Southeast Conference v. Schaefer ( 2010 )


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  •                             UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
    FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
    SOUTHEAST CONFERENCE, et al.,
    Plaintiffs,
    v.                                        Civil Action No. 08-1598 (JDB)
    THOMAS VILSACK, Secretary,
    United States Department of Agriculture,
    et al.,
    Defendants.
    MEMORANDUM OPINION
    In 2008, the United States Forest Service approved the 2008 Tongass National Forest
    Land and Resource Management Plan Amendment ("2008 TLMP Amendment" or "Plan"). The
    Plan established the Forest Service's goals and objectives for the management of the Tongass
    National Forest in Alaska, which include promoting the ecological, social, and economic values
    derived from the Tongass. Plaintiffs -- several Alaskan cities and regional, non-profit
    corporations -- disagree with the Forest Service's vision for the Tongass, particularly as it
    addresses the timber harvest. Accordingly, they challenge several components of the 2008
    TLMP Amendment, positing that it improperly reduces the amount of land available in the
    Tongass for the timber harvest. Before the Court are the parties' cross-motions for summary
    judgment, on which the Court heard oral argument on January 14, 2010. Upon consideration of
    the applicable law, the parties' several memoranda, and the entire record herein, and for the
    reasons stated below, the Court will grant defendants' motion and deny plaintiffs' motion.1
    1
    Although plaintiffs name several different individuals and entities as defendants, the
    Court will refer only to the Forest Service because it promulgated the 2008 TLMP Amendment.
    I.
    Located in Southeast Alaska, the 16.8 million acre Tongass National Forest is the nation's
    largest national forest. "Most of the area of the Tongass is wild and undeveloped."
    Administrative Record, 2008 TLMP Amendment Final Environmental Impact Statement ("2008
    TLMP Amendment FEIS"), 1-3. In spite of -- or perhaps because of -- this feral environment,
    "[t]he economies of Southeast Alaska's communities rely on the Tongass National Forest to
    provide natural resources for uses such as fishing, timber harvesting, recreating, tourism, mining,
    and subsistence." Id. Hence, "[m]aintaining the abundant natural resources of the Forest, while
    providing opportunities for their use, is a major concern of Southeast Alaska residents." Id. The
    Forest Service manages the Tongass with these issues in mind.
    A.
    The National Forest Management Act of 1976, 
    16 U.S.C. § 1600
     et seq., requires the
    Forest Service to "develop, maintain, and, as appropriate, revise land and resource management
    plans for units of the National Forest systems." 
    16 U.S.C. § 1604
    (a). In doing so, the Forest
    Service must "balance competing demands on national forests, including timber harvesting,
    recreational use, and environmental preservation." Lands Council v. Powell, 
    395 F.3d 1019
    ,
    1025 n.2 (9th Cir. 2005); see also 
    16 U.S.C. § 528
     (national forests "administered for outdoor
    recreation, range, timber, watershed, and wildlife and fish purposes"). Indeed, "[u]nlike other
    types of federal conservation statutes, the law regulating the use of national forests embraces the
    concepts of 'multiple use' and 'sustained yield of products and services.'" Lands Council, 
    395 F.3d at
    1025 n.2 (quoting 
    16 U.S.C. § 1607
    ). As part of its management of national forests, the
    Forest Service must "revise[] from time to time [its forest plans] when the Secretary [of
    -2-
    Agriculture] finds conditions in a unit have significantly changed, but at least every fifteen
    years." 
    16 U.S.C. § 1604
    (f)(5).
    In addition to the statutory scheme governing national forests generally, several other
    statutes specifically regulate the Tongass. First, the Alaska National Interest Lands Conservation
    Act ("ANILCA"), Pub. L. No. 96-487, 
    94 Stat. 2371
     (Dec. 2, 1980), created numerous new
    federal properties in Alaska in order to maintain a "proper balance between the reservation of"
    land for conservation and the disposition of "those public lands necessary and appropriate for
    more intensive use." 
    16 U.S.C. § 3101
    (d). Because Congress believed that ANILCA properly
    balanced these outcomes, it concluded that "the need for future legislation . . . has been obviated"
    by the statute. 
    Id.
     Congress therefore prohibited "future executive branch action which
    withdraws more than five thousand acres, in the aggregate, of public lands within the State of
    Alaska[, unless] notice is provided in the Federal Register and to both Houses of Congress." 
    Id.
    § 3213(a). The Forest Service must terminate any such withdrawal "unless Congress passes a
    joint resolution of approval within one year after the notice of such withdrawal has been
    submitted to Congress." Id.
    Second, the Tongass Timber Reform Act ("TTRA"), Pub. L. No. 101-626, 
    104 Stat. 4426
    (Nov. 28, 1990), "imposed additional planning requirements for the Tongass." Natural Res. Def.
    Council v. United States Forest Serv., 
    421 F.3d 797
    , 801 (9th Cir. 2005). "Among these
    requirements, Congress imposed a unique duty on the Forest Service to consider the 'market
    demand' for timber" when creating a forest plan for the Tongass. 
    Id.
     This duty requires the
    Secretary of Agriculture,
    to the extent consistent with providing for the multiple use and sustained yield of
    -3-
    all renewable forest resources, [to] seek to provide a supply of timber from the
    Tongass National Forest which (1) meets the annual market demand for timber
    from such forest and (2) meets the market demand from such forest for each
    planning cycle.
    16 U.S.C. § 539d(a). Although the statute's language is merely "hortatory," it nevertheless
    requires the "Forest Service . . . [to] at least consider market demand and seek to meet market
    demand." Natural Res. Def. Council, 
    421 F.3d at 809
    . The TTRA envisions "not an inflexible
    harvest level, but a balancing of the market, the law, and other uses including preservation."
    Alaska Wilderness Recreation & Tourism Ass'n v. Morrison, 
    67 F.3d 723
    , 731 (9th Cir. 1995).
    B.
    The Forest Service promulgated and approved the 2008 TLMP Amendment to fulfill its
    statutory responsibilities for the Tongass. In the Plan, as in the four previous Tongass forest
    plans, the Forest Service sought to meet its obligation to "provide for multiple use and sustained
