I. Background
A. Factual and Statutory Background
The lengthy factual history of the Dakota Access Pipeline, a 1,200-mile domestic-oil pipeline running from North Dakota to Illinois, is set forth in this Court's prior Opinions and need not be repeated here. See, e.g., Standing Rock Sioux Tribe v. U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (Standing Rock I),
Since the pipeline project was proposed, Plaintiffs insist that they have "continually sought to protect" their tribal lands from the "serious risk of harm" it poses. See Yankton MSJ at 4. This assertion is somewhat belied, however, by the record regarding the Tribe's cooperation (or lack thereof) with the federal agencies involved in the project. The Yankton did not attend multiple meetings held by the Corps and FWS to discuss DAPL (meetings that were attended by other interested tribes), see Exhs. I (January 25, 2016, Corps Meeting Log), J (December 8, 2015, Corps Meeting Log), V (List of Invitees to FWS Meetings), W (FWS Meeting Log), nor did they respond to numerous efforts by the Corps and FWS to engage in discussion regarding the pipeline. See Exhs. N (Letter from Col. Henderson, May 10, 2016), O (Letter from Col. Henderson, May 6, 2016), P (Email Chain Discussing Corps' Attempts to Contact Yankton, May 2, 2016), Q (Email Chain Discussing Consultation, April 15-22, 2016), T (Letter from FWS to Chairman Flying Hawk), U (Letter from FWS to Tribal Officer Little). Regardless of the Tribe's level of participation in the consultation process, however, the Yankton have since objected to the pipeline's construction and routing.
In particular, Plaintiffs contest the process by which the Corps and FWS issued a series of permits and permissions necessary for the pipeline to cross federally regulated lands and waters. Although DAPL runs almost entirely across private property, 3% of the pipeline is on federally managed land and thus required governmental approval. See Standing Rock I,
NEPA requires that federal agencies evaluate the environmental effects of major government actions, but it "imposes only procedural requirements." Dep't of Transp. v. Public Citizen,
This was the route chosen by the federal agencies charged with evaluating the DAPL-related permissions. In July 2016, the Corps' Omaha District issued an EA and FONSI related to the crossings of Corps-managed lands and flowage easements at Lake Oahe and Lake Sakakawea
B. Procedural History
1. History of DAPL Litigation
The Yankton Sioux Tribe initiated the instant suit on September 9, 2016, when it filed a Complaint against the United States Army Corps of Engineers, the United States Fish and Wildlife Service, and four individual Defendants-Dan Ashe, Director of FWS; John W. Henderson, Commander of the Corps' Omaha District; Anthony Mitchell, Commander of the Corps' St. Louis District; and Todd Semonite, the Corps' Commanding General and Chief of Engineers. See Case No. 16-1796, ECF No. 1 (Yankton Sioux Compl.). In February 2017, Defendant Dakota Access moved to intervene in support of federal Defendants, a motion that was not opposed by the Tribe and was subsequently granted by the Court.
