The National Marine Fisheries Service designs management plans to promote the sustainability of particular species of ocean fish. Plaintiff Oceana, Inc. brought suit under the Administrative Procedure Act challenging the Service's management plan for one such species: the dusky shark. But before reaching the merits of that challenge, the Court must first resolve Oceana's motion to compel the Service to complete or supplement the administrative record with four categories of documents: (1) studies and other documents cited in the final Environmental Impact Statement supporting the Service's dusky shark management plan, (2) catch-related data from fishing vessel logbooks and third-party observer reports, (3) documents withheld by the Service under the deliberative process privilege, and (4) certain other extra-record studies and data. Having considered the parties' arguments and supporting evidence, the Court will order that the record be supplemented with a subset of the materials in the first category of Oceana's request as detailed further below. The Court will deny Oceana's motion in all other respects.
I. Background
The National Marine Fisheries Service ("Service") is a federal agency within the Department of Commerce's National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration ("NOAA"). Under the Magnuson-Stevens Act, the Service is responsible for preparing management plans for all "highly migratory" fisheries under its jurisdiction in the Atlantic. See
In July 2016, the Service released a draft amendment-Amendment 5b-to its Highly Migratory Species Fishery Management Plan. A.R. 7080. Amendment 5b specifically addresses the overfishing and management of dusky sharks in the Atlantic.
After receiving the Service's answer, the Court set a summary judgment briefing schedule. Oceana then filed a motion to compel the Service to complete and supplement the administrative record. In light of Oceana's motion, the Court stayed summary judgment briefing and held a hearing on February 2, 2018. It will now grant Oceana's motion in part and deny it in part, as detailed below.
II. Legal Framework
Under the Administrative Procedure Act ("APA"), the Court is directed to "review the whole record or those parts of it cited by a party."
There are two situations in which a plaintiff may seek to add evidence or documents to the administrative record. First, a plaintiff may seek to include "extra-judicial evidence that was not initially before the agency" but that the plaintiff "believes should nonetheless be included in the administrative record." Univ. of Colo. Health at Memorial Hosp. v. Burwell,
With respect to the first situation, a party may supplement the administrative record if she can "demonstrate unusual circumstances justifying a departure from th[e] general rule" against considering extra-record evidence. City of Dania Beach v. FAA,
The appropriate standard to apply in the second situation-where a party seeks to include evidence that was allegedly before the agency but nevertheless excluded from the administrative record-has been the subject of some confusion. See Oceana, Inc. v. Pritzker,
The Court agrees with its colleagues who have not required that an "unusual circumstance" be demonstrated in such cases. After all, the administrative record properly consists of the materials before the agency and no more nor less . See Walter O. Boswell Memorial Hosp. v. Heckler,
Consequently, for a plaintiff to prevail on a motion to complete the record-that is, to add evidence that is properly part of the record but was excluded-she must only " 'put forth concrete evidence' and 'identity reasonable, non-speculative grounds for [her] belief that the documents were considered by the agency and
III. Analysis
Oceana seeks to add four categories of documents to the record: (1) studies and reports cited in the final agency Environmental Impact Statement for Amendment 5b (the "EIS"); (2) documents withheld from the record as privileged; (3) catch-related data from fishing vessel logbooks and third-party observer reports; and (4) extra-record data. The Court will grant Oceana's motion as to part of the first category of documents and deny it as to the rest.
A. Studies and reports cited in the EIS
The first set of documents that Oceana seeks to add to the record, listed in Exhibit A of its motion, consists of studies, memoranda, and assessments that the Service cited in the EIS. See Mem. Supp. Pl.'s Mot. Compel Completion & Supplementation ("Pl.'s Mot.") Ex. A. These documents received one of three treatments in the EIS: (1) some were cited in the body of the EIS for a substantive proposition; (2) some were cited in the body of the EIS but only as a source of additional information that readers might wish to consult; and (3) some were cited solely in a list of references and not in the body of the EIS. Oceana argues that because all of these studies were cited somewhere in the EIS, they were clearly before the Service at the time it made its decision and therefore belong in the administrative record. Pl.'s Mot. at 10-11. The Court agrees in part.