    yield of the products and services obtained from the National Forest System." Administrative
    Record, 2008 TLMP Amendment Record of Decision ("2008 TLMP Amendment ROD"), 2
    (internal quotation marks omitted). In other words, the 2008 TLMP Amendment balanced "the
    many competing uses to which land can be put." 
    Id.
     Of particular concern to plaintiffs here is
    how the Forest Service balanced the needs of the timber industry with the other uses of the
    Tongass. Accordingly, the Court will focus on those components of the 2008 TLMP
    Amendment that are relevant to that issue.
    The 2008 TLMP Amendment sets forth the Forest Service's vision for how the 16.8
    million acres of the Tongass will be managed. To do so, the Forest Service uses land
    management planning, which "may be compared to city, county, or borough zoning. Just as areas
    -4-
    in a community are zoned as commercial, industrial, or residential, the forest is also zoned to
    allow, or not allow, various uses and activities." 2008 TLMP Amendment FEIS at 2-1. Forest
    plan "zoning" is accomplished by employing land use designations, which "specify ways of
    managing an area of land and the resources it contains." 
    Id.
     For example, land may be
    designated to protect certain resources, such as old growth wildlife habitats, or it may be
    designated to permit the harvest of resources, such as timber or minerals. See 
    id.
     In addition,
    lands may be designated to permit a combination of activities on the land, "such as providing for
    scenic quality in combination with timber harvesting." 
    Id.
     As relevant here, in the 2008 TLMP
    Amendment the Forest Service designated 1.22 million acres of the Tongass as "old growth
    reserves," with the result that timber harvesting is prohibited on these lands. See 2008 TLMP
    Amendment ROD at 5. The Forest Service also has designated approximately 2.3 million acres
    of the Tongass for timber production, of which 663,000 acres are available for the timber harvest
    while the 2008 TLMP Amendment remains in effect. See id. at 5-6.
    The 2008 TLMP Amendment also includes the Forest Service's projection of market
    demand for timber from the Tongass. A Tongass forest plan must include a projection of market
    demand for timber so the Forest Service can fulfill its statutory obligation under the TTRA to
    seek to meet market demand. To reach a projection of demand, and to assess whether the Plan
    would supply enough timber to satisfy that demand, the Forest Service primarily relied on a
    forecast of market demand prepared by the Pacific Northwest Research Station. See 2008 TLMP
    Amendment ROD at 31-35 (discussing Allen M. Brackley, et al., Timber Products Output and
    Timber Harvests in Alaska: Projections for 2005-2025 (2006)). The study "project[ed] the
    demand for timber from the Tongass, [which was] derived from the demand in Pacific Rim
    -5-
    markets for the end products manufactured from that timber." Id. at 31. It gave four different
    scenarios of timber demand -- limited lumber, expanded lumber, medium integrated, and high
    integrated -- projecting a range of future average demand for Tongass timber. See id. The
    scenarios represent a spectrum of market demand, with "limited lumber" projecting the lowest
    levels of market demand and "high integrated" projecting the highest levels of market demand.
    Id. Under the scenario deemed most likely -- "expanded lumber" -- market demand is projected
    to range from 61.9 million board feet in 2007 to 187.1 million board feet in 2022, the end of the
    planning cycle for the 2008 TLMP Amendment. See id. at 33. The Forest Service adopted the
    expanded lumber scenario as the measure of market demand in its Tongass forest plan. See id. at
    35.2
    Based on the demand scenario it adopted, the Forest Service approved a Tongass forest
    plan that set the allowable sale quantity of timber for the next ten years at 2.67 billion board feet,
    or an average of 267 million board feet annually. See id. The allowable sale quantity "represents
    the upper decadal limit on the amount of timber that may be offered for sale from suitable
    timberland in the Tongass National Forest as part of the regularly scheduled timber sale
    program." Nat. Res. Def. Council, 
    421 F.3d at
    802 n.10 (internal quotation marks omitted). The
    Forest Service determined that an allowable sale quantity of 267 million board feet annually not
    only would satisfy projected market demand, but also would ensure that the Forest Service could
    2
    Plaintiffs do not challenge the Forest Service's reliance on the Pacific Northwest
    Research Station's report, or the Forest Service's selection of the expanded lumber scenario as the
    correct projection of market demand.
    -6-
    meet unforeseen or changing market conditions.3
    One such changing market condition the Forest Service considered was the development
    of an integrated timber industry. It concluded that the 2008 TLMP Amendment should be
    flexible enough to provide sufficient timber to create an "integrated timber industry" in Southeast
    Alaska. See 2008 TLMP Amendment ROD at 35. An integrated industry "is one that includes
    processing facilities and markets for all types of logs from timber harvest operations conducted in
    the area, and for byproducts such as chips that result from processing those logs into lumber or
    other products." 
    Id.
     Although such an industry does not currently exist in Southeast Alaska, the
    Forest Service "consider[ed] it important to provide an opportunity for the timber industry to
    become more integrated." Id. at 36. Relying on the Pacific Northwest Research Station's study,
    the Forest Service concluded that "a reliable annual supply of at least 200 million board feet of
    economic timber would be needed from the Tongass to meet the objective of providing an
    opportunity for the reestablishment of an integrated industry." Id. at 37. An allowable sale
    quantity of timber of 267 million board feet annually permitted this opportunity. See id. ("none
    of the alternatives with an [allowable sale quantity] lower than the amended Forest Plan's meet
    [the] criterion" of providing enough timber to supply a potentially integrated industry).
    Finally, to guide the timber harvest in the Tongass and to protect environmentally
    sensitive areas, the Forest Service implemented what it termed the Timber Sale Program
    Adaptive Management Strategy. See id. at 64 ("The Strategy is an extra step the Forest Service is
    3
    Plaintiffs do not challenge the Forest Service's selection of 2.67 billion board feet as the
