AquAlliance v. United States Bureau of Reclamation , 856 F.3d 101 ( 2017 )


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  •  United States Court of Appeals
    FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA CIRCUIT
    Argued October 17, 2016                  Decided May 9, 2017
    No. 15-5325
    AQUALLIANCE,
    APPELLANT
    v.
    UNITED STATES BUREAU OF RECLAMATION,
    APPELLEE
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the District of Columbia
    (No. 1:14-cv-01018)
    Matt Kenna argued the cause and filed the briefs for
    appellant.
    Carl E. Ross, Assistant U.S. Attorney, argued the cause for
    appellee. With him on the brief was R. Craig Lawrence,
    Assistant U.S. Attorney.
    Before: BROWN, MILLETT and WILKINS, Circuit Judges.
    Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge MILLETT.
    2
    MILLETT, Circuit Judge: There may be “water, water,
    everywhere,” but nary a water well to be found. 1 AquAlliance
    wants to know where the wells are, and it filed a Freedom of
    Information Act (“FOIA”) request to find out. But the federal
    government declined to say, invoking FOIA Exemption 9,
    which permits the withholding of “geological and geophysical
    information * * * concerning wells,” including “maps.” 5
    U.S.C. § 552(b)(9). The question before us is whether
    Exemption 9 permits the government to withhold information
    and maps disclosing the locations and depth of certain water
    wells. We hold that Exemption 9 means what it says and thus
    the government’s withholding was permissible.
    I
    A
    Congress enacted FOIA to “permit access to official
    information long shielded unnecessarily from public view.”
    Milner v. Department of the Navy, 
    562 U.S. 562
    , 565 (2011)
    (quoting EPA v. Mink, 
    410 U.S. 73
    , 80 (1973)). However
    Congress was also aware that “legitimate governmental and
    private interests could be harmed by release of certain types of
    information.” Department of Justice v. Julian, 
    486 U.S. 1
    , 8
    (1988) (quoting Federal Bureau of Investigation v. Abramson,
    
    456 U.S. 615
    , 621 (1982)). FOIA thus “balance[s] the public’s
    need for access to official information with the Government’s
    need for confidentiality.” Weinberger v. Catholic Action of
    Hawaii, 
    454 U.S. 139
    , 144 (1981). To that end, FOIA exempts
    nine categories of records from the government’s otherwise
    broad duty of disclosure. See 5 U.S.C. § 552(b). While those
    exemptions “must be narrowly construed,” 
    Milner, 562 U.S. at 565
    (quoting 
    Abramson, 456 U.S. at 630
    ), courts still must
    1
    SAMUEL TAYLOR COLERIDGE, THE RIME OF THE ANCIENT
    MARINER (1798).
    3
    respect the balance that Congress struck and give the
    exemptions the “meaningful reach and application” that their
    plain text requires, John Doe Agency v. John Doe Corp., 
    493 U.S. 146
    , 152 (1989); see also DiBacco v. United States Army,
    
    795 F.3d 178
    , 183 (D.C. Cir. 2015).
    At issue in this case is Exemption 9, which provides in full
    that FOIA’s general duty of disclosure has no application to
    “geological and geophysical information and data, including
    maps, concerning wells.” 5 U.S.C. § 552(b)(9).
    B
    The Department of Interior’s Bureau of Reclamation
    oversees water resource management across the United States.
    Among the Bureau’s many programs is the Central Valley
    Project, the “largest federal water management project in the
    country.”     Central Delta Water Agency v. Bureau of
    Reclamation, 
    452 F.3d 1021
    , 1023 (9th Cir. 2006). The Project
    comprises a series of dams, twenty-one reservoirs, eleven
    hydropower plants, and 500 miles of canals and aqueducts that
    distribute water south from the Sacramento and San Joaquin
    Rivers in Northern California, which together serve 20 million
    people and 7 million acres of farm land in California. San Luis
    & Delta-Mendota Water Auth. v. Jewell, 
    747 F.3d 581
    , 593–
    594 (9th Cir. 2014). Water districts within the Central Valley
    Project can sell their river water to other districts further south
    if the Bureau approves that water transfer. See Central Valley
    Project Improvement Act, Pub. L. No. 102-575, § 3405(a), 106
    Stat. 4600, 4709–4712 (1992).
