OPINION
Riсhard Oberdorfer and his company, Western Radio Services (collectively, “Western”), brought an action against the United States Forest Service and six of its officers under
Bivens v. Six Unknown Named Agents of the Bureau of Narcotics,
I
Because this appeal comes to us from the grant of a motion for summary judgment, we relate the facts in the light most favorable to Western.
See Nolan v. Heald Coll.,
Gray Butte is an 80-acre area within the Ochoco National Forest in central Oregon. The Forest Service leases various sites in the area to electronic communications companies, including Western and two other companies, Slater Communications and Electronics and Day Wireless Systems. Each lease agreement incorporates by reference the terms of the Forest Service’s Gray Butte Electronic Site Management Plan, which “establishes] a guide for the land manager to base decisions concerning the development of the site in conformance with” ten stated environmental objectives.
Western first constructed radio towers on Gray Butte in 1978, and it maintained good relations with the Forest Service for the first five years of its operations there. In 1986, Western began bringing administrative appeals of various Forest Service decisions. In 1993, Western filed several lawsuits challenging Forest Service permit and leasing decisions. After Western began challenging Forest Service decisions, it experienced unfavorable treatment from the Forest Service, including unexplained delays in processing its applications and rejections of its applications. On January *1118 3, 1991, Western applied to the Forest Service for permission to place additional antennae on Gray Butte. Slater Communications objected, and Wеstern submitted a revised application. Years later, in 1998, the Forest Service denied Western’s application. Western appealed this denial, and in 1999 the Forest Service withdrew its denial and took Western’s application back under consideration. More years passed, and in 2002 and 2003, Western pressed Forest Service officials to take action on its still-pending 1991 application. Between 2003 and 2007, there were communications between Western and various Forest Service officers, with the Forest Serviсe continuing to request additional documents and clarifications and adding new procedural requirements to Western’s application.
While Western was attempting to secure permission to install its side-hill antennae, Western also complained to the Forest Service regarding problems it was having with other Gray Butte lessees. In August 2000, Western informed a Forest Service officer that Slater Communications was not in compliance with the Site Plan, and that Slater Communications “would not allow inspection” by Western. Although Westеrn believed other lessees operated equipment that did not “meet the technical standards” required by the applicable regulations and the Site Plan, Western was unable to specify the nature of the lessees’ noncompliance because Western was unable to conduct its own inspection of the lessees’ sites.
In August 2002, the Forest Service began the process of scheduling an inspection of Gray Butte. In response, Western again raised complaints about other lessees’ noncompliance with the Site Plan. Western also asked the Forest Service to appoint representatives of other Gray Butte lessees, including Western, to the inspection team. In September 2002, the Forest Service inspected all three facilities at Gray Butte, but did not include lessees on its inspection team. The Forest Service found only minor deficiencies at Slater Communications and Day Wireless. Following this inspection, Western continued to send emails to the Forest Service accusing other lessees of noncompliance and demanding enforcement of the Site Plan.
On September 22, 2004, Western brought claims against the Forest Service and the individual defendants under Bivens and the APA, alleging that the defendants failed to stop other lessees’ noncompliance with the Site Plan, failed to allow Western to conduct site inspections of other lessees’ facilities, and delayed taking action on Western’s application to install the two additional “side-hill” antennae on Gray Butte. Western claimed that these delays and inactiоns violated the First Amendment (by treating Western unfavorably in retaliation for its prior litigation against the Forest Service), the Fifth Amendment (by treating Western less favorably than the other lessees without a rational basis), and the APA (by unlawfully withholding or unreasonably delaying administrative action).
In January 2006, Western submitted a revised application seeking permission to construct four additional microwave antennae on the side-hill locations. The Forest Service prepared an environmental assessment for the proposal, and, on September 4, 2007, issued an administrative decision allowing Western to build two of the four proposed antennae. The district court then dismissed Western’s APA inaction claims as moot because the agency had acted. The court also granted the defendants’ motion for summary judgment on Western’s Bivens claims, holding that the APA provided an adequate alternative remedy to a Bivens action.
