, 21.) A fourth declarant owns land on the Delaware River and uses the River for swimming, canoeing, and bird watching and obtains drinking water from a well. (Yeaman Deck (NGO Pis. 56.1 Statement Ex. E) ¶¶ 4, 6,16.) As with the Damascus Citizens for Sustainability declarants, these property rights, business activities, and recreational activities provide these declarants with concrete interests in the health of the Upper Delaware River and its Basin, and preserving the integrity of wells in the Basin. Therefore,
Riverkeeper, Inc., provided declarations from three declarants who are members of that organization. One declarant owns property on a tributary of the Delaware, and fly fishes in that region’s rivers. (LaRocca Decl. (NGO Pis. 56.1 Statement Ex. F) ¶¶ 4-5, 7.) Another declarant owns land in the Basin and fly fishes the Delaware River and its tributaries. (Huhner Decl. (NGO Pis. 56.1 Statement Ex. G) ¶¶ 1, 5.) A third owns land in the Basin and uses that land for hiking, bird watching, and organic gardening. (Lipshitz Decl. (NGO Pis. 56.1 Statement Ex. H) ¶¶4-5, 7.) These property rights and recreational activities provide the declarants with concrete interests in the health of the tributaries of the Delaware and its Basin in New York, and through them, provides Riverkeeper, Inc. with interests as well.
The National Parks Conservation Association puts forward the declarations of two individual members who have used and desire to continue to use the Delaware Water Gap National Recreation Area for hiking and canoeing. (Brach Decl. (NGO Pis. 56.1 Statement Ex. L) ¶¶ 3-4; Waldbuesser Decl. (NGO Pis. 56.1 Statement Ex. M) ¶ 3.) These aesthetic and recreational activities provide the declarants with concrete interests in preserving the Delaware Water Gap National Recreation Area and, consequently, provide the National Parks Conservation Association with concrete interests.
The court turns next to consider whether Plaintiffs have alleged an injury-in-fact, i.e., an actual or threatened invasion of their interests. Because NEPA is a proeedural statute — i.e., it requires agencies to engage in certain stеps when considering an issue, but does not mandate that agencies come to any particular decision once they have gone through those steps— courts often analyze injury-in-fact in NEPA cases according to the Supreme Court’s dicta in Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife: “procedural rights are special: the person who has been accorded a procedural right to protect his concrete interests can assert that right without meeting all the normal standards for redressability and immediacy.”
Various Second Circuit opinions have recognized the idea of standing based on increased risk or possible increased risk; but in each case, the government had acted in the form of a final order, regulation, plan, denial of a request, or statute. For example, in New York Public Interest Research Group v. Whitman,
Clearly, a plaintiff can show an injury-in-fact through showing the creation of an increased risk of invasion of concrete interests; in NEPA cases, this chain of reasoning is extended to allow for an injury based on the increased risk in uninformed decision-making that will create an increased risk in the invasion of a concrete interest. However, in all but one ease cited above, the defendant government agenсy has done something that has affected legal rights or obligations of some party in a way that made an invasion of plaintiffs interests more likely, or refused to do something that allowed an already existing invasion to continue.
Nor will this court extend the concept of injury-in-fact as Plaintiffs request. First, with a mere draft, the court has no way of judging reliably how probable it is that the regulation will be enacted, and thus no way of judging whether risks that natural gas development may create are more than conjecture, as Baur v. Veneman requires. Moreover, while the Supreme Court in Lujan stated that the concept of immediacy is “relaxed” in procedural rights cases,
The NGO Plaintiffs also allege they have organizational standing separate from their associational standing on behalf of their members, in that they have been injured by difficulties in “disseminating information on the environmental impacts of gas drilling in the Basin ... and in commenting on the Draft Regulations based on a full understanding of the DRBC’s or the Corps’ evaluation of the environmental impacts thereof.” (NGO Pis. Mem. at 37.) The court disagrees with Plaintiffs that Ragin v. Harry Macklowe Real Estate Co.,
Because the court holds that there is no injury-in-fact, the court does not (indeed, could not) address whether there is a causal connection between Defendants’ actions and Plaintiffs’ injuries, nor whether a court order could redress Plaintiffs’ injury. Additionally, the court does not reach the issue of whether there is a so-called parens patriae bar that strips New York of standing to sue the Federal Defendants to assert its quasi-sovereign interests.