First , there is a subset of documents listed in Oceana's Exhibit A that were cited substantively, i.e. , to justify a factual statement or assertion made in the EIS.
The Service's arguments to the contrary are unpersuasive. It contends, mainly, that the administrative record "need not include all references cited in an administrative record document, as a citation alone does not show that the source document was 'before' the agency decisionmaker." Defs.' Opp'n at 9. True enough. As the cases that the Service cites recognize, the mere mention of a document in the agency's decision or the record does not always mean, ipso facto , that the agency considered the document. See Franks v. Salazar,
But not all citations or references to a document in an agency decision are the same. An agency's decision to rely on a document to support a factual assertion is different from its mere mention of a document's existence. The use of a document to justify an assertion or proposition indicates that the Service consulted and thought about-and therefore considered-that document directly when issuing Amendment 5b. Indeed, one of the cases that Oceana relies on explicitly distinguishes a situation where an agency merely mentions a document from one where the agency cites a document for a substantive proposition. See WildEarth Guardians,
The Service next argues that "duplicative documents and references used for background information need not be included." Defs.' Opp'n at 10. But if the Service considered such documents, then they do need to be included: the administrative record consists of all such documents and no less . The key question is whether the Service considered the duplicative documents or background references. With respect to those documents cited substantively, the Service appears clearly to have consider them and they therefore belong in the administrative record.
Second , there is a subset of documents that are cited in the body of the EIS, but solely as a source of further information for the reader rather than to justify a factual proposition.
Third , there is a subset of documents that are never cited in the body of the EIS, but are included in the list of references appended to the end of each
B. Fishery observer and logbook data and reports
Oceana next seeks to add data regarding dusky shark mortality and bycatch.
In the process of formulating Amendment 5b, the Service consulted databases that compile the data from these logbook and observer reports. Id. ¶¶ 15, 18. The Service queried the underlying databases for specific information, such as how many dusky sharks were observed caught. Id. It then aggregated this data, considered it in developing Amendment 5b, and reported the aggregate data in the final EIS. Id.; see also, e.g., A.R. 7090, 7091 (data tables). Counsel for the Service stated at the hearing that the agency put the data it considered into the tables in the final EIS.
Oceana seeks to add the disaggregated version of the data reflected in the tables in Amendment 5b to the record.
Oceana further contends that more data needs to be added to the record because the tables in the EIS do not contain the full spectrum of data available to the Service. For instance, it notes that some of the tables only reflect observer data and not logbook data. Pl.'s Reply at 8. Other tables, it says, reflect data from only some fisheries and not others. Id. at 9. But the mere fact that other data was available to the Service does not mean the Service considered the underlying data.
In sum, the mere fact that the Service had data available to it does not provide a concrete, non-speculative basis upon which to conclude that it considered that available data. Nor does the fact that the Service considered and used the aggregated data that already appears in the EIS provide a concrete, non-speculative basis upon which to conclude that it considered the underlying raw or disaggregated data. Oceana has therefore failed to meet its burden to prove these datasets belong in the record.
C. Reviews, comments, emails, and drafts
Next, Oceana challenges the Service's withholding of certain documents from the administrative record pursuant to the deliberative process privilege. See Pl.'s Mot. at 19-23, id. Ex. C. Courts in this District have long held that materials that fall within the scope of the deliberative process
The justification for such a limitation is two-fold. First, "[d]eliberative documents are excluded from the record because, when a party challenges agency action as arbitrary and capricious, the reasonableness of the agency's action 'is judged in accordance with its stated reasons.' '[T]he actual subjective motivation of agency decisionmakers is immaterial as a matter of law-unless there is a showing of bad faith or improper behavior.' " Nat'l Ass'n of Chain Drug Stores v. U.S. Dep't of Health & Human Services,
In determining whether a document falls within the scope of the deliberative process privilege, courts in this District apply the same test used in Freedom of Information Act ("FOIA") or common law privilege cases. See, e.g. Am. Petroleum,
1. Documents PR25 and PR26 from the Service's privilege log
The Service prepared a log listing the documents it withheld from the administrative record on the basis of privilege. It included documents withheld under the deliberative process privilege on the ground that they "help form an understanding in the agency's decisionmaking process and ... the thought process the agency undertook in developing Amendment 5b." Schulze-Haugen Decl. ¶ 24. Oceana first contends that the Service improperly withheld two documents on the log pursuant to the deliberative process privilege. The first, PR25, is described in the privilege log as "Southeast Fisheries Science Center review of Amendment 5b Final Environmental Impact Statement (FEIS), for internal agency discussion." Pl.'s Mot. Ex. L, at 19. The second document, PR26, is described as "Southeast Fisheries Science Center review of comments and responses of Amendment 5b ... for internal agency discussion."
