The Clinch Coalition v. United States Forest Service

CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Virginia
DecidedApril 5, 2022
Docket2:21-cv-00003
StatusUnknown

This text of The Clinch Coalition v. United States Forest Service (The Clinch Coalition v. United States Forest Service) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Clinch Coalition v. United States Forest Service, (W.D. Va. 2022).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE WESTERN DISTRICT OF VIRGINIA BIG STONE GAP DIVISION

THE CLINCH COALITION, ET AL., ) ) Plaintiffs, ) ) V. ) Case No. 2:21CV00003 ) THE UNITED STATES FOREST ) OPINION AND ORDER SERVICE, ET AL., ) ) JUDGE JAMES P. JONES Federal Defendants, ) ) and ) ) AMERICAN LOGGERS COUNCIL, ET) AL., ) ) Intervenor Defendants. ) Sam Evans, SOUTHERN ENVIRONMENTAL LAW CENTER, Asheville, North Carolina, and Kristin Davis, SOUTHERN ENVIRONMENTAL LAW CENTER, Charlottesville, Virginia, for Plaintiffs; John P. Tustin, Senior Attorney, ENVIRONMENTAL AND NATURAL RESOURCES DIVISION, UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE, , Washington, D.C., for Defendant UNITED STATES FOREST SERVICE. The plaintiffs, various environmental and conservation entities, suing under the Administrative Procedures Act (APA), challenge a Final Rule of the United States Forest Service (Forest Service). The matter presently before the court is the plaintiffs’ objection pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 72(a) to a portion of the magistrate judge’s Order denying plaintiffs’ motion to compel completion of the Forest Service’s administrative record to include agency experts’ and the Council

on Environmental Quality’s (CEQ) input. For the reasons that follow, I disagree with the magistrate judge’s view as to the law on this issue. Accordingly, I will set aside the portion of the magistrate judge’s order objected to and direct the Forest Service to complete the record unless a valid privilege is asserted. I. The facts of this case are thoroughly recounted in the magistrate judge’s Memorandum Opinion accompanying her Order. Clinch Coalition v. United States Forest Service, No. 2-21-cv-0003-JPJ-PMS, 2021 WL 5768473, at *1-4 (W.D. Va. Dec. 6, 2021). I will briefly recount the relevant facts for purposes of deciding the present objection. On November 19, 2020, the Forest Service finalized a rule for [National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA)] compliance, (“Final Rule”), with the stated goal of “increase[ing] the pace and scale of forest and grassland management operations on the ground,” 84 Fed. Reg. 27,544, 27,550 (June 13, 2019), by “reduc[ing] the costs and time spent on environmental analysis,” 85 Fed. Reg. 73,620, 73,629 (Nov. 19, 2020). Id. at 1. Site-specific Forest Service actions are subject to NEPA, and the agency may avoid preparing an Environmental Impact Statement or Environmental Assessment only if its proposal falls within a categorial exclusion (CE). 36 C.F.R. § 220.7(a) (2020). CEs are typically limited to “small, insignificant and routine actions that categorically do not have significant impacts no matter where they occur.” Clinch Coalition, 2021 WL 5768473, at *2.

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For decades, the regulations of CEQ “prohibited development of new CEs unless the CE-developing agency showed that covered actions would not ‘individually or cumulatively’ cause significant impacts.” /d. (quoting 40 C.F.R. § 1508.4 (1978)). In July 2020, however, five months after the public comment period closed for the Forest Service’s proposed rule, CEQ published its revised NEPA regulations, overhauling the long-standing framework for developing new CEs “‘to allow development of CEs for actions that do not ‘normally’ cause significant impacts.” Jd. (quoting 40 C.F.R. § 1508.1(d)(2020)). The Forest Service thereafter provided CEQ an opportunity to review its proposed rule for conformity. The Forest Service’s Final Rule expanded its CEs for logging, road construction, and other special uses. In a 72-page report prepared by the Forest Service in support of its Final Rule, dated October 23, 2021, the agency stated that it based its conclusions — that the newly created CEs would not “normally” cause significant impacts — on three evidentiary pillars: (1) experience with past projects; (2) professional judgment; and (3) benchmarking with other agencies’ CEs. Specifically, the agency explained that it relied upon science-based input from named agency experts, as well as direction from CEQ. Suppl. Forest Service Admin. Rec. Ex. 2 Supp. Statement 9, ECF No. 44-2. On January 8, 2021, the plaintiffs filed suit, alleging that the Forest Service’s Final Rule and CEQ’s NEPA regulations are arbitrary and capricious and not in

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accordance with the law. The Forest Service filed its administrative record with the court in July of 2021 and supplemented it thereafter. On July 22, 2021, plaintiffs moved to compel completion of the administrative record and to strike non-record material.’ Specifically, they requested that the Forest Service be ordered to: (1) include all records of questionnaires, surveys and responses related to past projects; (2) include all records of input from Agency scientists or experts; (3) include all records of input from CEQ applying CEQ’s regulations to the Forest Service rulemaking and records of how that input shaped the Final Rule; (4) file with the court a privilege log of records that were considered, directly or indirectly, by the Forest Service, but excluded from the record, describing the basis for the asserted privilege with respect to each document; and (5) strike post- decisional documents from the record. Clinch Coalition, 2021 WL 5768473, at *4. On December 6, 2021, the magistrate judge denied in part and granted in part the plaintiffs’ motion. Specifically, the magistrate judge granted the motion as to records of questionnaires, surveys, and responses related to past projects, but denied the motion as to records of input from agency experts and CEQ, as well as to strike post-decisional documents. She further rejected the plaintiffs’ request that the Forest Service file a privilege log. In so holding, she drew a line between documents that the agency did not characterize as predecisional and deliberative (questionnaires, surveys, and responses) and those that it did (agency experts’ and CEQ’s input).

' CEQ also filed its administrative record with the court. However, the plaintiffs do not challenge the sufficiency of CEQ’s administrative record. -4-

While acknowledging that the Fourth Circuit has not squarely addressed the issue, the magistrate judge held that predecisional and deliberative documents are not part of the administrative record in the first instance, reasoning that the court does not usually consider the subjective motivations of agency decisionmakers and the presumptive exclusion of such documents safeguards the agency’s ability to

engage in frank and uninhibited discussion of legal and policy matters. She further determined that the plaintiffs may obtain documents classified by the agency as predecisional and deliberative only by showing bad faith or improper behavior, which they have not attempted to do. Finally, she concluded that cases interpreting the scope of the deliberative process privilege under the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) are in applicable in APA cases. On December 20, 2021, the plaintiffs filed a partial objection to the magistrate judge’s Order, challenging only her denial of the motion to compel completion of the record with agency experts’ and CEQ’s input. They claim that the magistrate judge’s holding was clearly erroneous, contending that she failed to consider the disputed documents’ role in the decision-making process and that the agency’s unilateral designation of documents that were incontrovertibly considered and relied

upon by decisionmakers as predecisional and deliberative frustrates judicial review.

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Bluebook (online)
The Clinch Coalition v. United States Forest Service, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-clinch-coalition-v-united-states-forest-service-vawd-2022.