ORDER
Before the Court are the parties’ cross-motions for summary judgment. For the reasons discussed below, Plaintiffs’ motion is granted and Defendants’ motion is denied. As threshold matters, Plaintiffs have standing to challenge the Forest Service’s failure to reinitiate section 7 consultation on the programmatic plan amendment at issue here, and the Court has jurisdiction to consider the case because Plaintiffs’ notice of intent to sue was adequate. The Court also finds that the Ninth Circuit’s decision in Pacific Rivers Council v. Thomas,
Facts
In 2000, the Distinct Population Segment of Canada lynx in the contiguous United States was added to the list of threatened species under the Endangered Species Act (“ESA”). In response, the United States Forest Service (“Forest Service”) developed the Northern Rockies Lynx Amendment (the “Lynx Amendment” or “Amendment”), a “programmatic plan amendment ]” to the land and resource management plans (“forest plans”) of 18 National Forests in the Northern Rocky Mountains analysis area. The Lynx Amendment is “programmatic in nature* consisting of direction that would be applied to future management activities.” AR 2372 at 4; AR 0101(a)at 4; AR 2535 at 8639.
In 2005, the Forest Service initiated formal consultation with the Fish and Wildlife Service (“Wildlife Service”) on the Amendment, pursuant to Section 7 of the ESA. At that time, the Wildlife Service had not yet designated any critical habitat for lynx on Forest Service lands.
Section 7 consultation was completed in 2007 when the Wildlife Service issued a Biological Opinion concluding that the Lynx Amendment would not jeopardize the continued existence of the Canada lynx. In a single Record of Decision, the Forest Service then incorporated the Lynx Amendment into the land and resource management plans for 18 national forests.
On February 25, 2009, the Wildlife Service extended critical habitat protections to additional lands in Idaho, Montana, and Wyoming that were already occupied by lynx, including areas within 11 national forests that were impacted by the Lynx Amendment.
Plaintiffs allege that the Forest Service should have reinitiated Section 7 consultation on the Lynx Amendment when lynx critical habitat was designated on Forest Service land. The claim arises under the citizen suit provision of the ESA, 16 U.S.C. § 1540(g)(1)(A).
Analysis
I. Standing
In order to satisfy the case or controversy requirement of Article III, a plaintiff must establish standing to bring a claim. Summers v. Earth Island Inst.,
Three elements are essential to member standing: injury in fact, causation, and redressability. An “injury in fact” must be (a) “concrete and particularized” and (b) “actual or imminent, not conjectural or hypothetical.” Summers,
In the case at hand, Plaintiffs challenge the Forest Service’s failure to reinitiate consultation on the Lynx Amendment, which was accomplished through one Record of Decision, but amended 20 separate plans covering 18 national forest units. Plaintiffs have named several specific, affected subareas of the national forests affected by the Lynx Amendment that they use and enjoy. See W. Watersheds Project v. Kraayenbrink,
Defendants claim that Plaintiffs must establish standing to challenge each individual forest plan, that they must also challenge specific projects that rely on the plan, and that they must show that the site-specific analysis for particular projects did not compensate for any injury that might have been caused by the failure to reinitiate consultation on the Lynx Amendment. Defendants argue that Plaintiffs have failed to allege an injury in fact that is traceable to the amendment of the plans for 17 of the 18 forests and that Plaintiffs’ allegations of injury in the Gallatin National Forest are negated by the Wildlife Service’s determination in site-specific biological opinions that the projects in question would not adversely modify lynx critical habitat. Plaintiffs counter that they have established standing to challenge the single, programmatic Lynx Amendment. It is sufficient, they insist, that they show a single imminent injury to their interests in one specific area in one national forest that is affected by the Amendment.
For the reasons discussed below, Plaintiffs’ arguments are more compelling.
A.
Defendants suggest that Summers requires plaintiffs who are challenging a programmatic regulation to also assert (and succeed on) a site-specific, “as-applied” claim challenging a specific project. (See doc. 32 at 9-12). However, for the purpose of establishing standing to challenge a programmatic regulation, plaintiffs can allege injury from a project that relies on that regulation without asserting a separate claim against the project.