At first blush, both of these documents seem to meet the requirements of the deliberative process privilege. Both are clearly predecisional: they are dated January 2017 and thus precede the final EIS issued in February 2017. They also appear to be deliberative. The Southeast Fisheries Science Center is a " 'scientific agency' within" the Service, and its comments thereby contain suggestions and feedback from agency staff on a preliminary draft of an
Oceana nonetheless contends that these documents are not protected because they contain factual material. Pl.'s Mot. at 18. But the so-called "fact/opinion" dichotomy is not as clearly delineated as Oceana contends. As the D.C. Circuit has explained in the FOIA context, "the legitimacy of withholding [under the deliberative process privilege] does not turn on whether the material is purely factual in nature or whether it is already in the public domain, but rather on whether the selection or organization of facts is part of an agency's deliberative process." Ancient Coin Collectors Guild v. U.S. Dep't of State,
2. Other unspecified documents
Oceana also argues that the agency withheld "an unspecified amount of material, including drafts, emails, and other internal documents, that it characterizes as 'deliberative' which the agency believes are therefore not part of the record in the first instance." Pl.'s Mot. at 23-24. The Service contends that these documents would be protected under the deliberative process privilege. Defs.' Opp'n at 25-26. However, when addressing this category of documents, Oceana does not contest that some record materials are properly withheld under the deliberative process privilege. See, e.g., Pl.'s Mot. at 24. Nor does Oceana contest the applicability of the two-part test from FOIA and common law privilege cases to administrative record ones. See
While Oceana may be correct that the Service cannot wholesale withhold a category of documents based only on their form-e.g. , all memos from junior agency personnel to senior agency personnel-it may do so if the category of documents withheld by definition meets the requirements of the deliberative process privilege-e.g. , all predecisional and deliberative memos from junior agency personnel to senior agency personnel. And to justify this withholding, the Service must simply represent that those documents meet the requirements of the deliberative process privilege. After all, if a document meets the test for the deliberative process privilege, then the agency has necessarily shown that its release would undermine the interests the privilege is designed to protect.
The Court will thus deny Oceana's motion with respect to this set of documents for two reasons. First, Oceana fails to identify any specific documents or provide
Second, to the extent there are other internal, deliberative (and predecisional) documents that the agency did consider, those documents would be protected by the deliberative process privilege and thereby should not be added to the record. As noted earlier, internal and deliberative emails and drafts of agency decisions are the sort of materials often protected by the deliberative process privilege. For this reason as well, the Court will deny this aspect of Oceana's motion.
D. Extra-record documents
Finally, Oceana seeks to add a set of data on dusky shark bycatch and mortality from various fisheries other than the highly migratory fishery (where dusky sharks are presumably most found). Oceana concedes that this is extra-record data. See Pl.'s Mot. at 27-28 ("Despite this evidence, the Fisheries Service did not consider mortality data from non-HMS fisheries .... The observer and logbook data that Oceana seeks to add to the administrative record as extra-record evidence are listed in Exhibit D to the Hardy Declaration." (emphases added) ). Therefore, Oceana must show that one of the three unusual circumstances applies. It argues that two are present: (1) the agency deliberately or negligently ignored possibly adverse documents and (2) the reports are background information needed to determine if the agency has considered all the relevant factors. However, Oceana has not demonstrated that either circumstance is present here.
