NEW JERSEY OUTDOOR ALLIANCE VS. NEW JERSEY DEPARTMENT OF ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION (DEPARTMENT OF ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION) ( 2018 )


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  •                                  NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE
    APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
    This opinion shall not "constitute precedent or be binding upon any court ." Although it is posted on the
    internet, this opinion is binding only on the parties in the case and its use in other cases is limited . R. 1:36-3.
    SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
    APPELLATE DIVISION
    DOCKET NO. A-0525-18T4
    NEW JERSEY OUTDOOR
    ALLIANCE, SAFARI CLUB
    INTERNATIONAL, and
    SPORTSMEN'S ALLIANCE
    FOUNDATION,
    Appellants,
    v.
    NEW JERSEY DEPARTMENT
    OF ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION,
    and CATHERINE R. McCABE,
    Commissioner of the New Jersey
    Department of Environmental Protection,
    in her official capacity,
    Respondents.
    ______________________________________
    Argued telephonically November 7, 2018 – Decided November 16, 2018
    Before Judges Sabatino, Haas and Mitterhoff.
    On appeal from the New Jersey Department of
    Environmental Protection.
    James H. Lister (Birch Horton Bittner & Cherot) of the
    Alaska and District of Columbia bars, admitted pro hac
    vice, argued the cause for appellants (Law Offices of
    John C. Lane, Van Dalen Brower, LLC, and James H.
    Lister, attorneys; Peter Caccamo-Bobchin and John M.
    Van Dalen, of counsel and on the joint brief; Anna M.
    Seidman, of the District of Columbia bar, admitted pro
    hac vice, Douglas S. Burdin, of the District of Columbia
    bar, admitted pro hac vice, and James H. Lister, on the
    joint brief).
    Jung W. Kim, Deputy Attorney General, argued the
    cause for respondents (Gurbir S. Grewal, Attorney
    General, attorney; Jason W. Rockwell, Assistant
    Attorney General, of counsel; Jung W. Kim, on the
    brief).
    Doris K. Lin argued the cause for amicus curiae Animal
    Protection League of New Jersey.
    PER CURIAM
    This accelerated appeal represents the latest chapter of the recurring
    controversy over the hunting of black bears in New Jersey.
    The present case involves the executive branch's closure of State lands 1 to
    the bear hunt. Currently, bear hunts are conducted in accordance with the 2015
    Comprehensive Black Bear Management Policy ("CBBMP"). The first phase of
    the 2018 hunt was completed in early October and the second phase is scheduled
    to begin very soon on December 3.
    1
    For simplicity, we use the term "State lands" to refer more precisely to the
    particular lands designated in the administrative order that has been challenged
    in this appeal.
    A-0525-18T4
    2
    For the reasons that follow, we deny appellants' emergent request to
    invalidate and enjoin the closure of State lands for the hunt's second phase. We
    reject appellants' contention that the closure requires the adoption of regulatory
    rules, because, as settled precedent has held, a closure such as this involves the
    State's proprietary interests and not the State's role as a regulator. We also reject
    appellants' claim that the closure must be halted in this private civil action
    because of federal law.
    Nevertheless, we remand this matter pursuant to Rule 2:5-5(b) for the
    development of a suitable plenary record and fact-finding in the Office of
    Administrative Law ("OAL"). That neutral quasi-judicial forum shall address
    the hotly-disputed and fact-dependent claims that the closure is arbitrary and
    capricious, conflicts with the scientific underpinnings of the CBBMP, and
    imperils public safety. In the meantime, we are unpersuaded appellants have
    met their considerable burden of demonstrating they are entitled to injunctive
    relief nullifying the State's restrictions on the imminent second phase of the 2018
    hunt.
    I.
    The hunting of black bears has frequently been the subject of litigation in
    our courts. Several units of State Government have a role in the development
    A-0525-18T4
    3
    of plans for a seasonal bear hunt. When it occurs, the hunt typically is held in
    the fall before the bears hibernate for the cold weather.
    Subject to the approval of the Commissioner of the Department of
    Environmental Protection ("DEP"), the State Fish and Game Council 2
    ("Council") is empowered to "formulate comprehensive policies for the
    protection and propagation of fish, birds, and game animals," "for the
    propagation and distribution of food fish," and "for the keeping up of the supply
    thereof in the waters to the State."     N.J.S.A. 13:1B-28.     Pursuant to that
    delegated authority, the Council has periodically adopted a CBBMP, most
    recently in 2015.3
    2
    The Fish and Game Council is composed of eleven members, appointed by the
    Governor with Senate advice and consent. N.J.S.A. 13:1B-24. The applicable
    statute prescribes that three members of the Council must be farmers, six must
    be sportsmen, one must be "knowledgeable in land use management and soil
    conservation practices," and one member "shall be the chair[person] of the
    committee established pursuant to section 7 of the 'Endangered and Nongame
    Species Conservation Act [N.J.S.A. 23:2A-7(e)].'" Ibid.
    3
    Part B of this court has a long-pending appeal by the Animal Protection League
    of New Jersey ("the League") and others, challenging the validity of the 2015
    CBBMP. See League of Humane Voters of N.J. v. N.J. Dep't of Envtl. Prot.,
    No. A-4630-15 (App. Div. argued Nov. 9, 2018). That appeal was argued before
    Part B, as had been previously scheduled, on November 9, 2018. We instructed
    counsel to omit from their briefing in this accelerated appeal before Part A legal
    arguments concerning the validity of the 2015 CBBMP, since they are presently
    before Part B.
    A-0525-18T4
    4
    Over the past decades, the Supreme Court and this court have issued
    several opinions addressing challenges to previous actions of the Commissioner
    and Council regarding black bear hunting. Sometimes those challenges have
    been mounted by animal rights groups and individuals opposed to bear hunting;
    at other times the litigation, as here, has been brought by sporting groups and
    persons who partake in or otherwise support such hunting. See, e.g., U.S.
    Sportsmen's All. Found. v. N.J. Dept. of Envtl. Prot., 
    182 N.J. 461
    , 476 (2005)
    (holding that the Council's "ability to authorize a bear hunt is subject to the
    statutory condition precedent of the [DEP] Commissioner's earlier approval of
    the very comprehensive policies governing the propagation of black bears");
    Animal Prot. League of N.J. v. N.J. Dep't of Envtl. Prot., 
    423 N.J. Super. 549
    (App. Div. 2011) (upholding the validity of the 2010 CBBMP); N.J. Animal
    Rights All. v. N.J. Dep't of Envtl. Prot., 
    396 N.J. Super. 358
     (App. Div. 2007)
    (invalidating the 2005 CBBMP and affirming the Commissioner's subsequent
    failure to implement a policy); Safari Club Int'l v. N.J. Dep't of Envtl. Prot., 
    373 N.J. Super. 515
     (App. Div. 2004) (upholding the Commissioner's order to close
    all lands "owned, managed or controlled" by DEP to black bear hunting).
