MORRISON C. ENGLAND, JR., Chief Judge.
Presently before this Court is the question of the appropriate remedy for a legal deficiency in the Supplemental Environmental Impact Statement ("SEIS") the Forest Service prepared pursuant to the National Environmental Policy Act ("NEPA") for the 2004 Sierra Nevada Forest Plan Amendment (also referred to as the "2004 Framework" or the "SNFPA").
On appeal of this Court's merits ruling, the Ninth Circuit concluded that the Forest Service failed to take a hard look at the environmental consequences of the 2004 Framework on fish and remanded the matter for determination of the appropriate remedy. Pacific Rivers Council v. U.S. Forest Serv., 689 F.3d 1012 (9th Cir.2012). Pacific Rivers Council ("PRC") urges this Court to vacate and enjoin the 2004 Framework and all projects issued under the 2004 Framework. Such draconian relief, however, is unwarranted. Vacatur of the 2004 Framework would be both unduly disruptive and environmentally harmful, and an indiscriminate injunction against all projects issued under the 2004 Framework's direction is both unnecessary to remedy PRC's injury and contrary to the public interest.
Therefore, as set forth below, the Court will deny PRC's request to vacate the 2004 Framework as well as its request for injunctive relief. The Forest Service will be directed to prepare a supplemental EIS to address the deficiencies in the 2004 SEIS no later than September 30, 2014.
The 2004 Framework, which amended the Forest Plans for 11 national forests covering 11.5 million acres within the Sierra Nevada region, represents the Forest Service's attempt at the "unenviable task" of balancing protection of wildlife with effective reduction of hazardous fuels in order to decrease the risk of stand-replacing wildfire. Sierra Nevada Forest Prot. Campaign ("SNFPC") v. Rey, 573 F.Supp.2d 1316, 1338 (E.D.Cal.2008). In four related cases, plaintiffs challenged the 2004 Framework alleging numerous deficiencies under NEPA and the National Forest Management Act ("NFMA"). Sierra Nevada Forest Prot. Campaign ("SNFPC") v. Rey, 573 F.Supp.2d 1316 (E.D.Cal.2008)
In this case, this Court granted summary judgment to the Forest Service on all issues. PRC, 2008 WL 4291209, at *22. PRC appealed. In a February 3, 2012 opinion, a divided panel of the Ninth Circuit concluded that the Forest Service adequately addressed impacts to amphibians in the 2004 SEIS, but failed to adequately address impacts to individual fish species. PRC v. U.S. Forest Serv., 668 F.3d 609, 627 (9th Cir.2012). The United States sought rehearing and rehearing en banc. On June 20, 2012, the Court of Appeals
After separate proceedings on appeal, see SFL v. Sherman, 646 F.3d 1161 (9th Cir.2011), the SFL and California cases challenging the Framework were concurrently before this Court on the question of remedy.
On April 15, 2013, ___ F.Supp.2d ___ (E.D.Cal.2013) the Court issued a separate Memorandum and Order with regard to the proper remedy for those cases.
PRC asks this Court to vacate the 2004 Framework and all actions taken in reliance upon the 2004 Framework, reinstate the 2001 Framework, and enjoin all logging, burning, road activity and grazing in the Sierra Nevada National Forests that is inconsistent with the 2001 Framework. Defendants urge the Court to leave the 2004 Framework in place, let project — level decisions move forward and direct the agency to prepare a supplemental EIS addressing the NEPA deficiency identified by the Ninth Circuit; namely, the likely environmental consequences on fish that implementation of the 2004 Framework may pose.
PRC's request to vacate the 2004 Framework is denied. Under the two-part vacatur test recently adopted by the Ninth Circuit, the limited nature of the NEPA error and the disruption that would be caused by a temporary return to the 2001 Framework both favor leaving the 2004 Framework in place during remand. PRC's broad request that all project decisions, licenses and permits issued under the 2004 Framework be vacated as well as enjoined is also denied. PRC falls well short of demonstrating that its members will suffer an injury-in-fact justifying such broad injunctive relief, and the equities clearly weigh in favor of allowing decisions made under the 2004 Framework to proceed unimpeded during remand.