    Plaintiff AquAlliance is a non-profit organization
    dedicated to protecting the Northern California ecosystem and
    watersheds. Concerned about the potential adverse effects of
    water transfers on the environment, AquAlliance has
    4
    frequently submitted comments to the Bureau on water transfer
    applications.
    In November 2013, AquAlliance filed a FOIA request
    seeking copies of all documents related to water transfers that
    occurred in 2013. In May 2014, AquAlliance filed a similar
    FOIA request for all documents related to water-transfer
    applications filed with the Bureau for 2014. When the Bureau
    failed to provide timely responses to both requests,
    AquAlliance filed suit in the United States District Court for
    the District of Columbia to compel disclosure of the requested
    documents. That lawsuit apparently prompted the Bureau to
    turn over most of the requested records. But, as relevant here,
    the Bureau redacted information relating to water-well
    construction, completion, depth, and location.
    AquAlliance and the Bureau both filed motions for
    summary judgment. The district court denied AquAlliance’s
    motion and granted summary judgment to the Bureau on the
    ground that Exemption 9 permitted the withholding of well
    depth and location information. See AquAlliance v. Bureau of
    Reclamation, 
    139 F. Supp. 3d 203
    , 209 (D.D.C. 2015). The
    court reasoned that the statutory text draws “no distinction
    * * * among types of wells, and * * * provides no reason to
    think that water wells would be excluded from the exemption’s
    purview.” 
    Id. at 209–210.
    The district court also noted that
    well location and depth “is seemingly prototypical
    ‘geophysical information.’” 
    Id. at 211.
    AquAlliance appealed in the hope that this court would
    read the statutory text differently. We do not.
    5
    II
    We review the district court’s grant of summary judgment
    de novo. See Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in
    Washington v. Federal Election Comm’n, 
    711 F.3d 180
    , 184
    (D.C. Cir. 2013). The burden is on the government to prove
    that a claimed FOIA exemption applies. See National Ass’n of
    Home Builders v. Norton, 
    309 F.3d 26
    , 32 (D.C. Cir. 2002).
    In determining the applicability of Exemption 9, we
    “start[] with its text.” 
    Milner, 562 U.S. at 569
    . In this case,
    that is also where we end. As noted earlier, Exemption 9
    permits the Bureau to withhold from disclosure “geological and
    geophysical information and data, including maps, concerning
    wells.” 5 U.S.C. § 552(b)(9). On its face, AquAlliance’s
    request seeks “information and data” “concerning” the depth
    and location of “wells,” specifically “including maps.” The
    ordinary meaning of “wells” includes water wells. See, e.g.,
    Well, BLACK’S LAW DICTIONARY (10th ed. 2014) (defining
    “well” as “[a] hole or shaft sunk into the earth to obtain a fluid,
    such as water, oil, or natural gas”) (emphasis added).
    The depth and location of wells straightforwardly qualifies
    as “geological and geophysical information,” 5 U.S.C.
    § 552(b)(9). Geological and geophysical records document the
    physical composition and structure of (for present purposes)
    the Earth, including its subsurface. See, e.g., 8 MCGRAW-HILL
    ENCYCLOPEDIA OF SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY 36 (11th ed. 2012)
    (defining “geology” as “[t]he study of the Earth’s materials and
    of the processes that shape them”); 
    id. at 80
    (defining
    “geophysics” as “[t]he study of the Earth and its relation[] to
    the rest of the solar systems,” including “the Earth’s interior”);
    see also Oral Argument at 8:24-8:36 (AquAlliance counsel: “I
    think the definition of geophysical refers to more the structure
    of the underground area.”). Geological maps, for example,
    6
    often disclose a region’s topographical features, plate tectonics,
    and soil composition. See 8 MCGRAW-HILL 
    ENCYCLOPEDIA, supra, at 42
    –43. Hydrogeological maps, in particular, show the
    locations of aquifers conveying water beneath the Earth’s
    surface. 2
    Providing the well-depth and location information to
    AquAlliance would thus necessarily disclose geological or
    geophysical information. After all, to function, water wells
    must be drilled deep enough to reach the sub-surface water
    table. So the depth and location of wells reveal the location
    both of groundwater deposits or flows and of aquifers or the
    water table. That is archetypical geological and geophysical
    information, which is obtained through geophysical processes.
    See, e.g., 8 MCGRAW-HILL 
    ENCYCLOPEDIA, supra, at 72
    –73
    (seismic mapping is used “in groundwater studies, engineering
    geophysics, and mining to map the water table”); 
    id. at 77
    (electrical survey methods are effective “in exploring for
    ground water and in mapping bedrock”). AquAlliance’s FOIA
    request thus falls squarely within Exemption 9.