    As the result of decisions by State Government and the impact of judicial
    opinions, bear hunts recently have been conducted in some years and not in
    A-0525-18T4
    5
    others. In 2003, the Council authorized the first bear hunt since 1970, in
    response to reports of bears interacting with people and property.         U.S.
    Sportsmen's All. Found. v. N.J. Dep't of Envtl. Prot., 
    372 N.J. Super. 598
    , 600
    (App. Div. 2004). That 2003 hunt resulted in the harvest of 328 bears. 
    Ibid.
    No hunt was conducted in 2004. N.J.A.C. 7:25-5.6 App. The hunt was resumed
    in 2005, yielding a harvest of 298. 42 N.J.R. 753(a) (Apr. 19, 2010). No hunts
    took place in 2006, 2007, 2008, or 2009. N.J.A.C. 7:25-5.6 App. Hunts again
    took place in 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, and 2017, yielding
    fluctuating harvests for those respective years of 592, 469, 287, 253, 273, 510,
    636, and 409 bears.
    The current CBBMP was approved, after public notice and comment, by
    then-Commissioner of the DEP, Bob Martin, and adopted as an Appendix to
    N.J.A.C. 7:25-5.6 effective on November 16, 2015 (operative on November 21,
    2015). 47 N.J.R. 2753(c) (Nov. 16, 2015). The 2015 CBBMP expires on June
    12, 2021. 
    Ibid.
     Among other things, the 2015 amendment to the regulation
    prescribes the bear hunt season to consist of two six-day segments, one in
    October and one in December. N.J.A.C. 7:25-5.6(a); 47 N.J.R. 929(a), 933 (May
    18, 2015).   The second hunting segment was initiated to "allow for more
    consistent harvests, with essentially all bears available for hunting and with
    A-0525-18T4
    6
    fewer complications due to weather events." 47 N.J.R. at 930. The regulations
    also address the timing of the closure of the hunt. If the rate of harvest reaches
    thirty percent,4 the hunting season concludes.            N.J.A.C. 7:25-5.6(a).
    Conversely, if the harvest rate at the end of the December segment is below
    twenty percent, the hunt will be extended for an additional four consecutive
    days. N.J.A.C. 7:25-5.6(b). As of 2015, hunters are allowed to purchase two
    permits, but can only harvest one bear per bear management zone. N.J.A.C.
    7:25-5.6(a)(1), (2); see 47 N.J.R. at 939. The boundaries of the hunting zones
    were changed in 2015, and a new zone was created. N.J.A.C. 7:25-5.6(a)(3); 47
    N.J.R. at 934-35. The number of permits for sale was increased from 10,000 to
    11,000, and the lottery to determine who would receive a permit was eliminated.
    N.J.A.C. 7:25-5.6(a)(1); 47 N.J.R. at 934.
    The present litigation arises out of actions taken in August 2018 by the
    Executive Branch, first by the Governor and then by the DEP Commissioner,
    both of whom were sworn into office earlier this year.
    4
    The harvest rate is a calculation equaling "the number of harvested bears that
    were tagged in the current calendar year within bear management zones
    (["]BMZs["]) open to hunting divided by the number of bears that were tagged
    in the current calendar year that are available for harvest (total number of bears
    tagged in the current year within BMZs open to hunting minus known mortality
    of such tagged bears and number of such tagged bears known to have left the
    BMZs that are open to hunting)." N.J.A.C. 7:25-5.6(a).
    A-0525-18T4
    7
    On August 20, 2018, Governor Philip D. Murphy issued Executive Order
    34 ("EO 34"). Executive Order No. 34 (Aug. 20, 2018), 50 N.J.R. 2039(a) (Oct.
    1, 2018). The Executive Order declares:
    WHEREAS, New Jersey is home to abundant and
    diverse wildlife, including many threatened and
    endangered species and species that are critical to the
    State’s varied ecosystems; and
    WHEREAS, among those species is the
    American black bear (Ursus americanus), which is
    found primarily in the northern part of the State but has
    been sighted statewide; and
    WHEREAS, the State of New Jersey, through the
    Department of Environmental Protection ("DEP") and
    its predecessors, has long authorized hunting and
    trapping of certain species in New Jersey for several
    purposes,    including    recreation  and    wildlife
    management; and
    WHEREAS, there has been considerable debate
    over the last several decades as to whether New Jersey
    should authorize a black bear hunt; and
    WHEREAS, in 2010, despite considerable public
    outcry against a hunt, the New Jersey Fish and Game
    Council (the "Council) published a Comprehensive
    Black Bear Management Plan ("CBBMP") which
    recommended the reintroduction of a black bear hunt to
    take place every year in December; and
    WHEREAS, the Council also promulgated
    regulations through the New Jersey Game Code
    authorizing and setting forth the parameters of a black
    bear hunt to take place beginning in 2010; and
    A-0525-18T4
    8
    WHEREAS, a new CBBMP was finalized in
    2015 that continued the recommendation to permit a
    black bear hunt; and
    WHEREAS, as a result of the 2010 and 2015
    CBBMPs and corresponding authorizations in the
    Game Code, a black bear hunt has been held in New
    Jersey for the past eight years; and
    WHEREAS, the Council has refused to
    reconsider its authorization of a black bear hunt for
    2018 despite a clear call to action by the Governor; and
    WHEREAS, in light of the significant opposition
    to the black bear hunt and continuing debate about
    techniques for management of the black bear
    population, and in an effort to promote public safety on
    public lands, it is appropriate to limit the use of State
    lands for the black bear hunt; and
    WHEREAS, the intent of this Order is to exercise
    the full extent of the legal authority of the Governor and
    the Commissioner of Environmental Protection
    ("Commissioner") to limit the black bear hunt in order
    to promote the public safety and welfare while
    protecting important wildlife; and
    WHEREAS, the authority over the black bear
    hunt rests with the Council and several court decisions
    have made it clear that neither the Governor nor the
    Commissioner have the authority to unilaterally alter or
    cancel the black bear hunt; and
    WHEREAS, while neither the Governor nor the
    Commissioner can unilaterally prevent a black bear
    hunt, the Commissioner has clear authority to direct and
    coordinate the use of all public lands under DEP’s
    A-0525-18T4
    9
    jurisdiction, including instituting a ban on hunting on
    said lands;
    NOW, THEREFORE, I, PHILIP D. MURPHY,
    Governor of the State of New Jersey, by virtue of the
    authority vested in me by the Constitution and the
    Statutes of this State, do hereby ORDER and DIRECT:
    1. The Commissioner shall take all necessary and
    appropriate actions within the Commissioner’s
    authority to protect black bears on lands controlled by
    the State of New Jersey, including deciding whether to
    close said lands to the hunting of black bears pursuant
    to the Commissioner’s authority at N.J.S.A. 13:1B-5 et
    seq., as clarified and confirmed in Safari Club
    International v. New Jersey Department of
    Environmental Protection, 
    373 N.J. Super. 515
     (App.
    Div. 2004).
    2. This Order shall take effect immediately.
    [50 N.J.R. at 2039(a).]