For the past fourteen months, others among the consolidated Plaintiffs have made multiple attempts to prevent oil from flowing through the pipeline. Indeed, this Court has now issued five Opinions in this case-all addressing various claims by the Standing Rock and Cheyenne River Sioux Tribes. These Tribes' first pass at preventing pipeline construction was a motion for a preliminary injunction based solely on the NHPA, asserting that the ongoing clearing and grading of the land along DAPL's route disrupted sacred tribal sites. See Standing Rock I,
On February 8, 2017, the Corps granted Dakota Access an easement pursuant to the Mineral Leasing Act, authorizing it to cross federal lands at Lake Oahe and complete the pipeline. See ECF No. 172-11 (Easement). The next day, Cheyenne River filed another motion for preliminary injunction and an application for a temporary
On June 14, 2017, two weeks after DAPL became fully operational, the Court granted in part and denied in part the parties' motions and remanded certain issues to the Corps. See Standing Rock Sioux Tribe v. U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (Standing Rock III),
2. Yankton Motion for Summary Judgment
Only now, as that remand is ongoing and further analysis is underway, have the Yankton Sioux and Robert Flying Hawk chosen to enter the fray. On November 13, 2017, they brought the instant Motion for Partial Summary Judgment on the basis of their claims arising under NEPA and the Tribe's 1851 Treaty of Laramie with the United States. See Yankton MSJ. Specifically, the Tribe asserts that Defendants violated NEPA by segmenting their evaluation of DAPL's environmental impacts among multiple federal agencies and Corps divisions. Id. at 5-16. Arguing that the various federal permissions for the pipeline are "connected" or "similar" actions under the meaning of NEPA's implementing regulations, Plaintiffs contend that Defendants were thus required to conduct a consolidated, programmatic assessment of the approvals. Id. at 5-6. Plaintiffs additionally move for summary judgment on their claim that, by failing to obtain the Tribe's free and informed consent prior to granting authorizations for DAPL's construction, the Corps and FWS violated the
On January 10, 2018, federal Defendants filed their Opposition to Plaintiffs' claims and cross-moved for partial summary judgment. See ECF No. 320 (Corps Opp.) Dakota Access, as a Defendant-Intervenor and Cross-Claimant, also filed its own Opposition and brief in support of federal Defendants' Cross-Motion. See DA Opp. In their briefing, Defendants additionally moved to dismiss the Tribe's NHPA claims as moot in light of DAPL's completed construction and current operation. Plaintiffs filed their Reply and Opposition on January 26, 2018, in which they continue to request summary judgment on their NEPA counts, but "withdraw" their Motion with respect to their Treaty- and trust-based claims. See ECF No. 324 (Yankton Reply). They also oppose Defendants' Motion with respect to the dismissal of their NHPA claim, asserting that the related counts in their Complaint remain viable. With briefing complete, the Court must now determine whether summary judgment is appropriate for either party.
II. Legal Standard
The parties have cross-moved for partial summary judgment on the administrative record. The summary-judgment standard set forth in Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 56(c), therefore, "does not apply because of the limited role of a court in reviewing the administrative record." Sierra Club v. Mainella,
The Administrative Procedure Act "sets forth the full extent of judicial authority to review executive agency action for procedural correctness." FCC v. Fox Television Stations, Inc.,
III. Analysis
A. Preliminary Issues
Before turning to the crux of this case-the Tribe's NEPA challenge to Defendants' environmental assessments-the Court first pauses to address four preliminary issues.
1. LCvR 7(h)
First, and simplest, is the question of whether Plaintiffs are correct that, because Defendants "failed to controvert any facts identified by [the Tribe] in the statement of material facts[,] ... this Court should assume Plaintiffs' facts are admitted" under Local Rule 7(h). See Yankton Reply at 3. They are not. Indeed, as Defendants accurately note, Rule 7(h) does not apply in cases such as this one in which judicial review is based solely on the administrative record. See All. for Nat. Health U.S. v. Sebelius,
2. Treaty and Trust Claims
The Court next looks at the Tribe's Treaty-based claims. Plaintiffs' Motion relies in part on the first count of their Complaint, which alleged that Defendants violated the 1851 Treaty of Laramie, the federal trust responsibilities to the Tribe, and the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP). See Compl., ¶¶ 81-90. More specifically, Plaintiffs assert that Defendants failed to "consider the impacts of [their] actions to the Tribe's 1851 Treaty Rights" and that the Corps breached its "fiduciary duty to consider how its actions may affect a tribe's treaty rights." Yankton MSJ at 20, 29. In their Oppositions and Cross-Motions, Defendants contend that this matter was already disposed of in Standing Rock II. They argue, moreover, that regardless of this Court's prior Opinion, Plaintiffs are unable to identify any retained tribal rights in land or waters that would be affected by DAPL's construction. See Corps Opp. at 18-19 (stating that "Plaintiffs offer no "compelling reason why this Court should reconsider" its prior Opinion addressing treaty rights), 27-28 (noting that Yankton's current lands are 230 miles away from the Lake Oahe crossing and the Tribe has "not identified any possibility ... that a spill would impact [its] lands"); DA Opp. at 21 ("Yankton's arguments based on treaty and trust obligation are indistinguishable from those the Court already considered and resolved.").