Vacatur is a species of equitable relief and courts are not mechanically obligated to vacate agency decisions that they find invalid. As the Ninth Circuit explained in Nat'l Wildlife Fed'n v. Espy:
The Ninth Circuit recently clarified the standards that should be applied when determining whether a procedurally invalid agency action should be vacated or left in place during a remand. Emphasizing that a "flawed rule need not be vacated," the Ninth Circuit held that the determination of "[w]hether agency action should be vacated depends on how serious the agency's errors are `and the disruptive consequences of an interim change that may itself be changed.'" California Communities Against Toxics v. U.S. EPA ("CCAT"), 688 F.3d 989, 992 (9th Cir.2012) (quoting Allied-Signal, Inc. v. U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Comm'n, 988 F.2d 146, 150-51 (D.C.Cir.1993)). As discussed below, the record before this Court indicates that the legal flaw in the 2004 Framework SEIS is not a grave one. Vacating the 2004 Framework in the face of the Forest Service's relatively minor NEPA error, however, would have extremely disruptive consequences to both the Forest Service and the general public.
PRC asserts that in conducting any remedy analysis in the instant matter, the Court should presume vacatur is the appropriate remedy and that the Forest Service should bear the burden of demonstrating vacatur is not warranted. While the Court does not believe that PRC has identified any controlling precedent that imposes the burden of proof on Defendants, the Court concludes that even if such a burden exists, Defendants have carried that burden in this case by providing overwhelming factual evidence to support the conclusion that vacating the 2004 Framework would be inequitable under controlling Ninth Circuit law.
In addition to arguing that vacatur is the presumptive remedy under the APA, PRC also suggests that vacatur should be withheld only in situations where environmental harm is likely to flow from vacating a flawed agency decision.
In sum, vacatur, like injunctive relief, is an equitable remedy that is only granted in particular circumstances; neither remedy issues as a matter of course upon the showing of a legal violation. And while the tests for vacatur and injunctive relief are not identical, both take into account a
Applying the two CCAT factors here indicates that the 2004 Framework should not be vacated.
The first CCAT factor looks to "how serious the agency's errors are." CCAT, 688 F.3d at 992. Here, the Court of Appeals faulted the Forest Service for not including a discussion of the impacts of the 2004 Framework on individual fish species. PRC, 689 F.3d at 1028. However, that merits finding does not demonstrate a serious error for several reasons.
First, because the 2004 and 2001 Frameworks have nearly identical protective measures for fish, projects issued pursuant to the 2004 Framework are not likely to result in appreciably different impacts to fish from those issued pursuant to the 2001 Framework.
Additionally, in preparing the SEIS for the 2004 Framework, the Forest Service prepared a "Consistency Review" to determine the extent to which the changes proposed in the 2004 Framework would result in environmental impacts that had not been addressed in the 2001 EIS. In the Consistency Review, the Forest Service concluded that the AMS under the 2004 Framework was essentially the same as that for the 2001 Framework and that the effects of management pursuant to that strategy had already been analyzed and disclosed in the 2001 EIS. Beyond this general finding, the Consistency Review evaluated the potential impacts of changed management on individual species of fish and concluded that the 2004 Framework "would not be expected to produce appreciably different results" from those disclosed in the 2001 FEIS. See SNFPA 03487-88 (discussing impacts to fourteen Endangered, Threatened and Proposed Species of fish); see also SNFPA 03491-92 (discussing impacts to nine Forest Service Sensitive Species of fish); SNFPA 03493 (discussing impacts to thirteen Moderately and Highly Vulnerable Species and Species of Concern of fish). Because the 2004 Framework shares the same aquatic management strategy as the 2001 Framework and should not result in an increase in adverse impacts to fish as compared to the 2001 Framework, the Forest Service's failure to reanalyze impacts to individual fish species does not constitute a serious legal error that warrants vacatur.
Second, because the 2004 Framework envisions a scope and type of management within the range of alternatives examined in the 2001 EIS, the 2004 Framework is not expected to have materially different impacts on fish from the alternatives that were analyzed in the 2001 EIS. During remedy proceedings, the Forest Service provided credible and unrebutted testimony from Donald Yasuda, a wildlife biologist that helped prepare the 2004 Framework SEIS. Mr. Yasuda stated:
Yasuda Decl. (ECF 177-1) at ¶ 8. Given that the 2004 Framework is not likely to have significantly different impacts on fish from the 2001 Framework or any of the other alternatives analyzed in the 2001 FEIS, the Forest Service's failure to conduct a new species-by-species fish analysis is not so serious a legal error as to warrant vacatur.
Third, while the 2004 SEIS did not provide an analysis of impacts to individual fish species, the 2004 SEIS did analyze the effects of the 2001 and 2004 Frameworks on aquatic ecosystems — where fish live.