    allowable sale quantity over the next decade, or the conclusion that 267 million board feet
    annually is sufficient to both meet projected market demand and provide enough timber to meet
    changing market conditions.
    -7-
    taking to respond to recommendations from many parties that we avoid timber harvest and road
    construction in areas of the Tongass that are perceived as being more environmentally sensitive
    . . . . "). Under the Strategy, the "timber harvest will be allowed in three phases as a means of
    limiting timber harvest and associated road construction activities to lower quality roadless areas
    until the level of timber harvest warrants allowing such activities in higher quality roadless
    areas." Id. at 8. The parts of the forest available to the timber harvest under the 2008 TLMP
    Amendment are divided into four separate areas: roaded, lower value roadless areas, moderate
    value roadless areas, and higher value roadless areas. Id. Based on these divisions, timber
    harvest and associated road construction is allowed in these areas in three phases, which come
    into effect if necessary to meet market demand. Id. at 65-66. Phase one includes roaded areas
    and most of the lower value roadless areas; phase two includes phase one lands and most of the
    moderate value roadless areas; and phase three includes the entire land base suitable for the
    timber harvest. Id. The Timber Sale Adaptive Management Strategy limits the timber harvest to
    phase one areas until timber harvest levels reach at least 100 million board feet per year for two
    consecutive years. Id. at 65. If that threshold is met, phase two lands become available for the
    timber harvest. Id. at 66. If the harvest levels reach at least 150 million board feet per year for
    two consecutive years, phase three lands become available for the timber harvest. Id.
    C.
    Plaintiffs bring suit under the Administrative Procedure Act, seeking declaratory and
    injunctive relief on the grounds that the 2008 TLMP Amendment violates ANILCA and the
    TTRA. In their complaint, plaintiffs challenge three components of the Plan. First, they contend
    that the "old growth reserves" land use designation, which in their view withdraws more than
    -8-
    5,000 acres from the timber harvest, violates ANILCA's provision prohibiting such executive
    branch withdrawals. See Compl. at p. 23. They opine that because the Forest Service neither
    sent notice of the designations to both houses of Congress nor obtained a joint congressional
    resolution authorizing the designations, the "old growth reserves" designations are illegal under
    ANILCA.
    Second, plaintiffs argue that the Timber Sale Adaptive Management Strategy "withdraws
    so much of the commercial forest land base as to effectively destroy the Forest Service's ability to
    exercise its discretion to meet market demand for an integrated timber industry." Compl. ¶ 4. In
    other words, plaintiffs posit that the Strategy "ha[s] rendered it improbable that Defendants
    could" fulfill their obligation under the TTRA to seek "to meet market demand for an integrated
    timber industry." Compl. ¶ 51.
    Third, plaintiffs suggest that the 2008 TLMP Amendment imposes "non-statutory"
    constraints on the Forest Service's "mandatory obligation under TTRA to seek to meet market
    demand." Pls.' Mem. in Supp. of Mot. for Partial Summ. J. ("Pls.' Mem.") [Docket Entry 16], at
    38. That is, plaintiffs insist that certain elements of the Plan, including the Timber Sale Adaptive
    Management Strategy, limit the Forest Service's ability to seek to meet the market demand for an
    integrated timber industry. See Pls.' Reply in Supp. of Mot. for Partial Summ. J. ("Pls.' Reply")
    [Docket Entry 18], at 40, 41.4
    4
    In their complaint, plaintiffs also argue that the 2008 TLMP Amendment has
    "effectively repealed . . . [the National Forest Management Act]." Compl. ¶ 51. But in response
    to the Court's question regarding what claims plaintiffs were asserting in this action, plaintiffs'
    counsel did not include the claim based on the National Forest Management Act. Moreover, the
    single statement that the 2008 TLMP Amendment "effectively repealed" the National Forest
    Management Act is insufficient to state a claim, especially where plaintiffs have not even
    identified the provisions of the Act at issue.
    -9-
    II.
    Under Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(c), summary judgment is appropriate when the pleadings and
    the evidence demonstrate that "there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the
    moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law." In a case involving review of a final
    agency action under the Administrative Procedure Act, 
    5 U.S.C. § 706
    , however, the standard set
    forth in Rule 56(c) does not apply because of the limited role of a court in reviewing the
    administrative record. See Prof'l Drivers Council v. Bur. of Motor Carrier Safety, 
    706 F.2d 1216
    ,
    1229 (D.C. Cir. 1983); Sierra Club v. Mainella, 
    459 F. Supp. 2d 76
    , 89-90 (D.D.C. 2006). The
    agency resolves factual issues in a manner that is supported by the administrative record.
    Summary judgment is then the mechanism for deciding whether as a matter of law the agency
    action is supported by the administrative record and is otherwise consistent with the APA
    standard of review. See Citizens to Preserve Overton Park, Inc. v. Volpe, 
    401 U.S. 402
    , 415
    (1971); Sw. Merchandising Corp. v. Nat. Labor Relations Bd., 
    53 F.3d 1334
    , 1341 (D.C. Cir.
    1995); Richard v. Immigration & Naturalization Serv., 
    554 F.2d 1173
    , 1177 & n.28 (D.C. Cir.
    1977).
    A court must "hold unlawful and set aside agency action, findings, and conclusions" that
    are "arbitrary, capricious, an abuse of discretion, or otherwise not in accordance with law," 
    5 U.S.C. § 706
    (2)(A), in excess of statutory authority, 
    id.
     § 706(2)(C), or "without observance of
    procedures required by law," id. § 706(2)(D). The scope of review, however, is narrow. See
    Motor Vehicle Mfrs. Ass'n of U.S., Inc. v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co., 
    463 U.S. 29
    , 43
    (1983). It presumes the agency's action is valid. See Volpe, 
    401 U.S. at 415
    . And the "court is
    not to substitute its judgment for that of the agency." State Farm, 
    463 U.S. at 43
    . Moreover,
    -10-
    where an agency "is evaluating scientific data within its technical expertise," the Court must give
    the agency "an extreme degree of deference." Am. Farm Bureau Fed'n v. Envtl. Prot. Agency,
    