    Following the issuance of EO 34, Catherine R. McCabe, the present
    Commissioner of the DEP, issued on August 30, 2018 Administrative Order
    2018-24 ("AO 2018-24"). AO 2018-24 states:
    WHEREAS, on August 20, 2018, Governor
    Murphy issued [EO 34] to exercise the full extent of the
    legal authority of the Governor and the Commissioner
    of the Department of Environmental Protection to limit
    the hunting of American black bear (Ursus americanus)
    within the State in order both to promote the public
    safety and welfare and protect an important wildlife
    species that provides an overall benefit to the citizens
    of this State; and
    A-0525-18T4
    10
    WHEREAS, EO 34 directs me, as Commissioner,
    to take all necessary and appropriate actions within my
    authority to protect black bears on lands controlled by
    the State of New Jersey; and
    WHEREAS, N.J.S.A. 13:1B-5 authorizes me to
    exercise the State's propriety authority to direct and
    coordinate the uses of all public lands under the
    jurisdiction of the Department, including all State
    forests, parks, recreation areas, historic sites, natural
    areas, and wildlife management areas; and
    WHEREAS, in Safari Club International v. New
    Jersey Department of Environmental Protection, 
    373 N.J. Super. 515
     (App. Div. 2004), the Appellate
    Division affirmed the Department's authority to close
    all or any portion of its lands to hunting and to allow
    hunting of only certain species; and
    WHEREAS, the exclusion of Department lands
    from black bear hunting will allow for the limited
    protection of the black bear population in New Jersey
    while the Department continues to focus its resources
    on pursuing, developing, and increasing its alternative
    control methods and evaluating its policies,
    recommendations, and regulations related to black bear
    management on its lands, and is in the best interest of
    balancing conservation, recreation, preservation, and
    management of these lands at this time.
    NOW THEREFORE, I, Catherine R. McCabe,
    Commissioner, pursuant to the authority vested in me
    under N.J.S.A. 13:1B-5, hereby ORDER and DIRECT
    that all lands owned, managed or otherwise controlled
    by the Department, including, but not limited to, all
    State forests, parks, recreation areas, historic sites,
    natural areas, and wildlife management areas, are
    closed to the hunting of black bears.
    A-0525-18T4
    11
    This Order shall take effect immediately and shall
    continue in effect until revoked or amended in writing
    by me.
    No one pursued any legal action during the month of September 2018 to
    challenge AO 2018-24. The first phase of the bear hunt went forward, as had
    been scheduled and publicly announced, during the week of October 8, 2018,
    with no bear hunting allowed on State lands. That October segment resulted in
    the harvest of 140 bears.
    On October 4, 2018, appellants New Jersey Outdoor Alliance, Safari Club
    International, and the Sportsmen's Alliance Foundation filed the present appeal,
    challenging the validity of AO 2018-24.      Shortly after filing their appeal,
    appellants sought a stay of the AO 2018-24 from the DEP.              The DEP
    Commissioner denied the stay request on October 17, expressing her reasons i n
    a detailed written decision. Appellants then sought, on October 18, to file an
    emergent application accelerating this appeal, desirous of obtaining an
    expedited judicial ruling on the validity of AO 2018-24 and the closure decision
    before the second phase of the 2018 hunt, which will begin on December 3.
    Despite the circumstance that the asserted emergency, to some extent, was self-
    created by appellants' own failure to take legal action or seek emergent relief
    sooner, we granted the application to accelerate the appeal, over the State's
    A-0525-18T4
    12
    objection. We did so in light of the public interest involved, and the potential
    benefits of providing judicial guidance before the December 3 hunt takes place.
    We also permitted the League, on short notice, to participate as an amicus.
    This court issued an accelerated and compressed briefing schedule, and
    promptly heard oral argument, enabling a decision to be issued before the
    upcoming Thanksgiving holiday and court recess, and recognizing that one or
    more dissatisfied parties would likely seek immediate review of our ruling by
    the Supreme Court. 5 The parties have expressed a desire to receive a final
    decision on the merits of this appeal in advance of the December 3 hunt. That
    goal has been achieved by the issuance of this expedited opinion.
    On appeal, appellants present the following three arguments: (1) the
    closure of State lands to the bear hunt is arbitrary and capricious because it is
    impermissibly based on a political campaign promise, contrary to science, and
    materially conflicts with and undermines the 2015 CBBMP; (2) AO 2018-24
    comprises an administrative "rule" and must be reversed because the DEP did
    not first conduct public comment as prescribed by the Administrative Procedure
    Act ("APA"), N.J.S.A. 52:14B-4, and by Metromedia, Inc. v. Director, Division
    5
    We express our appreciation to all counsel for their cooperative efforts and
    courtesies in supplying this court with helpful briefs and appendices in
    accordance with the expedited schedule and page limitations.
    A-0525-18T4
    13
    of Taxation, 
    97 N.J. 313
    , 331-32 (1984); and (3) AO 2018-34 usurps federal law
    under the Pittman-Robertson Wildlife Restoration Act ("P-R Act"), 
    16 U.S.C. § 669
    -669k, which assigns such authority singularly to the DEP's Division of Fish
    and Wildlife ("DFW"), and arbitrarily and capriciously fails to consider the
    impropriety of a partial diversion of federal grant funds used for state wildlife
    restoration lands. We now address these three arguments, in rearranged order.
    A.
    We first consider appellants' claim that AO 2018-24 and its prohibition of
    bear hunting on State lands violates federal law, specifically the P-R Act, 
    16 U.S.C. § 669
    -669k. We readily reject that argument because appellants have no
    established right to bring a private cause of action against the State under this
    federal law.
    Enacted in 1937, the P-R Act establishes a federal funding program for
    state wildlife restoration projects. "[T]he intent of the P-R Act is to insure that
    state fish and wildlife agencies spend state license fee revenues on the
    administration of the state fish and wildlife agencies if the state participates in
    P-R funding." Sportsmen's Wildlife Def. Fund v. U.S. Dep't of Interior, 
    40 F. Supp. 2d 1192
    , 1199 (D. Colo. 1999). Accordingly, "no money apportioned" by
    the program "to any State shall be expended therein until" the State has
    A-0525-18T4
    14
    "assented" to the provisions of the P-R Act, and has "passed laws for the
    conservation of wildlife which shall include a prohibition against the diversion
    of license fees paid by hunters for any other purpose than the administration of
    said State fish and game department." 
    16 U.S.C. § 669
    . In 1938, New Jersey
    assented to the P-R Act through a statutory enactment, and authorized wildlife
    restoration projects in compliance with the P-R Act. N.J.S.A. 23:12-1.
    Appellants contend the promulgation of AO 2018-24 violates the P-R Act
    in two ways: by removing management and control away from the "designated"
    state agency, which appellants contend is the DFW, and by diverting lands from
    their intended purpose by disallowing recreational bear hunting on those lands.