Finally, the seriousness of the Forest Service's error is mitigated by the programmatic nature of the 2004 Framework. The 2004 Framework itself does not directly authorize any ground-disturbing activities. SNFPA 03010 ("This ROD does not authorize timber sales or any other specific activity on the Sierra Nevada national forests. Site-specific decisions will be made on projects in compliance with NEPA, ESA, and other environmental laws following applicable public involvement and administrative appeal procedures.") Any action that may potentially impact individual fish species requires separate, project-level analysis pursuant to NEPA. That site-specific evaluation affords the Forest Service the opportunity to consider the impacts to fish before taking an action that can cause injury to PRC's members.
In sum, the record before the Court shows that the effect of the 2004 Framework on fish will likely be largely the same as the effect of the alternatives addressed in the 2001 FEIS. Because the effects of those alternatives were already considered by the Forest Service and disclosed to the public, the absence of new analysis — while a violation NEPA — is not a serious deficiency warranting vacatur. Furthermore, the seriousness of the NEPA violation is minimized by the fact that the 2004 SEIS did provide an analysis of impacts to aquatic habitat, and project-level NEPA documents will provide further analysis of impacts to fish species at the site-specific level, where those impacts can be best understood. While the Court orders that the NEPA deficiency in the 2004 SEIS be corrected, it does not believe the NEPA error raises serious doubts that the "agency chose correctly." Allied-Signal, 988 F.2d at 150. Therefore, the first CCAT factor favors remanding the 2004 Framework SEIS to the Forest Service without vacating the 2004 Framework decision.
Under the second CCAT factor, the evidence before the Court shows that an interim return to the 2001 Framework will have extremely "`disruptive consequences.'" 688 F.3d at 992 (quoting Allied-Signal, 988 F.2d at 150). PRC ignores the practical consequences of vacating the 2004 Framework, apparently assuming that management of the 11 national forests subject to the Framework can simply and seamlessly proceed under the 2001 Framework. Defendants have convincingly demonstrated, through extensive and compelling factual submissions and record citations, that project planning in the National Forest System is a lengthy and expensive endeavor, and that vacating the 2004 Framework would have enormous disruptive consequences. Even if vacatur would not impact projects with decisions already made (an issue addressed below), Defendants have demonstrated that vacatur would disrupt approximately 146 projects currently in various stages of the planning process across the Sierra Nevada. According to unrebutted evidence submitted
In addition to logistical and financial disruptions, vacatur would have harmful environmental consequences. See, e.g., Idaho Farm Bureau Fed'n, 58 F.3d at 1405 (leaving invalid rule in place to avoid environmental harm). The evidence before the Court in this case and the related Framework cases indicates that leaving the 2004 Framework in place while the Agency corrects the deficiency in its NEPA analysis is environmentally preferable to returning management of the Sierra Nevada to the 2001 Framework, even temporarily. The weight of evidence before the Court indicates that 2004 Framework is environmentally superior to the 2001 Framework in numerous regards, including reducing the threat of catastrophic wildfire (and the associated adverse impacts to fish), protecting and creating habitat for old forest species like the California spotted owl, and addressing non-fire related threats to forest health, including drought, insect infestation and climate change.
PRC claims that leaving the 2004 Framework in place will cause environmental harm, as it "threatens harm to already-imperiled Sierra Nevada fish species." PRC Br. at 8 (ECF 175). As set forth in detail below, the record belies PRC's claim that implementation of the 2004 Framework will significantly harm aquatic habitats or fish species. Indeed, the weight of the evidence before the Court indicates that implementing vegetation management projects pursuant to the 2004 Framework should result in a long-term benefit to aquatic and riparian resources — including fish — by reducing serious erosion and sedimentation caused by catastrophic wildfires.
