Alaska Fish and Wildlife Conservation Fund v. State ( 2015 )


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    THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF ALASKA
    ALASKA FISH AND WILDLIFE                       )
    CONSERVATION FUND,                             )        Supreme Court No. S-14516
    )
    Appellant,               )        Superior Court No. 4FA-11-01474 CI
    )
    v.                               )        OPINION
    )
    STATE OF ALASKA and                            )        No. 6992 - March 27, 2015
    AHTNA TENE NENE’,                              )
    )
    Appellees.               )
    )
    Appeal from the Superior Court of the State of Alaska,
    Fourth Judicial District, Michael P. McConahy, Judge.
    Appearances: Michael C. Kramer, Borgeson & Kramer, P.C.,
    Fairbanks, for Appellant. Michael G. Mitchell, Sr. Assistant
    Attorney General, Anchorage, and Michael C. Geraghty,
    Attorney General, Juneau, for Appellee State of Alaska. John
    M. Starkey, Hobbs Straus Dean & Walker, Anchorage, for
    Appellee Ahtna Tene Nene’.
    Before: Fabe, Chief Justice, Winfree, Stowers, Maassen, and
    Bolger, Justices.
    MAASSEN, Justice.
    I.    INTRODUCTION
    Regulations promulgated by the Alaska Board of Game establish two
    different systems of subsistence hunting for moose and caribou in Alaska’s Copper Basin
    region: (1) community hunts for groups following a hunting pattern similar to the one
    traditionally practiced by members of the Ahtna Tene Nene’ community; and
    (2) individual hunts.1    A private outdoors group, the Alaska Fish and Wildlife
    Conservation Fund, argues that this regulatory framework violates the equal access and
    equal protection clauses of the Alaska Constitution by establishing a preference for a
    certain user group. The Fund also argues that the regulations are not authorized by the
    governing statutes, that they conflict with other regulations, and that notice of important
    regulatory changes was not properly given to the public. But because we conclude that
    the Board’s factual findings support a constitutionally valid distinction between patterns
    of subsistence use, and because the Board’s regulations do not otherwise violate the law,
    we affirm the superior court’s grant of summary judgment to the State, upholding the
    statute and the Board regulations against the Fund’s legal challenge.
    II.    FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS
    The Copper Basin Community Hunt Area, located in Southcentral Alaska,
    includes Game Management Units 11 and 13 and a portion of Unit 12.2 After public
    hearings, the Board made extensive findings about the area in 2006, describing the
    customary and traditional subsistence use of moose and caribou.3 The Board recognized
    the existence of a community-based pattern of subsistence hunting, originating with the
    1
    5 Alaska Administrative Code (AAC) 85.025 (2012); 5 AAC 85.045;
    5 AAC 92.050; 5 AAC 92.072.
    2
    In a recent case involving these same parties, we discussed Ahtna’s and the
    Board’s respective histories with Unit 13 moose and caribou. See Ahtna Tene Nene’ v.
    State, Dep’t of Fish & Game, 
    288 P.3d 452
    , 455-57 (Alaska 2012).
    3
    The Board made these findings by considering the eight criteria described
    in 5 AAC 99.010(b). We upheld these eight criteria in Alaska Fish & Wildlife
    Conservation Fund v. State, Dep’t of Fish & Game, Bd. of Fisheries, 
    289 P.3d 903
    (Alaska 2012).
    -2-                                       6992
    Ahtna Athabascan communities in the region and “later adopted by other Alaska
    residents.” This community-based pattern, the Board found, was characterized by use
    of the entire caribou or moose, leaving only the antlers behind, and by events of
    “[w]idespread community-wide sharing” after the harvest.
    In 2011the Board made supplemental findings about a second subsistence
    hunting pattern in the Copper Basin. This pattern, according to the Board, was an
    individual use pattern that occurs “among households and families” but unlike the
    community-based pattern is not “linked to extensive networks of cooperation and
    sharing.” The individual use pattern occurs mostly during the fall, and it centers upon
    areas accessible from the road system. Individual subsistence users, like community
    subsistence users, tend to return to their “well-known and long-established
    camping/hunting sites,” but they tend to travel much farther to get there. The individual
    use pattern does not tend to use organ meat; meat sharing is “less formal”; and the “peer
    pressure to share is far less pronounced.”
    Based on these two recognized patterns of subsistence hunting, the Board
    adopted regulations that bifurcated subsistence hunts4 in Unit 13 into community
    harvests and individual hunts.5 A community harvest permit is issued to members of a
    group of 25 or more who agree to engage in the hunting practices described in the
    Board’s 2006 findings, including meat sharing and organ salvage.6 The community
    moose hunt has a longer hunting season, has a larger geographic area, and is allocated
    4
    Subsistence hunting statutes divide subsistence hunts into two tiers: Tier
    I hunts are those in which the resource is abundant enough to satisfy all subsistence uses;
    Tier II hunts are those in which it is not. AS 16.05.258(b)(1)-(4); see State v. Morry,
    
