OLMSTED CITIZENS FOR A BETTER COMMUNITY, a nonprofit
Minnesota Corporation; Lowell Fredin and Ralph
Lindeen, individually, Appellants,
v.
UNITED STATES of America, Bureau of Prisons, a bureau of the
United States Department of Justice; Norman A. Carlson,
Director of the Bureau of Prisons, individually and in his
official capacity; Loy S. Hays, Chief, Office of Facilities
Development and Operations, Bureau of Prisons, individually
and in his official capacity, Appellees.
No. 85-5141.
United States Court of Appeals, Eighth Circuit.
Submitted Nov. 14, 1985.
Decided June 9, 1986.
Rehearing and Rehearing En Banc Denied July 10, 1986.
Robert Abdalian, Minneapolis, Minn., for appellant.
Claire McGuire, Washington, D.C., for appellee.
Before ARNOLD and WOLLMAN, Circuit Judges, and GUNN,* District Judge.
WOLLMAN, Circuit Judge.
Olmsted Citizens for a Better Community and the individual plaintiffs appeal the grant of summary judgment against them on their claims under the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA). See 42 U.S.C. Secs. 4321-4347 (1982). The district court1 held that the government was not required to file an environmental impact statement in connection with the conversion of a former state mental hospital into a federal prisons hospital and that the document filed by the government adequately justified the lack of need for a complete environmental statement. Olmsted Citizens for a Better Community v. United States,
The property at issue in this case is a 160-acre wooded campus bordering a neighborhood of family homes and an area of undeveloped land in the city of Rochester, Olmsted County, Minnesota. This campus was established in the late 1800s as a state mental hospital and in addition, for a number of years, provided medical treatment for a small percentage of state prisoners. The hospital was closed and the land deeded to the county in 1982. Even while the hospital had been operating, however, the campus apparently had been "open"--that is, used by the public for recreational activities.
In April 1983, the U.S. Bureau of Prisons began considering the acquisition of 64 acres of the campus for use as a federal prisons hospital. A document denominated as a "draft environmental impact statement" was circulated in November 1983; and following a review of the public comments received, a final "environmental impact statement" was published in February 1984. After another period for comment, the director of the Bureau of Prisons issued a "record of decision," and congressional approval for the project was obtained. The purchase of the county facility was finalized on May 1, 1984. Within the month Olmsted Citizens for a Better Community, a nonprofit corporation composed of Olmsted County property owners, taxpayers, and registered voters, joined by Lowell Fredin and Ralph Lindeen, two individuals residing in the area of the proposed hospital (hereinafter collectively referred to as "Olmsted Citizens"), filed suit challenging the adequacy of the government's consideration of environmental factors.3
I.
The National Environmental Policy Act, while embodying substantive goals for the preservation of our physical environment, imposes basically procedural obligations in pursuit of these goals. Strycker's Bay Neighborhood Council v. Karlen,
The majority of the alleged substantial environmental impacts asserted by Olmsted Citizens can be disposed of on the basis of the recent Supreme Court decision in Metropolitan Edison Co. v. People Against Nuclear Energy,
The Supreme Court, however, stressed that the NEPA was not a vehicle for the airing of general policy objections to federal action but was addressed to the end of protecting human health and welfare only through the means of protecting the physical environment. Id. at 772-74, 777,
Olmsted Citizens alleges that the effects of converting part of the mental hospital campus into a federal prisons hospital will include the introduction of weapons and drugs into the area, an increase in crime, and a decrease or halt in neighborhood development. These impacts, however, follow not from any physical changes connected with the conversion but from the social changes reflected in the nature of the use of the facility and in the types of people that will be present. Even before Metropolitan Edison this court had held that a project's potential for contribution to criminal activity and alteration of the character of a neighborhood would not require development of an environmental impact statement. Como-Falcon Community Coalition v. United States Department of Labor,
Olmsted Citizens attempts to distinguish Como-Falcon and similar cases on the basis of an oft-quoted passage stating that socioeconomic effects are to be considered in an environmental statement when the federal action at issue also has a primary impact on the natural environment.
