VILLAGE OF LOS RANCHOS DE ALBUQUERQUE; Anne Bullock;
Steven Ruffennach; Edward Banks; Bill Derr; R.E. Clark;
Ann Clark; Conrad Stack; Arnold Sargeant; Kit Sargeant;
Riо Grande Valley Preservation Society, Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
John O. MARSH, Secretary of the Department of the Army;
Kent R. Genser, Colonel, District Engineer for the
Albuquerque District of the Army Corps of Engineers; Frank
Dunkle, Director of the United States Fish and Wildlife
Service; Manuel Lujan, Jr., Secretary of the Department of
the Interior; Henry J. Hatch, Lieutenant General; Michael
Spear, Region 2 (Southwest Region) of the Fish and Wildlife
Service; City of Albuquerque, Defendants-Appellees.
Nos. 90-2012, 90-2026, 90-2052.
United States Court of Appeals,
Tenth Circuit.
Feb. 11, 1992.
Before McKAY, Chief Judge, ALDISERT,* HOLLOWAY, LOGAN, SEYMOUR, MOORE, ANDERSON, TACHA, BALDOCK, BRORBY and EBEL, Circuit Judges.
EBEL, Circuit Judge.
The appellants have filed a Petition for Rehearing and Suggestion for Rehearing en Banc to reconsider the decision rendered in our unpublished Order and Judgment of October 24, 1991.
The panel that rendered the decision denies the petition for rehearing.
In accordance with Rule 35(b), Federal Rules of Appellate Procedure, the suggestion for rehearing en banc was transmitted to all of the judges of the court in regular active service. Based upon a poll of those judges, rehearing en banc was granted limited to the single issue of the appropriate standard for judicial review of an agency's determination that a project doеs not have sufficient environmental impact to require an EIS.3
The court concludes that the appropriate standard for reviewing an agenсy's determination that a proposed project will not have environmental impact significant enough to require an EIS is the arbitrary and capriсious standard of 5 U.S.C. § 706(2)(A).
The court summarizes the facts relevant to this issue as follows. The United States Army Corps of Engineers prepared an Environmental Assessment ("EA") of the effects of building the proposed Montano Bridge. Based on the EA, the Corps decided that the project would cause no significant environmental impact and therefore concluded that it need not prepare an EIS. The appellants brought suit, alleging among other things that the finding of no significant impact and the failure to prepare an EIS violated NEPA. The district court granted summary judgment to the appellees. In its Order and Judgment of October 24, 1991, this court affirmed the district court.
In Marsh, the Supreme Court addressed the "narrow question" of what standard the courts should use to review an agency's determination that an EIS need not be supplemented. Marsh,
a classic еxample of a factual dispute the resolution of which implicates substantial agency expertise.... The dispute ... does not turn on the meaning of thе term "significant" or on an application of this legal standard to settled facts. Rather, resolution of this dispute involves primarily issues of fact. Becаuse analysis of the relevant documents "requires a high level of technical expertise," we must defer to the "informed discretion of the responsible federal agencies." ... Accordingly, as long as the [agency's] decision not to supplement the [EIS] was not "arbitrary or capricious," it should not be set aside.
Id. at 376-77,
The initial decision that a project will not have significant impact and therefore will not require an EIS is no less a factual determination than the decision that new information is not significant and therefore will not require supplementing an existing EIS. See id. at 374,
Rаther than create traps for the unwary by establishing different standards of review for similar agency actions, the court believes it preferable to usе the arbitrary and capricious standard to review an agency's determination of the necessity of both an initial and a supplemental EIS, at leаst where the issue is whether the project will have significant environmental impact. See Goos v. Interstate Commerce Comm'n,
Because the court concludes that the prior Order and Judgment in this case applied the correct standard of review, the court AFFIRMS the prior judgment in that regard, which is the only issue considered in this rehearing en banc.
It is so ORDERED.
Notes
The Honorable Ruggero J. Aldisert, Senior Circuit Judge for the Third Circuit, sitting by designation. Judge Aldisert participated in the original panel's consideration of the petition for rehearing but did not рarticipate in the rehearing en banc
42 U.S.C. § 4332(2)(C)(i) requires that "all agencies of the Federal Government shall ... include in every recommendation or report on proposals for legislation and other major Federal actions significantly affecting the quality of the human environment, a detailed statement by the responsible official on ... the environmental impact of the proposed action."
A recent Tenth Circuit case, Sierra Club v. Lujan,
The en banc court has determined unanimously that additional oral argument and briefing would not materially assist its determination. Accordingly, the rehearing is ordered submitted without reargument or further briefing
The Eighth Circuit held in Goos that the arbitrary and capricious standard governs review of whether significant impact existed to require an EIS. The court held, however, that the reasonableness standard would continue to control review of the "threshоld issue" of whether the project involved "major federal action" sufficient to implicate NEPA. Goos,