In Summers, the plaintiffs challenged various timber regulations and also challenged the failure of the Forest Service to apply one of the regulations to a particular project, the Burnt Ridge Project.
The Ninth Circuit’s decisions in Sierra Forest Legacy v. Sherman,
The Ninth Circuit reached the same conclusion in Pacific Rivers (2012), a case in which the plaintiffs challenged the same 2004 Framework that was at issue in Sierra Forest Legacy. The court held that where “there is little doubt that [the plaintiffs members] will come into contact with affected areas, and the implementation of the [programmatic plan] will affect their continued use and enjoyment of the forests,” NEPA plaintiffs do not have to “wait to challenge a specific project when their grievance is with an overall plan.”
[I]f the agency action only could be challenged at the site-specific development stage, the underlying programmatic authorization would forever escape review. To the extent that the plan pre-determined the future, it represents a concrete injury that plaintiffs must, at some point, have standing to challenge. That point is now, or it is never.
Id. (quoting Salmon River Concerned Citizens v. Robertson,
Under Sierra Forest Legacy and Pacific Rivers (2012), plaintiffs may challenge a programmatic regulation that affects multiple forests so long as they allege a particularized injury in a specific area that is affected by the regulation and that will be subject to an agency action that relies on the regulation. It is not necessary for plaintiffs to assert a separate claim challenging the project or for plaintiffs to assert a particularized injury for every forest subject to the regulation. Plaintiffs’ decision not to challenge a specific project in this action does not undermine their standing to challenge the programmatic Lynx Amendment, and they are not required to show a particularized injury in every forest affected by the Lynx Amendment.
B.
Defendants also suggest that plaintiffs alleging injury from a specific project that relies on a programmatic plan must prove that the project analysis for that specific site failed to compensate for any injury the programmatic plan might have caused. In the case at hand, Defendants insist that the site-specific biological opinions for the Bozeman Municipal Watershed Project and the East Boulder Project considered the effects of the projects on lynx critical habitat and thereby eliminated any
Defendants rely on Ohio Forestry Association, Inc. v. Sierra Club,
Any such later challenge [to a project] might also include a challenge to the lawfulness of the present Plan if (but only if) the present Plan then matters, i.e., if the Plan plays a causal role with respect to the future, then-imminent, harm from logging.
Id. Twinning a project challenge with a plan challenge allows the “benefit of the focus that a particular logging proposal could provide” and avoids “the kind of abstract disagreements over administrafive policies ... that the ripeness doctrine seeks to avoid.” Id. at 736 (internal quotation marks and citation omitted).
Unlike the case at hand, however, Ohio Forestry involved a challenge under the National Forest Management Act (“NFMA”). The Supreme Court explicitly distinguished a NFMA challenge from a challenge brought pursuant to the National Environmental Policy Act (“NEPA”):
NEPA, unlike NFMA, simply guarantees a particular procedure, not a particular result____ Hence a person with standing who is injured by a failure to comply with the NEPA procedure may complain of that failure at the time the failure takes place, for the claim can never get riper.
Id. at 737.
Like NEPA, section 7 of the ESA guarantees a particular procedure, not a particular result. Thus Ohio Forestry’s requirements that a NFMA challenge to a Forest Plan be combined with a challenge to a project and that Plaintiffs prove the Project improperly relied on the challenged plan do not apply here.
The Ninth Circuit has explicitly rejected the notion that site-specific environmental analyses can cure an asserted procedural injury related to a programmatic regulation:
Nor could the Forest Service cure flaws in [a land management resource plan] in the [environmental impact statement (“EIS”) ] for a site-specific project. See Pit River [Tribe v. U.S. Forest Serv.,469 F.3d 768 , 785 (9th Cir.2006) ] (“[Dilatory or ex post facto environmental re*991 view cannot cure an initial failure to undertake environmental review.”). We have never held that an LRMP is not subject to facial attack based on an alleged NEPA violation.
Sierra Forest Legacy,
C.
