Psha. v. Dept. of Fish & Wildlife

239 P.3d 1140
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedSeptember 28, 2010
Docket39435-9-II
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 239 P.3d 1140 (Psha. v. Dept. of Fish & Wildlife) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Psha. v. Dept. of Fish & Wildlife, 239 P.3d 1140 (Wash. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

239 P.3d 1140 (2010)

PUGET SOUND HARVESTERS ASSOCIATION, Respondent,
v.
WASHINGTON STATE DEPARTMENT OF FISH AND WILDLIFE, Appellant.

No. 39435-9-II.

Court of Appeals of Washington, Division 2.

September 28, 2010.

*1141 Joseph Earl Shorin III, Aty. Gen. Ofc. /Fish Wildlife & Parks Division, Olympia, WA, for Appellant.

David Scott Mann, Gendler & Mann LLP, Seattle, WA, for Respondent.

PENOYAR, C.J.

¶ 1 The Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife (WDFW) appeals the trial court's invalidation of two Washington Administrative Rules. In 2008, WDFW adopted the two rules, setting the 2008 fall chum salmon fishing schedule in South Puget Sound areas 10 and 11. WDFW allocated fishing opportunities between the gillnetters and purse seiners rather than placing a limit on the total catch of either group. The trial court invalidated the two rules, ruling that they were arbitrary and capricious. We affirm the trial court's rulings invalidating the 2008 versions of WAC 220-47-311 and WAC 220-47-411 as arbitrary and capricious.

FACTS

I. Background

¶ 2 WDFW regulates commercial salmon fishing in the Puget Sound by gear type and geographic area. WDFW divides the Puget Sound into several areas, including areas 10 and 11 in the South Puget Sound. There are two major gear types used for chum salmon fishing, gillnets and purse seines.

¶ 3 WDFW develops rules for salmon fisheries through a process called the "North of Falcon" process. Clerk's Papers (CP) at 74. This process begins with a forecast of salmon expected to return to the Puget Sound during the season. The Indian treaty tribes and WDFW must agree on a total forecast and then on an allocation between treaty and non-treaty fishermen. This agreement includes the number of days the fishery will be open to non-treaty fishermen. WDFW and the Indian treaty tribes generally open different *1142 days of the week to their fishing fleets. WDFW then holds a series of public meetings to pursue an agreement between the gear groups—he gillnetters and purse seiners—on the management of the fisheries—here, areas 10 and 11—during the non-treaty fishing days.

¶ 4 Although WDFW tries to allocate fishing opportunities between gillnetters and purse seiners by agreement, this has not been possible in recent years. Ultimately, WDFW must decide the allocation based on the information before it and the law.

¶ 5 Purse seiners and gillnetters have different methods of catching fish. Purse seiners have equipment capable of catching more fish per boat than the gillnetters, and they have an extremely efficient method of fishing. The gillnetters have more licensed boats, smaller boats, and a smaller catch per boat than the purse seiners. In recent years, the gillnetters have marketed more fish in local markets than the purse seiners. During the 2006 and 2007 seasons, gillnetters caught an average of 725 chum salmon per hour of fishing time, while purse seiners caught an average of 4,893 chum salmon per hour of fishing time.

¶ 6 Puget Sound Harvesters Association (PSHA) challenged WDFW's 2007 fishing schedule in the Thurston County Superior Court. On June 2, 2008, the trial court entered an order, ruling that there was no rational basis for WDFW's 2007 allocation and invalidated the rules as arbitrary and capricious; it also awarded PSHA attorney fees. The trial court found that WDFW used the benchmark of the relative amounts of the catch for the years 1996-2000 as the sole basis to determine an equitable outcome.

¶ 7 In 2008, WDFW adopted rules setting the 2008 fishing season for commercial purse seine and gillnet fishing. These regulations, which included the areas 10 and 11 fishing schedule, allocated fishing opportunity between the two groups rather than capping the total catch of either group. WDFW's concise explanatory statement[1] clarifies the reasoning behind this decision: "WDFW believes that this is the most equitable means of regulating this fishery given the historical variations in catch, differences in fishing efficiency between the two groups, economics of the fishery and market forces, and fluctuations in the fishing effort and fleet sizes between the two groups." Admin. Record (AR) at 11.

¶ 8 WDFW defined management objectives for Puget Sound commercial salmon fisheries. Those objectives, in order from most to least important, mandated that WDFW: (1) Ensure the conservation of target species— meet spawning goals; (2) minimize catch or impacts on incidental species (bycatch); (3) monitor and sample all fisheries; (4) maintain the economic well-being and stability of the fishing industry; (5) fully utilize the non-Indian allowable catch; and (6) fairly allocate harvest opportunity between gear groups.

¶ 9 Until 2003, WDFW scheduled seasons by providing an equal number of days opened for purse seine and gillnet gears in areas 10 and 11. WDFW has never allocated on the basis of catch in any Puget Sound commercial salmon fishery. Between 1973 and 1993, catch shares averaged approximately 50-50. After 2003, WDFW departed from structuring seasons based on an equal number of days in order to better address the objectives of maintaining the economic well-being and stability of the fishing industry and fairly allocating harvest opportunity between gear groups. Since 2003, more fishing opportunity has been provided to the gillnet fleet than to the purse seine fleet in areas 10 and 11 because economic conditions presented a disadvantage to the gillnet fleet with respect to harvest opportunity, economic well-being, and stability. For example, in 2002, the gillnet share of the total chum catch *1143 was 5 percent. The gillnet share has increased each year since then, and, in 2007, the gillnet fleet caught 31 percent of harvestable chum salmon.[2] In 2007, WDFW allocated fewer fishing days to the gillnet fleet than in the adopted 2003-2006 seasons.

¶ 10 WDFW asserts in its concise explanatory statement that the efficiency of the fleets may be related to the abundance and distribution of chum salmon, because when the combined catch of the two gear groups was high, the gillnet fleet share of the catch was much lower than in years when chum salmon were in lower abundance and more dispersed. The average chum salmon catch for the seasons since 2001 is more than 366,000 chum salmon, while the average catch from 1973-2000 was 108,000 chum salmon. For the 2008 season, WDFW predicted a similarly high number of chum salmon and "lower gillnet catch effectiveness relative to purse seine gear." AR at 15.

¶ 11 "[G]iven the complexity of issues involved, the need to consider fisheries other than the Areas 10 & 11 chum fishery, and the failure to reach agreement on catch allocation for the 2008 season," WDFW used fishing schedules to address the needs of the purse seiners and the gillnetters and meet the objective of fairly allocating harvest opportunity between gear groups. AR at 17. According to WDFW's concise explanatory statement:

Achieving a fair allocation of the harvest itself in this fishery by WDFW mandate is not realistic, given the number of and variability within factors that are relevant to such an allocation. These include the number of active fishing licenses in both fleets, the economic investment of individual vessel owners in both fleets, the fishing effort made by individual fishers in both fleets, and the numbers of individuals employed by each fleet.

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239 P.3d 1140, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/psha-v-dept-of-fish-wildlife-washctapp-2010.