Plaintiffs were apparently persuaded by such arguments. In its Reply, the Tribe stated that "after reviewing [f]ederal Defendants' response, and given the complexities of rules for interpretation of treaties, Plaintiffs hereby withdraw the [ ] claim presented in their motion for partial summary judgment regarding [Defendants'] failure to consider the Tribe's treaty rights, and choose not to pursue that claim at this time." Yankton Reply at 2.
This attempt at a limited "withdrawal" is, unfortunately for the Tribe, not a fruitful legal tactic. Parties are not permitted to float trial balloons in motions for summary judgment, only to retract but preserve their claims when the opposing
Yet even if the Tribe had not withdrawn the relevant portions of its Motion, it would not have prevailed. Defendants are correct that in light of this Court's prior Opinion rejecting nearly identical trust and treaty arguments made by the Standing Rock and Cheyenne River Sioux Tribes, Yankton's claims are ultimately futile. See Standing Rock III,
The Court will additionally grant summary judgment with respect to Plaintiffs' UNDRIP claim. As Defendants accurately note, courts have consistently held that UNDRIP is a non-binding declaration that does not create a federal cause of action. See Corps Opp. at 19 n.8; Isaac v. Sigman,
3. Standing
Defendants additionally contend that the Tribe falls short of establishing standing for the purpose of bringing their NEPA and NHPA claims. See Corps Opp. at 29. In particular, the Corps asserts that Plaintiffs "do not provide a specific and concrete plan to return to or use Lake Oahe specifically or identify how any federal action causes them harm." Id. at 30. The Tribe's declarations, according to Defendants, "do not establish current or future use of the areas around Lake Oahe" and instead only "mention past visits" to the area and the fact that "unnamed tribal members hunt, gather and perform ceremony with water including the Missouri River in North and South Dakota." Id. The Corps casts these assertions as "generalized grievance[s]" and thus insufficient to confer standing under Article III. Id. at 29.
In order to establish standing, a plaintiff must show that: (1) she has suffered an "injury in fact" that is (a) concrete and particularized and (b) actual or imminent, rather than conjectural or hypothetical; 2) the injury is caused by, or fairly traceable to, the challenged action; and 3) it is likely, rather than merely
Here, the Court concludes that the Tribe adequately pled these requisites for standing. Plaintiffs' declarations discuss Tribe members' past use of the areas affected by DAPL's construction and operation, including those surrounding Lake Oahe, as well as the injuries they fear from the pipeline's presence on such lands. See Decl. of Faith Spotted Eagle, ¶¶ 12, 19-23 (stating that she has "performed ceremony and prayer at Lake Oahe and near the proposed Missouri River crossing site" and "[i]n doing so ... used water" for "medicine and for spiritual purposes," "gathered medicine very near the pipeline corridor at Lake Oahe," and that DAPL will "result in ... emotional, spiritual, psychological, and cultural damage" to the Yankton people via the potential destruction of such resources); Decl. of Kip Spotted Eagle, ¶¶ 10-13 (stating that Tribal members "continue[ ] to hunt, gather and perform ceremony with water ... including near the pipeline," and that he has "been invited to hunt and fish in this area by members of the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe"); Decl. of Glenn Drapeau, ¶¶ 9-10 (stating that the Tribe, of which he is a member, "depend[s] on a number of plants that grow ... near and within the pipeline corridor, including the Lake Oahe crossing area, for prayer, ceremony, and medicine," and that "[o]peration of the Pipeline will harm ... [the Tribe's] sacred water, sacred burial sites, and ... way of life and spirituality").