As in Pacific Rivers Council (2012) and Sierra Forest Legacy, Plaintiffs here allege a procedural violation related to a programmatic plan affecting multiple forests. Six members have submitted affidavits alleging interests in areas of the Gallatin, Custer, Lolo, Flathead, Helena, Custer, Shoshone, and Bridger-Teton National Forests. (Docs. 1-2, 12, 16, 25, 26, 27, 28.) They name specific subareas of these forests in which they recreate, including areas in which lynx critical habitat has been designated. Some of these areas with lynx critical habitat have been and will be affected by specific projects the Forest Service is implementing — including the Bozeman Municipal Watershed Project and the East Boulder Project in the Gallatin National Forest — and' several members indicate they have used these areas in the past and have concrete plans to return in the future.
Plaintiffs have demonstrated that the affiants have a connection to several areas that contain lynx critical habitat and are affected by the Lynx Amendment and that they have “specific and concrete” plans to return to and use these areas. Summers,
[T]he fact that ... [re-initiating consultation] might not in any way change the [management direction for the projects] is irrelevant. The asserted injury is that environmental consequences might be overlooked and reasonable alternatives ignored as a result of deficiencies .... The ultimate outcome following proper procedures is not in question.
Idaho Conservation League,
II. Notice of Intent to Sue
Defendants insist that the Court lacks jurisdiction to consider this case because Plaintiffs letter of intent to sue under the ESA did not provide adequate notice of the lawsuit it has filed. A citizen suit under the ESA may not be commenced “prior to sixty days after written notice of the violation has been given to the Secretary, and to any alleged violator.” 16 U.S.C. § 1540(g)(2)(A)(i). “The purpose of the 60-day notice provision is to put the agencies on notice of a perceived violation of the statute and an intent to sue.” S.W. Ctr. for Biological Diversity v. U.S. Bureau of Reclamation,
Plaintiffs’ Notice to the government states: “The Government’s reliance on the Northern Rockies Lynx Management Direction without re-initiating formal consultation violates the Endangered Species Act.” (Doc. 23-2 at 3.) It states that reinitiation of consultation was required under section 7 of the ESA after critical habitat was designated on national forest land (id. at 2), and it identifies the specific regulatory provisions alleged to have been violated, 50 C.F.R. § 402.16(b) and (d):
(b) If new information reveals effects of the action that may affect listed species or critical habitat in a manner or to an extent not previously considered;
.... or
(d) If a new species is listed or critical habitat is designated that may be affected by the identified action.
(Id. at 2-3.) The Notice demands reinitiation of formal consultation on the Lynx Amendment and a “new biological opinion” analyzing “the designation of new critical habitat on National Forests” and it informs Defendants of Plaintiffs’ intent to seek declaratory and injunctive relief if corrective action was not taken. (Id.) The Notice does not identify any specific project or national forest that is subject to the Lynx Amendment.
Plaintiffs provided sufficient notice under 16 U.S.C. § 1540(g)(3)(A). The single cause of action in the Complaint was described in the Notice. The Notice identified the statute and regulations allegedly violated and identified the specific violation complained of, the Forest Service’s failure to reinitiate consultation on the Lynx Amendment once lynx critical habitat was designated on affected lands. The Complaint alleged the same violation and relied on the same statutes and regulations.
Here, on the other hand, the Complaint does not challenge a specific project. The specific projects mentioned by Plaintiffs merely establish their standing to . challenge the Lynx Amendment. Defendants are well aware of the forests to which the Lynx Amendment applies, the locations where lynx critical habitat has been designated, and the projects that have been initiated or are being considered in those areas. Under Plaintiffs’ theory, any such project would pose potential harm because of the lack of consideration on the landscape level of whether the Lynx Amendment adequately protects lynx critical habitat from adverse modification.