    559 F.3d 512
    , 519 (D.C. Cir. 2009) (internal quotation marks omitted); see also Am. Radio Relay
    League, Inc. v. Fed. Commc'n Comm'n, 
    524 F.3d 227
    , 233 (D.C. Cir. 2008) ("Where a 'highly
    technical question' is involved, 'courts necessarily must show considerable deference to an
    agency's expertise.'" (quoting MCI Cellular Tel. Co. v. Fed. Commc'n Comm'n, 
    738 F.2d 1322
    ,
    1333 (D.C. Cir. 1984))). But the court must be satisfied that the agency has "'examine[d] the
    relevant data and articulate[d] a satisfactory explanation for its action including a rational
    connection between the facts found and the choice made.'" Alpharma, Inc. v. Leavitt, 
    460 F.3d 1
    ,
    6 (D.C. Cir. 2006) (quoting State Farm, 
    463 U.S. at 43
    ).
    III.
    Plaintiffs contend that the "old growth reserves" land use designation in the 2008 TLMP
    Amendment violates 
    16 U.S.C. § 3213
    (a), ANILCA's provision prohibiting executive branch
    withdrawals. According to plaintiffs, the "old growth reserves" designation has the effect of
    closing the designated land to the timber harvest. See Pls.' Mem. at 20; Pls.' Reply at 2. And
    because this land is closed to the timber harvest, plaintiffs posit that the "old growth reserves"
    designation "withdraws" land within the meaning of 
    16 U.S.C. § 3213
    (a). Hence, in plaintiffs'
    view, the "old growth reserves" designation can be upheld only if the Forest Service notifies
    Congress and seeks a joint resolution approving the designation. The Forest Service has not
    done so, and therefore plaintiffs contend that the 2008 TLMP Amendment is not "in accordance
    with law." Pls.' Mem. at 25.
    -11-
    Although plaintiffs' argument rests on the assumption that the statutory definition of a
    withdrawal encompasses land use designations, plaintiffs never define the term "withdrawal."
    Nor, to be fair, does ANILCA. In the absence of a definition of the term in ANILCA, the Court
    must look to how other, related statutes define withdrawal, see, e.g., Arlington Cent. School Dist.
    Bd. of Educ. v. Murphy, 
    548 U.S. 291
    , 300-03 (2006); Pierce v. Underwood, 
    487 U.S. 552
    , 564-
    65 (1988), as well as to the context in which the term is used in the statute at issue, see, e.g.,
    Gustafson v. Alloyd Co., 
    513 U.S. 561
    , 569 (1995); United Savings Ass'n of Texas v. Timbers of
    Inwood Forest Assocs., 
    484 U.S. 365
    , 371 (1988).
    One such related statute is the Federal Land Policy and Management Act, which, like
    ANILCA, governs the management of certain federal lands. Under that statute, a withdrawal is
    statutorily defined as a "withholding [of] an area of Federal land from settlement, sale, location,
    or entry, under some or all of the general land laws, for the purpose of limiting activities under
    those laws in order to maintain other public values in the area or reserving the area for a
    particular public purpose or program." 
    43 U.S.C. § 1702
    (j). Interpreting that provision, the D.C.
    Circuit described a withdrawal as an action that "exempts the covered land from the operation of
    public land laws." New Mexico v. Watkins, 
    969 F.2d 1122
    , 1124 (D.C. Cir. 1992); see also
    Sagebrush Rebellion, Inc. v. Hodel, 
    790 F.2d 760
    , 761 n.1 (9th Cir. 1986) ("A withdrawal
    withholds an area of federal land from sale, lease or use under the general land laws . . . in order
    to preserve a public value in the area or for a public purpose."). Public, or general, land laws
    "authorize the transfer of federal lands to the private domain." Sagebrush Rebellion, 
    790 F.2d at
    761 n.1. Putting the definitions together, then, a withdrawal exempts covered land from the
    -12-
    operation of laws that otherwise authorize the transfer of federal lands to the private domain for
    private use.
    This definition accords with the way several other provisions of ANILCA use the term
    withdrawal. For example, in a provision discussing ANILCA's effect on withdrawals of land
    made prior to ANILCA's passage, Congress stated that withdrawn lands "shall not be deemed
    available for selection, appropriation, or disposition." 
    16 U.S.C. § 3209
    (a). The phrase
    "selection, appropriation, or disposition" echoes the phrase "settlement, sale, location, or entry"
    used in the Federal Land Policy and Management Act's definition of withdrawal. Furthermore, in
    an ANILCA provision regarding mineral leasing rights, Congress found that certain lands "are
    . . . withdrawn from all forms of appropriation or disposal under public land laws." 16 U.S.C. §
    410hh-5. This construction mirrors the D.C. Circuit's description that a withdrawal under the
    Federal Land Policy and Management Act "exempts the covered land from the operation of
    public land laws." Watkins, 
    969 F.2d at 1124
    .5 The statutory evidence, then, supports the
    application of the Federal Land Policy and Management Act's definition of withdrawal to
    ANILCA.6
    5
    The Federal Land Policy and Management Act's definition of withdrawal also reflects
    the general use of the term in public land jurisprudence: "A withdrawal makes land unavailable
    for certain kinds of private appropriation under the public land laws." So. Utah Wilderness
    Alliance v. Bureau of Land Mgmt., 
    425 F.3d 735
    , 784 (10th Cir. 2005) (citing Charles F.
    Wheatley, Jr., II Study of Withdrawals and Reservations of Public Domain Lands A-1 (1969)).
    "Just as Congress . . . can pass laws opening the public lands to private settlement, so also it can
    remove the public lands from the operation of those same laws. That is what a withdrawal does."
    