    836 P.2d 358
    , 365-66 (Alaska 1992).
    5
    5 AAC 85.045; 5 AAC 92.050; 5 AAC 92.072.
    6
    5 AAC 92.072(c)(1).
    -3-                                     6992
    up to 70 moose of any size.7 For caribou, the season, hunting area, and size of animal
    that may be hunted are the same for both the community harvest and individual permit
    holders, but the community hunt is allocated up to 300 caribou.8 (What this allocation
    means in practical terms is addressed later in this opinion.)
    These regulations were challenged in the superior court by the nonprofit
    Alaska Fish and Wildlife Conservation Fund. The Fund argued that the regulations
    violated the Administrative Procedure Act,9 the subsistence hunting statutes, and article
    VIII of the Alaska Constitution. The Fund asked the court to enjoin all community
    harvest hunts and to strike any statutes and regulations purporting to allow them. The
    Fund also asked the court to require the revisor of statutes to strike or amend statutes that
    Alaska’s courts have ruled unconstitutional in the past. The local tribe, Ahtna Tene
    Nene’, was granted leave to intervene as a defendant.
    All parties agreed that the issues before the superior court could be decided
    on summary judgment. The superior court ruled in favor of the State, holding that the
    challenged regulation had been properly noticed; that the regulatory scheme was within
    7
    
    Id. Individual hunters
    may only harvest bull moose with spike-fork, 50­
    inch, or 4 brow tine antlers, while community harvesters may harvest any bulls but no
    more than 70 that could not have been harvested by individual hunters. 5 AAC 85.045.
    The community harvesters’ any-bull allocation increased to 100 for the 2013 season.
    5 AAC 85.045 (am. 7/1/13).
    8
    See 5 AAC 85.025. In testimony before the Board, a representative from
    the Alaska Outdoor Council, the Fund’s sister organization, expressed concern that
    community harvest permits would be issued per person while individual permits would
    be issued per household. This potential inequity never occurred because by special
    regulation the Board limited hunters in Unit 13 to one caribou per household regardless
    of whether they held a community harvest permit or an individual permit. See 5 AAC
    92.071(a); 5 AAC 92.072(c)(2)(A).
    9
    AS 44.62.010 – .950.
    -4-                                        6992
    the Board’s statutory power because the subsistence hunting statutes allow the Board to
    distinguish between different subsistence uses; and that the community harvest permit
    system did not violate the equal access provisions of the Alaska Constitution, article
    VIII, because participation in a community harvest was open to all Alaska residents. The
    Fund now appeals.
    III.   STANDARDS OF REVIEW
    Summary judgment may be granted only when there is no genuine issue of
    material fact and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law, and we
    therefore review grants of summary judgment de novo.10 In a review of agency action
    we substitute our judgment for that of the agency when interpreting the Alaska
    Constitution and deciding issues of law.11 But “[w]hen the interpretation of a statute or
    other question of law implicates ‘agency expertise as to complex matters or as to the
    formulation of fundamental policy,’ we defer to the agency’s interpretation so long as
    it has a ‘reasonable basis’ in the law.”12 If “a case may be fairly decided on statutory
    grounds or on an alternative basis, we will not address the constitutional issues.”13 When
    10
    Gilbert v. State, Dep’t of Fish & Game, Bd. of Fisheries, 
    803 P.2d 391
    , 394
    (Alaska 1990) (citing Southeast Alaska Constr. Co. v. State, Dep’t of Transp., 
    791 P.2d 339
    , 342 (Alaska 1990); Grand v. Municipality of Anchorage, 
    753 P.2d 141
    , 143 n.3
    (Alaska 1988)).
    11
    Alaska Fish & Wildlife Conservation Fund v. State, Dep’t of Fish & Game,
    Bd. of Fisheries, 
    289 P.3d 903
    , 907 (Alaska 2012) (citing Koyukuk River Basin Moose
    Co-Mgmt. Team v. Bd. of Game, 
    76 P.3d 383
    , 386 (Alaska 2003)).
    12
    Wilber v. State, Commercial Fisheries Entry Comm’n, 
    187 P.3d 460
    , 465
    (Alaska 2008) (quoting Rose v. Commercial Fisheries Entry Comm’n, 
    647 P.2d 154
    , 161
    (Alaska 1982)).
    13
    