The Forest Service did not need Plaintiffs to point to a specific project or forest affected by the Lynx Amendment in order to "identify the alleged violation or reinitiate consultation on the Lynx Amendment. S.W. Ctr.,
Center for Biological Diversity v. Marina Point Development Co.,
Second, the permit-specific nature of the violations at issue in Marina Point is readily distinguishable from the type of procedural violation on a programmatic amendment that is alleged here. In Marina Point,' the Complaint alleged violations of both §§ 402 and 404 of the Clean Water Act,
In the present case, Plaintiffs are challenging the failure to reinitiate consultation on the Lynx Amendment, a single programmatic decision that simultaneously amended multiple forest plans. They are not challenging specific projects. Their Notice cites the specific statutory and regulatory language Defendants are alleged to have violated and identifies the specific violation complained of — the failure to reinitiate consultation following the designation of lynx critical habitat in several of the forests subject to the Lynx Amendment. The same violation and the same statutes and regulations are cited in the Complaint and form the basis for this cause of action. (Doc. 1 at 14.) Unlike the plaintiffs in Marina Point and Klamath Siskyou Wildlands Center, Plaintiffs have not raised new claims or violations.
Defendants also claim that Plaintiffs’ request for relief — that all projects in forest land areas subject to the Lynx Amendment be enjoined pending consultation— exceeds the scope of the Notice because 16 U.S.C. § 1536(d) was not specifically mentioned in the Notice.
Because the Notice cited the specific statutes and regulations that the Complaint alleges were violated, the Complaint does not raise new claims or grounds for relief, and the Notice provided adequate notice of the relief Plaintiffs intended to seek, Plaintiffs’ Notice was adequate under
III. Whether Pacific Rivers (1994) has been effectively overruled
Under section 7(a)(2) of the ESA, an agency must consult with the Wildlife Service (or the National Marine Fisheries Service) to “insure that any action authorized, funded, or carried out by such agency (hereinafter in this section referred to as an ‘agency action’) is not likely to jeopardize the continued existence of any endangered species or threatened species or result in the destruction or adverse modification of habitat of such species which is determined ... to be critical.” 16 U.S.C. § 1536(a)(2). Sometimes, a federal agency is required to reinitiate consultation:
Reinitiation of formal consultation is required ... where discretionary Federal involvement or control over the action has been retained or is authorized by law and:
(b) If new information reveals effects of the action that may affect listed species or critical habitat in a manner or to an extent not previously considered;
(d) If a new species is listed or critical habitat designated that may be affected by the identified action.
50 C.F.R. § 402.16. The applicable Wildlife Service regulation defines “action” as “all activities or programs of any kind authorized, funded, or carried out, in whole or in part, by Federal agencies in the United States.” 50 C.F.R. § 402.02.
Defendants claim the Forest Service is not required to reinitiate consultation on the Lynx Amendment because that action — the amendment of the forest plans in March 2007 — was completed at the time of amendment and there is no further affirmative agency action to be taken. Defendants insist the Ninth Circuit’s contrary opinion in Pacific Rivers Council v. Thomas,
In Pacific Rivers (199k), the Ninth Circuit held: “Given the importance of [forest plans] in establishing resource and land use policies for the forests in question there is little doubt that they are continuing agency action under § 7(a)(2) of the ESA.”
The court explicitly rejected the Forest Service’s argument, which the Forest Service reiterates here, that forest plans are only agency actions at the time they are adopted, revised, or amended, and they cease to be actions upon their adoption because they do not mandate any particular action and are “ ‘merely’ programmatic documents.” Id. at 1055. The court noted the broad language defining an “action” under the ESA. Id. at 1054. The ESA requires consultation on “any action” carried out by an agency, id. (citing 16 U.S.C. § 1536(a)(2)), and the Supreme Court has stated that “[t]his language admits of no exception,” id. (citing Tenn. Valley Auth. v. Hill,
Action means all activities or programs of any kind authorized, funded, or carried out, in whole or in part, by Federal agencies in the United States or upon the high seas. Examples include, but are not limited to:
(a) actions intended to conserve listed species or their habitat;
(b) the promulgation of regulations;
(c) the granting of licenses, contracts, leases, easements, rights-of-way, permits, or grants-in-aid; or
(d) actions directly or indirectly causing modifications to the land, water, or air.
