California Trout v. Ferc

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedJuly 20, 2009
Docket07-73664
StatusPublished

This text of California Trout v. Ferc (California Trout v. Ferc) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
California Trout v. Ferc, (9th Cir. 2009).

Opinion

FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT

CALIFORNIA TROUT,  Petitioner, No. 07-73664 v.  FERC Project No. FEDERAL ENERGY REGULATORY 2426-204 COMMISSION, Respondent. 

CALIFORNIA TROUT,  Petitioner, No. 07-74494 v.  FERC Project No. FEDERAL ENERGY REGULATORY 2426-206 COMMISSION, Respondent. 

FRIENDS OF THE RIVER,  Petitioner, No. 08-71593 v.  FERC Project No. 2426-208 FEDERAL ENERGY REGULATORY COMMISSION, OPINION Respondent.  On Petition for Review of an Order of the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission

Argued and Submitted February 12, 2009—San Francisco, California

Filed July 20, 2009

9159 9160 CALIFORNIA TROUT v. FERC Before: Ronald M. Gould, Jay S. Bybee, and Timothy M. Tymkovich,* Circuit Judges.

Opinion by Judge Bybee; Dissent by Judge Gould

*The Honorable Timothy M. Tymkovich, United States Circuit Judge for the Tenth Circuit, sitting by designation. CALIFORNIA TROUT v. FERC 9163

COUNSEL

Daniel P. Selmi (argued), Los Angeles, California, and Amy J. Bricker, Rachel B. Hooper, and Amanda Garcia, San Fran- cisco, California, for the petitioners.

Holly E. Cafer, Kathrine Henry (argued), Cynthia Marlette, and Robert H. Solomon, Washington, D.C., for the respon- dent. 9164 CALIFORNIA TROUT v. FERC OPINION

BYBEE, Circuit Judge:

The Supreme Court has long stressed that “the formulation of procedures [is] basically to be left within the discretion of the agencies to which Congress [has] confided the responsi- bility for substantive judgments.” Vt. Yankee Nuclear Power Corp. v. Natural Res. Def. Council, Inc., 435 U.S. 519, 524-25 (1978). Agencies must have the ability to manage their own dockets and set reasonable limitations on the pro- cesses by which interested persons can support or contest pro- posed actions. In this respect, an agency’s procedural rules operate much as our own rules of procedure do: we require litigants to observe the orderly procedures of the court, even if such rules occasionally bar inattentive or ill-advised parties from our courtrooms. So long as an agency’s procedural rules do not afford petitioners less protection than the minimum mandated by the Administrative Procedure Act (“APA”) and the Constitution, we are not free to “improperly intrude[ ] into the agency’s decisionmaking process” and second-guess its administrative tradeoffs. Id. at 525.

In this case, petitioners California Trout (“CalTrout”) and Friends of the River (“FOR”) contend that the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (“the Commission”) applied its rule governing intervention in a license renewal proceeding in an arbitrary and capricious fashion. Although petitioners have set forth evidence that their late intervention would not prejudice the Commission’s proceeding, under the circumstances we cannot find that the Commission’s decision was an abuse of its discretion. The regulation at issue explicitly confers on the Commission a broad power to differentiate among untimely interveners and permits the Commission to summarily reject a prospective intervener who cannot demonstrate “good cause” for its untimely motion. Because we find that the Commission reasonably determined that petitioners lacked CALIFORNIA TROUT v. FERC 9165 good cause for their untimely attempt to intervene, we deny the petition for review.

I

A

Bufo microscaphus californicus, the arroyo southwestern toad, is a small (two to three inch) amphibian with light greenish gray or tan warty skin and dark spots. See Endan- gered and Threatened Wildlife and Plants; Determination of Endangered Status for the Arroyo Southwestern Toad, 59 Fed. Reg. 64,859 (Dec. 16, 1994) (codified at 50 C.F.R. pt. 17). The toad can usually be identified by its movement, which consists of hopping (as opposed to walking or leaping), and its high-pitched trill that adult males emit during courtship. Id. It is not an especially peripatetic species—adult toads gener- ally range no farther than a mile or so from the streams where they breed, and none are known to live outside the state of California. See Endangered and Threatened Wildlife and Plants; Final Designation of Critical Habitat for the Arroyo Toad, 66 Fed. Reg. 9415 (Feb. 7, 2001) (codified at 50 C.F.R. pt. 17).

The arroyo toad is quite particular about its habitat. It only lives in rivers or large streams that have shallow, gravelly pools, sandy terraces, and minimal vegetative cover. 59 Fed. Reg. at 64,859. The adult toad deposits its eggs in these shal- low pools, where the potentially destructive water current is at a minimum, and the young toads eventually leave the pools to forage for insects on the sandy terraces. Id. The larger toads often burrow into the sandy terraces to create shelter and to escape from the sun’s potentially lethal heat. Id. For this rea- son, urbanization and the rapid construction of dams in Cali- fornia beginning in the 1900s (which altered the natural water flows on which the toad had come to depend) severely degraded the arroyo toad’s habitat. Id. By the early 1990s, nearly 76 percent of the species’ habitat had been degraded, 9166 CALIFORNIA TROUT v. FERC see 66 Fed. Reg. at 9414, and almost all the existing toad pop- ulations were near extinction. 59 Fed. Reg. at 64,859.

One place where the remaining arroyo toads continued to dwell was Piru Creek, a stream that meanders south from northwestern Los Angeles County through eastern Ventura County until it drains into the Santa Clara River. The creek runs through two large lakes: the northern Pyramid Lake and the southern Piru Lake. The eighteen-mile stretch of creek between these two lakes is known as “Middle Piru Creek.” This area of the creek is surrounded mainly by national forest land (the Angeles National Forest and the Los Padres National Forest) and is used primarily for recreational activi- ties, chief among which is fly-fishing.

It is surprising that the species had managed to survive for so long in Middle Piru Creek. In 1968, as part of the Califor- nia Aqueduct Project,1 construction began on Pyramid Dam, a 408-foot earth and rockfill edifice intended to prevent the natural flow of water from Pyramid Lake into Middle Piru Creek. The dam was completed in 1973, and in 1978 the Commission licensed the California Department of Water Resources (“DWR”) and the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power to operate the dam and an associated power plant. This license strictly regulated the minimum amount of water that DWR could release from the dam at any one time. As a result, the increased water flow emitted from Pyramid Dam significantly altered the character of Middle Piru Creek. 1 The California Aqueduct is one component of the enormous “State Water Project” designed to mitigate California’s uneven distribution of water resources by ferrying water from the wet northern areas of the state to the more arid south. The general history of the project is described in the mass of California and federal case law adjudicating disputes over its scope. See generally, e.g., In re Bay-Delta Programmatic Env. Impact Report Coordinated Proceedings, 184 P.3d 709 (Cal. 2008); United States v. State Water Res. Control Bd., 227 Cal. Rptr. 161 (Cal. App. 1986). CALIFORNIA TROUT v. FERC 9167 Article 52 of the original license created the minimum flow requirements for the release of water from Pyramid Dam: DWR was instructed to release a continuous flow of at least 5 cubic feet per second (“cfs”) in the winter and spring and at least 10 cfs in the summer and fall.

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California Trout v. Ferc, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/california-trout-v-ferc-ca9-2009.