    Id. (citing State,
    Dep’t of Health & Soc. Servs. v. Valley Hosp. Ass’n,
    
    116 P.3d 580
    , 584 (Alaska 2005)).
    -5-                                      6992
    a regulation is adopted in accordance with the Administrative Procedure Act and the
    legislature intended to give the agency discretion, our review is limited to ascertaining
    whether the regulation is consistent with its authorizing statutory provisions and whether
    it is reasonable and not arbitrary.14
    IV.	   DISCUSSION
    A.	    The Community Harvest Permit System Does Not Violate Article VIII
    Of The Alaska Constitution.
    The Fund argues that the community harvest permit system is
    unconstitutional because it creates classifications that result in disparate treatment of
    Alaskans who are otherwise similarly situated.        The superior court rejected this
    argument, reasoning that “[a]ny Alaskan is eligible to participate in either opportunity
    [i.e., the individual hunt or the community harvest] by complying with the regulatory
    requirements for each.” We agree.
    Sections 3, 15, and 17 of article VIII are the equal access clauses of the
    Alaska Constitution; they provide the constitutional framework within which the State
    regulates subsistence hunting and fishing. Section 3, the common use clause, provides
    that “[w]herever occurring in their natural state, fish, wildlife, and waters are reserved
    to the people for common use.” Section 17, the uniform application clause, requires that
    “[l]aws and regulations governing the use or disposal of natural resources . . . apply
    equally to all persons similarly situated with reference to the subject matter and purpose
    to be served by the law or regulation.” Section 15 provides that there shall be “[n]o
    exclusive right or special privilege of fishery . . . in the natural waters of the State”;
    though the clause addresses only fishing, we apply its underlying principles when
    14
    
    Id. -6- 6992
    interpreting sections 3 and 17.15 Together, these provisions “share at least one meaning:
    exclusive or special privileges to take fish and wildlife are prohibited.”16
    The equal access clauses are not implicated by a regulation that applies
    equally to all the State’s citizens.17 To be invalid under these clauses, a regulation must
    place “limits . . . on the admission to resource user groups.”18 “[W]e have consistently
    defined ‘user groups’ in terms of the nature of the resource (i.e., fish or wildlife) and the
    nature of the use (i.e., commercial, sport or subsistence).”19 We have refused to define
    “user groups” based on a “particular means or method of access” to the resource,20 and
    we have declined to recognize a constitutional right to “convenient” access.21 Instead,
    we have repeatedly held that “[i]nconvenience is in no sense the equivalent of a bar to
    eligibility for participation in subsistence hunting and fishing and does not suffice to
    trigger an analysis under the equal access clauses.”22
    15
    McDowell v. State, 
    785 P.2d 1
    , 9 (Alaska 1989).
    16
    
    Id. at 6.
           17
    Interior Alaska Airboat Ass’n v. State, Bd. of Game, 
    18 P.3d 686
    , 695
    (Alaska 2001) (citing Alaska Fish Spotters Ass’n v. State, Dep’t of Fish & Game,
    
    838 P.2d 798
    , 804 (Alaska 1992)).
    18
    Tongass Sport Fishing Ass’n v. State, 
    866 P.2d 1314
    , 1318 (Alaska 1994)
    (internal citations omitted); see also Interior Alaska Airboat 
    Ass’n, 18 P.3d at 695
    .
    19
    Alaska Fish 
    Spotters, 838 P.2d at 803
    .
    20
    
    Id. 21 State
    v. Kenaitze Indian Tribe, 
    894 P.2d 632
    , 640 (Alaska 1995).
    22
    Interior Alaska Airboat 
    Ass’n, 18 P.3d at 695
    (quoting Kenaitze Indian
    