PRC departs from the CCAT factors to suggest that vacatur is necessary to "ensure that the Forest Service undertakes an open-minded review" of the impacts to individual fish species. PRC Br. at 10. The Court finds this claim unpersuasive. The Forest Service is entitled to a presumption that it will act in good faith in preparing its analysis of impacts to individual fish species. Citizens to Preserve Overton Park, Inc. v. Volpe, 401 U.S. 402, 415, 91 S.Ct. 814, 28 L.Ed.2d 136 (1971)
In this regard, the Ninth Circuit's decision in Northern Cheyenne Tribe v. Hodel, 851 F.2d 1152 (9th Cir.1988), is instructive. There, the plaintiffs argued that coal leases issued without proper NEPA should be voided, and not merely suspended, to avoid the new NEPA being tainted by bureaucratic commitment to the leases. The Court disagreed, finding:
Id. at 1157. The situation here is no different. The 2004 Framework has been in place for eight years; whether it remains in place or is vacated during the remand is not likely to alter the Agency's analysis of impacts to fish or the agency's conclusion about what is the best management regime for the future. The Forest Service must evaluate in good faith the effects of the 2004 Framework on individual fish species, as required by this Order, regardless of whether the 2004 Framework is vacated or left in place during the remand.
In sum, both of the CCAT factors counsel strongly in favor of remanding the 2004 Framework without vacatur.
In addition to seeking vacatur of the 2004 Framework decision, PRC requests that the Court vacate "any timber sales and the issuance of permits beyond those authorized by the 2001 Framework." PRC Br. at 10. However, vacatur is only available for the specific agency decision challenged by a Plaintiff. Here, the only agency decision that PRC has challenged is the adoption of the 2004 Framework. Therefore, the only agency decision potentially subject to vacatur is the 2004 Framework decision itself.
The APA grants federal courts jurisdiction to review "final agency action," 5 U.S.C. § 704, and to "set aside" agency actions found to be arbitrary or capricious, id. at 706(2). The only final agency action challenged by PRC in this litigation is the adoption of the 2004 Framework. Without reviewing site-specific actions issued under the 2004 Framework, this Court cannot determine whether they are in fact arbitrary or capricious or should be set aside. That determination must be made "in the context of site specific actions, if and when they actually arise." Idaho Sporting Cong. v. Rittenhouse, 305 F.3d 957, 974 (9th Cir.2002). Contrary to PRC's assumption, the mere fact that decisions were rendered under the 2004 Framework does not mean they are arbitrary or capricious. See, e.g., Wyoming Outdoor Council v. U.S. Forest Serv., 165 F.3d 43, 51 (D.C.Cir.1999) (finding agency could engage in "further efforts to fulfill its NEPA obligations" at the site-specific decision stage). Moreover, even assuming all decisions issued under the 2004 Framework were procedurally invalid, PRC's request
PRC claims that in SFL the Ninth Circuit made "clear that its discussion of vacatur under the APA encompassed not only the 2004 Framework itself, but also approvals made to implement the 2004 Framework." PRC Br. at 10. Nowhere in SFL, however, does the court address the parameters of vacatur; the discussion referred to by PRC is simply the Court of Appeals' conclusion that this Court has jurisdiction to issue injunctive relief barring implementation of a program-level decision. 646 F.3d at 1185. This is a far cry from holding that because the 2004 Framework suffers a procedural deficiency, all actions issued under the 2004 Framework must be vacated. Indeed, were that the law, the court in SFL would not have remanded the matter to this Court for remedy proceedings; it would have simply vacated all agency actions taken under the 2004 Framework.
PRC also points to the Ninth Circuit's decision in Klamath Siskiyou Wildlands Ctr. v. Boody, 468 F.3d 549 (9th Cir.2006), PRC Br. at 11, but that case actually undermines PRC's position. In Klamath Siskiyou Wildlands, the plaintiff challenged two programmatic decisions and two site-specific timber sales issued pursuant to the programmatic decisions. 468 F.3d at 553-54. The court found that the programmatic decisions and the two projects were "invalid and must be enjoined." Id. at 562. Thus, in sharp contrast to this case, plaintiffs in Klamath Siskiyou Wildlands directly challenged site-specific decisions and those decisions and their underlying administrative records were before the court for review. Furthermore, in Klamath Siskiyou Wildlands, the court "enjoined" the decisions being challenged; it did not "vacate" them.
Idaho Sporting Congress v. Rittenhouse, 305 F.3d 957 (9th Cir.2002), also undercuts PRC's claim to wholesale vacatur of all decisions issued under the 2004 Framework. In Idaho Sporting Congress, the plaintiffs challenged two specific timber sales and a Forest Plan standard. Id. at 966. The court found the plan standard invalid and held that the two sales should be set aside and enjoined. Id. at 974. However, the court explicitly refused to extend relief beyond the two projects challenged by plaintiffs, noting that the "sweeping remedy" of "a forest-wide injunction of all logging" was not warranted. Id. Thus, nothing in Klamath Siskiyou Wildlands or Idaho Sporting Congress supports the proposition that a plaintiff who challenges only a program-level decision is automatically entitled to broad vacatur of all site-specific projects implementing the program-level decision.