First, it is unlikely that such a distinction survives the recent Supreme Court holding in Metropolitan Edison. That decision, as discussed above, was based on congressional intent, and there is no suggestion that Congress contemplated that the process it designed to make agencies aware of the consequences of their actions with regard to the physical environment would be converted into a process for airing general policy objections anytime the physical environment was implicated. Such a rule would divert agency resources away from the primary statutory goal of protecting the physical environment and natural resources, just as in Metropolitan Edison. See
Second, we are not convinced that Olmsted Citizens has identified any significant impacts on the physical environment in this case. The physical changes without dispute are the additions of harsh lighting, a double perimeter security fence with barbed wire, and a one-lane perimeter security road to be traversed by an armed mobile patrol. The main impact alleged from these changes, however, is apparently aesthetic, and the Seventh Circuit has suggested that aesthetic concerns alone should rarely be sufficient to compel preparation of an environmental impact statement: "Aesthetic values do not lend themselves to measurement or elaborate analysis. * * * The necessary judgments are inherently subjective and normally can be made as reliably on the basis of an environmental assessment as on the basis of a much lengthier and costlier environmental impact statement." River Road Alliance, Inc., v. Corps of Engineers of the U.S. Army,
We find no special aesthetic concerns here. While the setting for the prisons hospital is a wooded campus rather than an urban city block or industrial zone, see Maryland-National Capital Park & Planning Commission v. United States Postal Service,
The conversion of the former mental hospital into a prisons hospital will have a further physical impact in that 64 acres will no longer be available for community recreational use. This diminution, however, leaves nearly 100 acres of the original campus open to the public. There is no suggestion of a threat to any endangered species--or to any wildlife at all--and there is no suggestion of any permanent damage to the natural characteristics of the site. River Road,
Finally, Olmsted Citizens argues that an environmental impact statement should have been prepared because use of the campus as a prisons hospital violates local zoning ordinances. In cases involving such conflicts, Olmsted Citizens asserts, "more careful scrutiny" of the federal action is required under Maryland-National,
We conclude that Olmsted Citizens has failed to raise a significant environmental issue within the meaning of the relevant legislation8 and that there is thus no issue of fact preventing a summary judgment that an environmental impact statement was not required for the prisons hospital conversion project.9
II.
Olmsted Citizens further argues that regardless of the question surrounding the impact statement, the government failed to fulfill its independent statutory duty to "study, develop, and describe appropriate alternatives to recommended courses of action in any proposal which involves unresolved conflicts concerning alternative uses of available resources." 42 U.S.C. Sec. 4332(2)(E). Particularly, Olmsted Citizens asserts that the government did not " 'explicate fully its course of inquiry, its analysis and its reasoning' " under Environmental Defense Fund, Inc. v. Froehlke,
The "explicate fully" language of Froehlke on which Olmsted Citizens relies, however, addresses the sufficiency of and detail needed in a formal environmental impact statement. See
Furthermore, we agree with those circuits which reason that the range of alternatives that reasonably must be considered decreases as the environmental impact of the proposed action becomes less and less substantial. E.g., River Road Alliance, Inc. v. Corps of Engineers of the U.S. Army,
Finally, the government was only required to consider reasonable alternatives to conversion of the former mental hospital; it was not required to study remote and speculative possibilities. Miller v. United States,
The lack of specificity in Olmsted Citizens' objections further disposes of its claim that the government failed to weigh environmental concerns equally with economic considerations in that it did not study alternatives, such as construction of a new facility, that would have cost more than conversion of the former mental hospital. Since we cannot accept the invitation to presume that the government's figures were incorrect, Olmsted Citizens in effect seeks to require, contrary to Strycker,
In sum, Olmsted Citizens' main complaint is that a federal prisons hospital should not be placed in a family neighborhood. Olmsted Citizens diligently pursued opportunities for making its views heard through the local political process, see Metropolitan Edison,
The summary judgment is affirmed.