    In support of those claims, appellants point to correspondence between the DEP
    and the United States Fish and Wildlife Service ("USFWS"), in which the
    federal agency advised the DFW to review grant documents in order to ensure
    federal grant moneys for wildlife restoration were not being misapplied as the
    result of EO 34. The State denies any such misuse, and essentially maintains
    that nothing in the P-R Act requires a bear hunt to proceed on the wildlife
    management areas. The State also argues that the DFW is an administrative
    agency housed within the DEP, and that it is entirely lawful for the DEP
    A-0525-18T4
    15
    Commissioner to issue an administrative order affecting the functions of one of
    the Department's internal units.
    Even before reaching the merits of these arguments, however, we must
    consider a threshold procedural and jurisdictional issue: whether private parties
    such as appellants may compel the enforcement of the P-R Act against a State
    and its officials in state court litigation in which the United States Government
    is not a party. Stated differently, is there a private right of action under the P-R
    Act? Appellants fail to show such a right exists.
    "The question of the existence of a statutory cause of action is, of course,
    one of statutory construction." Touche Ross & Co. v. Redington, 
    442 U.S. 560
    ,
    568 (1979) (citations omitted). In Cort v. Ash, 
    422 U.S. 66
    , 78 (1975), the
    United States Supreme Court set forth the following factors to be considered
    when determining the existence of a private cause of action to enforce a statute:
    (1) whether the plaintiff is part of the class Congress intended to benefit when
    enacting the statute; (2) whether there exists evidence of legislative intent to
    create or deny such a remedy; (3) whether inferring a private cause of action is
    consistent with the underlying purposes of the legislation; and (4) whether the
    cause of action is one traditionally relegated to state law.
    A-0525-18T4
    16
    In Touche Ross, the Supreme Court partially overruled Cort, holding that
    the four factors are not all of equal weight. 
    442 U.S. at 575
    . The Court clarified
    that, when determining whether a statutory scheme creates a private right of
    action, the central inquiry is "whether Congress intended to create, either
    expressly or by implication, a private cause of action." 
    Ibid.
     The Court has
    since reinforced this holding – that the lodestar of the analysis is Congressional
    intent – on several occasions.6
    The P-R Act contains no express provision creating a private cause of
    action to enforce its terms. Hence, we only need to consider whether Congress
    intended to create such a private cause of action under the P-R Act by
    implication. No such intention may be fairly inferred from the statutory scheme.
    If anything, the inherent structure of the statute and associated federal
    regulations point strongly to the contrary.
    6
    See, e.g., Alexander v. Sandoval, 
    532 U.S. 275
    , 286 (2001) (statutory intent
    is "determinative" as to the existence of a cause of action premised on a statute);
    Suter v. Artist M., 
    503 U.S. 347
    , 364 (1992) ("The most important inquiry here
    . . . is whether Congress intended to create the private remedy sought by the
    plaintiffs."); Karahalios v. Nat'l Fed'n of Fed. Emp.'s, Local 1263, 
    489 U.S. 527
    ,
    532 (1989) (holding the "ultimate issue is whether Congress intended to create
    a private cause of action" (quoting California v. Sierra Club, 
    451 U.S. 287
    , 293
    (1981))); Thompson v. Thompson, 
    484 U.S. 174
    , 179 (1988) ("In determining
    whether to infer a private cause of action from a federal statute, our focal point
    is Congress' intent in enacting the statute.").
    A-0525-18T4
    17
    The P-R Act does not proscribe any conduct as unlawful. It does not
    expressly create or recognize any rights for individuals or private organizations.
    Rather, the regulations adopted under the P-R Act provide that a state is
    ineligible to receive funds if it "[f]ails materially to comply with any law,
    regulation, or term of a grant as it relates to acceptance and use of [P-R] funds[.]"
    
    50 C.F.R. § 80.11
    (a) (2018). The regulations also provide the Director of the
    USFWS with discretion to declare whether a state is in "diversion" of P-R Act
    funds, which is defined as "any use of revenue from hunting and fishing licenses
    for a purpose other than administration of the State fish and wildlife agency."
    
    50 C.F.R. §§ 80.2
    ; 80.21 (2018).
    If the Director of the USFWS withholds federal funding, a state has the
    opportunity to "resolve" the diversion issue in order to continue receiving
    federal funds. 
    50 C.F.R. § 80.21
    ; Sportsmen's Wildlife Def. Fund v. Romer, 
    73 F. Supp. 2d 1262
    , 1264 (D. Colo. 1999) (noting the state's "right to cure" a
    diversion). The regulations contain detailed procedures and standards for how
    states can resolve such diversion issues. 
    50 C.F.R. §§ 80.22
    ; 80.135 (2018). If
    the USFWS finds a state agency allowed a use of its P-R-funded property that
    interferes with the property's authorized purpose, the state agency has a
    reasonable time, up to three years, after notification of diversion status to either
    A-0525-18T4
    18
    restore the property or acquire replacement property. 
    50 C.F.R. § 80.135
    (f)
    (2018).
    The fact that Congress omitted any private cause of action from the P-R
    Act – but created a discretionary remedy for the federal government to withhold
    monies for states in diversion – strongly militates against any inference that
    Congress intended for private individuals or organizations to enforce the P-R
    Act against state agencies in state court. See Sandoval, 
    532 U.S. at 290
     ("The
    express provision of one method of enforcing a substantive rule suggests that
    Congress intended to preclude others."). Allowing such a private cause of action
    to proceed in state court would interfere with the federal enforcement
    mechanisms set forth in the P-R Act and its implementing regulations. That
    heavily weighs against appellants' claim that Congress intended to create a
    private cause of action. 7
    In Illinois State Rifle Association v. Illinois, 
    717 F. Supp. 634
    , 634-35
    (N.D. Ill. 1989), the plaintiffs sued the State of Illinois in federal court, alleging
    7
    See Piscitelli v. Classic Residence by Hyatt, 
    408 N.J. Super. 83
    , 104-5 (App.
    Div. 2009) (finding no private right of action to enforce provision of
    Immigration Reform and Control Act of 1986 because the statute vested the
    United States Attorney General with enforcement authority and did not
    expressly create private cause of action); Wisniewski v. Rodale, Inc., 
    510 F.3d 294
    , 305 (3d Cir. 2007) (observing that, "agency enforcement creates a strong
    presumption against implied private rights of action that must be overcome").
    A-0525-18T4
    19
    violations of the P-R Act. They challenged the alleged diversion of P-R funds
    to the Division of Natural Heritage, the purchase of a Frank Lloyd Wright home,
    and the funding of a ranch. Id. at 636. The district court recognized that the P-
    R Act created no express cause of action, and thus analyzed whether the statute
    did so impliedly. Id. at 637. The court reasoned that the P-R Act's sole statutory
    sanction – withholding federal funds – "strongly suggests that a nonstatutory
    remedy such as a private enforcement action does not exist." Id. at 638. The
    court therefore concluded that the P-R Act did not create a private cause of
    action. Ibid. The court's reasoning in Illinois State is sound.