PRC's request that all site-specific actions issued under the 2004 Framework be vacated is denied.
In addition to its request to vacate the 2004 Framework and all projects issued pursuant to it, PRC also asks this Court to issue a broad injunction barring the Forest Service from "continuing to plan and implement projects (logging, road-construction, grazing, etc.) in reliance on the 2004 Framework." PRC Br. at 12. PRC's request would potentially impact over 100,000 acres of already authorized vegetation management projects, grazing on hundreds of thousands of acres, and an unknown number of other undefined Forest Service activities authorized over the past eight years across the 11 National Forests.
For the reasons set forth below, the Court denies PRC's request for injunctive
To qualify for a permanent injunction, PRC bears the burden of demonstrating:
SFL, 646 F.3d at 1184 (quoting eBay Inc. v. MercExchange, 547 U.S. 388, 391, 126 S.Ct. 1837, 164 L.Ed.2d 641 (2006)). The Supreme Court has made clear that the traditional four factor analysis must be applied in NEPA cases without any "thumb on the scale." Monsanto Co. v. Geertson Seed Farms, 561 U.S. 139, 130 S.Ct. 2743, 2757, 177 L.Ed.2d 461 (2010). Further, the Supreme Court has made clear that courts may decline to grant injunctive relief for a NEPA violation where the public interest weighs against such relief, even if that means an irreparable injury goes unaddressed. Winter v. NRDC, 555 U.S. 7, 25-26, 129 S.Ct. 365, 172 L.Ed.2d 249 (2008). See also Weinberger v. Romero-Barcelo, 456 U.S. 305, 312, 102 S.Ct. 1798, 72 L.Ed.2d 91 (1982) (holding an injunction is an "extraordinary remedy" that does not issue as a matter of course even "though irreparable injury may otherwise result to the plaintiffs").
Nowhere in its request for injunctive relief, or in its complaint, does PRC challenge or even identify a single, site-specific project that will irreparably harm its members.
PRC's attempt to demonstrate irreparable harm based on predicted increases in ground-disturbing activities is also deficient in a number of ways. First, the evidence before the Court does not support PRC's assumption that projects implementing the 2004 Framework will have significant adverse impacts on aquatic habitats and fish, particularly when compared to the likely impacts from projects issued pursuant to the 2001 Framework. Second, PRC's assumption that because the 2004 Framework "allows" more activity, more activity will necessarily be authorized at the site-specific level not only demonstrates a misunderstanding of the Forest Service's staged decision-making process, but it is also belied by the eight-year history of implementing the 2004 Framework. Finally, to the extent that the 2004 Framework has resulted in increased levels of land management (such as increased thinning for fuel reduction purposes), PRC ignores the fact that programmatic and project-level protective measures are effective at minimizing and avoiding negative impacts to aquatic and riparian habitats when applied in the site-specific context. Each of these issues is addressed in turn below.
First, PRC's assertion that timber harvest, road-building and grazing under the 2004 Framework will lead to detrimental impacts to aquatic habitats and fish above and beyond what would occur under the 2001 Framework is unsupported by the record before the Court. Rather, the evidence indicates that with regard to direct impacts to aquatic habitats and fish from Forest Service management activities, there is little difference between the 2001 and 2004 Frameworks.
As this Court has previously noted and the Forest Service experts have demonstrated, both Frameworks use essentially the same Aquatic Management Strategies, Riparian Conversation Objectives and Critical Aquatic Refuges. See PRC, 2008 WL 4291209, at *3. See also Kellett Decl. (ECF 177-2) at ¶ 3; Hill Decl. (ECF 177-3) at ¶ 23-25; Yost Decl. (ECF 177-4) at ¶ 12. Both Frameworks also utilize substantially the same S & Gs for protection of aquatic and riparian resources, including fish. See SNFPA 3285 (S & Gs similar); Kellett Decl. (ECF 177-2) at ¶¶ 5-19 (comparing S & Gs and concluding that changes "are not likely to result in notably greater adverse impacts to fish, aquatic, and riparian resources"); Hill Decl. (ECF 177-3) at ¶¶ 26-33 (comparing S & Gs applicable to RCOs and concluding the changes "are minor and are unlikely to significantly increase risks to water quality or aquatic resources"); Yost Decl. (ECF 177-4) at ¶ 5 (comparing grazing S & Gs relevant to aquatic impacts and finding no significant
In support of its position, PRC relies on the declarations of its experts, who opine at length about the harmful effects of logging, grazing and roads on aquatic systems and fish. However, the allegations of PRC's experts are almost entirely generic and fail to attribute the harms of which they complain to the 2004 Framework itself. Based on the totality of the evidence, the Court concludes that PRC has failed to demonstrate that implementing the 2004 Framework will adversely affect fish and aquatic systems in any way that is materially different from the impacts that would occur from management activities under the 2001 Framework. Therefore, PRC has failed to carry its burden of proving that the 2004 Framework will adversely affect aquatic systems (and harm PRC's members) above and beyond what might occur under the 2001 Framework. See Sierra Forest Legacy v. Rey, 577 F.3d 1015, 1022 (9th Cir.2009) (noting that in considering relief, the court must compare the 2001 and 2004 Frameworks with respect to harms and equities).