    Id.
    6
    It is reasonable to believe that Congress wrote ANICLA with the Federal Land Policy
    and Management Act's definition of withdrawal in mind given that Congress passed the Federal
    Land Policy and Management Act just four years before ANILCA. Compare Federal Land
    Policy and Management Act, Pub. L. No. 94-579, 
    90 Stat. 2743
     (Oct. 21, 1976), with ANILCA,
    -13-
    Because other provisions of ANILCA reflect the definition of withdrawal set forth in the
    Federal Land Policy and Management Act, the Court is persuaded that the term withdrawal in 
    16 U.S.C. § 3213
    (a) should be given that definition as well. See United Savings Ass'n of Texas,
    
    484 U.S. at 371
     ("A provision that may seem ambiguous in isolation is often clarified by the
    remainder of the statutory scheme . . . ."). Accordingly, for "old growth reserve" land use
    designations to be withdrawals, they must "exempt[] the covered land from the operation of
    public land laws." Watkins, 
    969 F.2d at 1124
    . But plaintiffs make no allegations that the
    designations here have the effect of suspending any public lands laws. Nor could they.
    Land use designations -- which are part of nearly every forest plan7 -- are merely
    examples of the Forest Service's statutory responsibility under the National Forest Management
    Act to "provide for multiple use and sustained yield of the products and services of units of the
    National Forest System." 
    16 U.S.C. § 1604
    (e). They neither exempt lands from the operation of
    public land laws, nor suspend the operation of those laws on certain lands. Land use
    designations simply have no effect on laws that authorize the transfer of federal lands to the
    private domain -- and plaintiffs have not pointed this Court to any authority suggesting
    otherwise. Indeed, the only court to consider plaintiffs' contention that land use designations are
    withdrawals summarily rejected it. See Seattle Audubon Society v. Lyons, 
    871 F. Supp. 1291
    ,
    1315 (W.D. Wash. 1994). Considering a challenge under the Federal Land Policy and
    Management Act, the Lyons court held that employing land use designations was "merely an
    Pub. L. No. 96-487, 
    94 Stat. 2371
     (Dec. 2, 1980).
    7
    See, e.g., Lands Council, 
    395 F.3d at 1033
     (discussing land use designations); Morrison,
    