Such averments of use of the areas affected by the pipeline and allegations of specific harms that may befall declarants and the Tribe from DAPL's presence are sufficient for Plaintiffs to establish injury in this case. See Friends of the Earth,
4. NHPA Claims
The Court last considers whether Plaintiffs' NHPA claims should be dismissed as moot, in light of the fact that "construction is complete and oil is flowing." Standing Rock IV,
Article III of the U.S. Constitution limits federal courts to resolving actual cases or controversies and thus "prevents their passing on moot questions-ones where intervening events make it impossible to grant the prevailing party effective relief." Burlington N. R.R. Co. v. Surface Transp. Bd.,
Here, Plaintiffs claim that the Corps violated the NHPA's requirement that a "federal agency ... consult with Indian tribes that attach cultural or religious significance to property affected by the agency's undertakings." Standing Rock III,
The Court concludes that the answer is in the negative. The alleged "injuries" arising from Defendants' NHPA violations are tethered to the timeline of DAPL's construction and operation; in other words, tribal consultation and the granting of relevant federal permissions are actions that take place prior to the execution of a given project. See Standing Rock I,
The specter of mootness raised in Standing Rock's earlier filings has now come to pass-construction is complete and oil is flowing through the pipeline. This advancement in DAPL's development in turn dooms Yankton's NHPA efforts. The Tribe's first three claims mentioned above are explicitly premised on alleged violations of the consultation requirements under § 106 of the Act. Now that construction of the pipeline has occurred, the Court agrees with Defendants (and the Standing Rock Sioux) that such consultation would no longer be "meaningful." Similarly, the Court is unable to order effective relief with respect to Plaintiff's final NHPA claim, which alleges that the Corps improperly defined the area of potential effects. This count relies on the Tribe's assertion that "the clearing, grading, excavation, and construction that would occur along the duration of the [p]ipeline route would destroy any historic or culturally significant sites encountered." Compl., ¶ 139. These construction-related activities have now occurred, and, accordingly, the potential for the preservation of historic or cultural sites no longer exists. Cf. Sierra Club,
Although the Tribe asserts in its Reply that meaningful relief remains available because the "risk of a spill through operation and maintenance of the Pipeline still ... threatens the Tribe's cultural and historic sites," such an emphasis on ongoing harms is nowhere to be found in Plaintiffs' Complaint, nor are such prospective injuries supported by the record. See Yankton Reply at 3, 30-31; Benavides v. Hous. Auth. of San Antonio, Tex.,
B. NEPA
The Court at last turns to what remains of the Cross-Motions for Summary Judgment-i.e. , Plaintiffs' NEPA claims. The Tribe's Motion focuses on Count VI of its Complaint, which alleges that federal Defendants "unlawfully piecemealed and segmented approval and analysis of the Pipeline utilizing three separate EAs and FONSIs." Yankton Compl., ¶ 168. Specifically, Plaintiffs allege that the Corps and FWS violated NEPA's "anti-segmentation principle" by choosing to issue discrete EAs for the various components of the pipeline requiring federal permissions. Id., ¶ 166. This principle seeks to prevent agencies from "avoid[ing] the NEPA requirement that an EIS be prepared for all major federal actions with significant environmental impacts by dividing an overall plan into component parts." Taxpayers Watchdog, Inc. v. Stanley,
1. Deference to Agencies
In evaluating the parties' Cross-Motions, the Court begins with the question of deference. According to federal Defendants, "[A]n agency's scoping decision is entitled to deference," including the Corps' and FWS's decision to "limit[ ] their review to areas within their jurisdiction." Corps Opp. at 8. Plaintiffs counter, somewhat confusingly, that because federal Defendants "are part of the same entity-the United States-and the United States is required to conduct the NEPA analysis," no deference is due to the agencies' independent scoping determinations. See Yankton Reply at 13. This line of argument is unavailing, as the scoping process
Here, the Court agrees with Defendants that the Corps' and FWS's scoping determinations are entitled to deference under NEPA. As this Circuit has held, "[T]he line-drawing decisions necessitated" in agencies' "treatment of [a] project's relation to other government activities" are "vested in the agencies, not the courts." Coal. on Sensible Transp., Inc. v. Dole,
2. Framework of Segmentation Analysis
Deference thus established, the Court next discusses the general parameters of Plaintiffs' claim that the Corps and FWS impermissibly "segmented" their environmental analysis.