Second, PRC's attempt to prove irreparable harm based on an alleged increase in management activity under the 2004 Framework founders on the fact that the record since 2004 does not reflect the vast increase in activities assumed by PRC. For example, grazing levels in the Sierra Nevada, measured both by acres grazed and Animal Unit Months have declined from 2000 to 2012. Yost Decl. (177-4) at ¶¶ 3, 5. Similarly, between the 2004 and 2011, the national forests in the Sierra Nevada have decommissioned more than 10 times the length of roads than they constructed. Hill Decl. (177-3) at ¶ 46. And, on a related note, the number of water bodies on NFS lands in the Region listed as impaired due to timber harvest and livestock grazing declined between 2002 and 2010. Id. at ¶ 35.
Third, PRC's attempt to base its claim of irreparable injury on the potential increase in land management allowed by the 2004 Framework ignores the actual design features of individual projects, which ensure that an increase in activity levels does not correlate with an increase in adverse impacts.
In addition to meeting the S & Gs established by the Framework itself, project-specific decisions follow a series of Best Management Practices ("BMPs") designed to protect aquatic and riparian resources. According to evidence provided by the Forest Service and not rebutted by PRC, these BMPs have proven extremely effective in preventing or minimizing adverse impacts to aquatic resources. For example,
The difference between PRC's attempt to establish harm to aquatic and riparian resources based on potential aggregate levels of activities "allowed" under the 2004 Framework and the actual impact of projects once implemented is illustrated by considering a particular site-specific project.
The Slapjack Project,
PRC fails at the second step for injunctive relief because it cannot demonstrate that other remedies available at law are inadequate to avoid injury to its members. eBay Inc. v. MercExchange, 547 U.S. at 391, 126 S.Ct. 1837. PRC's alleged injuries can be addressed by declaratory relief. PRC's case against the 2004 Framework is a facial one — PRC has never challenged a single site-specific application of the Framework. Such activities, and their impacts, will occur only through site-specific project decisions. When, and if, the Forest Service authorizes a project under the 2004 Framework that PRC believes will cause it injury, PRC can bring a challenge to that project based on the weight of its declaratory relief against the Framework and ordinary principles of stare decisis. See, e.g., United States v. Am. Friends Serv. Comm., 419 U.S. 7, 11, 95 S.Ct. 13, 42 L.Ed.2d 7 (1974) (finding that a full and fair opportunity to litigate claims in a separate suit constitutes an adequate remedy at law, thereby undercutting "the existence of irreparable injury"). Given the efficacy of declaratory relief, an injunction against the 2004 Framework is not necessary.
In determining whether the injunctive relief requested by PRC is appropriate, this Court must consider the balance of the equities and the public interest. Here, the Court finds that considering the balance of equities and the public interest, the 2004 Framework should remain in place while the agency addresses the deficiency in the 2004 SEIS.
Before considering the equities individually, it is necessary to address the multiple practical impediments that are embedded
One of the principal purposes of the 2004 Framework is to address the risk of catastrophic wildfire. Based on volumes of evidence in the administrative record and testimony provided by all the parties in the various Framework cases, the Court has concluded that the 2001 Framework compromises the Forest Service's ability to effectively address the threat of severe wildfire, and that leaving the 2004 Framework in place during remand (as well as those projects that are issued pursuant to the 2004 Framework) is in the public interest.