    67 F.3d at 726
     (same).
    -14-
    exercise of the Secretary's multiple-use planning responsibilities," and thus could not be a
    withdrawal. 
    Id.
     So too here.
    The Forest Service's responsibility under the National Forest Management Act to plan for
    multiple uses necessarily means that not all lands are available for all purposes. See, e.g., 
    16 U.S.C. § 1604
    (g)(3)(E) (Forest Service must ensure that timber will be harvested from National
    Forest System lands only where, for example, "(i) soil, slope, or other watershed conditions will
    not be irreversibly damaged"); 
    id.
     § 1604(k) ("In developing land management plans pursuant to
    this subchapter, the Secretary shall identify lands within the management area which are not
    suited for timber production, considering physical, economic, and other pertinent factors to the
    extent feasible . . . ."). To accept plaintiffs' argument that land use designations are withdrawals
    would be to assume that Congress implicitly repealed this "multiple use" approach, arrogating
    power to promulgate forest plans. The Court finds no reason to read ANILCA so broadly when
    its plain language and context support a more measured construction. That construction, the
    Court notes, accords with the fact that "Congress has given no indication as to the weight to be
    assigned each value and it must be assumed that the decision as to the proper mix of uses within
    any particular area is left to the sound discretion and expertise of the Forest Service." Sierra
    Club v. Hardin, 
    325 F. Supp. 99
    , 123 (D. Alaska 1971); accord Mountain States Legal Found. v.
    Glickman, 
    922 F. Supp. 628
    , 634 (D.D.C. 1995) ("District courts have also held that the Forest
    Service has wide discretion to weigh and decide the proper uses within any area of the National
    Forests."), aff'd, 
    92 F.3d 1228
     (D.C. Cir. 1996). Accordingly, the land use designations of "old
    -15-
    growth reserves" in the 2008 TLMP Amendment are not withdrawals under 
    16 U.S.C. § 3213
    (a).8
    Nevertheless, plaintiffs suggest that the Court need not be guided only by the statutory
    definition of withdrawal. Instead, according to plaintiffs, the "realities of the situation" should
    inform the Court's analysis -- and because the "old growth reserves" are closed to the timber
    harvest, they must, as a practical matter, be withdrawals under 
    16 U.S.C. § 3213
    (a). For this
    argument, plaintiffs rely on Mountain States Legal Found. v. Andrus, 
    499 F. Supp. 383
     (D. Wyo.
    1980). At issue there was whether the Secretary of the Interior's failure to act on applications for
    mineral leases that had been pending before him for several years was a withdrawal under the
    Federal Land Policy and Management Act. See Mountain States, 499 F. Supp at 393, 396. The
    court concluded that the Secretary's delay in acting on the lease applications precluded plaintiffs
    from ever perfecting a potential property right under federal law. See 
    id. at 397
    . The delay had
    the effect of preventing plaintiffs from exercising their right to seek mineral leases on federal
    land under the public land laws. See 
    id.
     In the court's view, "the realities of the situation" meant
    that delay was tantamount to a prohibition of private action on certain federal land. See 
    id.
    The Mountain States decision cannot bear the weight plaintiffs assign to it. To begin
    with, the Ninth Circuit rejected the decision's reasoning as unpersuasive. See Bob Marshall
    Alliance v. Hodel, 
    852 F.2d 1223
    , 1230-31 (9th Cir. 1988) ("Mountain States is not binding on
    8
    Plaintiffs also suggest that areas of the Tongass identified as Timber Sale Adaptive
    Management Strategy phase two and phase three lands are withdrawals under 
    16 U.S.C. § 3213
    (a). Compl. ¶ 57; see also Pls.' Reply at 15. But these lands are not closed even to the
    timber harvest -- the Timber Sale Adaptive Management Strategy merely indicates at what point
    these lands may be harvested. And, in any event, the Strategy, as with the "old growth reserves,"
    does not purport to suspend any public land laws. Plaintiffs do not contend otherwise.
    -16-
    us and we do not find its reasoning persuasive."). Plaintiffs suggest that this Court should
    nevertheless follow Mountain States and imbue the statutory definition of withdrawal with a
    practical component. This Court does not read the case so broadly. Mountain States merely
    applied the Federal Land Policy and Management Act's definition of withdrawal -- the Secretary's
    delay was a withdrawal because it had the effect of suspending the operation of public land laws
    that granted private individuals the right to apply for mineral leases on public lands. 
    Id.
     at 396-
    97. It spoke of the "realities of the situation" only because there was no executive branch action
    that affirmatively suspended the public land laws. The court did not, therefore, create an
    alternative, more practical definition of withdrawal. Accordingly, Mountain States is inapposite
    to plaintiffs' ANILCA challenge.
    IV.
    Plaintiffs next assert that the 2008 TLMP Amendment violates the TTRA because the
    Timber Sale Adaptive Management Strategy "withdraws so much of the commercial forest land
    base as to effectively destroy the Forest Service's ability to exercise its discretion to meet market
    demand for an integrated timber industry." Compl. ¶ 4 (emphasis added). That is, plaintiffs
    believe that the Strategy "ha[s] rendered it improbable that Defendants could" fulfill their
    obligation under the TTRA to seek "to meet market demand for an integrated timber industry."
    Compl. ¶ 51. This challenge, however, proceeds from the erroneous premise that the TTRA
    obligates the Forest Service to seek to meet the market demand for an integrated timber industry.
    In fact, the TTRA only instructs the Forest Service to "seek to provide a supply of timber from
    the Tongass National Forest which (1) meets the annual market demand for timber from such
    forest and (2) meets the market demand from such forest for each planning cycle." 16 U.S.C. §
    -17-
    539d(a); see also Natural Res. Def. Council, 
    421 F.3d at 809
     (Forest Service attempted to meet
    market demand by "using its own economists' projections of the annual and plan-cycle market
    demand for Tongass timber"). The TTRA says nothing at all about an integrated timber industry.
    The Forest Service has discretion to make predictions of market demand. Accordingly,
    the Forest Service could project market demand based on the needs of an integrated timber
    industry. In that case, the TTRA might indeed oblige the Forest Service to seek to meet market
    demand for an integrated timber industry. But in the 2008 TLMP Amendment, the Forest
    Service chose a projection of market demand that was not based on an integrated timber industry
    -- which in fact does not currently exist in the Tongass. See 2008 TLMP Amendment ROD at
    31-35. It explicitly rejected two projections that were based on an integrated timber industry, and
    explained why it was doing so. See 
    id.
     Therefore, the Forest Service is not obligated under the
    TTRA to seek to meet the market demand of an integrated timber industry in the 2008 TLMP
    Amendment.
    Nevertheless, plaintiffs repeatedly, and consistently, contend that the 2008 TLMP
    Amendment and its Timber Sale Adaptive Management Strategy prevent the Forest Service from
    seeking to meet market demand for an integrated timber industry. See, e.g., Compl. ¶ 3 (the 2008
    TLMP Amendment "effectively eliminat[es] the Forest Service's ability to exercise its discretion
    to meet annual and cyclical market demand . . . by providing three years volume of economic
    timber under contract to an integrated timber industry"); Compl. ¶ 4 (the Timber Sale Adaptive
    Management Strategy "withdraws so much of the commercial forest land base as to effectively
    destroy the Forest Service's ability to exercise its discretion to meet market demand for an
    integrated timber industry"); Compl. ¶ 49 ("Because the Defendants have never properly
    -18-
    evaluated or determined the volume of timber and the [allowable sale quanity] to provide three
    years of economic timber under contract to an integrated industry, it follows that [the Strategy] is
    . . . arbitrary and capricious . . . ."); Compl. ¶ 51 (the 2008 TLMP Amendment "ha[s] rendered it
    improbable that Defendants could exercise their discretion to provide sufficient economic timber
    to meet market demand for an integrated timber industry").9 Maybe so, but plaintiffs' claim
    simply misses the mark.
    Plaintiffs' challenge seeks to hold the Forest Service to a standard it is not required to
    fulfill. Whether or not the Timber Sale Adaptive Management Strategy will prevent the Forest