Under NEPA, an agency acts unlawfully when it "divides connected, cumulative, or similar federal actions into separate projects and thereby fails to address
The initial task in addressing a segmentation claim is identifying the "overall plan" or "major federal action" that has allegedly been sub-divided. See Save Barton Creek Ass'n v. Fed. Highway Admin.,
According to Defendants, the Tribe is identifying the federal action at issue as "the entire pipeline" project, see Corps Opp. at 9, which they contend is squarely precluded by the D.C. Circuit's holding in Sierra Club,
The Tribe, Defendants assert, is making "functionally the same argument" here. See Corps Opp. at 9. If Plaintiffs were in fact asserting that NEPA required a DAPL-wide assessment, the Corps would be correct in deeming such a claim futile. The Tribe would, moreover, be precluded from making such an argument not only by the holding in Sierra Club, but also by one of the Court's prior Opinions in this case. In Standing Rock I, it rebuffed Standing Rock's argument that federal Defendants were required to engage in a whole-pipeline analysis. The Court denied the need for any such comprehensive evaluation, finding that "a federal agency with limited jurisdiction over specific activities related to a pipeline" is not "required to consider all the effects of the entire pipeline."
Yet the Court believes that the Yankton Sioux's segmentation claim is more nuanced than Defendants contend. Although the Tribe certainly confuses the matter somewhat by referring repeatedly to the "entire pipeline project" and the "impacts of the [p]ipeline," it also raises the narrower argument that NEPA required a "comprehensive agency action review of the connected and similar federal actions" related to DAPL. See Yankton Reply at 1, 8, 10; Yankton MSJ at 6 (emphasis added). Plaintiffs contrast this claim with "whole pipeline review," explaining that they are limiting their challenge to the series of actions within federal permitting authority. See Yankton Reply at 9-10.
For this Court, then, the decision in Sierra Club serves only to identify a lacuna in the binding precedent-how to apply the anti-segmentation rule to federal actions encompassed within a larger, private project. Here, Plaintiffs are challenging federal Defendants' decision to issue "three separate and distinct EAs, three separate and distinct FONSIs, and one categorical exclusion classification for their own respective actions related to the Pipeline project," in lieu of a consolidated analysis of all such federal permissions related to DAPL. See Yankton MSJ at 11. This limited anti-segmentation claim appears to fit within the narrow opening left ajar by the holdings of Sierra Club and this Court's prior Opinion. See Sierra Club,
3. Connected Actions
Having established the framework of the anti-segmentation rule and the parameters of Plaintiffs' NEPA claims, the Court begins with the Tribe's allegation that Defendants violated the Act's implementing regulation,
Under § 1508.25(a)(1), connected actions are those that "(i) automatically trigger other actions which may require [an EIS]; (ii) cannot or will not proceed unless other actions are taken previously or simultaneously; or (iii) are interdependent parts of a larger action and depend on the larger action for their justification." Although Defendants argue that this regulation applies only to EIS analyses, and not EAs (as were issued in this case), this contention conflicts with Circuit precedent stating that "when determining the contents of an EA or an EIS, an agency must consider all connected actions." Delaware Riverkeeper,
So, are the discrete federal permissions here in fact "connected"? Plaintiffs offer four major arguments in favor of finding such a relationship: (1) the federal projects do not have "substantial independent utility"; (2) the approval of each federal permit constrained the consideration of alternatives for other portions of the pipeline; (3) the permits and permissions were "justified by" a larger federal action; and (4) the federal projects are "interdependent" and have a "synergistic" environmental
a. Substantial Independent Utility
Under this Circuit's decision in Taxpayers, federal projects can only be analyzed separately if each project has, inter alia , "substantial independent utility."
