Sierra Club v. Wagner , 555 F.3d 21 ( 2009 )


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  •           United States Court of Appeals
    For the First Circuit
    No. 08-1978
    SIERRA CLUB, CENTER FOR BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY,
    and THE WILDERNESS SOCIETY,
    Plaintiffs, Appellants,
    v.
    THOMAS WAGNER, in his official capacity as Forest Supervisor of
    the White Mountain National Forest; ABIGAIL KIMBELL, in her
    official capacity as Chief of the United States Forest Service;
    EDWARD T. SCHAFER, in his official capacity as Secretary of the
    United States Department of Agriculture; and the UNITED STATES
    DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE,
    Defendants, Appellees.
    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
    FOR THE DISTRICT OF NEW HAMPSHIRE
    [Hon. Steven J. McAuliffe, U.S. District Judge]
    Before
    Boudin, Selya and Stahl,
    Circuit Judges.
    Kristin A. Henry, with whom Eric E. Huber and Bradford W.
    Kuster were on brief for appellants.
    Charles R. Scott, United States Department of Justice,
    Environment & Natural Resources Division, with whom Cynthia S.
    Huber and Mark R. Haag, United States Department of Justice,
    Environment & Natural Resources Division, and Ronald J. Tenpas,
    Assistant Attorney General, were on brief for appellees.
    February 6, 2009
    BOUDIN, Circuit Judge.      The Sierra Club, along with two
    other conservation groups (for simplicity we refer only to the
    Sierra Club), challenges the Forest Service's approval of two
    forest resource management projects in the White Mountain National
    Forest ("Forest" or "WMNF"): the Than Forest Resource Management
    Project   ("Than   Project")   and    the    Batchelder    Brook     Vegetation
    Management Project ("Batchelder Project").             The district court's
    decision,    upholding   the   Forest       Service,      provides    detailed
    background, Sierra Club v. Wagner, ___ F. Supp. 2d ___, 
    2008 WL 2336902
    , at *1-5 (D.N.H. Jun. 6, 2008), which we summarize here.
    The Forest Service, an agency of the U.S. Department of
    Agriculture, is responsible for national forests.               The National
    Forest Management Act ("NFMA"), 16 U.S.C. §§ 472a, 521b, 1600 et
    seq. (2006), provides for management of national forests at two
    levels, the programmatic (or plan) level and the project level
    (where the Forest Service implements the broader programs and goals
    laid out in the forest plan).        Ohio Forestry Ass'n v. Sierra Club,
    
    523 U.S. 726
    , 729-30 (1998).
    All projects within a forest must comply with the overall
    plan for that forest, 
    16 U.S.C. § 1604
    (i), which is revised
    periodically, 
    id.
     § 1604(f)(5).             The governing White Mountain
    National Forest Land and Resource Management Plan was most recently
    revised and adopted in September 2005 ("the 2005 Plan").               The 2005
    Plan was revised pursuant to the 1982 forest service regulations
    -2-
    ("the 1982 rules"), which could still permissibly be considered for
    Plan revisions when the new plan was adopted.                 See 
    36 C.F.R. § 219.35
    (b).
    The White Mountain National Forest covers almost 800,000
    acres in northern New Hampshire and western Maine.              The governing
    2005       Plan   promotes   multiple    uses    for   the   Forest   including
    recreation, timber harvesting, and preservation of wildlife and
    wilderness, as required by the NFMA.             
    16 U.S.C. §§ 1604
    (a), (e).
    The 2005 Plan classifies approximately 281,000 acres in the WMNF as
    appropriate for harvesting timber, but currently harvesting is
    allowed only on roughly 3,400 acres annually, a tiny fraction of
    the forest.
    During the 2005 Plan revision process, the land was
    inventoried to determine whether it qualified as "roadless."                  
