SOUTHWEST CENTER FOR BIOLOGICAL DIV. v. Bartel

470 F. Supp. 2d 1118
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. California
DecidedDecember 15, 2006
Docket3:98-cr-02234
StatusPublished

This text of 470 F. Supp. 2d 1118 (SOUTHWEST CENTER FOR BIOLOGICAL DIV. v. Bartel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
SOUTHWEST CENTER FOR BIOLOGICAL DIV. v. Bartel, 470 F. Supp. 2d 1118 (S.D. Cal. 2006).

Opinion

470 F.Supp.2d 1118 (2006)

SOUTHWEST CENTER FOR BIOLOICAL DIVERSITY, California Native Plant Society, Wetlands Action Network, Save Our Forests and Ranchlands, Carmel Mountain Conservancy, Preserve Wild Santee, Iron Mountain *1119 Conservancy, Ramonans for Sensible Growth, San .Diego Audubon Society, Sierra Club, Horned Lizard Conservation Society, San Diego Herpetological Society, Earth Media, Inc., and Preserve South Bay, Plaintiffs,
v.
Jim BARTEL, Anne Badgley, and Gale Norton, Defendants, and
Building Industry Legal Defense Foundation, National Association of Home Builders, California Building Industry Association, Building Industry Association of San Diego, and Pardee Construction Company, Intervening Defendants.
Building Industry Legal Defense Foundation, National Association of Home Builders, California Building Industry Association, and Building Industry Association of San Diego, Cross-Complainants,
v.
United States Fish and Wildlife Service, Gale Norton, City of San Diego, and Anne Badgley, Cross-Defendants, and
Southwest Center for Biological Diversity, Sierra Club, California Native Plant Society, San Diego Audubon Society, and Preserve The South Bay, Intervening Defendants.

No. 98-CV-2234-B(JMA).

United States District Court, S.D. California.

December 15, 2006.

*1120 *1121 *1122 Daniel J. Rohlf, Portland, OR, for Plaintiffs.

Marco Antonio Gonzalez, Coast Law Group, Encinitas, CA, Neil Levine, Earthjustice, Washington, DC, for Plaintiffs/Intervenor Defendants.

U S Attorney CV, Thomas C. Stahl, U S Attorneys Office Southern District Of California Civil Division, San Diego, CA, Jane P. Davenport, Keith W. Rizzardi, Wildlife and Marine Resources Section, Environment and National Resources Divis U S Department of Justice, Martin McDermott, US Department of Justice, Environmental Defense Section, Washington, DC, Stephen M. Macfarlane, United States Department of Justice, Environmental Natural Resource Divison, Sacremento, CA, for Defendants/Cross Defendants.

Stephen J. Odell, Law Offices of Stephen J. Odell, Portland, OR, William E. Halle, Hewitt and O'Neil Llp, Irvine, CA, for Intervenor Defendant.

John Peter Mullen, Richard A. Duvernay, Office of the City Attorney Civil Division, San Diego, CA, for Cross Defendant.

AMENDED DECISION AND INJUNCTION

BREWSTER, Senior District Judge.

In this Endangered Species Act ("ESA," 16 U.S.C. งง 1531-1544) case, fourteen national, state, and local conservation and environmental groups[1] (hereinafter "Plaintiffs") challenge the decision of the United States Fish and Wildlife Service[2] (hereinafter "FWS" or "Federal Defendants") to issue an incidental take permit ("ITP") under ง 10 of the ESA to the City of San Diego[3] based upon its conservation plan. *1123 This Court has jurisdiction under the citizen suit provision of the ESA. ง 1540(g). Though the City's ITP governs 85 species, Plaintiffs' lawsuit is limited to seven vernal Pool speciesโ€”two small aquatic crustacean species (San Diego fairy shrimp and Riverside fairy shrimp) and five plant species (Otay mesa mint, California Orcutt grass, San Diego button celery, San Diego mesa mint, and spreading navarretia (also known as prostrate navarretia) โ€” which are listed as "endangered" or "threatened.") Third Amended Complaint ถ 41-42 ("TAC").

A construction company and four building associations intervened (hereinafter "Builder Intervenors")[4] and filed a crosscomplaint against the Federal Defendants and the City of San Diego to challenge the scope of the .ITP provisions on those same seven vernal pool species. Southwest Ctr. for Biological Diversity v. Berg, 268 F.3d 810, 820-22 (9th Cir.2001); Cross Compl. ถ 9-12; see Order Resolving Subject Matter Jurisdiction at 4-5 (filed Sept. 8, 2004).

Having considered the administrative record, the legal briefs, and the relevant case law, it appears to this Court that the ITP would permit monumental destruction of the vernal pool species, which are extremely sensitive to their environment and were virtually extinct in 1995. The Court finds that FWS overlooked an important aspect of the operation of the Assurances because the malleable standard โ€” to avoid the pools when "practicable" โ€” virtually guarantees development and the ersatz mitigation measures run counter to the realistic needs of these dwindling vernal pool species and may hasten their extinction. It is undisputed that the fairy shrimp cannot be transferred by human transplant from one area to another with any measure of reliability or survivability. Yet, a close examination of the record reveals that FWS has authorized extensive development of lands containing vernal pools that would destroy essential habitat for these rare species under the guise of obtaining promises for "mitigation" in other areas. The ostensible "mitigation" is inadequate to ensure that the fairy shrimp will survive and recover to the point where they need not be listed for protection of the ESA. In short, while vigorous development is certain, the purported mitigation is unlikely to conserve the listed species. Moreover, the record does not support FWS's finding that the City of San Diego would fund its share of the conservation plan. The Court finds that this plan violates both the spirit and letter of the ESA.

More specifically, the Court finds that FWS must re-initiate consultation proceedings on the City's ITP because the avenue of seeking permits from the United States Army Corps of Engineers ("ACOE") is no longer available for vernal pools,, and the remaining conservation measures are inadequate to protect these fragile species. FWS concedes that it did not examine the impact of the City's plan on the vernal pool species because FWS did not anticipate any impact on those species; instead, FWS expected to evaluate any impact on particular sites in future permit procedures. That structure violates the ESA as to the vernal pool species in this case because *1124 FWS has locked in any mitigation, that could be recommended or would be required to the measures delineated in the City's conservation plan โ€” the very plan that FWS did not assess for adequate protection of the vernal pool species because it deferred that evaluation to future proceedings and that uses mitigation measures that FWS had previously concluded are ineffective, experimental, and inadequate given the strict needs of the imperiled vernal pool species. The position of FWS thus circles back onto itself, and the species are left in a "heads I lose, tails you win" position that substitutes inadequate conservation measures in the place of the strict conservation and recovery standards of the ESA. Consequently, the Court finds that the Assurances in the Implementing Agreement ("IA"), as applied to the vernal pool species, violate the ESA because they are inconsistent with the governing statutory command to conserve the vernal pool species to bring them to the point at which protection by the ESA is no longer necessary. ง 1523(3).

One might ask, when all is said and done, "who cares about the fairy shrimp and the other vernal pool species?" Fairy shrimp, when they manage to survive to adulthood, are one-quarter inch fully grown. For the most part, they are hard to see by the naked eye. There are not many left, and if gone, who would miss there Surely, the casual observer passing through the Southern California landscape would not notice one way or the other.

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Bluebook (online)
470 F. Supp. 2d 1118, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southwest-center-for-biological-div-v-bartel-casd-2006.