Swomley v. Schroyer

CourtDistrict Court, D. Colorado
DecidedSeptember 3, 2020
Docket1:19-cv-01055
StatusUnknown

This text of Swomley v. Schroyer (Swomley v. Schroyer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Swomley v. Schroyer, (D. Colo. 2020).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLORADO Civil Action No. 19-cv-01055-TMT JOHN SWOMLEY, TODD BARKER, DAVID GOLDSTEIN, ELIZABETH SWOMLEY, OLIVIA SWOMLEY, JAMES SWOMLEY, SARAH SWOMLEY, ROBERT COSINUKE, WILLA COSINUKE, JENNIFER KRIER, ABIGAYLE COSINUKE, AUGUST COSINUKE, KATHRYN VAGNEUR, BRUCE BARKER, GERRY BARKER, TOM STEWART, BARBARA STEWART, THOMAS H. STEWART, KATHERINE KENNEY, ERIC VOTH, MICHELLE VOTH, Petitioners, v. KAREN SCHROYER, in her official capacity as District Ranger, Aspen-Sopris Ranger District, White River National Forest, United States Forest Service, and UNITED STATES FOREST SERVICE, a federal agency of the United States Department of Agriculture, Federal Respondents. MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER ________________________________________________________________________ This matter comes before this court on Petitioners’ “Petition for Review of Agency Action.” (Doc. 1.) In the Petition, 21 residents of the Upper Fryingpan Valley near Leadville, Colorado (collectively Petitioners) challenge the U.S. Forest Service’s approval of the Upper Fryingpan Project—a timber project in a section of the White River National Forest. Petitioners bring three claims under the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) and the Administrative Procedure Act (APA). Petitioners allege the Forest Service1 violated these statutes by (1) failing to consider the Project’s impact on climate change; (2) failing to adequately consider scientific evidence regarding the Project’s

impact on fungi; and (3) failing to prepare an environmental impact statement (EIS) for the Project. After careful review of the parties’ briefing and the administrative record,2 this court holds Petitioners have failed to establish any violations under NEPA or the APA. Thus, for the reasons stated below, this court denies the Petition and grants judgment in favor of the Forest Service on all counts.

I. Background This matter arises from the Forest Service’s approval of the Upper Fryingpan Project. The Project authorizes logging on 1,631 acres of land in the White River National Forest.3 Specifically, the Project is located in the Upper Fryingpan Valley and

covers numerous unconnected segments of forest roughly in between Leadville, Colorado and the Reudi Reservoir. (See Doc. 26 at 3.) Petitioners regularly use the valley,

1 Petitioners also name Karen Schroyer—the Forest Service district ranger for the relevant area—as a respondent. For convenience and because Schroyer is only sued in her official capacity, this court refers here to all respondents collectively as “the Forest Service.” 2 The Forest Service lodged the Administrative Record with the court. (Doc. 16.) This court refers to the Administrative Record herein by citing to AR-XXXX. 3 To effectuate the logging, the Project also authorizes the construction of nine miles of new roads and necessarily will result in increased traffic on certain existing roads. 2 including the Project area, to fish, hike, swim, mountain bike, hunt mushrooms, observe wildlife, and “enjoy nature.”4 (Doc. 22 at 3, 7.)

The forest in the Project area is composed of lodgepole pine, aspen, and mixed conifer species. Of the 1,631 acres, the Forest Service plans to treat 1,061 acres with a “clearcut with leave tree” method. This approach harvests all lodgepole pine over five inches in diameter, but leaves aspen and mixed conifer species on the landscape. Another 198 acres will be treated through a “coppice” method, which involves harvesting all

merchantable trees (typically those over five inches in diameter) and felling or burning all nonmerchantable trees. The remaining 369.6 acres5 will be treated through a “group selection” method, which “create[s] small openings, a quarter acre to an acre in size.” AR5386. These openings would not collectively exceed 25% to 30% of the acreage

treated with this method. Generally, the harvested trees will be removed for use as forest products and biomass fuel. The waste resulting from the logging—known as “slash”—will be piled and burned; lopped and scattered; or removed for biomass energy generation.

4 Petitioners allege additional interests in the land at issue. (See Docs. 1, 22.) These need not be recounted here as this court holds the listed interests sufficient to establish standing, see WildEarth Guardians v. Bureau of Land Mgmt., 870 F.3d 1222, 1230 (10th Cir. 2017) (requiring Petitioners show they “have suffered or will imminently suffer a concrete and particularized injury” that is “fairly traceable” to the challenged action), and the Forest Service does not challenge the justiciability of Petitioners’ suit. 5 Under this breakdown of acreage, 2.4 acres remain unaccounted for. It is not clear from the record or briefing what, if any, treatment would occur in this area, but this court finds the type of treatment, if any, immaterial. 3 The Forest Service identifies three purposes for the Project: (1) providing commercial forest products and biomass to local industries; (2) increasing the “tree

age/size class diversity at the stand and landscape scales, thereby increasing forest resistance and resilience to disturbances, such as future bark beetle outbreaks, fires, and other climate-related mortality events”; and (3) providing “snowshoe hare habitat in both the stand initiation structural stage and in mature, multi-story conifer vegetation to benefit the Canada lynx, a federally threatened species.” AR5375–76.

Approval for the Project began on October 6, 2016, when the Forest Service first initiated a scoping process. Two alternatives were considered: (1) the “no action” alternative, and (2) the “preferred alternative” of moving forward with the Project. AR3384. The Forest Service received numerous comments on its proposal and, in

response, made slight adjustments to the Project’s size and design. In August 2017, the Forest Service prepared a 172-page environmental assessment (EA), finding that the Project would have no significant impact on the environment. See AR5369–540. In December 2017, the Forest Service issued a Draft Decision Notice indicating its intent to

move forward with the Project as then-designed. Petitioners and others filed objections. As a result of the objection process, the Forest Service again made slight adjustments to the Project’s size and design. Finally, on April 30, 2018, the Forest Service issued its Final Decision Notice, authorizing implementation of the Project.

4 Petitioners initiated this suit on April 10, 2019. The Petition alleges three counts of NEPA and APA violations. In Count One, Petitioners contend the Forest Service

failed to disclose and analyze the Project’s indirect and cumulative impacts on climate change in violation of NEPA. In Count Two, Petitioners allege that the Forest Service ran afoul of NEPA by failing to adequately consider relevant science concerning the Project’s potential impact on mycelium.6 Count Three asserts another NEPA violation due to the Forest Service’s failure to prepare an environmental impact statement (EIS) for

the Project. For each count, Petitioners allege the Forest Service’s conduct was arbitrary and capricious under the APA. Accordingly, the Petition seeks a declaration of the Forest Service’s alleged violations, injunctive relief precluding the Project from moving forward

until those violations are cured, and costs and fees. II. Legal Standards Petitioners bring their claims under NEPA, the basic national charter for protecting the environment. NEPA places “upon an agency the obligation to consider every

significant aspect of the environmental impact of a proposed action [and] ensures that the agency will inform the public that it has indeed considered environmental concerns in its

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Bluebook (online)
Swomley v. Schroyer, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/swomley-v-schroyer-cod-2020.