*1119
Western appeals only the grant of summary judgment on his
Bivens
claims. Our review is de novo.
See Nolan,
II
At the outset, we note that the Supreme Court has held that no
Bivens
remedy is available against a federal agency,
see FDIC v. Meyer,
A
In
Bivens,
the Supreme Court “recognized for the first time an implied private action for damages against federal officers alleged to have violated a citizen’s constitutional rights.”
Ashcroft v. Iqbal,
— U.S. -,
Since
Carlson,
however, the Supreme Court has “consistently rеfused to extend
Bivens
liability to any new context or new category of defendants.”
Corr. Servs. Corp. v. Malesko,
In Wilkie,
the Court distilled its 35-year history of
Bivens
jurisprudence into a two-step analysis for determining congressional intent as to the appropriateness of a
Bivens
remedy.
See id.
at 550,
We have interpreted these cases as holding that, “[s]o long as Congress’ failure to provide money damages, or other significant relief, has not been inadvertent, courts should defer to its judgment.”
Berry v. Hollander,
Second, if the Court cannot infer that Congress intended a statutory remedial scheme to take the place of a judge-made remedy, the Court next asks whether there nevertheless are “factors counseling hesitation” before devising such an implied right of action.
Wilkie,
The Court also found “special factors counselling hesitation” in
Wilkie,
and accordingly declined to create a
Bivens
remedy.
In the first step of its
Bivens
analysis, the Court examined whether there was “any alternative, existing process” available to the ranch owner, and broke his claims “into four main groups: torts or tort-like injuries inflicted on him, charges brought against him, unfavorable agency аctions, and offensive behavior by Bureau employees falling outside those three categories.”
Id.
at 551,
Nonetheless, the Court held that the case could not be disposed of at step one of its
Bivens
analysis because “the forums of defense and redress” were “a patchwork, аn assemblage of state and federal, administrative and judicial benches applying regulations, statutes and common law rules.”
Id.
at 554,
*1122
In the second step of this two-step analysis, the Court noted that the plaintiffs allegation amounted to the claim that the officers had pushed too hard on the government’s behalf, and the Court reasoned that it would be too difficult to draw a line between “legitimately hard bargaining” and “illegitimate pressure.”
Id.
at 562,
B
Applying
Wilkie’s,
two-step analysis to this case, we begin by asking whether the existence of “any alternative, existing process” available to Western, or other indication of Congressional intent, raises the inference that Congress “expected the Judiciary to stay its
Bivens
hand.”
Id.
at 550, 554,
At the outset, we note that
Wilkie
itself gave us a strong indication that the APA constitutes an “alternative, existing process” for Western’s damages claims based on agency actions and inactions. The Court in
Wilkie
observed that the ranch owner had an adequate remedy for the “unfavorable agency actions,” because, “[f]or each [such] claim, administrative review was available, subject to ultimate judicial review under the APA.”
Id.
at 552,
Although
Wilkie
does not explain in detail how it determined that the APA was an adequate alternative remedy for unfavorable agency actions, our own consideration of the APA leads to the same conclusion. The APA expressly declares itself to be a comprehensive remedial scheme: it states that a “person suffering legal wrong because of agency action, or adversely affected or aggrieved by agency action within the meaning of a relevant statute, is entitled to judicial review,” 5 U.S.C. § 702, and then sets forth the procedures for such review,
see id.
§§ 704, 706. “The APA’s comprehensive provisions ... allow any person ‘adversely affected or aggrieved’ by agency action to obtain judicial review thereof, so long as the decision challenged represents a ‘final agency action for which there is no other adequate remedy in a court.’ ”
Webster v. Doe,
(1) compel agency action unlawfully withheld or unreasonably delayed; and
(2) hold unlawful and set aside agency action, findings, and conclusions found to be ... (A) arbitrary, capricious, an abuse of discretion, or otherwise not in accordance with law; [or] (B) contrary to constitutional right, power, privilege, or immunity....