    Tribe, 894 P.2d at 640
    ) (internal quotation marks omitted).
    -7-                                        6992
    In Alaska Fish Spotters Ass’n v. State, we reviewed a challenge to a
    regulation that prohibited the aerial spotting of salmon in Bristol Bay.23 Despite the
    Association’s argument that the regulation “eliminated their ‘historical’ and ‘long
    enjoyed’ access to the fishery resource” as a unique user group, we concluded that the
    common use clause does not obligate the State to “guarantee access to a natural resource
    by a person’s preferred means or method.”24 We further explained that although “each
    ban directly affected only a small number of people who had previously used the banned
    tool” and “precluded a preferred use of the fisheries resource,” the bans applied equally
    to all persons in the State and did not preclude all uses of the resource.25 We noted other
    ways the members of the Association could access the fishery resources besides the one
    they preferred: they “may access the resource in the same manner open to any other
    commercial fishers. They may participate in industries which support the fishery harvest.
    They may continue to use their planes to spot fish before an open commercial fishing
    period and to transport supplies and personnel for commercial fishing clients.”26 We
    concluded that the regulation was “a permissible limitation on the means and methods
    which any person may use to take salmon in Bristol Bay” and did not violate the
    Constitution’s common use clause.27
    
    23 838 P.2d at 799-800
    .
    24
    
    Id. at 801.
           25
    
    Id. at 802.
           26
    
    Id. 27 Id.
    -8-                                       6992
    In this case, the relevant “user group” is subsistence hunters, which means
    all Alaskans, urban or rural.28 All Alaskans are eligible to receive a community harvest
    permit; the only requirement for obtaining one is collaboration with other resource users.
    Like the members of the Fish Spotters Association, hunters who choose not to join a
    community group have another way to access moose and caribou: they can apply for an
    individual hunting permit. The requirement of joining a group may well be inconvenient
    for those who lack a ready community; but inconvenience is not a bar to eligibility for
    participation, and it is therefore insufficient to raise a constitutional claim under the equal
    access clauses.29
    The Fund also argues that AS 16.05.330(c) and 5 AAC 92.072(d) are
    facially invalid under article VIII. The superior court found that while these provisions
    “could be applied in a manner offensive to article VIII,” they could also be applied
    constitutionally.
    “[A] party raising a constitutional challenge to a statute bears the burden
    of demonstrating the constitutional violation. A presumption of constitutionality applies,
    and doubts are resolved in favor of constitutionality.” 30 The Fund’s main complaint
    28
    McDowell v. State, 
    785 P.2d 1
    , 9 (Alaska 1989) (holding that admission to
    subsistence user groups could not be based on rural residency).
    29
    The Fund argues that the regulations are unconstitutional under our decision
    in Grunert v. State, 
    109 P.3d 924
    (Alaska 2005). In Grunert we invalidated a
    cooperative salmon fishery, but we did so under the Limited Entry Act, not article VIII.
    