With respect to the first alleged unusual circumstance-the agency deliberately or negligently ignored potentially adverse evidence-the D.C. Circuit has recently explained that a party must show evidence of bad faith on the part of the agency to carry its burden. See Dist. Hosp. Partners, L.P. v. Burwell,
This leaves the second circumstance-that the reports are background information
IV. Conclusion
For the foregoing reason, the Court will grant in part and deny in part Oceana's motion. The Service must complete the record with the documents listed in Oceana's Exhibit A excluding the first three documents listed (the 2008, 2011, and 2012 SAFE reports). However, the Court will not require the Service to add any of the other documents to the record. A separate Order will accompany this Memorandum Opinion.
Notes
The Act defines a "fishery" as "one or more stocks of fish which can be treated as a unit for purposes of conservation and management and which are identified on the basis of geographical, scientific, technical, recreational, and economic characteristics" and "any fishing for such stocks."
The D.C. Circuit has not clearly resolved this question because the key circuit cases-City of Dania Beach and American Wildlands-involved extra-record material, not material that was before the agency. See City of Dania Beach,
See, e.g., A.R. 7155 ("For example, from 1992-2000, dusky sharks were 8.5 times more common than a target species, the shortfin mako shark (Isurus oxyrinchus ), in the pelagic longline fishery (Beerkircher et al. 2002)."); A.R. 7184 ("The most commonly used hook was the 18.0 circle hook used on 42.4 percent of the hauls (Enzenauer et al., 2016)."); A.R. 7255 ("There is no evidence that artificial lures or flies frequently cause gut-hooking and associated post-release mortality (Muoneke and Childress 1994; Brownscombe et al. 2017).").
See, e.g., A.R. 7209 ("For detailed information about HMS tournaments, please see ... the 2011 SAFE Report (NMFS 2011a) ..."); A.R. 7211 ("Community profile information along with demographic information from the 1990, 2000, and 2010 U.S. Census can be found in the 2011 and 2012 SAFE Reports (NMFS 2011a; NMFS 2012).").
See, e.g., A.R. 7237 (including Cortés & Neer 2002 and Babcock et al. 2003 in the references list for EIS chapter 3, though neither are cited in the body of chapter 3).
Every document that is cited in the body of the EIS also appears in a list of references. As to those documents that appear in a reference list and are also cited substantively in the text to justify a proposition (thereby falling within the first category), the Court has already held they need to be added to the record. As to those documents that appear in a reference list and were cited in the text solely for additional information (thereby falling within the second category), the Court has already held they were not considered and need not be added to the record. This third category of documents solely addresses those that appear in a reference list and were not cited in the text at all.
"Under the Magnuson-Stevens Act, 'bycatch' has a very specific meaning: 'fish which are harvested in a fishery but which are not sold or kept for personal use, and includes economic discards and regulatory discards. Such term does not include fish released alive under a recreational catch and release fishery management program.' " A.R. 7214 (quoting
To the extent that Oceana seeks access to other data in the databases that was not pulled from the database and analyzed-for instance, data regarding fish species other than the dusky shark-it presents no evidence to indicate the Service considered any of this data and thus supplementation of the record with the entire database would be inappropriate.
The Court will note that in one section of the final EIS, the Service explained that it used both logbook and observer data in the Predraft to Amendment 5b but used only logbook data in the final EIS. See A.R. 7259. But since the Predraft is in the record already, any data that appears there but not in the final EIS is also already in the record.
Oceana contends that even if this data is not record evidence, it should be added to the record as extra-record evidence. For the reasons discussed more below in the section dealing with Oceana's other extra-record evidence, the Court finds that Oceana fails to show any unusual circumstance requiring supplementation of the record with this data.
Nor will the Court require the Service to provide a privilege log specifically listing this alleged category of records, for the reasons articulated by other judges in this District. See, e.g., Stand up for California! v. U.S. Dep't of Interior,
Oceana contends that it need not show bad faith to meet this first unusual circumstance, arguing that the D.C. Circuit "has been inconsistent as to whether bad faith is part of this element or is a separate circumstance" and that the case on which District Hospital itself relies treated bad faith as a separate unusual circumstance. See Pl.'s Mot. at 24 n.14. But as Oceana concedes, District Hospital "described bad faith as a necessary component of the adverse documents exception."