This line of argument, as Defendants accurately note, ignores the facts on the ground. Most significantly, 97% of DAPL runs through private land. This means that vast swaths of the pipeline could be constructed without any federal permissions or permits whatsoever, and that, if a given federal authorization was denied for a portion of the remaining 3%, the project could be re-routed to avoid the contentious crossing or easement. See Standing Rock I,
It follows, therefore, that each discrete federal permission had "substantial independent utility," as each would allow that portion of the pipeline to proceed as planned, while any denial would result in re-routing-with no apparent impact on the other federally regulated components of the project. Cf. City of Williams v. Dombeck,
The limited federal involvement with DAPL and the potential for re-routing additionally distinguishes this case from Delaware Riverkeeper, upon which Plaintiffs rely. In that case, the projects at issue addressed upgrades to a natural-gas pipeline, meaning that a federal agency-FERC-had jurisdiction over projects along its entire length. See
DAPL, by contrast, is not so beholden to overall federal approval; as this Court noted in Standing Rock I, "[N]o permitting" does not mean "no pipeline."
b. Consideration of Alternatives
The Tribe next posits that "each approval issued [by the Corps and FWS] sufficiently constrained the consideration of alternatives for other portions of the pipeline to mandate consideration of all approvals in a single NEPA document." Yankton MSJ at 13. According to Plaintiffs, the "approval of one segment clearly foreclosed the opportunity to consider other reasonable alternatives, as the approval of one segment at a specific location decreased route options for other segments of the pipeline."
Defendants have the better of this argument. Indeed, a review of the three EAs at issue demonstrates that the two Corps districts and FWS clearly considered a full panoply of alternatives-including, in each case, a "no-action" alternative that consisted of a scenario in which the pipeline was not constructed. See Omaha Dist. EA at 12-13; St. Louis Dist. EA at 12-15; FWS EA at 15. As made evident by the agencies' analyses, the approval for any one crossing or permission did not restrict the consideration of different route options or alternatives for the other proposed actions. See also Coal. on Sensible Transp.,
c. Larger Federal Action
Plaintiffs next assert that the various federal permits and permissions are "connected" because they "are justified by a larger federal action"-that is, but for an overarching federal project, the discrete approvals would not have been required. They contend that the actions of the Corps and FWS were "clearly parts of a larger action," stating that "the permits and permissions issued by Federal Defendants were part of, and justified by, the ... greater implementation of the Pipeline." Yankton Reply at 10-11. Yet, as discussed above, any suggestion that DAPL as a whole constitutes a "federal action" is unavailing in light of Sierra Club and Standing Rock II. The narrower question, therefore, is whether the federal permits and permissions were justified by any larger federal action and thus required a consolidated NEPA analysis. See Yankton Reply at 12 (acknowledging that Tribe "do[es] not argue that the entire pipeline should have been analyzed, but rather, that the permits and permissions ... should have been analyzed together in a single NEPA process"); see also Sierra Club v. U.S. Army Corps,
Here, Plaintiffs can identify no such overarching federal project upon which the various permissions rely. Instead, the record is clear that federal permission was needed for only limited, discrete components of DAPL's construction. See Corps Opp. at 10 (noting that "there was no single proposal for the pipeline submitted to Corps and FWS"). Although all of the federal authorizations were part of the pipeline project, the project was not itself a federal undertaking. See Sierra Club,
d. Synergistic Effect
Last, the Tribe is unable to demonstrate that the discrete federal permissions were "interdependent" or that they had any "synergistic effect." Plaintiffs cite to Kleppe v. Sierra Club,
This lack of interaction between the sites addressed in each EA distinguishes this case from NRDC v. Hodel,
4. Similar Actions