Id. (quoting 50 C.F.R. § 402.02) (emphasis added by Ninth Circuit). “Congress has spoken in the plainest of words, making it abundantly clear that the balance has been struck in favor of affording endangered species the highest of priorities, thereby adopting a policy which it described as ‘institutionalized caution.’ ” Id. at 1055 (quoting Tenn. Valley Auth.,
Unless Pacific Rivers (1994) has been “effectively overruled” by subsequent, higher authority, the parties appear to agree that it mandates the conclusion that the Lynx Amendment is an ongoing agency action under the ESA and is thus subject to reinitiation of consultation requirements.
In 2004, in Norton v. SUWA, the United States Supreme Court determined that forest plans are not ongoing agency actions under NEPA.
In Forest Guardians v. Forsgren, the Tenth Circuit applied Norton’s reasoning to the ESA and explicitly rejected the Ninth Circuit’s approach in Pacific Rivers (1994).
Plans do not grant, withhold, or modify any contract, permit or other legal instrument, subject anyone to civil or criminal liability, or create any legal rights. Plans typically do not approve or execute projects and activities. Decisions with effects that can be meaningfully evaluated typically are made when projects and activities are approved.
Id. at 1153 (quoting 36 C.F.R. § 219.3(b) (2007)).
A [forest plan] considered in isolation simply is not an ongoing, self-implementing document. Specific activities, programs, and/or projects are necessary to implement the plan. Those same activities, programs, and projects must be alleged in a complaint that seeks to establish an “acting” agency’s duty to consult under § 7(a)(2) of the ESA. As we have explained, a [forest plan] envisions the forest will be used for multiple purposes, including “outdoor recreation, range, timber, watershed, wildlife and fish, and wilderness.” A plan or vision is certainly a precursor to “agency action,” but neither is action requiring § 7(a)(2) consultation.
Id. at 1158 (citations omitted).
Of course, the Tenth Circuit’s decision in Forsgren is not binding in this Circuit. The opinion does not appear to have been adopted or even cited outside the Tenth Circuit except by’ a Ninth Circuit district court, which merely noted, while following the Ninth Circuit precedent, the Tenth Circuit’s express rejection of the conclusion in Pacific Rivers (199)) that the ongoing implementation of a forest plan is an action for purposes of the ESA. Coalition for a Sustainable Delta v. Fed. Emerg. Mgt. Agency,
Both parties argue that Ninth Circuit case law since Pacific Rivers (199)) supports their view concerning whether the case is still good law. Plaintiffs’ arguments are more convincing.
The Ninth Circuit distinguishes “agency actions” under the ESA from those under NEPA, noting that it has “repeatedly held that the ESA’s use of the term ‘agency action’ is to be construed broadly.” Karuk Tribe of Cal. v. U.S. Forest Serv.,
Although the Ninth Circuit construes the ESA standard broadly, it has recognized that not all agency actions remaining ongoing after they are approved. Cal. Sportfishing Protec. Alliance v. F.E.R.C.,
Defendants’ notice of supplemental authority cites a recent Northern District of California case that held that Pacific Rivers (1991) was “implicitly overruled” by the Ninth Circuit in Karuk Tribe,
Presumably, Defendants are interested in the court’s interpretation of Karuk Tribe. The court stated that Karuk Tribe’s requirement that section 7 only applies when an agency makes an affirmative act implicitly overruled Pacific Rivers (1991)’s holding that forest plans are ongoing agency actions. Id. at *10. The court’s statement was dicta, however, because it was not considering a forest plan. Moreover, Karuk Tribe did not mark the first time the Ninth Circuit held that an affirmative act is required to find ongoing agency action under the ESA. In Western Watersheds v. Matejko, the Ninth Circuit noted this requirement and expressly confirmed that forest plans constitute ongoing, affirmative agency action because the Forest Service “maintained continuing authority under a comprehensive and long term management plan, that was still in effect.”
Because the Ninth Circuit has demonstrated continued support for Pacific Rivers (1991) in decisions emphasizing that an “affirmative act” is necessary for an agency action to be ongoing, this Court respectfully disagrees with the district court’s conclusion that Karuk Tribe implicitly overruled Pacific Rivers (1991). Forest plans and programmatic amendments to forest plans are not situations “[w]here private activity is proceeding pursuant to a vested right or to a previously issued li
In Karuk Tribe, the Ninth Circuit explained that an “agency action” inquiry under the ESA is two-fold:
First, we ask whether a federal agency affirmatively authorized, funded, or carried out the underlying activity. Second, we determine whether the agency had some discretion to influence or change the activity for the benefit of a protected species.