    Id. at 932-46.
    As the State points out in its brief, there is “no analog to the Limited Entry
    Act or other statutory limitation on the Board’s authority to regulate in the subsistence
    [hunting] context.” We agree with the State that Grunert does not control our decision
    here.
    30
    Estate of Kim ex rel. Alexander v. Coxe, 
    295 P.3d 380
    , 388 (Alaska 2013)
    (alteration in original) (quoting Harrod v. State, Dep’t of Revenue, 
    255 P.3d 991
    , 1000­
    (continued...)
    -9-                                         6992
    about AS 16.05.330(c) is that it “was passed as part of a comprehensive rural preference
    subsistence statute intended by the Governor and legislature to circumvent this Court’s
    1985 Madison decision.”31 But we will uphold a statute against a charge that it is facially
    unconstitutional even if it might sometimes create problems as applied, as long as the
    statute “has a plainly legitimate sweep.”32 And the Fund admits the statute can be read
    constitutionally: “At most, AS 16.05.330(c) gives the Boards discretion to consolidate
    and streamline the permitting process by issuing permits to areas, villages, communities,
    or groups.” The Fund’s facial challenge to the statute’s constitutionality therefore fails.33
    B.     The Community Harvest Regulations Are Authorized By Statute.
    The Fund’s challenge to the statutory authority for the community harvest
    system raises three questions: (1) whether the Board has the authority to adopt
    regulations that grant permits to communities; (2) whether such regulations can
    permissibly differentiate among various patterns of use of a subsistence resource; and
    30
    (...continued)
    01 (Alaska 2011)).
    31
    The reference is to Madison v. Alaska Dep’t of Fish & Game, 
    696 P.2d 168
    (Alaska 1985), in which we held that subsistence uses could not be constitutionally
    limited to members of communities that had historically practiced subsistence hunting
    and fishing.
    32
    State v. Planned Parenthood of Alaska, 
    171 P.3d 577
    , 581 (Alaska 2007)
    (quoting Treacy v. Municipality of Anchorage, 
    91 P.3d 252
    , 260 n.14 (Alaska 2004))
    (internal quotation marks omitted).
    33
    The Fund also urges us to strike several unconstitutional statutes. But the
    Fund does not state which statutes are unconstitutional or what authority we have to
    rewrite statutes. We find this issue waived as inadequately briefed and do not consider
    it here. See Adamson v. Univ. of Alaska, 
    819 P.2d 886
    , 889 n.3 (Alaska 1991) (“[W]here
    a point is given only a cursory statement in the argument portion of a brief, the point will
    not be considered on appeal.”).
    -10-                                       6992
    (3) whether the regulations at issue here provide a “reasonable opportunity” for each
    subsistence use pattern. We answer all three questions in the affirmative.
    First, under AS 16.05.330(c) the Board “may adopt regulations providing
    for the issuance and expiration of subsistence permits for areas, villages, communities,
    groups, or individuals as needed for authorizing, regulating, and monitoring the
    subsistence harvest of fish and game.” This plain statutory language authorizes the
    issuance of community permits.
    Second, AS 16.05.258(b)(2) not only grants the Board the authority to
    differentiate between subsistence uses, it requires the Board to adopt regulations that
    “provide a reasonable opportunity for subsistence uses” of those game populations that
    are “customarily and traditionally taken or used for subsistence.”34 Here, after the Board
    identified the two customary and traditional subsistence use patterns of moose and
    caribou in the Copper Basin — the community use pattern and the individual use pattern
    — it was statutorily required to “provide a reasonable opportunity” for these subsistence
    uses of the relevant game populations.35 The Board’s findings described two very
    different use patterns, with different hunting areas and seasons, different parts of the
    animal consumed, and different cultural and social traditions associated with the hunt.
    34
    AS 16.05.258(a), (b)(2)(A).
    35
    AS 16.05.258(b)(2)(A).
    -11­                                      6992
    Because both patterns are “subsistence uses,”36 the Board was required to provide “a
    reasonable opportunity” for each of them.37
    The Board did so by its creation of the parallel community harvest and
    individual permit systems. The permit conditions for the community harvest closely
    track the Board’s 2006 findings of customary and traditional use. The Board found that
    a community hunting pattern “was originally defined by the Ahtna Athabascan residents”
    but was “then adopted and modified by other local settlers in the early 20th century.”
    The Board found that “[m]ost of the long-term subsistence patterns in this area are
    community-based,” and that
    specialized hunters tend to provide for the community at
    large, sometimes or often taking more than necessary for their
    own family’s use in their capacities as community providers,
    and to fulfill social and cultural obligations. Community
    subsistence activities are then divided among members and
    further introduced into traditional patterns of barter and
    exchange. Thus, some harvest and others process, distribute,
    receive and utilize the results of the harvest.
    The community harvest permits reasonably provide for this use by allowing “a
    community or group of 25 or more to select, from their group members, individual
    36
    AS 16.05.940(33) (Subsistence uses are the “noncommercial, customary
    and traditional uses of wild, renewable resources . . . for direct personal or family
    consumption as food, shelter, fuel, clothing, tools, or transportation, for the making and
    selling of handicraft articles out of nonedible by-products of fish and wildlife resources
    taken for personal or family consumption.”).
    37
    AS 16.05.258(b)(2)(A). We observe that the Fund’s challenge is based on
    what it views as the Board’s preferential treatment of one subsistence user group over
    another. It does not directly contend that holders of individual subsistence permits
    lacked a “reasonable opportunity,” only that the opportunities in the community hunt
    were better.
    -12-                                      6992
    harvesters who may possess particular expertise in hunting to harvest wildlife resources
    on behalf of the community or group.”
    Nor was the group size of 25 chosen arbitrarily. The Board was concerned
    that without a minimum size, “groups of two or three people [could] come in and create
    a very huge administrative burden.” The Board set the group membership at 25 “to
    ensure that it really is a communal experience, and not just two hunting buddies together,
    that there really is some level of interaction and sharing and that there’s a genuine
    group.” This tracks the Board’s 2006 findings about the community use pattern, which
    showed that the community or group potentially benefitting from a hunt was larger than
    a nuclear family — it involved “all family members, elders, [and] others in need.”
    The community use pattern also involves the “salvage and use [of] all parts
    of the harvested animal, in conformance with traditions prohibiting waste.” Hunters