5 U.S.C. § 706(l)-(2);
see also Darby v. Cisneros,
The APA does not provide for monetary damages, though it does allow “specific relief,” including the payment of money to which a plaintiff is entitled.
Bowen v. Massachusetts,
In sum, the design of the APA raises the inference that Congress “expected the Judiciary to stay its
Bivens
hand” and provides “a convincing reason for the Judicial Branch to refrain from providing a new and freestanding remedy in damages,”
Wilkie,
C
This conclusion resolves Western’s claims. Western alleges that the individual defendants were responsible for the Forest Service’s denial of Western’s application to place additional radio antennae on Gray Butte and its failure to take administrative action against other site lessees when it was required by the Site Plan to do so. Provided Western complied with the APA’s procedural requirements,
see
5 U.S.C. § 704, such agency actions and in-actions could be challenged under the APA,
see id.
at § 706(l)-(2);
see also Wilkie,
*1124 Western does not dispute that it has alternative remedies under the APA; it did, after all, bring APA claims against the Forest Service in this case. But Western raises several arguments as to why we should nevertheless allow it an implied right of action.
First, Western points to our decision in
Castaneda,
where we followed the Supreme Court’s precedent in
Carlson
and held that the FTCA did not preclude a
Bivens
action for a prisoner alleging violations of his Eighth Amendment rights by prison officials.
See
[T]he remedies we and the Supreme Court have held to preclude Bivens were deliberately crafted by Congress and applied uniformly throughout the republic. We are aware of no case holding a remedial scheme that is entirely parasitic on state law to be a substitute for a Bivens remedy.
Castaneda,
Second, Western cites Carlson’s analysis of congressional intent. In Carlson, the Court concluded that Congress did not intend for the FTCA to be a substitutе for Bivens because the FTCA had already been enacted when Bivens was decided. Moreover, Carlson noted that a post-Bi vens amendment to the FTCA did not include a statement of congressional intent to create a substitute for Bivens. Western points to the fact that the APA, like the FTCA, predated Bivens, and that Congress similarly failed to address Bivens in a post -Bivens amendment to the APA. According to Western, this legislative history compels the inference that Congress did not intend the APA to be a substitute for Bivens.
Again, we disagree.
Carlson
did not rely only on congressional silence in post
Bivens
amendments to the FTCA; rather,
Carlson
noted that “the congressional comments accompanying that amendment made it
crystal clear
that Congress views FTCA and
Bivens
as parallel, complementary causes of action.”
Finally, Western argues that
Wilkie
is distinguishable from this case because here the individual defendants’ alleged misdeeds were the result of illegitimate motives. Western claims that the individual officers’ misdeeds were based on an illegitimate desire to retaliate against Western for exercising its First Amendment right to petition the government for redress of grievances and to discriminate against Western without a rational basis. In
Wilkie,
by contrast, the Court refrained from creating a
Bivens
remedy due to concerns about the “difficulty in defining a workable cause of action” against government employees for overzealous conduct based on
legitimate
motivations.
Western’s argument misunderstands
Wilkie,
which considered the defendants’ legitimate motives at the second stage of its two-step inquiry. In step one of the analysis, the Court concluded that the. alternative remedies available to the plaintiff were “a patchwork” and therefore inadequate.
Id.
at 554,
Ill
Because Western’s claims against the individual defendants are based on Forest Service actions or inactions, we conclude that the remedies available to Western under the APA constitute an “alternative, existing process” that “amounts to a convincing reason for the Judicial Branch to refrain from providing a new and freestanding remedy in damages.”
Id.
at 550,
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Bivens was the first Supreme Court decision authorizing plaintiffs to bring claims for money damages against individual federal officials based on constitutional violations where no federal statute authorized such a suit; courts have subsequently referred to these as “Bivens claims.”
. The specific final agency actions in
Wilkie
were the Bureau’s cancellation of the ranch owner's right-of-way, its decision to reduce the length of the special recreational use permit from five years to one and subsequent termination of that permit, and its revocation of his cattle-grazing permit.
Id.
at 552-53,
