Tulkisarmute Native Community Council v. Heinze

898 P.2d 935, 1995 Alas. LEXIS 83, 1995 WL 444821
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 28, 1995
DocketS-5711
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 898 P.2d 935 (Tulkisarmute Native Community Council v. Heinze) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tulkisarmute Native Community Council v. Heinze, 898 P.2d 935, 1995 Alas. LEXIS 83, 1995 WL 444821 (Ala. 1995).

Opinion

OPINION

EASTAUGH, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

Tulkisarmute Native Community Council, the tribal government of the Village of Tu-luksak, and Tuluksak residents (collectively TNCC) challenge the decision of the Department of Natural Resources (DNR) to extend fifteen permits for the appropriation of water in the Tuluksak River and its tributaries. 1 The water is to be used for placer gold mining, a procedure in which overburden is removed from streambeds and nearby lands and the underlying gravels are mixed with water and run through a sluicebox. Because the water is taken from a stream, state law requires that it be appropriated. Residents of the Village of Tuluksak rely on the river for subsistence fish and wildlife uses and oppose the permit extensions. They contend that the extensions are without basis, and violate applicable regulations and article VIII, section 13 of the Alaska Constitution. They assert that appropriation of water for placer mining threatens the quantity and quality of the water and the health of fish and wildlife populations. DNR and interve-nors Tuluksak Dredging, Ltd. (TDL) and Calista Native Corporation (Calista) (collectively TDL) support extending the permits so that TDL may continue placer mining on the Tuluksak River.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

In 1981 and 1982, TDL applied for water rights for placer mining on the Tuluksak River and its headwater tributaries. 2 In February 1982 DNR issued permit ADL 209433-P, authorizing the appropriation of 6.0 cubic feet of water per second (cfs). In June 1982 DNR issued a second permit, ADL 213090-P, authorizing the appropriation of 7.0 cfs. ADL 213090-P expired in March 1985; ADL 209433-P expired in March 1986. In December 1986 DNR extended the permits for another four years. However, instead of issuing two extended permits, DNR separated the two original permits into fifteen separate permits. 3 Each of the fifteen permits authorized an appropriation of 5.6 cfs.

In February 1990, in anticipation of the expiration of the 1986 permits, ADF & G reported to DNR the likelihood that in seven of the stream locations, less than 5.6 cfs of streamflow existed. Consequently, ADF & G concluded that permitting appropriation of *939 that amount would effectively deprive those streams of all their water. 4 ADF & G requested that DNR supply specific information on those streams and an additional stream to complete its review. 5 DNR apparently never responded to these requests.

When the fifteen 1986 permits expired in March 1990, TDL applied for an extension of each of the permits. 6 DNR issued TDL temporary water use permits for the 1990 mining season.

In October 1990 DNR held a public hearing in Tuluksak at which villagers testified and unanimously opposed the extensions. The villagers described a variety of adverse impacts on the river which they attributed to mining: the river had grown shallow; the water was no longer safe to drink; the number of fish in the river had decreased dramatically; and the water had discolored river boats. By letter the villagers also asked that DNR not extend the permits and asserted that DNR had committed specified procedural and substantive errors.

In its April 22,1991 written decision on the request for extension of the permits, DNR extended the permits through October 31, 1993, the end of the 1993 mining season. DNR rejected the villagers’ view that TDL’s mining adversely affected the quality and quantity of the water. DNR indicated that the turbidity resulted from natural causes; there was no proof mining caused loss of water depth, lower fish populations, and health problems; the use of water for mining is nonconsumptive because TDL operates a 100% water recycling system; and each creek contained sufficient water to support the withdrawal of 5.6 cfs. DNR also reasoned that “the extension of the permits is preferable to the issuance of certificates of appropriation, because of the complexity of the issues and the potential change in land ownership [from the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) to Calista].”

TNCC filed an administrative appeal of the decision to extend the permits. DNR denied the appeal, stating that it relied on the best available hydrologic data to make its decision and otherwise complied with its regulations. DNR conceded that there would be a net water loss as a result of the appropriation but stated that the permits would “be conditioned to determine how much water is diverted and when it is diverted.” DNR amended the permits to require the collection of hydrologic data to document the flow and water level in the river and creeks and the measurement of the amount of water diverted each mining season.

TNCC appealed DNR’s decision to the superior court. Contemporaneous with the filing of their opening superior court brief, TNCC filed a variety of documents to augment the record. Two of these documents were reports prepared by consultants retained by TNCC. The reports asserted that in most streams there was insufficient data to conclude that there would be no harm to fish, and that in at least some streams degradation of fish habitat was certain to occur.

After a hearing, Superior Court Judge Brian C. Shortell remanded the matter to DNR to decide whether to accept and consider the additional materials offered by TNCC. DNR decided to add eight out of ten exhibits to the administrative record, but did not amend its decision except to note that TDL had abandoned its request for water at Shovel Creek. After further briefing by the parties, in April 1993 Superior Court Judge Dana Fabe affirmed DNR’s decision. This appeal followed.

*940 III. DISCUSSION

TNCC raises three issues on appeal: (1) whether DNR acted outside its authority by extending the water rights permits under the circumstances of this case; (2) whether substantial evidence supported extending the water rights permits; and (3) whether DNR’s extension of the permits violated article VIII, section 13 of the Alaska Constitution. 7

A. Standard of Review

We have not previously addressed the standard of review for a challenge of a DNR decision regarding an application for water rights. However, for cases involving preferential land rights, we have stated that we review “discretionary actions that do not require formal procedures under the arbitrary and capricious or abuse of discretion standard.” Olson v. State, Dep’t of Natural Resources, 799 P.2d 289, 293 (Alaska 1990). “This is also the federal rule.” Id. at 293 n. 7. Under that standard

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898 P.2d 935, 1995 Alas. LEXIS 83, 1995 WL 444821, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tulkisarmute-native-community-council-v-heinze-alaska-1995.