    retrieve “the entire carcass and all bones, hide, head, heart, liver, kidneys, stomach, and
    fat,” leaving only the antlers behind. Permit conditions therefore require meat salvage,
    the taking of “[a]ll edible meat from the frontquarters, hindquarters, ribs, neck, and
    backbone, as well as the heart, liver, kidneys, and fat.”
    Also involved in the community use pattern is “[w]idespread community-
    wide sharing.” Unlike use patterns in which hunters “are completely free to share, or not
    to share, as they see fit,” the community pattern comes with a social obligation to share
    the game with others. This sharing “plays a key economic role in distributing essential
    food supplies throughout the community.”           Permit conditions therefore require
    community harvest permit holders to participate in “at least one communal sharing
    event.”
    The community harvest permit also authorizes a larger hunting area than
    that open to individual hunters. Community harvest permit holders are allowed to hunt
    -13-                                      6992
    moose in all of Game Management Units 11 and 13 and part of Unit 12.38 Individuals
    are limited to Unit 13.39 This distinction is based on the Board’s 2006 and 2011findings
    about the different hunting areas frequented by community and individual hunters. The
    Board found that community hunters in the Copper Basin have “an intimate and
    exclusive relationship between the user and a very particular set of places generally in
    close proximity to the hunter’s residence.” Community hunters traditionally do not
    travel outside the Copper Basin to hunt, even when caribou and moose are hard to find.
    The Board found that individual hunters, in contrast, traditionally hunt in areas reached
    by road from Anchorage and Fairbanks, along the Denali and Glenn Highways, both of
    which are mostly within Unit 13; and they tend to go where the game is.40
    We now consider whether the Board’s regulations specific to the moose
    hunt and those specific to the caribou hunt satisfy the “reasonable and not arbitrary”
    standard of review.41
    1.     Moose hunting
    Community harvest hunters are permitted to hunt one bull moose of any
    size for each person on the community group’s list, while individual hunters are limited
    to bull moose with spike-fork antlers, 50-inch antlers, or antlers with four or more brow
    38
    The 2011-12 hunt conditions opened only Unit 13 to caribou hunting by
    community harvest permit holders, “due to conservation concerns for adjacent caribou
    herds.”
    39
    5 AAC 85.045.
    40
    See Unit 13: Nelchina-Upper Susitna, A LASKA D EPARTMENT OF FISH &
    G AME (May 8, 2012), http://www.adfg.alaska.gov/static/hunting/maps/gmumaps/pdfs/
    13.pdf.
    41
    See Wilber v. State, Commercial Fisheries Entry Comm’n, 
    187 P.3d 460
    ,
    465 (Alaska 2008).
    -14-                                     6992
    tines on one side.42 Community harvest hunters also have a longer season: August 10
    to September 20, as opposed to September 1 to September 20 for individuals.43 The
    Fund argues that this provides the community harvest hunters with “an exclusive hunting
    opportunity” and is therefore impermissible.
    We conclude, however, that the Board made findings sufficient to support
    some season and size differences between community and individual hunts. Simply put,
    the community hunts are more likely to occur close to home, where it is harder to find
    moose; a longer season and fewer size restrictions help counter this difficulty. During
    a 2011 Board of Game proceeding, a supporter of community hunts testified that the “50­
    inch antlered moose is . . . pretty scarce around where I hunt and it’s usually pretty warm.
    They’re usually way up in the mountains. Having a restriction for 50-inch antlers . . .
    makes [it] a hardship for . . . getting a moose. . . . I took my daughter there last year, and
    . . . we saw a lot of bull moose, but . . . they aren’t . . . 50-inch moose. All small antlers.”
    At an earlier hearing in 2010, there was testimony that in early fall “all the moose are
    high during that time and the three brow tine and four brow tines are up high. . . . [Y]ou
    might find a spike fork near a road, but . . . people didn’t really get any moose.” The
    community use pattern may require a longer hunting season because community harvest
    hunters traditionally “keep hunting as close to home as reasonably possible,” “travel[ ]
    shorter distances to hunt,” and “still prefer to walk in to hunting areas and maintain
    permanent camps.” If the community harvest permit holders hunt in the same areas each
    year and do not travel in search of better hunting opportunities, it is reasonable to
    conclude that they will need a longer season in order to find legal moose. In addition,
    42
    5 AAC 85.045 (providing for “1 bull per harvest report by community
    harvest permit only . . .”).
    43
    5 AAC 85.045. Community and individual subsistence hunters have the
    same season for caribou. 5 AAC 85.025.
    -15-                                         6992
    the Board found in 2006 that community harvest hunters hand “down the hunting and
    fishing knowledge, values and skills through family oriented experiences,” which require
    “relatively long summer and fall camping trips.” Although the Board heard evidence
    that the individual hunt would also benefit from a longer season,44 we cannot say that the
    Board’s adoption of a regulation setting a longer season and fewer size restrictions for
    the community hunt is arbitrary or unreasonable.45
    2.     Caribou hunting
    The community harvest caribou hunt allows hunters to take one animal per
    group member, up to 300 caribou.46 Individual hunters may also take one caribou each.47
    The Board, before adopting this regulation, discussed whether 300 caribou was a quota
    allocated to the community hunt, allowing the community hunters to take up to that many
    animals even if the individual hunt were closed; it also discussed the 300 caribou as an
    absolute cap on the number that community groups could harvest. In practice, the
    44
    For example, the 2011 Board findings describing the individual subsistence
    hunting pattern note that “[a]ll hunters currently tend to focus their harvest efforts during
    the late summer and early fall, when caribou and moose are in their best physical
    condition and relatively accessible from the road system.” The Board found that the
    individual hunting pattern also involved passing down “lore about how and where to
    hunt . . . from generation to generation.” Furthermore, in the same session in which it
    adopted its 2011 findings, the Board rejected a proposal to allow non-community harvest
    members to engage in early moose hunting in Unit 13. The Board decided that even a
    short general hunt in August was not sustainable.
    45
    See Interior Alaska Airboat Ass’n. v. State, Bd. of Game, 
    18 P.3d 686
    , 690
    (Alaska 2001) (“In determining whether a regulation is reasonable and not arbitrary
    courts are not to substitute their judgment for the judgment of the agency. Therefore
    review consists primarily of ensuring that the agency has taken a hard look at the salient
    problems and has genuinely engaged in reasoned decision making.”).
    46
    5 AAC 85.025(a)(8).
    47
    