    Service from seeking to meet the market demand of an integrated timber industry is an irrelevant
    question. Plaintiffs could have alleged that the Strategy prevents the Forest Service from seeking
    to meet its actual projection of market demand. But they did not. And the Court will not rewrite
    plaintiffs' complaint and briefs to assert the proper claim. Plaintiffs' contention that the Timber
    Sale Adaptive Management Strategy violates the TTRA therefore fails at the outset.
    9
    In their litigation papers, plaintiffs similarly, and consistently, contend that the 2008
    TLMP Amendment prevents the Forest Service from seeking to meet market demand for an
    integrated timber industry. See, e.g., Pls.' Mem. at 29 ("[T]he Forest Service will not be able to
    seek to meet market demand, which it has identified as an annual minimum of 200 [million board
    feet] to reestablish an integrated industry."); id. at 30 ("Thus, [the Timber Sale Adaptive
    Management Strategy] will always be stuck in Phase 1 at 100 [million board feet],
    notwithstanding the 2008 TLMP Amendment's recognition that a minimum of 200 [million
    board feet] per year is needed to seek to meet the market demand for an integrated industry."); id.
    at 33 (the Timber Sale Adaptive Management Strategy provides "only half of the volume the
    Regional Forester has determined is needed to seek to meet market demand for an integrated
    industry"); id. at 34 (the Timber Sale Adaptive Management Strategy is flawed because the 2008
    TLMP Amendment "acknowledges that the industry needs a minimum of 200 [million board
    feet] per year to reestablish a fully integrated industry"); id. at 44-45 (the Forest Service cannot
    "supply the volume of timber that they have identified is needed to meet market demand for an
    integrated timber industry").
    -19-
    To be sure, in a supplemental memorandum filed at the Court's request, plaintiffs do
    suggest that the 2008 TLMP Amendment and its Timber Sale Adaptive Management Strategy
    preclude the Forest Service from meeting its own projection of market demand. See Pls.'
    Responses to the Court's January 21, 2010 Questions ("Pls.' Resp.") [Docket Entry 30], at 9-10.
    This single allegation, however, is insufficient to rescue plaintiffs' claims under the TTRA. First,
    as discussed above, their complaint is devoid of any assertion that the Timber Sale Adaptive
    Management Strategy prevents the Forest Service from seeking to meet its actual projection of
    market demand. Plaintiffs' post hoc answer in a supplemental brief does not change how they
    have consistently litigated this case.
    Second, even assuming plaintiffs properly presented a challenge to the Forest Service's
    projection of market demand, they have not provided sufficient evidence to overcome the
    "extreme degree of deference" given to an agency's evaluation of "scientific data within its
    technical expertise." Am. Farm Bureau Fed'n, 
    559 F.3d at 519
    . The Forest Service concluded
    that the 2008 TLMP Amendment and its Timber Sale Adaptive Management Strategy, "allows
    the projected level of long-term demand to be met." 2008 TLMP Amendment ROD at 35.
    Plaintiffs, however, suggest that "[t]he failure to provide a sufficient volume of economic timber
    in the 2008 [TLMP Amendment's] 5 year timber sale schedule" renders the Forest Service unable
    to meet its own projection of market demand. Pls.' Resp. at 10. And they further contend that
    there is an insufficient amount of timber that either is available for sale or has been sold but not
    yet harvested to permit the Forest Service to meet its projection of market demand. See id. at 9.
    But plaintiffs' argument ignores the fact that "[t]he Forest Service employs a 'pipeline'
    approach to timber sale planning to provide a stable timber sale program and a continuous flow
    -20-
    of timber to regional processors." 2008 TLMP Amendment FEIS at 3-334. That is, the Forest
    Service seeks to meet market demand through a mix of timber available for sale, timber sold but
    not yet harvested, and timber that is being planned for sale. See id. On the basis of this pipeline,
    the Forest Service concluded that the 2008 TLMP Amendment would permit it to meet its actual
    projections of market demand. See 2008 TLMP Amendment ROD at 35.
    Although the Court recognizes that the Forest Service and plaintiffs disagree on this
    point, the Court cannot say that the Forest Service's conclusion is incorrect. Plaintiffs have not
    provided the necessary evidence to overcome "'the considerable deference to an agency's
    expertise'" where "a 'highly technical question' is involved." Am. Radio Relay League, Inc., 
    524 F.3d at 233
     (quoting MCI Cellular Tel. Co., 
    738 F.2d at 1333
    ). They have not, for example,
    shown that the Forest Service will not be able to meet market demand for each year the 2008
    TLMP Amendment is in effect. In fact, they concede that even without any further timber sales,
    there is enough timber in the "pipeline" to meet market demand through 2012. See Pls.' Resp. at
    9. Furthermore, plaintiffs' position does not take into account timber sales conducted under the
    Timber Sale Adaptive Management Strategy, which will likely increase the amount of timber in
    the pipeline. See Defs.' Responses to the Court's January 21, 2010 Questions [Docket Entry 31],
    at 2. The Court simply cannot conclude, in the absence of any evidence marshaled by plaintiffs,
    that the 2008 TLMP Amendment will not meet the Forest Service's projection of market demand.
    Nor can plaintiffs save their cause by pointing to the fact that in the 2008 TLMP
    Amendment the Forest Service recognized the importance of "provid[ing] an opportunity for the
    timber industry to become more integrated." 2008 TLMP Amendment ROD at 36. In the Plan,
    the Forest Service concluded that the 2008 TLMP Amendment should be flexible enough to
    -21-
    provide sufficient timber to create an integrated industry. See id. at 36-37. Relying on the
    Pacific Northwest Research Station's study, the Forest Service found that "a reliable annual
    supply of at least 200 million board feet of economic timber would be needed from the Tongass
    to meet the objective of providing an opportunity for the reestablishment of an integrated
    industry." Id. at 37. It therefore set the allowable sale quantity of timber at 267 million board
    feet annually to provide that opportunity. This decision merely builds flexibility into the 2008
    TLMP Amendment such that the forest plan could, in the Forest Service's expert view,
    potentially meet the market demand associated with any integrated industry that develops. It
    does not, however, alter the Forest Service's projections of market demand. And therefore it has
    no effect on the Forest Service's obligation under the TTRA to seek to meet the actual market
    demand projection.
    V.
    Finally, plaintiffs also suggest that the 2008 TLMP Amendment imposes "non-statutory"
    constraints on the Forest Service's seek-to-meet obligation -- limitations, plaintiffs opine, that
    preclude the Forest Service from fulfilling its obligations under the TTRA. As the Court
    discussed in Part IV, however, plaintiffs do not contend in their complaint or in their briefing that
    the 2008 TLMP Amendment will preclude the Forest Service from seeking to meet its actual
    projection of market demand. Hence, they present no allegation or argument that the "non-
    statutory" constraints specifically limit the Forest Service's ability to seek to meet market
    demand. Rather, plaintiffs specifically cast their "non-statutory" constraints argument, as they do
    their challenge to the Timber Sale Adaptive Management Strategy, in terms of the market
    -22-
    demand for an integrated timber industry. See, e.g., Pls.' Reply at 36, 40, 41. Plaintiffs' "non-
    statutory" constraints argument therefore also fails at the threshold.10
    VI.
    For the foregoing reasons, defendants' motion for summary judgment will be granted, and
    plaintiffs' motion for summary judgment will be denied. A separate order has been issued on this
    date.
    /s/
    JOHN D. BATES
    United States District Judge
    Dated: February 17, 2010
    10
    Plaintiffs would fare no better even if the Court reached the merits of their challenge.
    Although plaintiffs' assert in their supplemental response that the 2008 TLMP Amendment and
    its Timber Sale Adaptive Management Strategy preclude the Forest Service from seeking to meet
    its actual projection of market demand, see Pls.' Resp. at 9-10, the Court has already concluded
    that the response does not provide sufficient evidence to overcome the "considerable deference"
    given to agency evaluations of "scientific data within its technical expertise," see Am. Farm
    Bureau, 
    559 F.3d at 512
    ; see also Part IV, supra. That conclusion applies with equal force to
    plaintiffs' "non-statutory" constraints argument.
    -23-
    

