Alaska Fish and Wildlife Conservation Fund v. State

CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 27, 2015
Docket6992 S-14516
StatusPublished

This text of Alaska Fish and Wildlife Conservation Fund v. State (Alaska Fish and Wildlife Conservation Fund v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alaska Fish and Wildlife Conservation Fund v. State, (Ala. 2015).

Opinion

Notice: This opinion is subject to correction before publication in the P ACIFIC R EPORTER . Readers are requested to bring errors to the attention of the Clerk of the Appellate Courts, 303 K Street, Anchorage, Alaska 99501, phone (907) 264-0608, fax (907) 264-0878, e-mail corrections@akcourts.us.

THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF ALASKA

ALASKA FISH AND WILDLIFE ) CONSERVATION FUND, ) Supreme Court No. S-14516 ) Appellant, ) Superior Court No. 4FA-11-01474 CI ) v. ) OPINION ) STATE OF ALASKA and ) No. 6992 - March 27, 2015 AHTNA TENE NENE’, ) ) Appellees. ) )

Appeal from the Superior Court of the State of Alaska, Fourth Judicial District, Michael P. McConahy, Judge.

Appearances: Michael C. Kramer, Borgeson & Kramer, P.C., Fairbanks, for Appellant. Michael G. Mitchell, Sr. Assistant Attorney General, Anchorage, and Michael C. Geraghty, Attorney General, Juneau, for Appellee State of Alaska. John M. Starkey, Hobbs Straus Dean & Walker, Anchorage, for Appellee Ahtna Tene Nene’.

Before: Fabe, Chief Justice, Winfree, Stowers, Maassen, and Bolger, Justices.

MAASSEN, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION Regulations promulgated by the Alaska Board of Game establish two different systems of subsistence hunting for moose and caribou in Alaska’s Copper Basin region: (1) community hunts for groups following a hunting pattern similar to the one traditionally practiced by members of the Ahtna Tene Nene’ community; and (2) individual hunts.1 A private outdoors group, the Alaska Fish and Wildlife Conservation Fund, argues that this regulatory framework violates the equal access and equal protection clauses of the Alaska Constitution by establishing a preference for a certain user group. The Fund also argues that the regulations are not authorized by the governing statutes, that they conflict with other regulations, and that notice of important regulatory changes was not properly given to the public. But because we conclude that the Board’s factual findings support a constitutionally valid distinction between patterns of subsistence use, and because the Board’s regulations do not otherwise violate the law, we affirm the superior court’s grant of summary judgment to the State, upholding the statute and the Board regulations against the Fund’s legal challenge. II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS The Copper Basin Community Hunt Area, located in Southcentral Alaska, includes Game Management Units 11 and 13 and a portion of Unit 12.2 After public hearings, the Board made extensive findings about the area in 2006, describing the customary and traditional subsistence use of moose and caribou.3 The Board recognized the existence of a community-based pattern of subsistence hunting, originating with the

1 5 Alaska Administrative Code (AAC) 85.025 (2012); 5 AAC 85.045; 5 AAC 92.050; 5 AAC 92.072. 2 In a recent case involving these same parties, we discussed Ahtna’s and the Board’s respective histories with Unit 13 moose and caribou. See Ahtna Tene Nene’ v. State, Dep’t of Fish & Game, 288 P.3d 452, 455-57 (Alaska 2012). 3 The Board made these findings by considering the eight criteria described in 5 AAC 99.010(b). We upheld these eight criteria in Alaska Fish & Wildlife Conservation Fund v. State, Dep’t of Fish & Game, Bd. of Fisheries, 289 P.3d 903 (Alaska 2012).

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Ahtna Athabascan communities in the region and “later adopted by other Alaska residents.” This community-based pattern, the Board found, was characterized by use of the entire caribou or moose, leaving only the antlers behind, and by events of “[w]idespread community-wide sharing” after the harvest. In 2011the Board made supplemental findings about a second subsistence hunting pattern in the Copper Basin. This pattern, according to the Board, was an individual use pattern that occurs “among households and families” but unlike the community-based pattern is not “linked to extensive networks of cooperation and sharing.” The individual use pattern occurs mostly during the fall, and it centers upon areas accessible from the road system. Individual subsistence users, like community subsistence users, tend to return to their “well-known and long-established camping/hunting sites,” but they tend to travel much farther to get there. The individual use pattern does not tend to use organ meat; meat sharing is “less formal”; and the “peer pressure to share is far less pronounced.” Based on these two recognized patterns of subsistence hunting, the Board adopted regulations that bifurcated subsistence hunts4 in Unit 13 into community harvests and individual hunts.5 A community harvest permit is issued to members of a group of 25 or more who agree to engage in the hunting practices described in the Board’s 2006 findings, including meat sharing and organ salvage.6 The community moose hunt has a longer hunting season, has a larger geographic area, and is allocated

4 Subsistence hunting statutes divide subsistence hunts into two tiers: Tier I hunts are those in which the resource is abundant enough to satisfy all subsistence uses; Tier II hunts are those in which it is not. AS 16.05.258(b)(1)-(4); see State v. Morry, 836 P.2d 358, 365-66 (Alaska 1992). 5 5 AAC 85.045; 5 AAC 92.050; 5 AAC 92.072. 6 5 AAC 92.072(c)(1).

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up to 70 moose of any size.7 For caribou, the season, hunting area, and size of animal that may be hunted are the same for both the community harvest and individual permit holders, but the community hunt is allocated up to 300 caribou.8 (What this allocation means in practical terms is addressed later in this opinion.) These regulations were challenged in the superior court by the nonprofit Alaska Fish and Wildlife Conservation Fund. The Fund argued that the regulations violated the Administrative Procedure Act,9 the subsistence hunting statutes, and article VIII of the Alaska Constitution. The Fund asked the court to enjoin all community harvest hunts and to strike any statutes and regulations purporting to allow them. The Fund also asked the court to require the revisor of statutes to strike or amend statutes that Alaska’s courts have ruled unconstitutional in the past. The local tribe, Ahtna Tene Nene’, was granted leave to intervene as a defendant. All parties agreed that the issues before the superior court could be decided on summary judgment. The superior court ruled in favor of the State, holding that the challenged regulation had been properly noticed; that the regulatory scheme was within

7 Id. Individual hunters may only harvest bull moose with spike-fork, 50­ inch, or 4 brow tine antlers, while community harvesters may harvest any bulls but no more than 70 that could not have been harvested by individual hunters. 5 AAC 85.045. The community harvesters’ any-bull allocation increased to 100 for the 2013 season. 5 AAC 85.045 (am. 7/1/13). 8 See 5 AAC 85.025. In testimony before the Board, a representative from the Alaska Outdoor Council, the Fund’s sister organization, expressed concern that community harvest permits would be issued per person while individual permits would be issued per household. This potential inequity never occurred because by special regulation the Board limited hunters in Unit 13 to one caribou per household regardless of whether they held a community harvest permit or an individual permit. See 5 AAC 92.071(a); 5 AAC 92.072(c)(2)(A). 9 AS 44.62.010 – .950.

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the Board’s statutory power because the subsistence hunting statutes allow the Board to distinguish between different subsistence uses; and that the community harvest permit system did not violate the equal access provisions of the Alaska Constitution, article VIII, because participation in a community harvest was open to all Alaska residents. The Fund now appeals. III.

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