    Id. -16- 6992
    Department has not treated the number of caribou assigned to the community harvest as
    a quota. In 2011, the Department closed the individual hunt by emergency order,
    explaining that the 2011-2012 harvest quota of 2,400 caribou had nearly been reached
    — individual hunters had taken 1,603 caribou, community hunters had taken 82, federal
    subsistence hunters had taken 361, and the holders of drawing permits had taken 311.48
    This closure left the community harvest and federal subsistence hunts open because
    “additional harvest [was] expected to be negligible.”49 In 2013, both the individual and
    community subsistence hunts were closed on October 10, despite the fact that only 112
    caribou had been harvested under the community harvest permits.50
    Reading the regulatory language in light of the Department’s practical
    application of it, the grant of “up to 300 caribou” does not appear to be a quota that
    favors community hunters at the expense of individuals. Rather, it is an upper limit
    based on an estimate of the number of caribou that community hunters are expected to
    take each year, a number supported by the evidence before the Board. When the Board
    was discussing the community harvest regulations, Dr. James Fall, the statewide program
    manager for the State’s Division of Subsistence, testified that it was difficult to determine
    how many people were interested in hunting caribou in Unit 13 and how many caribou
    were needed for subsistence, because the hunt there had been restricted for many years.
    Yet the Board did have evidence of the needs for community use — the Ahtna
    48
    See A LASKA D EP ’T OF FISH & G AME , E MERGENCY O RDER N O . 04-08-11
    (Dec. 2, 2011), available at http://www.adfg.alaska.gov/static/applications/webintra/
    wcnews/2011/orders/04-08-11.pdf.
    49
    