    To be sure, a private individual or organization may challenge decisions
    or inaction by the USFWS in federal court under the federal Administrative
    Procedure Act, 
    5 U.S.C. § 702
    . See, e.g., Scarborough Citizens Protecting Res.
    v. U.S. Fish & Wildlife Serv., 
    674 F.3d 97
    , 99 (1st Cir. 2012); Sierra Club v.
    U.S. Fish & Wildlife Serv., 
    235 F. Supp. 2d 1109
    , 1136 (D. Or. 2002); Sierra
    Club v. U.S. Fish & Wildlife Serv., 
    189 F. Supp. 2d 684
    , 691 (W.D. Mich. 2002);
    Sportsmen's Wildlife Def. Fund v. Romer, 
    29 F. Supp. 2d 1199
    , 1211 (D. Colo.
    1998). However, appellants' reliance upon these cases brought against the
    USFWS is misplaced, because the decisions either expressly recognize that the
    P-R Act creates no private right to enforce, or fail to question that notion.
    A-0525-18T4
    20
    Compare Sierra Club, 
    189 F. Supp. 2d at 691
    , with Sportsmen's Wildlife Def.
    Fund, 
    29 F. Supp. 2d at 1211
    .
    The P-R Act grants discretionary enforcement authority to the USFWS,
    which issues decisions reviewable under the federal APA like any other federal
    agency to which that statute applies. Thus, it makes sense for federal courts to
    review the USFWS's compliance with the P-R Act when appropriate. The
    federal precedents do not support the existence of a private cause of action for
    an individual or private organization to seek enforcement of the P-R Act in state
    court against a state agency.
    As an alternative argument, appellants rely upon 
    42 U.S.C. § 1983
    , which
    provides a cause of action for the "deprivation of any rights, privileges, or
    immunities secured by the Constitution" of the United States and federal
    statutes. Wilder v. Va. Hospital Assoc., 
    496 U.S. 498
    , 508 (1990). At least one
    federal district court has recognized that individuals may assert § 1983 claims
    against state officials acting in their official capacities premised upon the state
    officials alleged P-R Act violations. Sportsmen's Wildlife Def. Fund v. U.S.
    Dep't of the Interior, 
    949 F. Supp. 1510
    , 1517-19 (D. Colo. 1996). Notably, the
    United States Government was a party in that Colorado federal case.
    A-0525-18T4
    21
    Here, appellants do not assert any constitutional rights, and the present
    litigation was not brought pursuant to § 1983. They instead seek to enforce the
    technical and funding-related provisions of the P-R Act against the State in the
    context of an administrative appeal, a litigation neither brought by or against the
    United States Government. They have no such private right of action, express
    or implied.
    Accordingly, we must deny relief to appellants under the P-R Act. The
    funding questions remain a matter between the State and the USFWS, which has
    not made a finding that the closure of State lands to bear hunting has, in fact,
    diverted federal grant funds.
    B.
    We next consider appellants' contention that the administrative order's
    closure of State lands for the ongoing bear hunt is procedurally invalid because
    that order was issued without advance public notice and comment and formal
    rulemaking under the APA, N.J.S.A. 52:14B-4. This argument fails because
    settled precedent establishes that such a closure is a proprietary, rather than a
    regulatory, action.
    The controlling precedent is Safari Club International v. New Jersey
    Department of Environmental Protection, 
    373 N.J. Super. 515
     (App. Div. 2004),
    A-0525-18T4
    22
    an opinion cited and relied upon in EO 34, AO 2018-24, and Commissioner
    McCabe's denial of appellants' application for an emergent stay. In Safari Club,
    this court upheld the DEP Commissioner's notice closing all State lands under
    the DEP's jurisdiction to bear hunting. Id. at 520-21. The appellants in that
    case, sporting organizations who wanted access to State lands for bear hunting,
    challenged the Commissioner's action.         Id. at 517.    They argued the
    Commissioner "lacks the statutory authority to close [State] lands under his
    control to bear hunting." Ibid. They further argued that the Commissioner's
    action was arbitrary and capricious. Ibid. This court, in a scholarly opinion by
    Judge Skillman, rejected these arguments and affirmed the Commissioner's
    closure decision. Id. at 520-21.
    As Judge Skillman explained in Safari Club, the Legislature has delegated
    "proprietary authority over" State lands to the Commissioner. Id. at 519. As
    such, "while the [Fish and Game] Council has authority to determine whether
    the territorial limits of a hunt will include State lands under the DEP's
    jurisdiction, the Commissioner has ultimate authority to determine whether to
    open those lands to hunting."      Ibid.   This "proprietary authority" is "the
    proprietary authority of any private or public landowner to determine whether
    to allow hunting on its land." Ibid. As Judge Skillman noted, that proprietary
    A-0525-18T4
    23
    authority over State lands circumscribes the Council's regulatory functions with
    respect to hunting rules and regulations. Id. at 520.
    In particular, N.J.S.A. 13:1B-5(a) declares "the [DEP] [C]ommissioner
    shall have authority to direct and coordinate the uses of all public lands under
    the jurisdiction of the department." Other statutory provisions recognize the
    Commissioner's ability to control State lands. For example, N.J.S.A. 13:1B-
    15.101(a) states that "[t]he [D]ivision [of Parks and Forestry] shall, under the
    direction and supervision of the [C]ommissioner: (a) [d]evelop, improve,
    protect, manage and administer all State forests, State parks, State recreation
    areas, State historic sites, and State natural areas, excepting those regulated by
    interstate compact." (emphasis added). In addition, multiple portions of the
    DEP's regulations recognize the State's proprietary authority over State lands.
    See, e.g., N.J.A.C. 7:2-2.2, -2.3, and -2.18. For instance, N.J.A.C. 7:2-2.18
    prescribes that "[a] person shall not hunt, fish and/or trap, except on specifically
    designated lands and waters of the State Park Service." Further, N.J.A.C. 7:25-
    2.26 provides:
    Nothing contained in N.J.A.C. 7:25-2 shall preclude the
    Division from limiting, or closing from, public use any
    specific land and water areas under its control, effective
    immediately upon making the finding that prevailing
    conditions warrant such restriction to protect the users,
    or to protect and preserve the land and water areas, or
    A-0525-18T4
    24
    both, and continuing for so long as such conditions
    warrant.
    [(Emphasis added).]
    Safari Club makes clear that a Commissioner's authority to close State
    lands to bear hunting is fundamentally a proprietary decision, and not a
    regulatory action. The opinion does not state or suggest that a Commissioner
    must engage in administrative rulemaking in making such a proprietary
    determination.
    As an important caveat, Safari Club does caution that "[t]he
    Commissioner's exercise of his [or her] authority to control the uses of State
    parks, forests and recreation areas, like any other authority delegated to an
    administrative official, may not be exercised arbitrarily or capriciously." 373
    N.J. Super. at 521. Hence, "if it could be shown that bears pose a serious threat
    to public safety and that hunting on [S]tate lands must be allowed to combat this
    threat, the Commissioner's closure of [S]tate lands to bear hunting could be
    found to be arbitrary and capricious." Ibid. Judge Skillman noted the appellants
    in Safari Club "have not undertaken to demonstrate that there is any public safety
    or other vital public interest that requires State lands to be open to bear hunting."
