JOHN A. MENDEZ, District Judge.
On June 9, 2018, Plaintiff Conservation Congress filed a complaint against Defendant United States Forest Service ("the Forest Service"), alleging that the Service violated the Administrative Procedures Act, National Environmental Policy Act, and the National Forest Management Act.
The Lassen 15 Restoration Project ("the Lassen 15 Project") is planned for the Lassen Creek area of the Modoc National Forest. LC15_000001. It is comprised of 8,004 acres of treatment areas within the approximately 25,000 acres of analysis area.
The primary objective of the Lassen 15 Project is to address forest health concerns, including the risk of insect infestation, disease, and wildfire in the dense, homogeneous conifer forest. LC15_000002. The Lassen 15 Project calls for 7,002 acres of vegetation treatments, including thinning and fuel break treatments; prescribed fire of 6,146 acres to be implemented over 10 to 15 years; and several miles of temporary roads, to be decommissioned after use. LC15_000003. The Project also involves tree planting of 90 acres at the rate of 200 trees per acre and stream restoration to restore aquatic conditions. LC15_000035. Implementation of the Lassen 15 Project was scheduled for 2018 to 2024. LC15_000011.
In the no action alternative, "no harvesting, tree planting, or other restoration actions" would occur; however, "[o]ngoing management practices such as limited road maintenance, fire suppression, and livestock grazing would continue[.]" LC15_000041.
After considering ten factors identified in 40 C.F.R. § 1508.27(b), Forest Supervisor Amanda McAdams issued a Finding of No Significant Impact ("FONSI") for the Lassen 15 Project on May 21, 2018. LC15_000001. The FONSI followed a revised final Environmental Assessment, made available in August 2017, LC15_000005, in which the Forest Service weighed the impacts of implementing the Project against a no action alternative. LC15_000001. Conservation Congress was one of three objectors to the initial final Environmental Assessment. LC15_000005.
The Joseph Creek Forest Health Project ("the Joseph Creek Project") is planned within the Warner Mountain Ranger District of the Modoc National Forest. JC_000011. It is comprised of approximately 2,800 acres.
The Joseph Creek Project seeks to remedy the above average stocking levels in the area and the tree mortality attributed to bark beetles, Heterobasidion root disease, and dwarf mistletoe.
The Joseph Creek Project was approved pursuant to a decision memorandum signed by Forest Supervisor Amanda McAdams on March 16, 2018. JC_000019. The Forest Service seeks to carry out the Joseph Creek Project pursuant to the authority granted in Section 8204 of the Agricultural Act of 2014, Pub. L. No. 113-79. JC_002512.
The National Environmental Policy Act ("NEPA") "is a procedural statute that requires the federal government to carefully consider the impacts of and alternatives to major environmental decisions."
The Court reviews an agency's NEPA compliance under the Administrative Procedure Act ("the APA").
"Judicial review of an agency decision typically focuses on the administrative record in existence at the time of the decision and does not encompass any part of the record that is made initially in the reviewing court."
The National Forest Management Act ("the NFMA") "directs the Forest Service to develop a comprehensive land and resource management plan (`Forest Plan') for each unit in the national forest system."
"In general, a court reviewing agency action under the APA must limit its review to the administrative record."
Conservation Congress has objected to the Forest Service's inclusion of a declaration from Forestry Technician Traci Silva.
Conservation Congress's Complaint lists seven claims. The Forest Service argues in its Motion for Summary Judgment that Conservation Congress has abandoned its second, third, and fourth claims. Those claims alleged that the Forest Service violated NEPA, the NFMA, and the APA by failing to take a hard look at the environmental impacts of the Lassen 15 Restoration Project (second claim); failing to adequately analyze and disclose the mitigation measures for the Lassen 15 Restoration Project (third claim); and failing to comply with the Sierra Nevada National Forest Plan Amendment for American (Pine) Marten (fourth claim). Conservation Congress does not present any arguments on or acknowledgements of these claims in its summary judgment briefing. It also fails to address the Forest Service's argument that it has abandoned the three claims. The Court finds that Conservation Congress's second, third, and fourth claims have been abandoned and summary judgment on these claims in favor of the Forest Service is granted.
Conservation Congress's four remaining claims allege that the Forest Service violated NEPA and the APA: (1) by failing to adequately analyze and disclose the cumulative effects of the Lassen 15 Restoration Project (first claim); (2) by using a Categorical Exclusion where extraordinary circumstances required preparation of an Environmental Assessment (fifth claim); (3) by failing to adequately or accurately evaluate and disclose the cumulative effects of the Joseph Creek Project in relation to other projects, including the adjacent Lassen 15 Project (sixth claim); and (4) by violating the NFMA Standards and Guidelines for Minimum Proportions of Seral Stages and for Average Snag Densities (seventh claim). Compl. at 10-20.
Conservation Congress's first claim asserts that the Forest Service violated NEPA by failing to take a hard look at the baseline and cumulative impacts of grazing on the Lassen 15 Project. Compl. at 10-12. Conservation Congress argues that the Forest Service did not "provide a meaningful description of the baseline through past and ongoing impacts of cattle grazing in the project area." Opp'n Mem. at 13.
This argument lacks merit. The Forest Service adequately evaluated the cumulative effects of grazing in the Lassen 15 Project area. For example, the Environmental Assessment discusses how free-range cattle and sheep began grazing in the area in the late 1800s. LC15_000080. It discusses how seasonal grazing in the area is on a rotation system from May to September and notes that most of the area is subject to light livestock use and is in satisfactory condition. LC15_000124. While some of the existing grazing is moderate or heavy in key riparian areas, the Forest Service found that the Lassen 15 Project would not contribute to the problem.