Given that the Ninth Circuit distinguishes ongoing agency actions under NEPA and the ESA and has cited Pacific Rivers (199F) with approval since Norton v. SUWA was issued, it is not clear that Pacific Rivers (199F) has been effectively overruled. Such a determination is not for this Court to make, even though the Forest Service has presented a pragmatic argument for following the Tenth Circuit’s lead. Under Ninth Circuit case law, then, the Lynx Amendment constitutes an ongoing agency action under the ESA. The Forest Service is required to reinitiate consultation on the Amendment if a triggering event under 50 C.F.R. § 402.16 occurs.
IV. Whether a triggering event occurred
Agencies are required to engage in section 7 consultation whenever an action “may affect” a listed species. As the agencies recognized when they first consulted on the Lynx Amendment, the Amendment “may affect” the lynx and lynx critical habitat because it provides the broad management direction for 20 forest plans covering 18 separate national forest units.
Though the Forest Service and Wildlife Service consulted on the Lynx Amendment in 2007, Plaintiffs contend they must re-initiate consultation based on the subsequent designation of lynx critical habitat. An agency must reinitiate consultation in the following circumstances:
(a) If the amount or extent of taking specified in the incidental take statement is exceeded;
(b) If new information reveals effects of the action that may affect listed species or critical habitat in a manner or to an extent not previously considered;
(c) If the identified action is subsequently modified in a manner that causes an effect to the listed, species or critical habitat that was not considered in the biological opinion; or
(d) If a new species is listed or critical habitat designated that may be affected by the identified action.
The designation of critical habitat in 11 national forests to which the Lynx Amendment applies satisfies both subsections (b) and (d) of 50 C.F.R. § 402.16. Since no critical habitat had been designated when the agencies first consulted on the Amendment, the Bi-Op concluded that “none will be affected.” AR 0101(a) at 75. Nor did the Bi-Op address whether the Amendment would impact the Primary Constituent Elements of lynx habitat. “The analysis of the effects to critical habitat is a separate and different analysis from that of the effects to the species, and may provide greater regulatory benefits to the recovery of a species than listing alone.” AR 2535 at 8616, 8624.
The agencies cannot shift this analysis to the project level. Sierra Forest Legacy,
Without programmatic guidance and planning to conserve lynx, assessment of land management effects to lynx and development of appropriate conservation strategies are left to project-specific analysis without consideration for larger landscape patterns.
Bi-Op at 75. A “big picture approach to lynx management” is required. AR 0101(a) at 70. “[Landscape level direction [is] necessary for the survival and recovery of lynx in the northern Rockies ecosystem.” AR 0101(a) at 70. “[M]anagement activities [can] reduce or degrade essential habitat elements used by lynx for denning, foraging, and recruitment, or [] increase habitat fragmentation and lynx mortality” and “[e]ffects may occur and/or continue without appropriate management direction at broad scales.” AR 2375 at 31. The Forest Service cannot now claim the opposite — that project-specific analysis is sufficient to protect the lynx and its habitat in the larger region.
By failing to reinitiate consultation on the Lynx Amendment, the Forest Service violated 50 C.F.R. § 402.16 and section 7 requirements after lynx critical habitat was identified in forests subject to the Amendment. The Forest Service must now reinitiate consultation in order to determine that the Amendment is “not likely to ... result in the destruction or adverse modification of’ designated critical habitat, 16 U.S.C. § 1536(a)(2), “in a way that will affect both the conservation of the species, and its recovery,” AR 2535 at 8646. The Forest Service and Wildlife Service must determine “whether, with implementation of the [Amendment], the affected critical habitat would remain functional (or retain the current ability for the [primary constituent elements] to be functionally established) to serve its intended conservation role for the species.” AR 2535 at 8644.