In addition to maintaining that the approvals were "connected actions," Plaintiffs assert that the Corps' and FWS's assessments were "similar actions" under § 1504.25. The Court begins with the threshold issue of whether the Tribe has in fact forfeited this claim. According to Defendants, the "similar actions" contention is unavailable, as "neither Plaintiffs nor any other commenter raised the argument that FWS and the Corps' actions should be considered together as 'similar actions,' " Corps Opp. at 13 n.5, and "[i]t is well-established that issues not raised in comments before the agency are waived." DA Opp. at 24 (quoting Nat'l Wildlife Fed'n v. EPA,
After examining the underlying record, the Court agrees with Defendants that the "similar actions" issue was not raised "with sufficient specificity reasonably to alert the agency" during the comment period. See Tex Tin Corp. v. EPA,
Similarly, Plaintiffs cannot demonstrate that the issue is "so obvious" that it need not have been pointed out in order to be preserved as a basis for a later legal challenge. See Dep't of Transp.,
Out of an abundance of caution, however, the Court also notes that even if this claim were preserved, the Tribe would still not prevail. Under § 1508.25, similar actions are those that, "when viewed with other reasonably foreseeable or proposed agency actions, have similarities that provide a basis for evaluating their environmental consequences together, such as common timing or geography." Plaintiffs contend that the federal permissions at issue in this case share such a resemblance. In particular, the Tribe focuses on the "common timing" of the Corps' and FWS's actions, noting that the agencies' decisionmaking processes "took place at roughly the same time," with the relevant federal permits and permissions issued within a span of ten months. See Yankton MSJ at 15; Reply at 19.
Simultaneity of agency actions is not, however, dispositive of their similarity. Instead, § 1508.25 clearly states that the ultimate question is whether a set of actions "ha[s] similarities that provide a basis for evaluating their environmental consequences" in a single assessment. As this Circuit has put it, a comprehensive analysis is appropriate under § 1508.25 when the "sufficiently similar character of actions is such that [a programmatic analysis] is the 'best way' to assess their combined impacts." Coal. on Sensible Transp.,
The implementing regulation, moreover, also lists common geography as another potential indicator of similarity-a factor that, in this case, cuts against finding such commonality between the DAPL-related permissions. As discussed above, the three EAs and FONSIs were for geographically and ecologically distinct areas of federal control. As Defendants note, the assessments addressed actions that were "not physically connected" and instead were "spread over hundreds of miles across multiple states." Corps Opp. at 16. The permissions and permits, moreover, were for different environmental resources: the Omaha District EA addressed the crossing of Lakes Oahe and Sakakawea; the St. Louis EA looked at a series of lake, creek, and channel crossings and drainage districts in Illinois; and the FWS EA was concerned with the agency's jurisdiction over wetland and grassland easements.
Such geographic isolation and ecological diversity, the Corps contends, defeat any suggestions of similarity between the federal actions. Plaintiffs counter that "[w]hile the geographic locations for the various agency actions are not the same, they all
Plaintiffs also vaguely allude to other alleged similarities among the DAPL-related actions. Although it focuses largely on the temporal overlap between the various federal permissions, the Tribe asserts that "Defendants' actions involved the same singular pipeline which would transport the same crude oil, rendering the actions' potential impacts similar if not identical." Yankton MSJ at 15. Again, this argument does not reflect the reality of the pipeline-a project that spans four states over its 1,200-mile route. The discrete parcels of federal lands and easements the pipeline encounters along this corridor are not, simply by virtue of being in DAPL's path, "similar." Indeed, one need only reference the EAs at issue in this case to understand that, far from presenting "identical" environmental considerations, each federal permission reflects site-specific and distinct ecological concerns. Although the pipeline may be a "singular" private undertaking, its environmental impacts and the related federal assessments are far more diverse.
