Siletz Anglers Assn. v. ODFW

336 Or. App. 272
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedNovember 20, 2024
DocketA181877
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 336 Or. App. 272 (Siletz Anglers Assn. v. ODFW) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Siletz Anglers Assn. v. ODFW, 336 Or. App. 272 (Or. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

272 November 20, 2024 No. 830

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF OREGON

SILETZ ANGLERS ASSOCIATION, an Oregon non-profit corporation; Oregon Rod Reel & Tackle; Scott Amerman; Grant Scheele; Mike Kelly; and Port of Siuslaw, a publicly chartered special district, Petitioners, v. FISH AND WILDLIFE COMMISSION and the DEPARTMENT OF FISH AND WILDLIFE, an agency of the State of Oregon, Respondents. Department of Fish and Wildlife A181877

Argued and submitted October 15, 2024. Dominic M. Carollo argued the cause for petitioners. Also on the briefs were Nolan G Smith and Carollo Law Group, LLC. Carson L. Whitehead, Assistant Attorney General, argued the cause for respondents. Also on the brief were Ellen F. Rosenblum, Attorney General, and Benjamin Gutman, Solicitor General. Before Tookey, Presiding Judge, Kamins, Judge, and Kistler, Senior Judge. KAMINS, J. Rules held valid. Cite as 336 Or App 272 (2024) 273

KAMINS, J. In this rule challenge under ORS 183.400, petition- ers challenge the validity of two temporary administrative rules adopted by the State Department of Fish and Wildlife (ODFW)1—OAR 635-014-0090 (July 1, 2023) and OAR 635-016-0090 (July 1, 2023)—which “modif[ied] bag limits, close[d] salmon fishing, and implement[ed] other conserva- tion measures for protection of wild Chinook in specified Oregon coastal rivers.”2 Those temporary rules expired on December 7, 2023. As described in more detail below, in three assign- ments of error, petitioners assert that we should hold that the temporary rules were invalid because they were “a stark and arbitrary departure from ODFW’s Oregon Coastal Multi-Species Conservation and Management Plan (‘CMP’), ODFW failed to follow rulemaking procedures, the rules were inconsistent with ODFW’s statutory and regulatory author- ity, and [the rules] violate[d] the Oregon Constitution’s sep- aration of powers doctrine.” ODFW responds that we should dismiss the petition for judicial review as moot, and further asserts that the temporary rules were valid. 1 The State Department of Fish and Wildlife is a department established under the State Fish and Wildlife Commission. ORS 496.080. Petitioners’ brief- ing refers to the State Department of Fish and Wildlife and the State Fish and Wildlife Commission collectively as “ODFW,” and we adopt the same convention in this opinion. 2 OAR 635-014-0090 (July 1, 2023) provided, for example: “(2) The following regulations apply in the Alsea River and bay and Drift Creek: “(a) The daily adult wild Chinook bag limit is two fish in aggregate; and “(b) No more than ten adult wild Chinook may be retained for the period in aggregate. “(3) Effective October 1 through December 31, Big Creek (Clatsop) is open for retention of hatchery steelhead and hatchery Chinook.” OAR 635-016-0090 (July 1, 2023) provided, for example: “(3) Effective July 1 through December 31, the following regulations apply in the Coos River, Coos Bay, South Fork Coos River, and Millicoma mainstem: “(a) The daily adult wild Chinook bag limit is two fish in aggregate; and “(b) No more than ten adult wild Chinook may be retained for the period in aggregate. “(4) Effective July 1 through December 31, the Coquille River and South Fork Coquille is closed to angling for and retention of all Chinook.” 274 Siletz Anglers Assn. v. ODFW

For the reasons below, we conclude that petitioners’ challenge to the temporary rules is moot, but we exercise our discretion to reach the merits of petitioners’ rule chal- lenge. As to the merits of petitioners’ challenge, we hold that the temporary rules were valid. I. BACKGROUND A. ODFW’s Statutory Charge and the CMP It is the policy of the State of Oregon that “wildlife shall be managed to prevent serious depletion of any indig- enous species and to provide the optimum recreational and aesthetic benefits for present and future generations of the citizens of this state.” ORS 496.012. In furtherance of that policy, the legislature has charged ODFW with represent- ing “the public interest” and implementing certain “coequal goals of wildlife management” that the legislature has spec- ified.3 Id. With regard to salmon in particular, ORS 496.435 provides that “it is declared to be a goal of the people of the State of Oregon to achieve recovery and sustainability of native stocks of salmon.” In fulfilling its statutory duties, ORS 496.162 requires that ODFW conduct an investigation into the “sup- ply and condition of wildlife” and adopt rules for the taking of such wildlife, providing, in relevant part: “(1) After investigation of the supply and condition of wildlife, the State Fish and Wildlife Commission, at appro- priate times each year, shall by rule:

3 Those goals are: “(1) To maintain all species of wildlife at optimum levels. “(2) To develop and manage the lands and waters of this state in a manner that will enhance the production and public enjoyment of wildlife. “(3) To permit an orderly and equitable utilization of available wildlife. “(4) To develop and maintain public access to the lands and waters of the state and the wildlife resources thereon. “(5) To regulate wildlife populations and the public enjoyment of wildlife in a manner that is compatible with primary uses of the lands and waters of the state. “(6) To provide optimum recreational benefits. “(7) To make decisions that affect wildlife resources of the state for the benefit of the wildlife resources and to make decisions that allow for the best social, economic and recreational utilization of wildlife resources by all user groups.” Cite as 336 Or App 272 (2024) 275

“(a) Prescribe the times, places and manner in which wildlife may be taken by angling, hunting, trapping or other method and the amounts of each of those wildlife spe- cies that may be taken and possessed.” To “ensure the conservation and recovery of native fish in Oregon,” ODFW has adopted a “Native Fish Conservation Policy.” OAR 635-007-0502(1). That policy is implemented, at least primarily, through “conservation plans.” OAR 635-007-0502(4); OAR 635-007-0505(1). The CMP—which petitioners contend the temporary rules were a “stark and arbitrary departure from”—is such a conserva- tion plan. Specifically, the CMP “implements the State’s strategy for protecting, enhancing and utilizing Oregon populations of Chinook salmon, spring Chinook salmon, chum salmon, winter steelhead, summer steelhead, and coastal cutthroat trout along the Oregon coast.” OAR 635- 500-6775(1). At bottom, as described in the CMP itself, the CMP is a document that is intended to be “used by anglers, conservation groups, watershed councils, government agen- cies, landowners and the general public to understand how salmon, steelhead, and trout within the Coastal planning area are being managed, what the long-term goals are for them, and what actions need to be taken to achieve those goals.” Among other information, the CMP “contain[s] fac- tual background material, statements of the rationale for selection of objectives, strategies to be applied to attain objectives, and statements of general priorities for various actions.” OAR 635-500-0002.

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Siletz Anglers Assn. v. ODFW
336 Or. App. 272 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2024)

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Bluebook (online)
336 Or. App. 272, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/siletz-anglers-assn-v-odfw-orctapp-2024.