Wild Wilderness v. Allen

12 F. Supp. 3d 1309, 2014 WL 1477398, 2014 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 53516
CourtDistrict Court, D. Oregon
DecidedApril 14, 2014
DocketCivil No. 6:13-0523-TC
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 12 F. Supp. 3d 1309 (Wild Wilderness v. Allen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wild Wilderness v. Allen, 12 F. Supp. 3d 1309, 2014 WL 1477398, 2014 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 53516 (D. Or. 2014).

Opinion

ORDER

COFFIN, United States Magistrate Judge:

Plaintiffs bring this action pursuant to the Administrative Procedures Act, 5 U.S.C. § 701 et seq. They seek to set aside a decision by the Forest Service to construct the Kapka Sno-park.

Presently before the court are plaintiffs’ motion (# 30) for summary judgment, the defendant-intervenor’s1 cross-motion (# 35) for summary judgment, and defendants’ cross-motion (#36) for summary judgment.

Excluding the Administrative Record (AR), declarations and exhibits, there are more than 215 pages of briefing on these motions. Plaintiffs make numerous arguments in support of multiple claims and counts, but ultimately the arguments are not persuasive and, for the reasons stated below, this action is dismissed.

Factual Background

“Sno-parks” provide parking for outdoor enthusiasts. The U.S. Forest Service made a decision to build the Kapka Sno-[1312]*1312park along the Cascades Lake Highway area near Bend and Mount Bachelor in Central Oregon. This area is already used extensively by snowmobilers and back-country skiers and snowshoers who currently use existing sno-parks. The Kapka Sno-park will not change the motorized and non-motorized allocation areas already established in the region.

The Kapka Sno-park involves the construction of a six-acre parking lot area, two vault toilets, information kiosks, and connector trails to an existing network of trails. AR 16721. The Kapka Butte area is open to snowmobile use, and Kapka Butte is encircled by existing marked snowmobile trails. EA 29, AR 15394 (showing snowmobile trails # 45, # 5, and #4 ringing the butte), AR 17468 (same), AR 16689 (noting that snowmobile use has occurred in the project area for years). Directly across the highway are large contiguous areas that are entirely closed to snowmobiles and open to off-trail skiing (the Swampy Lakes and Bend Watershed areas). See AR 15394/16721.

In January 2009, the Forest Service published a notice of intent to publish an Environmental Impact Statement (“EIS”) for the Kapka project. AR 10772. At that time, the proposal included tree-cutting in an Inventoried Roadless Area, a situation where the Forest Service’s regulations provide that an EIS may be needed. See AR 12167, AR 12808, 36 C.F.R. § 220.5(a)(2), AR 9210. Many public comments to the Forest Service proposal focused on social conflict between motorized and non-motorized recreation users, particularly in the Dutchman Sno-park and Dutchman Flat areas. AR 9016-202; AR 16364.

In April 2011, the Forest Service published a Draft Environmental Impact Statement (“DEIS”) for a slightly different version of the Kapka project than was ultimately adopted in September 2012. AR 13055-338. The Forest Service took public comments for 75 days. AR 16678. Plaintiffs and other interested parties submitted comments. See AR 14350-72, AR 14494-645. After reviewing the comments, the Forest Service determined on September 14, 2012 that a Final EIS was not needed, because it did not believe the project had significant environmental effects requiring a final EIS. AR 16824. The Forest Service announced that it would proceed with its National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) review using an Environmental Assessment (“EA”) instead. AR 16824.

On September 20, 2012, the Forest Service issued an EA that provided a detañed analysis of three action alternatives and a “no-action” alternative for Kapka. AR 16362-713. Two of the alternatives would create a larger non-motorized area near Dutchman Sno-park. AR 16366. The EA also briefly discussed seven (7) alternatives that it considered but eliminated from detailed study. AR 16405-09. These alternatives including creating a large non-motorized recreation area at Tumalo Mountain. AR 16406-08. In a 37-page appendix to the EA, the Forest Service responded to the public comments that it received on the DEIS. AR 16678-713. The Forest Service noted that a proposal to close Tumalo Mountain to motorized use would require a large scale assessment through a separate NEPA process. AR 16702.

On September 20, 2012, the Forest Service also issued a Decision Notice and Finding of No Significant Impact (“Decision” or “FONSI”) for Kapka. AR 16714-43. The Decision approves construction of the new sno-park, which will provide 70 parking slots for larger vehicles and vehicles towing trailers, two vault toilets, and information kiosks. AR 16721. Construe[1313]*1313tion of the parking area •will disturb about 6 acres of ground. In the Decision, the Forest Service scaled back the size of the parking area by more than 25% from the original proposed alternative. AR 16721 (square footage of final authorized area); AR 16432 (square footage of original proposed alternative).

The Decision also authorizes a 0.2 mile snowmobile connector trail from the new parking lot to an existing trail, and a 0.6 mile Nordic connector trail to link the new lot to the Nordic non-motorized trail system on the other side of Cascade Lakes Highway. AR 16722. The new park serves existing winter recreation trails and areas and does not change the existing motorized/non-motorized allocation. AR 16722, AR 16705 (response to comments). Based on design capacity, the Kapka Sno-park could allow for an increase in motorized use on a “peak-use” day of approximately 182 snowmobiles. AR 16435.

In the Kapka EA, the Forest Service acknowledged that “social conflict” among recreational users is a “key issue,” and addressed that issue in detail. AR 16462-88. As the Forest Service discussed in the EA and Decision, the agency believes that Kapka will reduce the overall congestion and conflict in the Dutchman Sno-park and Dutchman Flat areas. AR 16730. It will provide new parking capacity that will alleviate the well documented parking congestion at Dutchman. See AR 16727, AR 13734-43 (photos of Dutchman Sno-park congestion), AR 16448-50, AR 16473-75. Due to Kapka, snowmobilers who want to access Tumalo Mountain and the high country may now bypass the Dutchman area completely via the existing snowmobile trail # 6. AR 16730, AR 15394 (2011 winter recreation map). The Forest Service believes that the new park “will become the most in-demand sno-park among motorized users on the [Deschutes] for most of the winter season.” AR 16728. The higher-elevation park would have a longer use season than other lower-elevation parks, easy access from the highway, and direct connections to existing trails. AR 12807. The new park will alleviate problems with illegal parking along the Cascade Lakes Highway. AR 16729.

Discussion

Plaintiffs contend the Forest Service’s decision to build the Kapka Sno-park should be set aside. More specifically, plaintiffs argue that “by relying on an assessment” that they contend “ignored the key issue of increased user conflicts caused by the construction of the new sno-park, the Forest Service did not adequately consider the impacts of the project in violation of-NEPA.” Furthermore, plaintiffs contend that “by issuing the decision to build the Kapka Sno-park without minimizing such conflicts, the Forest Service was not acting consistently with its Forest Plan or travel management regulations, in violation of the National Forest Management Act [NFMA] and the 2005 Travel Management Rule.” Id.

I.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
12 F. Supp. 3d 1309, 2014 WL 1477398, 2014 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 53516, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wild-wilderness-v-allen-ord-2014.