    36 C.F.R. § 219.17
    (a) (1983).              In the eastern United States, to
    qualify as roadless, land must meet certain environmental standards
    including very few constructed roads or recent timber harvesting.1
    Twenty-seven areas, totaling 403,000 acres, met these criteria and
    comprise      inventoried    roadless    areas    ("IRA's"),    which   can   be
    designated by Congress as Wilderness Areas, thereby affording the
    1
    To qualify requires a natural, untrammeled appearance;
    improvements in the area must be disappearing or muted; the
    location must be conducive to perpetuating wilderness values; the
    area may contain no more than one-half mile of improved road for
    each 1,000 acres; and only twenty percent or less of the area may
    have been the subject of timber harvesting within the past ten
    years. Forest Serv. Handbook 1909.12, § 7.12 (1992).
    -3-
    lands special protection, 
    16 U.S.C. § 1132
    (b).                 The Forest Service
    recommended that Congress so designate 34,500 acres over and above
    the 114,000 acres previously protected.
    After adoption of the 2005 Plan, the Forest Service
    evaluated various management areas within the Forest to determine
    what new projects were required to achieve the 2005 Plan goals.                   It
    determined, for the areas encompassing the Than and Batchelder
    projects, that more diverse habitats, including new vegetation in
    younger age classes, were needed and that it would be beneficial to
    harvest   some      mature   trees   to    create     room    for    younger    trees
    (creating what is known as early successional habitat).
    Ultimately the Forest Service proposed to allow timber
    harvesting     of    approximately      929   acres    in     the    Than    project,
    creating up to 231 acres of early successional habitat.                         Some
    existing roads would receive maintenance or reconstruction, and a
    500 foot section of new road was planned.                   Part of this project
    would affect the Wild River Inventoried Roadless Area, including
    464 acres of timber harvesting in that area.
    The      other    proposed     action,   the      Batchelder      Project,
    involved harvesting on 380 acres, including 139 acres within the
    South   Carr   Mountain      Inventoried      Roadless       Area.     The    Project
    requires no new road construction, but does authorize maintenance
    on approximately three miles of road, one-half mile of which is
    located in the South Carr Mountain IRA.
    -4-
    The National Environmental Policy Act ("NEPA"), 
    42 U.S.C. § 4321
     et seq., obligates agencies such as the Forest Service to
    evaluate the environmental impacts of its proposed actions. Dubois
    v. U.S. Dep't of Agriculture, 
    102 F.3d 1273
    , 1284 (1st Cir. 1996),
    cert. denied sub. nom. Loon Mtn. Recreation Corp. v. Dubois, 
    521 U.S. 1119
     (1997).        To comply with NEPA, the Forest Service was
    first   required    to    determine         whether    either      the    Than   or   the
    Batchelder Project would have a significant environmental impact.
    
    40 C.F.R. § 1501.4
     (2007); Save Our Heritage, Inc. v. F.A.A., 
    269 F.3d 49
    , 57 (1st Cir. 2001).
    A detailed environmental impact statement ("EIS") is
    required whenever proposed actions will "significantly affect the
    quality of the human environment."                
    42 U.S.C. § 4332
    ; 
    40 C.F.R. §§ 1502.1
    , 1502.14; Dubois, 
    102 F.3d at 1285
    .                      If uncertain about
    impact, the agency may start with a less detailed Environmental
    Assessment    ("EA");     
    40 C.F.R. § 1501.3
    .     If    the    EA    finds   a
    significant impact, a full EIS must be prepared; if not, the agency
    makes   a   "Finding     of    No   Significant       Impact"      ("FONSI"),      which
    exhausts    its   obligation        under    NEPA.      
    Id.
       §§    1501.4,      1508.9,
    1508.13.
    The Forest Service prepared an EIS in connection with the
    2005 Plan revision and it was also required to prepare either an
    EIS or EA for both the Than and Batchelder projects.                       
