Environmental Protection Information Center v. Dept. of Fish and Wildlife CA1/2

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 26, 2024
DocketA163051
StatusUnpublished

This text of Environmental Protection Information Center v. Dept. of Fish and Wildlife CA1/2 (Environmental Protection Information Center v. Dept. of Fish and Wildlife CA1/2) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Environmental Protection Information Center v. Dept. of Fish and Wildlife CA1/2, (Cal. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

Filed 1/26/24 Environmental Protection Information Center v. Dept. of Fish and Wildlife CA1/2 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION TWO

ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION INFORMATION CENTER et al., Petitioners and Appellants, v. DEPARTMENT OF FISH AND WILDLIFE, A163051 Respondent; GREEN DIAMOND RESOURCE (Humboldt County COMPANY, Super. Ct. No. DR190416) Real Party in Interest and Respondent.

Petitioners Environmental Protection Information Center and Center for Biological Diversity (collectively, Centers) appeal the trial court’s order denying their petition for writ of mandate filed against respondent Department of Fish and Wildlife (Department). The petition challenged a safe harbor agreement (Agreement) that the Department entered into with real party in interest Green Diamond Resource Company (Green Diamond) pursuant to the California Endangered Species Act (CESA). CESA prohibits the “taking” (that is, the killing, capturing, or harming) of an animal of an endangered or threatened species, including

1 unintentionally. But the Safe Harbor Agreement Program Act (Safe Harbor Act) provides an exception to the no-take mandate. Intended to “encourage landowners to manage their lands voluntarily to benefit endangered, threatened, or candidate species” (Fish & G. Code, § 2080),1 the Safe Harbor Act allows landowners and the Department to enter into agreements requiring landowners to undertake conservation measures, spelled out in the agreements, that the Department reasonably expects to provide a net benefit to an endangered species. (§ 2089.6, subd. (a)(3)) In return, the landowner receives the benefit of a safe harbor from liability for incidentally taking members of the species on its land. (§ 2089.6, subd. (a).) Modeled on a similar program of the federal Endangered Species Act, the underlying insight of the Safe Harbor Act is that landowners may be discouraged from undertaking conservation measures that draw more endangered animals onto their land if they become subject to take liability as a result; granting them a safe harbor gives them incentives to improve their land in ways that benefit a species without increasing the prospect of take liability. The Agreement at issue here concerns Humboldt martens, a small predatory mammal of the weasel family that was designated as an endangered species in 2018 by the Fish and Game Commission (Commission). Humboldt martens were once widespread throughout the coastal forests of Northern California, but extensive fur trapping and the loss of coastal redwood forest habitat through logging have decimated marten populations over the last century. Scientists believed they were extinct until 1996, when the paw prints of a Humboldt marten were found on a tracking plate in Del Norte County. Presently, the population of Humboldt martens is believed to

1 All further statutory references are to the Fish and Game Code unless

otherwise specified.

2 number fewer than 100 individuals, and in California today these creatures are believed to live only in Humboldt and Del Norte Counties. Green Diamond owns land and conducts logging operations in those counties. Humboldt martens are largely absent from Green Diamond’s land, but the northern portion of Green Diamond’s land sits between marten- inhabited land and protected parklands with old-growth coastal redwoods that are likely very suitable for martens. A group of biologists undertook an extensive assessment of how to improve martens’ conservation prospects and concluded that expanding martens’ range into the protected parklands was a promising strategy, either by capturing and relocating martens or by improving potential marten habitat that would connect to the parklands and encourage martens over time to migrate and expand their range. In general terms, the Agreement purports to implement that conservation strategy on Green Diamond’s land over its 40-year term: the Agreement sharply limits logging in two discrete areas of Green Diamond’s land where martens are presently found; in other areas, it requires Green Diamond to make a variety of incremental adjustments to its logging operations that may make Green Diamond’s property more hospitable as an expanded range for martens; and it requires Green Diamond to fund a study of the feasibility of relocating martens onto a portion of Green Diamond’s land that is closer to the parklands, and to contribute funds toward relocation if it is found feasible. The Department found that the Agreement was reasonably expected to provide a net conservation benefit to martens, and the incidental take that it authorized would not jeopardize the species’ continued existence. The Centers challenge these findings as unsupported by substantial evidence in the administrative record. We acknowledge the modest and incremental

3 nature of many of Green Diamond’s habitat-improvement commitments in what the Agreement calls the Marten Special Management Area (Management Area). But we nonetheless conclude that the Department’s determination was supported by substantial evidence. For the Marten Reserve Area, where martens are presently found, the Agreement unquestionably provides a benefit to them by limiting Green Diamond to one logging entry over the life of the Agreement. For the Management Area, martens are largely absent but may migrate there (either on their own or through relocation after a feasibility study). The Department concluded that Green Diamond’s commitments will improve the Management Area as potential habitat for martens. How great an improvement, and whether these measures are enough to create viable new habitat for martens on Green Diamond’s logged lands, are admittedly uncertain. But CESA does not require scientific certainty, and the Department’s judgment of a reasonable expectation of benefit to martens finds support in the administrative record, particularly where the detriment to martens from any incidental take cannot occur in the Management Area unless there is first a benefit—that is, unless martens find the area improved enough to migrate there, or unless the feasibility study concludes that martens can safely be moved to the Management Area. For these reasons and others discussed below, we affirm the judgment. BACKGROUND We turn now to a more detailed discussion, first describing the purpose and scope of CESA and the Safe Harbor Act to provide context for the Centers’ challenge.

4 I. CESA CESA was enacted in 1984 “to conserve, protect, restore, and enhance any endangered species or any threatened species and its habitat.” (§ 2052.) It defines “endangered species” as “a native species or subspecies . . .which is in serious danger of becoming extinct throughout all, or a significant portion, of its range due to one or more causes, including loss of habitat, change in habitat, overexploitation, predation, competition, or disease.” (§ 2062.) The Commission is tasked with establishing the lists of endangered and threatened species and adds or removes species from these lists “based solely upon the best available scientific information.” (§ 2070.) Once a species is listed, no person or public agency may “take” a member of that endangered or threatened species. (§ 2080.) “Take” is defined as “hunt, pursue, catch, capture, or kill, or attempt to hunt, pursue, catch, capture, or kill.” (§ 86.) Thus, an action may be a “take” even without killing or hurting an endangered or threatened animal. (Center for Biological Diversity v.

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Environmental Protection Information Center v. Dept. of Fish and Wildlife CA1/2, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/environmental-protection-information-center-v-dept-of-fish-and-wildlife-calctapp-2024.