    AquAlliance voiced two objections to that plain-text
    reading. First, AquAlliance argues that information should
    only qualify as “geological and geophysical” if it (i) is technical
    or scientific, and (ii) would bestow a competitive advantage on
    the person who receives it. That argument fails because there
    is nothing ambiguous about “geological and geophysical,” at
    least not in a way that would permit judicially engrafting a
    competitive-advantage limitation onto the text.
    2
    See, e.g., Kenneth E. Lite, Jr., Hydrogeologic Mapping,
    WATER ENCYCLOPEDIA, http://www.waterencyclopedia.com/Hy-
    La/Hydrogeologic-Mapping.html (last visited April 26, 2017).
    7
    AquAlliance points to the legislative history of Exemption
    9. But neither the House nor the Senate Report contains any
    reference to competitive disadvantage or scientific
    technicalities. S. REP. NO. 813, 89th Cong., 1st Sess. 37
    (1965); H.R. REP. NO. 1497, 89th Cong., 2d Sess. 32 (1966).
    Notably, when Congress wanted to craft a FOIA exemption to
    protect trade secrets and competitive financial or scientific
    information, it knew how to say so. See 5 U.S.C. § 552(b)(4)
    (applicable to confidential “commercial or financial
    information”).
    AquAlliance also argues that Exemption 9 was meant to
    apply only to oil and gas wells, reasoning that, for such wells,
    geological and geophysical information can have significant
    value to economic competitors. The short answer is that—
    whatever AquAlliance believes Congress might have meant—
    Congress said geological and geophysical information
    “concerning wells,” without any such adjectival limitation.
    AquAlliance points out that the House Report discusses
    Exemption 9’s purpose as protecting oil and gas companies
    from competitors eager to freeload on the companies’ research
    investments. See H.R. REP. NO. 
    1497, supra, at 32
    (“Witnesses
    contended that disclosure of the seismic reports and other
    exploratory findings of oil companies would give speculators
    an unfair advantage over the companies which spent millions
    of dollars in exploration.”).
    That is no help to AquAlliance. The Supreme Court has
    used legislative history only to “illuminate ambiguous text” in
    FOIA. 
    Milner, 562 U.S. at 572
    ; see also Department of State
    v. Washington Post Co., 
    456 U.S. 595
    , 599 (1982). The
    problem for AquAlliance is that there is nothing ambiguous
    about Exemption 9’s unqualified reference to “wells.”
    8
    In any event, nothing in the House Report says that
    protecting oil and gas companies was the House’s only
    concern. And the Senate Report on the bill lacks any such
    limiting language. Instead, the Senate Report explains that the
    Exemption was added “to protect from disclosure certain
    information which is highly valuable to several important
    industries and which should be kept confidential when it is
    contained in Government records.” S. REP. NO. 
    813, supra, at 37
    . Water wells directly implicate that purpose, given the value
    of water and competing demands for it, especially in the
    Western United States. See, e.g., Michael Wines, West’s
    Drought and Growth Intensify Conflict Over Water Rights,
    NYTIMES.COM               (March            16,          2014),
    https://www.nytimes.com/2014/03/17/us/wests-drought-and-
    growth-intensify-conflict-over-water-rights.html (“Residents
    of the arid West have always scrapped over water.”).
    AquAlliance, in short, asks the court to use “ambiguous
    legislative history to muddy clear statutory language,” Milner,
    562 U.S at 572. That we cannot do. The proper course, instead,
    is for this court to assume that Congress meant what it said, and
    said what it meant. 3
    3
    See Loughrin v. United States, 
    134 S. Ct. 2384
    , 2391 (2014);
    Connecticut National Bank v. Germain, 
    503 U.S. 249
    , 253–254
    (1992) (“We have stated time and again that courts must presume
    that a legislature says in a statute what it means and means in a statute
    what it says there.”).
    9
    The judgment of the district court upholding the Bureau’s
    withholding of water well location and depth information under
    Exemption 9 is affirmed. 4
    So ordered.
    4
    Because we conclude that the Bureau properly withheld the well
    depth information under Exemption 9, we do not reach the Bureau’s
    separate argument that the information is also covered by Exemption
    4, 5 U.S.C. § 552(b)(4).