Reducing the risk of severe wildfire is in the public interest not only because of the threat wildfire poses to human lives and property, but also because of the threat it poses to wildlife. The Forest Service has made clear in the other Framework cases that habitat loss from severe wildfire is the primary threat to the viability of old forest species, including the California spotted owl, the Pacific fisher and the American marten See, e.g., 71 Fed.Reg. 29,886, 29,897 (May 24, 2006) (FWS 12-month finding on California spotted owl); Fed. Def's Op. Br. on Remedy ("Fed. Op. Remedy"), Macfarlane Decl. at ¶ 13, SFL, 05-cv-0205 (ECF 270-2) ("The greatest threat to fisher persistence in the northern and southern Sierra Nevada was habitat modification due to severe wildfire."); Fed. Op. Remedy, Yasuda Decl. at ¶¶ 6-7 SFL, 05-cv-0205 (ECF 270-3) (describing number of owl Protected Activity Centers lost to wildfire).
The evidence submitted to the Court in this case indicates that severe fires also pose significant risks to fish and other aquatic species due to erosion and sedimentation, among other factors. PRC and its experts argue that the harmful impacts of sediment attributable to grazing, road use and fuel treatments exceed the harm from sediment caused by wildfire. The Forest Service experts effectively rebut this testimony. As Forest Service hydrologist Barry Hill explains, recent studies show that sediment yields caused by fuel treatments utilizing BMPs are hundreds to thousands of times lower than sediment yields from severely burned areas.
Hill Decl. (ECF 177-2) at ¶¶ 21-22. Mr. Hill also makes clear that PRC's affiant misuses the Forest Service's erosion model to overstate impacts of roads, grazing and logging and to understate the impacts of
PRC and its experts attempt to undermine the legitimacy of the 2004 Framework by attacking the efficacy of fuel treatments in reducing fire severity and total sediment delivery to watercourses. However, Forest Service expert Hugh Safford explains that the overwhelming scientific evidence indicates that fuel treatments successfully reduce fire severity and modify fire behavior. ECF 189-4. The net result is that fuel reduction treatments contribute little if any sediment in the short term and can effectively minimize the amount of large pulses of sediment caused by wildfires.
In sum, contrary to the assertion of PRC and its experts, the weight of the evidence before the Court indicates that fuel treatments to reduce the risk of severe wildfire provide a net benefit to riparian and aquatic resources, including fish. The public interest in reducing the adverse effects of sedimentation is thus best served by implementing projects designed under the 2004 Framework.
Like the Plaintiffs in the other Framework cases, PRC asserts that harvest of larger diameter trees allowed under the 2004 Framework serves only financial ends and is unrelated to fire hazard reduction and its associated environmental benefits. However, the evidence before the Court makes clear that the inclusion of commercially-valuable trees in fuel reduction projects enables the Forest Service to complete far more fuel reduction work than it could accomplish under its limited budget, and thus allows work at the pace and scale necessary to address the region-wide threat of severe wildfire. See Fed. Op. Remedy, Bahro Decl. at ¶ 9, SFL, 05-cv-0205 (ECF 270-8) ("To be effective at [the landscape scale] we need to have a pattern of treatment areas that is effective in changing the spread and intensity of a large fire as it moves across the landscape."); SNFPA 03079 (2004 Framework allows harvest of some medium-sized trees to increase the likelihood of accomplishing program goals with limited funding); SNFPA 03024 (noting need for landscape-level fire and fuel management strategy); SNFPA 03336 ("The pace and intensity of mechanical thinning planned under Alternative S2 is expected to reduce the rate at
PRC's focus on the fact that larger trees can be harvested under the 2004 Framework also ignores that it is superior to the 2001 Framework in reducing fire risk in ways unrelated to tree size. For example, as this Court has already recognized, the 2004 Framework is far more effective than the 2001 Framework at modifying fire behavior. PRC, 2008 WL 4291209, at *17 (noting the differences in the rate of spread, flame length, scorch height and projected mortality). This is the case because the 2001 Framework placed limits on mechanical treatments even within treatment areas, a requirement which "can severely reduce the effectiveness of individual treatment areas in modifying fire behavior," and which is not found in the 2004 Framework. SNFPA 3291; see also Fed. Op. Remedy, Bahro Decl. at ¶¶ 10-14, SFL, 05-cv-0205 (ECF 270-8) (describing the cumulative effect of the overlapping standards and guideline imposed by the 2001 Framework).
On balance, the public interest in reducing the risk of catastrophic wildfire favors leaving the 2004 Framework in place pending preparation of an SEIS.
