I. INTRODUCTION
Aftеr conducting an environmental review, the United States Forest Service issued a special-use permit authorizing the Water Supply and Storage Co. (“WSSC”) to store water on certain National Forest lands underlying the Long Draw Reservoir west of Fort Collins, Colorado. The United States District Court for the District of Colorado determined the Forest Service’s decision violated the Federal Land Policy and Management Act (“FLPMA”). The district court reversed and remanded the Forest Service’s decision. WSSC, the City of Greeley, the Greeley Water and Sewer Board, the State Engineer of the State of Colorado, and the Colorado Water Conservation Board seek review of the district court’s order. Because this court lacks jurisdiction, we dismiss the appeal.
II. BACKGROUND
Long Draw Reservoir is a water storage facility in the Roosevelt National Forest. It is located on La Poudre Pass Creek, a tributary of the Cache La Poudre River. The original reservoir was formed following complеtion of the Long Draw Dam in 1929. Almost thirty years later, the reservoir was expanded. The expansion inundated an additional 390 acres of National Forest land.
WSSC holds an easement which permits it to store water on National Forest land flooded by the original Long Draw Reser
The Forest Service first authorized WSSC to operate and maintain the expanded Long Draw Reservoir in 1980. The agency amended the permit a year later, extending its terms until December 31, 1991. The аmended permit noted future permits would be subject to conditions imposed by the Forest Service. In 1991 and thereafter, the agency further extended the term of the permit to allow it time to analyze potential environmental impacts assоciated with renewing WSSC’s authorization to store water on National Forest land.
The upper Cache La Poudre drainage provides habitat for a variety of fish species, and water from La Poudre Pass Creek is vital to several threatened and endangered species. Typically, however, WSSC releases no water from Long Draw Reservoir to La Poudre Pass Creek between November and March or April. As a result, La Poudre Pass Creek between the Long Draw Dam and the confluence with the Cache La Poudre River is effectively dry during the winter months. The Forest Service has concluded lack of winter flow causes a nearly complete loss of aquatic habitat in some locations and may preclude the mаintenance of self-sustaining fish populations in La Poudre Pass Creek below Long Draw Reservoir.
In 1993, the Forest Service issued a Draft Environmental Impact Statement (“DEIS”) on permit renewal for Long Draw Reservoir. The DEIS identified four alternatives. Alternativе B, the Forest Service’s proposed action, suggested issuing a special-use permit to WSSC with the understanding that WSSC would voluntarily commit to operating Long Draw Reservoir in accordance with a joint operating plan (“JOP”) submitted by WSSC and the cities of Fоrt Collins and Greeley, Colorado. The JOP purported to provide for additional winter flows to the Cache La Poudre River, but did not provide for winter flow in La Poudre Pass Creek. Alternative C, the “Environmentally Preferred Alternative,” proposed issuing the sрecial-use permit with a “bypass flow” requirement. The bypass flow requirement would compel WSSC to release water from Long Draw Reservoir during the winter months in order to maintain minimum flows in La Poudre Pass Creek.
The Region VIII Administrator for the Environmental Protection Agency, the Acting Superintendent of Rocky Mountain National Park, and the Forest Service’s own interdisciplinary team urged the Forest Service to impose a bypass flow requirement when it issued the Long Draw Reservoir permit. Nevertheless, the аgency granted WSSC its land use authorization without a bypass flow requirement. Instead, the agency conditioned the permit upon WSSC’s participation in a revised version of the JOP. Six months after the Forest Service issued its decision, it executed a fifty-year water facility easement to WSSC for the use and operation of Long Draw Dam and the expanded reservoir.
Following an unsuccessful administrative appeal, Trout Unlimited (“TU”) challenged the Forest Service’s decision in federal court аnd moved for summary judgment. WSSC, the City of Greeley, the Greeley Water and Sewer Board, the State Engineer of the State of Colorado, and the Colorado Water Conservation Board intervened as defendants. The district court dismissed or denied all but one of TU’s claims for relief. It granted summary judgment, however, on TU’s claim
Defendant-Intervenors appeal the district court’s decision. They assert the Forest Service lacks authority to impose bypass flow requirements as a condition of permit issuance and claim the district court erred in granting summary judgment to TU. TU cross-appeals, raising claims under the National Forest Management Act (“NFMA”) and the National Environmental Policy Act (“NEPA”).
In addition to the merits issues, the parties have submitted three motions for this court’s consideration. First, the Forest Service, with the support of TU, moves to dismiss for lack of appellate jurisdiction. Second, DefendanU-Intervenors move to certify questions of state law. Third, Washington Agricultural Legal Foundation, Washington State Pоtato Commission, Washington State Dairy Federation, and New Mexico Cattle Growers Association (collectively Washington Agricultural) move for leave to submit an amicus brief.
III. ANALYSIS
Before addressing the substance of the parties’ claims, this court must first resolve the jurisdictional issue raised by the Forest Service in its motion to dismiss. See In re Universal Serv. Fund Tel. Billing Practice Litig.,
This court has jurisdiction over final decisions of the federal district courts pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291. Jurisdiction under § 1291 generally is contingent upon “the existence of a decision by the District Court that ends the litigation on the merits and leaves nothing for the court to do but execute the judgment.” Coopers & Lybrand v. Livesay,
In the context of a district court order remanding a matter to an administrative agency, jurisdiction may be appropriate when the issue presented is both urgent and important. Bender,
In Bender, this court applied the exception to the administrative-remand rule when we determined the case involved a “serious and unsettled” question regarding federal oil and gas leasing and was urgent because refusal to assert jurisdiction might have foreclosed future appеllate review of the issue at later stages in the proceeding. Id. at 1428; see also id. at 1428 n. 3 (stating both urgency and importance elements contributed to the court’s determination that it had jurisdiction to hear the appeal). In fact, we noted the possibility of injustice due to delay was “perhaps [the] most important” factor in our jurisdictional calculus.
DefendanNIntervenors make the conclusory allegation that delaying appellate review of the district court’s Long Draw decision will “result in uncertainty, additional litigation, confusion and a very real danger of injustice.” Defendant-Intervenors’ Resp. to Mot. to Dismiss at 11. Thеy offer no support for this statement, however, and we can discern no reason why this case requires urgent or immediate judicial consideration. In this case, delayed review will not result in injustice. Defendant-Intervenors do not claim the Forest Sеrvice will require implementation of bypass flows during the remand process.
In sum, this case does not fall within the narrow exception to the administrative-remand rule. Although the issues presented may be important, the need for judicial review is not urgent.
For the reasons stated abovе, Defendant-Appellee’s motion to dismiss is granted. Defendant-Intervenors’ appeal and TU’s cross-appeal are dismissed for lack of jurisdiction. Because this court does not have jurisdiction over the issues raised in Defendant-Intervenоrs’ motion to certify questions of state law, that motion is dismissed as moot. Similarly, because we lack jurisdiction over the issues raised in its proposed amicus brief, Washington Agricultural’s motion for leave to file an amicus brief is dismissed as moot.
Notes
. We recognize Bender cites Paluso v. Mathews,
. Defendant-Intervenors contend postponed review will result in cost, delay, and uncertainty during the remand process. These inconveniences, however, do not create appellate, jurisdiction where it does not otherwise exist. See Boughton v. Cotter Corp.,
.Because we conclude at the outset that appellate review is not urgent, there is no need to balance "the danger of injustice by delaying appellate review” against "the inconvenience and costs of piecemeal review.” Bender,