Outside of the Environmental Assessment itself, the Forest Service reviewed the impact of grazing in the Revised Range Resource Specialist Report for Lassen 15 Restoration Project, LC15_001316-41, and in the reports considering the impact of the Project on aquatic species, LC15_000872; fuels, LC15_000988, LC15_001017-18; heritage, LC15_001132; hydrology, LC15_001193, LC15_001196; roads, LC15_001430; soils, LC15_001553; and wildlife, LC15_001595-001603. The Ninth Circuit has found similar grazing analysis to be sufficient for an Environmental Impact Statement, which requires more stringent analysis.
Many of Conservation Congress's arguments focus on the negative impacts of preexisting grazing activity on riparian areas, and what it views to be insufficient baseline information.
Some of the detail Conservation Congress seeks pertains to future conditions and grazing patterns. It takes issue with the Forest Service's assessment that improving grazing distribution patterns in the uplands would potentially decrease grazing in riparian areas, LC15_000163-64, while simultaneously noting that livestock have an affinity for meadows and streams, LC15_000097. These statements are not inherently contradictory. Rather, the Forest Service has provided information about the possible consequences of future actions, without wading into the murky waters of speculation. NEPA does not require the Forest Service become an oracle, predicting exactly which variable outcome will flow from its proposed action.
The Forest Service has elucidated the possible impacts of the Lassen 15 Project, in conjunction with the cumulative effects of grazing, with a sufficient degree of detail. The Lassen 15 Project Environmental Assessment is not arbitrary, capricious, an abuse of discretion, or otherwise not in accordance with the law. 5 U.S.C. § 706(2). The Court grants summary judgment in favor of the Forest Service and against Conservation Congress on Conservation Congress's first claim.
Conservation Congress's fifth claim asserts that the Forest Service violated NEPA by failing to consider extraordinary circumstances that preclude the use of categorical exclusion for the Joseph Creek project. Compl. at 16-17. The main issue raised here is whether "extraordinary circumstances review," required for categorical exclusion under NEPA regulations, applies to categorical exclusions permitted by the Health Forest Restoration Act, 16 U.S.C. § 6591
Five years ago, Congress amended the Healthy Forests Restoration Act of 2003 to add a new type of categorical exclusion for projects that address qualifying insect and disease infestations on National Forest System lands. 16 U.S.C. § 6591a,
The parties provided the Court with prior cases on this issue that reached different conclusions.
Accordingly, the Court agrees with the Forest Service's interpretation of section 6591b statutory categorical exclusion. The Forest Service was not required to perform extraordinary circumstances review for a qualifying project under section 6591b. The Court grants summary judgment in favor of the Forest Service and against Conservation Congress on Conservation Congress's fifth claim.
Conservation Congress's sixth claim alleges that the Forest Service violated NEPA by failing to evaluate and disclose the cumulative effects of the Joseph Creek Project in relation to the Lassen 15 Project. Compl. at 17-18.
The scope of an environmental impact assessment requires an agency consider "direct," "indirect," and "cumulative" impacts. 40 C.F.R. § 1508.25. "By its plain language, however, this regulation applies only to environmental impact statements."
Here, the Forest Service issued the Joseph Creek Project categorical exclusion pursuant to the Farm Bill Amendment, 16 U.S.C. § 6591b, rather than NEPA's regulatory categorical exclusion, 40 C.F.R. § 1508.4. The provisions under which the Forest Service may issue a statutory categorical exclusion does not include a requirement that the documentation include a cumulative effects analysis. Conservation Congress has not provided any sections of the applicable statute that provide otherwise.
In the absence of a clear requirement that the Forest Service consider cumulative impacts in statutory categorical exclusion analysis, the Court declines to require such consideration. The Court grants summary judgment in favor of the Forest Service and against Conservation Congress on Conservation Congress's sixth claim.
Conservation Congress's seventh claim asserts that the
Forest Service violated NEPA and the Forest Act because the decision memorandum for the Joseph Creek Project does not contain findings of consistency with the Forest Plan. Compl. at 18-20. Conservation Congress argues that the lack of express findings of consistency with the Forest Plan standards,
Here, the Court does not apply the requirements for regulatory categorical exclusions, 36 C.F.R. § 220.6(f)(4), but rather those for statutory categorical exclusions, 16 U.S.C. § 6591b. Regulatory categorial exclusions from NEPA require that decision memoranda include "[f]indings required by other laws such as, but not limited to findings of consistency with the forest land and resource management plan as required by the National Forest Management Act; or a public interest determination." 36 C.F.R. § 220.6(f)(4). Statutory categorical exclusions under the Farm Bill Amendment do not contain a similar requirement.
Conservation Congress's arguments rely on the requirements for regulatory categorical exclusions. The organization has not argued that the Joseph Creek Project is excluded from statutory categorical exclusion under subsection 6591b(d)(4), and the Court will not rule upon arguments that were not raised. Indeed, even if that argument had been raised, the administrative record does not support a finding of inconsistency.
The Court grants summary judgment in favor of the Forest Service and against Conservation Congress on Conservation Congress's seventh claim.
For the reasons set forth above, the Court DENIES Conservation Congress's Motion for Summary Judgment and GRANTS the Forest Service's Motion for Summary Judgment.