PRC's requested injunction will compromise the Forest Service's ability to address forest health goals, including the stresses caused by climate change, drought and insects. This Court has previously concluded that in order to address forest health concerns, the Forest Service "needs the flexibility to remove trees of larger diameter than allowed under the 2001 Framework and to reduce canopy cover below the levels allowed in the 2001 Framework." Order Denying Inj. Pending Appeal at 16, SFL, 05-cv-0205, (ECF 319). See also Mem. & Order at 10, SFL, 05-cv-0205 (ECF No. 304) ("2004 Framework offers better long-term forest health"). That conclusion is bolstered by the Forest Service's remedy phase experts, who compellingly explain that cutting trees 20"-30" in diameter and reducing canopy cover below 50%, as allowed under the 2004 Framework, is at times necessary to address non-fire forest health
Addressing these non-fire related forest health goals is unquestionably in the public interest, and the overwhelming weight of the evidence demonstrates that leaving the 2004 Framework in place best enables the Forest Service to do so.
The Forest Service has presented compelling declaration testimony showing that the 2004 Framework best serves the public interest in providing economic benefits to forest industries and communities, which not only creates jobs but also sustains the infrastructure needed to properly manage forest resources. Mem. and Order at 10, SFL, 05-cv-0205 (ECF No. 304). See also Order Denying Inj. Pending Appeal at 18, SFL, 05-cv-0205 (ECF No. 319) ("Reducing harvest to the levels contemplated in the 2001 Framework will lead to closures of some of the few remaining sawmills in the Sierra Nevada as well as some biomass power plants."). PRC has failed to meaningfully rebut this testimony. Instead, PRC faults the Forest Service for not "provid[ing] the information necessary to support these claims [of harm to the industrial infrastructure], including current and projected log inventories, alternative sources of timber and biomass supply on private timberlands, or the minimum timber supply requirements to keep mills running." PRC Reply at 19 (ECF 187). This criticism is meritless. It is not the Forest Service's burden to avoid injunctive relief; it is PRC's burden to prove that it is entitled to such relief.
Furthermore, even though it was not technically required to do so, the Forest Service did provide the Court with extensive evidence to support its arguments related to the impacts of an injunction on the industrial infrastructure, even though it may not have been in the form PRC would have preferred.
After considering the evidence presented by the Forest Service without deference to the agency's experts based on their status as agency employees, the Court finds the injunction sought by PRC will negatively impact the timber and forest products industry in the Sierra Nevada. The economic health of communities and industries in the Sierra Nevada is an important element of the public interest that must be considered in balancing the equities.
In sum, there is a strong public interest in sustaining the timber and biomass industry and infrastructure and the socio-economic benefits they provide, which weighs in favor of keeping the 2004 Framework in place and allowing projects issued under the 2004 Framework to proceed.
This Court previously concluded that full implementation of the HFQLG Pilot Project is in the public interest and best accomplished under the 2004 Framework. See Mem. & Order at 9, SFL, (ECF 304); Order Denying Inj. Pending Appeal at 15, SFL, 05-cv-0205, (ECF 319). Because the 2001 Framework prohibited many of the actions required by the HFQLG Act, reconfiguring HFQLG projects under the 2001 Framework would frustrate the purposes of the Act. Fed. Resp. Br. on Remand, Whitman Decl. at ¶ 11, SFL, 05-cv-0205 (ECF 342-1). PRC makes no attempt to demonstrate that its broad injunction would better serve the public interest in implementation of the Pilot Project than the 2004 Framework.
Based on the administrative record and the testimonial evidence provided by the Forest Service, without granting any special deference to Forest Service experts due to their affiliation with the agency, the Court again finds that the 2004 Framework best serves the public interest in implementation of the HFQLG Pilot Project.
Based on the foregoing, the Court denies Plaintiffs' request to vacate and enjoin the 2004 Framework and all projects issued pursuant to its direction.
The Court finds that, based on the circumstances of this case, the appropriate remedy is that proposed by the Forest Service, and therefore orders the Forest Service to complete a supplemental EIS that addresses the analytical deficiency identified by the Ninth Circuit in its June 30, 2012 opinion, Pacific Rivers Council v. U.S. Forest Serv., 689 F.3d 1012 (9th Cir. 2012). The final supplemental EIS should be issued by
In the interim, the agency may continue management of National Forest Service lands in the Sierra Nevada consistent with the 2004 Framework.
IT IS SO ORDERED.