    Id. 50 ALASKA
    DEP’T OF FISH & GAME, EMERGENCY ORDER NO . 04-07-13 (Oct. 9,
    2013), available at http://www.adfg.alaska.gov/static/applications/webintra/wcnews/
    2013/orders/04-07-13.pdf
    -17-                                       6992
    Subsistence Committee estimated this number at between 200 and 400 caribou. The
    Board’s decision to designate “up to 300 caribou” for the community harvest was based
    on this evidence, which contrasts with its lack of information about how many caribou
    were needed for individual subsistence hunters.51 Given the evidence before the Board,
    its estimate that the community harvest permit holders could take “up to 300 caribou”
    is not arbitrary or unreasonable.
    C.	    The Community Harvest Regulations Do Not Conflict With Other
    Board Regulations.
    5 AAC 92.072(d) is a fish and game regulation of statewide application,52
    providing that the “total bag limit for a community harvest permit will be equal to the
    sum of the individual participants’ bag limits.” The Fund argues that the Board violated
    this regulation when it eliminated the size restrictions on moose for holders of
    community harvest permits in Unit 13, effectively granting them a larger bag limit. But
    the regulations do not conflict. A “bag limit” is defined as “the maximum number of
    animals of any one game species a person may take.”53 Board regulations provide that
    community harvest permit holders and individual permit holders are both entitled to
    harvest a single caribou and a single bull moose, although the individual permit holders
    are limited by antler size and shape and the community harvest permit holders are not.54
    51
    Discussing the number of available caribou, Board Chair Ted Spraker said
    that the Board needed more data and its members “really need to kind of step back from
    this and . . . let it go for a year” before they could get a “pretty good idea of what’s going
    to happen.”
    52
    See 5 AAC 92.001 (“[T]he regulations in this chapter apply statewide to
    subsistence hunting.”).
    53
    5 AAC 92.990(a)(3) (emphasis added).
    54
    5 AAC 85.025; 5 AAC 85.045.
    -18-	                                       6992
    Alaska Statutes 16.05.255(f) and 16.05.258(e) both differentiate between “bag limits”
    and “size limitations” when discussing the areas in which the Board may regulate.
    Community harvest permits do not allow permit holders to take more bulls than the
    individual permit holders; the Board adoption of the community harvest permit system
    did not violate 5 AAC 92.072(d).
    D.       The Board’s Amendment To 5 AAC 92.072(d) Was Properly Noticed.
    The Board amended 5 AAC 92.072(d) in July 2009 to give itself the
    authority to assign different season lengths to community harvest permit holders and
    individual permit holders.55 The Administrative Procedure Act requires the Board to
    give notice before amending a regulation.56 The notice must include “an informative
    summary of the proposed subject of agency action.”57 When the ultimate agency action
    differs from that contemplated by the notice, the Administrative Procedure Act is
    satisfied “if the subject matter remains the same and the original notice assured
    reasonable notification to the public that the proposed agency action might affect its
    interests.”58
    The Fund argues that the March 2009 amendment is invalid because “[t]he
    Board did not provide any notice that it would be changing a regulation that required
    identical seasons and bag limits for community hunts to a regulation that allowed for
    preferential seasons and bag limits.” But the superior court concluded that the notice
    55
    Compare Alaska Administrative Code, Register 190, 3-511 to -512 (July
    2009) (implementing current language of 5 AAC 92.072(d)), with Alaska Administrative
    Code, Register 182, 3-291 (July 2007) (prior language of 5 AAC 92.072(d)).
    56
    AS 44.62.200(a).
    57
    AS 44.62.200(a)(3).
    58
    Chevron U.S.A. Inc. v. LeResche, 
    663 P.2d 923
    , 929 (Alaska 1983).
    -19-                                     6992
    “did contain notice of proposed changes to [U]nit 13 seasons for caribou and moose, as
    well as proposed changes to community subsistence harvest areas and conditions,” and
    was thus “sufficient to comply with AS 44.62.200.” We agree.
    According to the January 2009 notice — the one preceding the spring 2009
    meeting — the Board was considering changes to 5 AAC 92, including changes to
    “HUNTING SEASONS AND BAG LIMITS” in Unit 13 for game including moose and
    caribou.59 Also to be considered were changes to “LICENSES, HARVEST TICKETS,
    HARVEST REPORTS, TAGS, FEES, AND PERMITS” in units including Unit 13, and
    “including, but not limited to . . . community subsistence harvest areas and conditions.”60
    The subject matter of the amended regulation was the relative length of the hunting
    seasons available to community harvest permit holders and individual hunters.61 The
    January notice covered the same subject matter and was sufficient to inform the public
    that their interests might be affected. The notice therefore satisfied the requirements of
    the Administrative Procedure Act.
    V.     CONCLUSION
    We AFFIRM the superior court’s grant of summary judgment to the State.
    59
    There is no copy of the notice in the record on appeal. The superior court
    cited to the notice’s on-line version. The Fund does not appear to question this reliance,
    and the State directs us to the same source. See A LASKA BD . O F G AME , N OTICE O F
    PROPOSED CHANGES IN REGULATIONS O F THE A LASKA BD . O F G AME SPRING 2009
    M EETING (Jan. 23, 2009), available at http://aws.state.ak.us/OnlinePublicNotices/
    Notices/View.aspx?id=144484.
    60
    
    Id. 61 See
    5 AAC 92.072(d).
    -20-                                      6992