    Ibid. (emphasis added). Based on the record, the panel unanimously concluded
    that the appellants had not met their burden to show that the Commissioner's
    A-0525-18T4
    25
    notice closing all lands owned, managed or controlled by the DEP to bear
    hunting was either arbitrary or capricious.8 Ibid.
    The logic of Judge Skillman's analysis – classifying as proprietary in
    nature a decision to close State lands to bear hunting – exempts the DEP from
    conducting formal rulemaking procedures under the APA as a precondition of
    the State exercising its rights over those lands as a property owner. Therefore,
    AO 2018-24 is not an "administrative rule" that must be enacted through the
    elaborate procedures for agencies to adopt regulations spelled out in the APA.
    See N.J.S.A. 52:14B-2 (defining an "administrative rule").
    If we were to adopt appellants' contrary argument, the State conceivably
    would need to pursue formal rulemaking, including public notice and comment,
    whenever it chose to make periodic decisions to close portions of State lands for
    repairs, renovations, maintenance, or public safety reasons. We recognize that,
    in a general sense, the State in such circumstances is arguably "regulating" what
    persons may do or not do on State lands, but that aspect must yield to the
    dominant inherent proprietary nature of the Commissioner's actions.
    Accordingly, the requirements of the APA and the multi-factor analysis under
    8
    We address, infra, in Part II(C) of this opinion, the present appellants'
    arguments that the current closure of State lands to bear hunting is arbitrary and
    capricious.
    A-0525-18T4
    26
    Metromedia, 
    97 N.J. at 331-32
    , used for generally determining when formal
    rules are required for an agency's regulatory actions, have no bearing on this
    case.9
    Nor would formal rulemaking be necessary if, hypothetically, the State
    chose in the future to reopen some or all of State lands to bear hunting. The
    State has the flexibility and prerogative to make that decision, so long as it is
    not shown to be arbitrary or capricious. 10
    Appellants stress that in Humane Society of the United States, New Jersey
    Branch, Inc. v. Guido, 
    173 N.J. Super. 223
    , 233 (App. Div. 1980), an opinion
    this court issued twenty-four years before Safari Club, the panel instructed that,
    in the future, public notice-and-comment procedures should be followed
    (although without specifying that administrative rules were necessary) before
    9
    Appellants' counsel have advised us that they have ascertained that the briefs
    in the Safari Club appeal from 2004 did not contain any arguments about an
    alleged need for APA rulemaking or the Metromedia standards. Although we
    appreciate counsel's diligence, their research is inconsequential because of the
    analytic force of the court's "proprietary authority" holding in Safari Club. The
    State is acting as a landowner, not as a regulator, when it decides to open or
    close State lands to certain hunting activities.
    10
    Even if rulemaking were legally required, the Executive Branch would still
    have residual powers to bypass the usual APA procedures upon a gubernatorial
    declaration of emergency under the Civilian Defense and Disaster Control Act,
    N.J.S.A. App. A:9-30 to -63, or via emergency rulemaking under N.J.S.A.
    52:14B-4(c), neither of which was invoked here.
    A-0525-18T4
    27
    the State takes action similar to that taken in Guido, namely implementing a one-
    day deer hunt in a state park. The panel in Guido observed that the DFW
    Director's action opening the park to hunters for one-day deer hunt "may not fit
    precisely into the statutory definition of an 'administrative rule,'" because it was
    not generally applicable or of continuing effect. 
    Ibid.
     However, the court noted
    the one-day hunt was a departure from longstanding policy or practice
    prohibiting hunting in High Point Park, and "had the potential to change in a
    substantial way, at least temporarily, the use and enjoyment of the park by the
    general public." Id. at 233-34.
    We recognize why appellants have cited Guido, but find that opinion is
    not dispositive under current law. This court's supervening opinion in Safari
    Club adopted a proprietary authority principle that now controls the legal
    analysis. To be sure, nothing prevents the Commissioner, as a matter of public
    administration and public relations, from choosing to hold public hearings or to
    invite public notice and written comment before closing or opening portions of
    State lands to bear hunting. 11 But that option is not mandated by the now-
    11
    We recall in this regard Judge Stern's observations in N.J. Animal Rights
    Alliance, 396 N.J. Super. at 372-73 n.3, that "Bear management is a topic that
    sparks widespread disagreement and strong public sentiments. The need to give
    the public sufficient notice of the terms of a proposed bear management policy,
    A-0525-18T4
    28
    controlling precedent of Safari Club classifying such decisions as proprietary
    rather than regulatory.
    We therefore reject appellants' procedural argument that AO 2018-24
    must be declared invalid for lack of rulemaking.
    C.
    We lastly turn to appellants' contention that AO 2018-24 is arbitrary and
    capricious, and, therefore, the DEP Commissioner's decision, even if it is
    deemed proprietary, must be nullified and consequently we should direct the
    DEP to allow the December segment of the bear hunt to take place on State
    lands.
    In approaching this issue, we reiterate the admonition of Safari Club,
    namely that "[t]he Commissioner's exercise of his [or her] authority to control
    the uses of State parks, forests and recreation uses, like any other authority
    delegated to an administrative official, may not be exercised arbitrarily or
    capriciously." Id. at 521. As we have already noted, Judge Skillman mentioned
    examples in Safari Club of what might demonstrate such arbitrary and capricious
    and to respond fully to comments received from citizen objectors and advocates
    alike, is particularly salient here." Those perceptive comments, however, were
    made in the context of a case involving the validity of a CBBMP as a regulatory
    document, and not the distinguishable context of the State's proprietary closure
    decision that is challenged in the present appeal.
    A-0525-18T4
    29
    State action, such as proof "that bears pose a serious threat to public safety and
    that hunting on [S]tate lands must be allowed to combat this threat," or that
    "there is any public safety or other vital public interest that requires State lands
    to be open to bear hunting." Ibid.
    Appellants claim they have demonstrated such a showing of a "vital public
    interest" requiring the resumption of a seasonal bear hunt on State lands. They
    assert the DEP lacks empirical or other evidential support for AO 2018-24, and
    the closure conflicts with the underpinnings of the 2015 CBBMP. Appellants
    further argue the closure was ordered solely for political reasons in order to
    fulfill a campaign promise. The DEP and the amicus disagree. They argue in
    opposition that AO 2018-24 is not arbitrary or capricious, but instead is a
    reasonable exercise of the State's proprietary authority over State lands.
    As we evaluate these contentions, we must abide by general principles
    governing the standards of appellate review of decisions by administrative
    agencies. We recognize the "final determination of an administrative agency
    . . . is entitled to substantial deference." In re Eastwick Coll. LPN–to RN Bridge
    Program, 
    225 N.J. 533
    , 541 (2016). "A strong presumption of reasonableness
    must be accorded [to an] agency's exercise of its statutorily delegated duties."