    40 C.F.R. § 1501.4
    ; see also Blue Mountains Biodiversity Project v. Blackwood,
    -5-
    
    161 F.3d 1208
    , 1214 (9th Cir. 1998), cert. denied, 
    527 U.S. 1003
    (1999).   Under the 2005 Plan, specific projects' environmental
    analyses may incorporate by reference ("tier") information that is
    in the Plan EIS, so an EA need not start from scratch.             
    40 C.F.R. § 1508.28
    .
    The Forest Service prepared an initial EA for the Than
    Project in May 2006 but, after an administrative appeal, issued in
    November 2006 a revised EA for public comment.               After receiving
    comments and after an injunction deferred the operation of new
    Forest Service rules relied on in the November 2006 draft, the
    Forest Service revised the EA and issued the final Than EA in April
    2007.
    Despite certain possible adverse effects of the Than
    Project on the Wild River Inventoried Roadless Area--including
    sediment inputs to streams, some soil disturbance, and effects on
    stream temperature--the Forest Service concluded that the project
    would
    not significantly alter the character of the
    area or the qualities which qualified it for
    inclusion in the inventory . . . because the
    harvests are of limited intensity and minimal
    road systems will be used [and that there
    would be no] lasting or significant effect on
    the roadless character of the area.
    It   issued    a   FONSI   and   thereafter   denied   the    Sierra   Club's
    administrative appeal.
    -6-
    As for the Batchelder project, an initial EA draft was
    withdrawn when the initial Than EA was set aside; a revised EA was
    issued in December 2006 for public comment followed by a final EA
    and a revised decision notice with a FONSI in May 2007.             The FONSI
    conceded   certain   potential     adverse   effects    (on     wildlife   and
    possible   sedimentation     of    streams),   but     concluded    that    no
    significant impact would result on the South Carr Mountain Area's
    roadless   or   wilderness        characteristics.        A     Sierra     Club
    administrative appeal was thereafter denied.
    In August 2007, the Sierra Club filed a complaint in the
    district court challenging the Than Project.                  It amended its
    complaint to incorporate claims regarding the Batchelder Brook
    Project in October 2007.      On cross-motions for summary judgment,
    the district court upheld the Forest Service's actions, granted the
    Forest Service's motion and denied Sierra Club's. We denied a stay
    pending appeal but expedited the case.
    On appeal, Sierra Club claims error by the Forest Service
    in several respects.   We review questions of law de novo, WorldNet
    Telecommunications, Inc. v. Puerto Rico Telephone Co., 
    497 F.3d 1
    ,
    5 (1st Cir. 2007), but are deferential to the agency in its
    interpretation of its own rules, Chevron, U.S.A., Inc. v. Natural
    Res. Def. Council, 
    467 U.S. 837
    , 843-44 (1984), and in judgment
    calls as to the likely impact of proposed actions.                 Associated
    Fisheries of Maine, Inc. v. Daley, 
    127 F.3d 104
    , 109 (1st Cir.
    -7-
    1997).   The latter, reflected in the FONSI findings, are to be
    upheld unless arbitrary and capricious.     Marsh v. Oregon Natural
    Res. Council, 
    490 U.S. 360
    , 374, 376 (1989); see also 
    5 U.S.C. § 706
    (2)(A).
    Sierra Club argues first that the Forest Service erred by
    applying the "best available science" standard found in the Forest
    Service rules, adopted in 2000, see 
    36 C.F.R. § 219.35
    (a) (2001),
    to its evaluation of the Than and Batchelder Brook projects, rather
    than a set of rules adopted in 1982.   One might think from the name
    that "best available science" is an unexceptionable standard, but
    according to Sierra Club, the 1982 rules provided a set of precise
    tests for evaluating a project's impact on species that are more
    rigorous and were intentionally weakened by the 2000 rules.
    Its brief provides a short description of the difference
    and, as the characterization is not denied by the Forest Service's
    brief, we will assume it to be true.      See Forest Watch v. U.S.