V. Appropriate Relief
It is “well-settled that a court can enjoin agency action pending completion of section 7(a)(2) requirements.” Wash. Toxics Coalition v. EPA,
The “traditional preliminary injunction analysis does not apply to injunctions issued pursuant to the ESA.” Nat. Wildlife Fedn. v. NMFS,
Despite this liberal standard for imposing injunctive relief under section 7, Plaintiffs are still obligated to show an irreparable injury to support the issuance and scope of an injunction. In National Wildlife Federation v. National Marine Fisheries Service, the Ninth Circuit held that the district court’s rejection of a biological opinion under the ESA, together with its finding of irreparable harm, were “precisely the circumstances in which our precedent indicates that the issuance of an injunction is appropriate.”
Similarly, a district court has held:
Reason dictates that plaintiffs make a showing that the particular injunction they request is necessary to prevent irreparable harm caused by the defendants’ violation of the ESA. It could not be the case that any time defendants are found liable for a significant violation of the ESA’s procedural provisions, the plaintiffs are entitled to any form of injunctive relief that they request. Indeed, “injunctive relief must be tailored to remedy the specific harm alleged.” NRDC v. Winter,508 F.3d 885 , 886 (9th Cir.2007). As a practical matter, the court must decide what irreparable harms are likely to occur to the species in order to craft an appropriately tailored injunction. Here, plaintiff is only entitled to an injunction that prevents irreparable harm caused by defendants’ violation of the Endangered Species Act. Thus, even if a showing of irreparable harm was not necessary for an injunction to issue, such a showing is required in order to justify the specific measures that plaintiffs’ request. Accordingly, the court holds that plaintiff must show that irreparable harm to the listed species will result from defendants’ violation of the ESA in the absence of each measure plaintiffs request.
S. Yuba River Citizens League v. Natl. Marine Fisheries Serv.,
The practical approach adopted by the district court in South Yuba River Citizens League is persuasive. Based on the limited factual support provided by Plaintiffs, the Court cannot analyze in the context of
Plaintiffs’ decision not to challenge any particular project also imposes an impossible burden on Defendants under the burden-shifting approach of Washington Toxics. To show their actions are non-jeopardizing, Defendants would have to show that each action to take place in all the forests subject to the Lynx Amendment will not “appreciably” or “considerably” “diminish the value of critical habitat for both the survival and recovery of the listed species.” 50 C.F.R. § 402.02. The Lynx Amendment amended 20 plans affecting 18 forests, 11 of which include critical lynx habitat. Thus, the breadth of injunction requested by Plaintiffs would impose an impossible task on Defendants. If Plaintiffs had substantiated their request with specific showings of irreparable harm, such a burden would be fan*. But it is not in the total absence of such evidence.
This approach is consistent with that taken by the Eastern District of California in Sierra Forest Legacy v. Sherman, — F.Supp.2d -,
Plaintiffs have not met the burden of identifying likely and irreparable harm tied to specific projects in Lynx Amendment forests. “Establishing injury-in-fact for the purposes of standing is less demanding than demonstrating irreparable harm to obtain injunctive relief.” Id. at - n. 6, at *8 n. 6 (citing Caribbean Marine Serv. Co. v. Baldrige,
Conclusion
For the reasons discussed above,
IT IS ORDERED that Defendants’ motion for summary judgment (doc. 22) is
This case is closed.
Notes
. In 2006, the Wildlife Service designated some critical habitat for lynx, but none of the designated areas were located on Forest Service lands. Ultimately, the Wildlife Service
. The other cases cited by Defendants, Wild Fish Conservancy v. Salazar,
. One affiant is also connected to the Colt Summit Project area in the Lolo National Forest, but it is not clear whether this project area contains lynx critical habitat.
. Section 402 requires permits for discharges of pollutants into navigable waters. 33
. This section states: "After initiation of consultation required under subsection (a)(2) of this section, the Federal agency and the permit or license applicant shall not make any irreversible or irretrievable commitment of resources with respect to the agency action which has the effect of foreclosing the formulation or implementation of any reasonable and prudent alternative measures which would not violate subsection (a)(2) of this section.”
. This regulation appeared in the regulations until 2010. The language does not appear in the current regulations.