    In re Certificate of Need Granted to the Harborage, 
    300 N.J. Super. 363
    , 380
    A-0525-18T4
    30
    (App. Div. 1997). Generally, our courts will not overturn an administrative
    action "unless there is a clear showing that it is arbitrary, capricious, or
    unreasonable, or that it lacks fair support in the record." J.B. v. N.J. State Parole
    Bd., 
    229 N.J. 21
    , 43 (2017) (quoting In re Herrmann, 
    192 N.J. 19
    , 27-28 (2007)).
    "The burden of demonstrating that the agency's action was arbitrary, capricious
    or unreasonable rests upon the [party] challenging the administrative action."
    Lavezzi v. State, 
    219 N.J. 163
    , 171 (2014) (alteration in original) (quoting In re
    J.S., 
    431 N.J. Super. 321
    , 329 (App. Div. 2013)).
    In their effort to prove that the closure order is arbitrary and capricious,
    appellants particularly emphasize a January 4, 2018 status report from the DFW
    addressing the implementation of the 2015 CBBMP. 12 In its final passage, the
    status report concludes as follows:
    DFW's active, integrated bear management
    strategy is effective and essential for maintaining bears
    at a density that provides for a sustainable population
    within suitable bear habitat, minimizes human-bear
    conflicts and reduces emigration of bears to unsuitable
    habitat in suburban and urban areas. The black bear
    population in New Jersey is beginning to stabilize at a
    level that DFW believes is consistent with the cultural
    12
    At oral argument, the State's counsel indicated that she is unaware of the
    genesis of the status report, and whether, for example, it was a report scheduled
    for issuance under some policy or routine procedure. In any event, the status
    report preceded the new administration taking office, and we presume it may
    have been generated in part to be informative for the incoming Commissioner.
    A-0525-18T4
    31
    carrying capacity for this species in the state. No one
    management tool is responsible for the successes
    demonstrated by implementing the CBBMP. Continued
    management using all the tools provided in the CBBMP
    is critical to maximize public safety, minimize bear-
    related damages, and maintain a healthy black bear
    population. Without continuation of population
    management by regulated sport hunting, NJ’s black
    bear population will double in five years.
    Appellants argue that AO 2018-24 conflicts with the January 2018 status
    report's findings about the continued need to include seasonal bear hunting as
    one of the vital "tools" in managing the bear population in this State. They point
    out that, over the past several years, about forty percent of the bears harvested
    in the fall hunt were encountered on State lands. They argue that disallowing
    the hunt on such a substantial portion of State lands materially undermines the
    integrated plan set forth in the 2015 CBBMP, and that there is no evidence in
    the record that would justify such a territorial limitation. Appellants also note
    that the harvest from the first phase of this year's hunt in October 2018 declined
    by 43% from the October 2017 first phase.
    In response, the State and amicus contend that the closure order represents
    a reasonable exercise of the Commissioner's proprietary authority over State
    lands.     They dispute that appellants have demonstrated that the current
    population of black bears in New Jersey "pose[s] a serious threat to public safety
    A-0525-18T4
    32
    and that hunting on [S]tate lands must be allowed to combat this threat[.]" Safari
    Club, 373 N.J. Super. at 521. The State and amicus also dispute that, despite
    the alleged inconvenience and loss of recreational opportunity to persons who
    would like to hunt on State lands, appellants have not shown, and cannot prove,
    that "public safety or other vital public interest[s] . . . require State lands to be
    open to bear hunting." Ibid.
    Among other things, the State asserts the drop in the October 2018 harvest
    as compared with the October 2017 figure may be accounted for by many
    variables other than the closure order, such as weather and the number of bears
    and hunters with permits. The record shows the harvest rate figures have tended
    to be inherently volatile from year to year. The State further emphasizes that
    hunters with licenses are not precluded by AO 2018-24 from hunting on the
    large tracts of private lands and other properties not owned or controlled by the
    State. In addition, the State points out that the December 2018 segment of the
    hunt may be extended by several days if harvest goals are not met.
    We have duly considered appellants' arguments, and the competing
    contentions of the State and the amicus.         Our review is impeded by the
    circumstance that there is no well-developed factual record by which we can
    A-0525-18T4
    33
    make an informed ultimate plenary determination as to whether the closure of
    State lands to the hunt is arbitrary and capricious.
    The record supplied to us is not definitive in several respects. The parties
    and amicus dispute a number of fact-laden matters. The fact that about 40% of
    the bears in past harvests were apprehended on State lands does not necessarily
    mean that figure will translate into a 40% drop-off of the final 2018 harvest,
    given the mobility of bears, as well as the mobility of hunters, who may prefer
    to hunt on State lands, but might still seek out bears on other properties. The
    empirical impact of the closure on the black bear population is debatable and
    unclear, as no past hunts took place with that major restriction. Further, to the
    extent the closure order depends on the probative value of scientific findings
    and expert opinion, we lack any credibility determinations or fact-finding by a
    neutral tribunal.
    Rule 2:5-5(b) authorizes a method for developing a suitable record in such
    circumstances. It provides:
    At any time during the pendency of an appeal from a
    state administrative agency, if it appears that evidence
    unadduced in the proceedings below may be material to
    the issues on appeal, the appellate court, on its own
    motion or on the motion of any party, may order, on
    such terms as it deems appropriate, that the record on
    appeal be supplemented by the taking of additional
    evidence and the making of findings of fact thereon by
    A-0525-18T4
    34
    the agency below or, in exceptional instances, by a
    judge of the Superior Court especially designated for
    that purpose.
    [R. 2:5-5(b).]
    Through the mechanism of this Rule, our appellate courts "retain[] the
    discretion, in an appropriate case . . . to refer [a contested agency action] to the
    Law Division or to the agency for such additional fact-finding as it deems
    necessary to a just outcome."      Infinity Broad. Corp. v. N.J. Meadowlands
    Comm'n, 
    187 N.J. 212
    , 227 (2006).
    Notably, the Supreme Court invoked Rule 2:5-5(b) earlier this year in
    American Civil Liberties Union of New Jersey v. Hendricks, 
    233 N.J. 181
    , 185
    (2018), a case involving a challenge to a final decision of the State Secretary of
    Higher Education ("Secretary"). In American Civil Liberties Union of New
    Jersey, the Supreme Court concluded that "[a] remand is necessary to allow for
    the development of a proper record, with fact-finding" as "[a]dversarial testing
    of the evidence in support of the parties' presentations is required here." 
    Ibid.
    As the Court noted, "[i]t is imperative that [the] issues be more fully developed
    below, through the crucible of an adversarial process . . . ." 
    Ibid.
     Accordingly,
    the Court remanded the case to the Secretary so that a "contested case
    proceeding" could be conducted. Ibid.; see also In re Mountain Ridge State
    A-0525-18T4
    35
    Bank, 
    244 N.J. Super. 115
    , 118-19 (App. Div. 1990) (remanding an appeal under
    R. 2:5-5(b) to the Commissioner of Banking and directing that there be a hearing
    in the OAL).