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In sum, the Court concludes that Defendants' environmental assessments are not "connected" or "similar" federal actions. Instead, they are discrete analyses that address ecologically and geographically disparate areas of federal jurisdiction. The Corps and FWS, accordingly, were under no obligation to consider these authorizations together. The Court observes, moreover, that a major rationale for the anti-segmentation rule is especially inapplicable in this case. Enforcement of the principle seeks, in large part, to prevent agencies from disguising the actual environmental impacts of a given governmental project by dividing the action into artificially created components. See Macht v. Skinner,
C. Harmless Error
Finally, even if Defendants' actions did violate NEPA, the Court concludes that such violations did not prejudice Plaintiffs, as there is no indication that the agencies would have reached a different outcome if they had in fact considered the DAPL-related actions in toto .
The Tribe argues that the Court should not apply harmless-error doctrine in this context, noting that certain cases finding improper segmentation of NEPA analyses have not explicitly addressed the question of prejudice. See Yankton Reply at 21. Yet just because other courts have not applied harmless error does not prevent this Court
Defendants assert that the Tribe has identified "no concrete environmental impact that was missed by the alleged segmenting of the discrete permissions" by the Corps and FWS. See Corps Opp. at 17-18. The Court agrees. The Tribe describes the actual impact of Defendants' allegedly improper segmentation in only the vaguest of terms, stating that the use of separate analyses left the Tribe "with no means to truly understand or weigh in on the vast cumulative impacts this project can and will have on the human environment" and generally alleging that by using three separate EAs, Defendants "concealed the cumulative environmental impacts of the project." Yankton MSJ at 2.
Yet there is no indication in the record that Defendants "concealed" any cumulative environmental impacts or that they "faile[ed] to do the analysis ... to determine the cumulative impacts" of all of the federal actions. See Yankton Reply at 5-6. On the contrary, each of the three EAs contains a section explicitly titled"cumulative impacts," discussing the potential cumulative effects of each permission and addressing the potential for the relevant permit to interact with other federal actions-including those related to the pipeline. See Omaha EA at 98-107; FWS EA at 33-35; St. Louis EA and FONSI at 83-94. If the agencies were attempting to "hid[e] the ball" as to DAPL's cumulative impacts, see Yankton MSJ at 19, they did a poor job indeed.
Beyond providing no evidence of Defendants' alleged "concealment," Plaintiffs have not identified any actual harms that arose from the division of the agencies' analysis. The goal of NEPA is to ensure that the public is provided with relevant information and the opportunity to participate in agency decisionmaking. See Robertson v. Methow Valley Citizens Council,
In fact, the high volume of comments and active public dialogue throughout the permitting process undermine any conclusion that NEPA's participatory goals were somehow stymied by the use of three separate EAs. See Yankton MSJ at 5 (acknowledging "multitude of comments" regarding Defendants' actions). Although the Tribe may have preferred that the assessments be combined into a single document, there is no indication in the record that such consolidation would have had any meaningful effect. Plaintiffs, like the rest of the public, seem to have had no difficulty reviewing the three discrete documents-or voicing their concerns regarding the agencies' conclusions. See Nevada v. Dep't of Energy,
Contrary to the Tribe's assertion that "had [Defendants] not broken the analysis
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As a final note, the Court observes that its conclusions today are not necessarily the end of the road for the Yankton Sioux's involvement with DAPL. As of October 20, 2017, the Tribe has been contacted by Defendants and asked to provide input during the ongoing remand analysis. See ECF No. 306, Exh. 1 (Letter from Corps requesting information from Yankton to assist in remand). Plaintiffs will therefore have the opportunity to voice their remaining concerns regarding the Corps' environmental assessments and, if they choose, to engage in an active dialogue with Defendants as this case continues to move forward.
IV. Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, the Court will deny Plaintiffs' Motion for Summary Judgment, grant Defendants' Cross-Motion for Summary Judgment, and dismiss Plaintiffs' Count I as moot. A contemporaneous Order so stating will issue this day.