C. RIPENESS
Having concluded that Plaintiffs’ Complaints should be dismissed for lack of standing, the court nonetheless considers the parties’ arguments as to ripeness out of an abundance of caution and as an alternative ground for disposition. The court notes that the doctrine of ripeness has both constitutional and prudential strands. Simmonds v. INS,
Nonetheless, the court will assume arguendo that Plaintiffs have alleged constitutionally ripe claims and will consider whether Plaintiffs’ claims are prudentially ripe. In analyzing whether a claim is prudentially ripe, “we ask: (1) whether an issue is fit for judicial decision and (2) whether and to what extent the parties will endure hardship if decision is withheld.” Simmonds,
The NGO Plaintiffs argue that their claims are in the nature of mandamus — under both the mandamus statute, 28 U.S.C. § 1361, and under the APA cause of action to compel agency action unlawfully withheld, 5 U.S.C. § 706(1)— and are not subject tо a prudential ripeness inquiry. (NGO Pis. Mem. at 39^13.) Plaintiffs’ argument lacks support: the decision Plaintiffs cite in support of that argument as to the mandamus statute clearly refers to the fact that there is no sovereign immunity bar to an otherwise valid mandamus claim; it does not address whether prudential ripeness doctrine is applicable to mandamus claims. See Washington Legal Found. v. U.S. Sentencing Comm’n,
Plaintiffs also argue that prudential ripeness is not relevant to NEPA challenges because of the Supreme Court’s Ohio Forestry Association v. Sierra Club,
Turning to the application of doctrine of prudential ripeness to Plaintiffs’ claims, the court considers first the claims’ fitness for judicial review. See Simmonds, 326
The court next considers whether delay would impose any hardship on the parties. The court does not believe delay would do so: Plaintiffs challenge something that is, at present, a legal interpretation that merely affects the internal operations of Defendants. First, it does not create legal rights of obligations for either Plaintiffs or any third parties. Cf. Ohio Forestry Association,
As both the fitness for review and hardship of delay prongs of prudential ripeness suggest, Plaintiffs’ claims can and should wait until, at least, if or when the DRBC ends the moratorium currently in place.
IV. REMLAINING MOTIONS
The court notes that, should the DRBC adopt regulations that permit natural gas development within the river basin without performing an EIS, then at some point, some court would be required to address multiple difficult issuеs, including: (1) whether NEPA can be enforced through a cause of action other than the APA; (2) whether the DRBC is a federal agency; (3) and whether, even if not, the presence of a federal officer on the DRBC, and the support and assistance federal agencies
y. CONCLUSION
For the reasons discussed above, Defendants’ motion to dismiss for lack of subject matter jurisdiction is GRANTED without prejudice as to all three Complaints. The remaining pending motions are denied as moot. The Clerk of Court is directed to close these three cases.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. Although the DRN Plaintiffs and Damascus Citizens have filed separate Complaints, they have filed joint briefing regarding the dispositive motions before the court. The court refers to these two sets of Plaintiffs collectively as the "Non-Governmental Organization Plaintiffs” or the "NGO Plaintiffs.” The DRN Plaintiffs have brought suit against the Army Corps of Engineers and its Division Engineer, but not the other Federal Defendants. To the extent this distinction in Defendants is relevant to any issue the court discusses, it will note that fact.
. The court acknowledges the contribution of multiple amici curiae, including the Council of the City of New York, the Philadelphia City Council, and the Chesapeake Bay Foundation in support of Plaintiffs, and the American Petroleum Institute, Independent Petroleum Association of America, and the U.S. Oil and Gas Association (collectively, the "Oil and Gas Industry”) and the Susquehanna River Basin Commission in support of Defendants. Their viewpoints have been helpful to the
. Some exploratory wells were permitted to go forward before this policy was adopted; it is the court’s understanding that those exploratory operations hаve now been completed. See Delaware Riverkeeper Network v. Delaware River Basin Commission, No. 11-CV-423,
. Having concluded that the associations that brought the ll-CV-3780 Complaint have standing, the court declines to resolve whether the two individual Plaintiffs — the so-called "Delaware Riverkeeper” and "Hudson River-keeper” — in that action have standing. See Mass. v. EPA,
. The exception is Sierra Club v. U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, where the court found a plaintiff had standing to challenge the Army Corps of Engineers’ proposal to build a levee, even though additional approvals by other agencies were required before construction could commence.
. The court is aware that 40 C.F.R. § 1502.5 states that a draft EIS “normally” should accompany draft regulations. However, Plaintiffs provide no support for the idea that this regulation confers Article III standing on someone whose risks have not yet been increased by uninformed decision-making — that increase in risk of injury comes after the
. Although not part of the prudential ripeness analysis described in Supreme Court decisions, the court notes additionally that delay will likely further judicial efficiency. Should the DRBC adopt regulations that permit natural gas development, it is reasonable to foresee challenges beyond NEPA compliance (e.g., a challenge to substantive reasonableness of the regulations). Resolving a substantive challenge alongside the NEPA one would reduce the overall amount of judicial resources devoted to these issues.