Document Info

Docket Number: Civil Action No. 2008-1598

Judges: Judge John D. Bates

Filed Date: 2/17/2010

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/30/2014

Authorities (21)

United Sav. Assn. of Tex. v. Timbers of Inwood Forest ... , 108 S. Ct. 626 ( 1988 )

Seattle Audubon Society v. Lyons , 871 F. Supp. 1291 ( 1994 )

state-of-new-mexico-v-james-d-watkins-secretary-department-of-energy , 969 F.2d 1122 ( 1992 )

Motor Vehicle Mfrs. Assn. of United States, Inc. v. State ... , 103 S. Ct. 2856 ( 1983 )

alaska-wilderness-recreation-and-tourism-association-organized-village-of , 67 F.3d 723 ( 1995 )

Citizens to Preserve Overton Park, Inc. v. Volpe , 91 S. Ct. 814 ( 1971 )

Compton James Richards v. Immigration and Naturalization ... , 554 F.2d 1173 ( 1977 )

Alpharma Inc v. Leavitt, Michael , 460 F.3d 1 ( 2006 )

Professional Drivers Council, John Torbet, and David Gaibis ... , 706 F.2d 1216 ( 1983 )

mci-cellular-telephone-company-v-federal-communications-commission-bell , 738 F.2d 1322 ( 1984 )

sagebrush-rebellion-inc-v-donald-p-hodel-secretary-of-the-interior , 790 F.2d 760 ( 1986 )

Mountain States Legal Foundation v. Andrus , 499 F. Supp. 383 ( 1980 )

Sierra Club v. Hardin , 325 F. Supp. 99 ( 1971 )

Mountain States Legal Foundation v. Glickman , 922 F. Supp. 628 ( 1995 )

natural-resources-defense-council-southeast-alaska-conservation-council , 421 F.3d 797 ( 2005 )

the-lands-council-a-washington-nonprofit-corporation-kootenai , 395 F.3d 1019 ( 2005 )

Mountain States Legal Foundation v. Dan Glickman, Secretary ... , 92 F.3d 1228 ( 1996 )

American Farm Bureau Federation v. Environmental Protection ... , 559 F.3d 512 ( 2009 )

bob-marshall-alliance-v-donald-p-hodel-secretary-of-the-interior-and , 852 F.2d 1223 ( 1988 )

Gustafson v. Alloyd Co. , 115 S. Ct. 1061 ( 1995 )

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