    In like manner, we choose to remand this matter to the Commissioner with
    instructions that there be a contested case proceeding before the OAL, in order
    to develop the record and address the hotly-disputed, fact-laden disputes over
    whether AO 2018-24 has reasonable evidential support and is not arbitrary and
    capricious. R. 2:5-5(b). At such a quasi-judicial hearing, an Administrative
    Law Judge ("ALJ") can hear the testimony of competing fact and expert
    witnesses, and make appropriate credibility assessments and findings of fact.
    The pertinent data, and the scientific reliability of that data, including the most
    recent data from the October and December phases of the 2018 hunt, could be
    analyzed and dissected in that forum through the adversarial process. See In re
    Accutane Litig., 
    234 N.J. 340
    , 382 (2018) (underscoring the importance in civil
    matters of relying on scientific evidence that is shown to be reliable). 13 The
    13
    We cite In re Accutane Litigation for illustrative purposes only, and do not
    rule that the Supreme Court's holdings concerning the admissibility of scientific
    evidence under N.J.R.E. 702 govern the admissibility in administrative
    litigation, where the Rules of Evidence are relaxed. Rather, we mention In re
    Accutane Litigation solely with regard to weighing the probative value of
    scientific or expert opinions, such as, for example, affording greater weight to
    A-0525-18T4
    36
    parties could also present empirical evidence as to whether the omission of State
    lands from the hunt substantially undercuts the efficacy of the CBBMP.
    The case shall not be litigated in the OAL on summary decision, but rather
    by the presentment of testimonial and documentary proof, "through the crucible
    of an adversarial process," Am. Civil Liberties Union of N.J., 233 N.J. at 201.
    The parties are free, of course, to stipulate to any uncontested facts.
    After an ALJ renders his or her written decision on remand, any aggrieved
    party may file exceptions with the Commissioner.         We do not presume in
    advance which party or parties maybe dissatisfied with the ALJ's findings. Upon
    receipt of those findings, the Commissioner shall issue a final agency decision,
    with the benefit of those findings.
    That said, the Commissioner is free at any time to revise, modify, or
    rescind AO 2018-24, as she may find appropriate in the public interest and
    consistent with the law and the State's proprietary authority over State lands ,
    provided her decision is not arbitrary and capricious and has adequate support.
    For instance, the data generated from the October 2018 and December 2018
    hunts, as compared with past hunts, may provide an independent basis for the
    peer-reviewed scientific literature over studies that are not peer-reviewed. See
    234 N.J. at 398-99.
    A-0525-18T4
    37
    Commissioner to decide to extend, modify, or rescind AO 2018-24. We do not
    wish the pendency of OAL proceedings to hinder the Commissioner's flexibility
    in responding to new data and additional information and experience.
    Following the Commissioner's final decision, a new appeal may be
    pursued in this court. Again, we do not presume which party or parties will be
    dissatisfied with the outcome. The key point is that the parties and the public
    would all have more than the scant and rather inconclusive record that presently
    exists.
    In remanding this case pursuant to Rule 2:5-5(b), we by no means suggest
    that we do so as a matter of routine. Administrative appeals still will be suitable
    for appellate review without an OAL proceeding. Nor should our remand be
    construed to suggest the State must undertake the burden of defending its day -
    to-day proprietary decisions in the OAL. We respect the constitutional
    prerogatives of the Executive Branch, and do not intend to foist an undue burden
    on the routine workings of government. 14 The present case is distinctive from
    14
    As a side point, we note there is nothing nefarious or illegal about a new
    administration taking authorized executive actions to attain policy objectives
    that were the subject of a political campaign, so long as those decisions
    otherwise comport with the law and are not arbitrary and capricious. Hence,
    even if EO 34 and AO 2018-24 implement public policies concerning bear
    hunting that are consistent with positions taken during a political campaign, that
    A-0525-18T4
    38
    said routine contexts in the likely material impact that the closure of hundreds
    of thousands of acres of State lands may have on the scientific and policy
    underpinnings of the CBBMP.
    We now turn to the time-sensitive question of whether, as appellants
    request, we should immediately nullify AO 2018-24 and order that State lands
    must be available for the upcoming December phase of the hunt. This request
    to nullify, or at least stay, the administrative order implicates the standards for
    injunctive relief. Similar if not identical considerations pertain, whether we
    view appellants' demands for relief under the standards for a preliminary
    injunction under Crowe v. De Goia, 
    90 N.J. 126
     (1982), or for a permanent
    injunction.
    As to preliminary injunctive relief under Crowe, courts must consider
    these well-known factors: (1) if an injunction is "necessary to prevent
    irreparable harm"; (2) if "the legal right underlying [the appellants'] claim is
    unsettled"; (3) if the appellants have made "a preliminary showing of a
    reasonable probability of success on the merits"; (4) "the relative hardship to the
    parties in granting or denying [injunctive] relief." 
    Id. at 132-34
    .
    provides no per se basis to set them aside. The voters in our democracy
    ultimately decide if legally-permissible policy choices advocated by a candidate
    should cause an electoral change.
    A-0525-18T4
    39
    In Rinaldo v. RLR Investment, LLC, 
    387 N.J. Super. 387
    , 397 (App. Div.
    2006), we distinguished the analysis of a preliminary injunction under Crowe
    from the analysis of a permanent injunction, stating:
    [T]he determination whether to grant a permanent
    injunction at the conclusion of the case does not involve
    a prediction as to the outcome of future proceedings.
    Instead, at that stage of the case, the court must make
    findings of fact based on the evidence presented at trial
    and then determine whether the applicant has
    established the liability of the other party, the need for
    injunctive relief, and the appropriateness of such relief
    on a balancing of equities.
    [(Emphasis added) (citations omitted).]
    Having duly considered these factors, we conclude that appellants have
    not demonstrated that either preliminary or final injunctive relief is warranted,
    pending the outcome of the administrative remand.
    The merit (or even the probability of success) of appellants' claim of
    public necessity for a hunt to take place on State lands has yet to be established.
    As the State and amicus rightly emphasize, bear hunters will still have access
    under AO 2018-24 to other lands, and the hunt may be extended if the harvest
    falls below the specified targets. The modest fee expended for a hunting license,
    and the temporary loss of access to State lands for recreational bear hunting , do
    not sufficiently comprise irreparable and imminent harm. Appellants' delay in
    A-0525-18T4
    40
    not appealing AO 2018-24 until over a month after it was issued, and in not
    seeking emergent relief until after the October phase of the hunt had already
    occurred, weakens their claim that it is imperative to open the hunt to State
    lands.
    Appellants also have not met their burden of demonstrating that the public
    interest mandates the immediate nullification of AO 2018-24, or that the balance
    of equities tips in their favor. We therefore deny their emergent application for
    an injunction; subject of course to whatever the Supreme Court may instruct if
    further appellate review is sought.
    Affirmed in part as to appellants' federal and rulemaking claims, and
    remanded in part as to their claim of arbitrary and capricious decision-making.
    We deny the requested stay of AO 2018-24. We do not retain jurisdiction.
    A-0525-18T4
    41