ARNOLD, Circuit Judge, dissenting.
I think this case should be tried. Tens of millions of federal dollars are to be or have been spent, and I do not understand the Court's opinion to contend that this is not a "major Federal action [ ]." The question, rather, is whether the action is one "significantly affecting the quality of the human environment...." In giving content to the term "significant," we should heed the direction of Congress that the requirement of preparation of environmental impact statements should be enforced "to the fullest extent possible...." 42 U.S.C. Sec. 4332. That is, in close cases, it is better to err on the side of requiring the preparation of an EIS than on the side of omitting it. "[T]he spirit of the Act would die aborning if a facile, ex parte decision that the project was minor or did not significantly affect the environment were too well shielded from impartial review." Save Our Ten Acres v. Kreger,
Here, because the case was disposed of on summary judgment, we must accept the position of plaintiffs as to all disputed questions of fact, and, in addition, give them the benefit of all reasonable inferences from evidence favoring their side of the case. When this standard is applied, I cannot say that the effect of this project is so clearly insignificant as to justify deciding the case without a trial. The fact that the Bureau of Prisons itself apparently agreed--because it did prepare a document which it described as an EIS--confirms me in this view.
In this Circuit, decisions by agencies that preparation of an EIS is unnecessary--the position this agency now takes--are subject to fairly broad judicial review. Such decisions are to be accepted only if "reasonable." By contrast, in some other circuits a decision that an EIS is not required can be set aside only if the reviewing court is convinced that it is arbitrary and capricious. See River Road Alliance, Inc. v. Corps of Engineers, --- U.S. ----,
Notes
The HONORABLE GEORGE F. GUNN, JR., United States District Judge for the Eastern District of Missouri, sitting by designation
The Honorable Diana E. Murphy, United States District Judge for the District of Minnesota
Because we agree with the district court on these points, we need not reach its alternate holding that the document prepared met the standards for an environmental impact statement anyway.
A motion for a preliminary injunction was denied on the ground that, since the proposed modifications to the campus for the federal prison could be removed, Olmsted Citizens had failed to show irreparable harm. Olmsted Citizens for a Better Community v. United States, Civil No. 4-84-492 (D.Minn. July 27, 1984)
We observe that Olmsted Citizens, in support of its argument that effects on area development can require preparation of an environmental impact statement, cites the district court opinion in Como-Falcon,
We note also that Olmsted Citizens, in support of its argument that potential increases in criminal activity require the filing of an environmental impact statement, cites the Second Circuit decision in Hanly v. Mitchell,
E.g., Goodman Group, Inc. v. Dishroom,
Olmsted Citizens, relying on Justice Brennan's concurrence in Metropolitan Edison,
The federal regulation cited by Olmsted Citizens, 40 C.F.R. Sec. 1508.27(b)(10) (1985), is not to the contrary. It says only that a federal action may be deemed significant when it threatens violation of a local law or regulation "imposed for the protection of the environment," not that a federal action may be deemed significant every time it violates a zoning law. Similarly, any possible violation by the government of statutory provisions regarding federal acquisition of urban properties, see 40 U.S.C. Secs. 531-533 (1982), is a separate concern not cognizable under the NEPA
Olmsted Citizens in its brief identifies two additional "environmental impacts" not discussed in the body of this opinion. First, it suggests that the prisons hospital might some day have to be evacuated due to its location in a 100-year flood area. This court, however, has questioned whether the NEPA requires consideration of the effects of the environment on the persons who will be using the federal facility. Monarch Chem. Works v. Thone,
We are not precluded from basing our decision on this ground, as Olmsted Citizens argues, by the rule of Securities & Exch. Comm'n v. Chenery Corp.,
The authority relied on by Olmsted Citizens, Natural Resources Defense Council, Inc. v. Administrator,