    Forest Serv., 
    410 F.3d 115
    , 116-17 (2d Cir. 2005). However, Sierra
    Club's brief fails to explain whether or how the allegedly more
    rigorous standards of the 1982 rules would likely have altered the
    Forest Service's ultimate evaluation of the two projects. This may
    not derail the argument but it reduces one's enthusiasm for it.
    In all events, Sierra Club contends that the 1982 rules
    apply in this case, and understanding the argument requires a brief
    excursion.   When the new 2000 NFMA rules were announced, their
    -8-
    transition provision deferred many of the new rules until November
    2003 (a date thereafter extended)2; but the provision said that
    effective immediately the Forest Service "must consider the best
    available science in implementing . . . the current plan."                  
    36 C.F.R. § 219.35
    (a).       The parties take this language to supercede
    the allegedly more stringent 1982 rules on species evaluation, but
    disagree as to whether the transition provision covers the two
    projects in issue here.
    Sierra    Club    argues   that   the    plain   language   of   the
    transition    provision    applies   only   to    forest   plans   that    were
    "current" when the transition provision was adopted in 2000.               See
    Utah Environmental Congress v. Troyer, 
    479 F.3d 1269
    , 1272-74 (10th
    Cir. 2007).    And, the argument goes, the 2005 Plan for the forest
    (which had been implemented when the two projects were approved)
    was not "current" in 2000. The Forest Service counters that Sierra
    Club waived this argument because it was not presented to the
    district court.
    Ordinarily, arguments not raised in the district court
    cannot be raised for the first time on appeal.                 E.g., Boston
    2
    The extensions continued until January 2005 when a revised
    set of rules were adopted, which (according to Sierra Club) are
    even weaker in protecting the environment; but they have been
    enjoined nationwide pendente lite, Citizens for Better Forestry v.
    U.S. Dep't of Agriculture, 
    481 F. Supp. 2d 1059
    , 1100 (N.D. Cal.
    2007), so prior rules, including the 2000 transition provision,
    seemingly remain in effect for the present. See Action on Smoking
    & Health v. Civil Aeronautics Bd., 
    713 F.2d 795
    , 797 (D.C. Cir.
    1983).
    -9-
    Celtics Ltd. P'ship v. Shaw, 
    908 F.2d 1041
    , 1045 (1st Cir.1990).
    Sierra Club agrees that it did not raise its "current plan"
    argument in the district court but says that it did there oppose
    the "best available science" standard on other grounds and this is
    enough to allow us to consider its new legal theory in support of
    the same result.    This is a misunderstanding of the requirements
    for preserving issues for review.
    We can affirm a judgment on a legal ground not relied
    upon in the district court, Plymouth Sav. Bank v. I.R.S., 
    187 F.3d 203
    , 209-10 (1st Cir. 1999)--after all, why send the case back if
    the result was right--but it is altogether different to reverse a
    judgment on a ground never raised in the lower court.    See In re
    Boston Reg'l Med. Ctr., 
    291 F.3d 111
    , 125 n.16 (1st Cir. 2002).   We
    may ourselves choose to consider newly minted arguments from the
    parties, or devise them ourselves, but this is not an entitlement
    of the parties.3   See, e.g., United States v. La Guardia, 
    902 F.2d 1010
    , 1013 (1st Cir. 1990)).
    In sum, the Sierra Club has forfeited the argument, and
    we decline to consider it.   The 2005 rules have been enjoined but
    3
    For example, we may choose to hear an argument not raised
    below in “cases that involv[e] important constitutional or
    governmental issues [which are] exceptional . . . and, as such
    [warrant] a full legal treatment of all legal issues involved,
    whether squarely introduced by the parties or not.” TI Fed. Credit
    Union v. DelBonis, 
    72 F.3d 921
    , 930 (1st Cir. 1995) (citing Nat'l
    Ass'n of Social Workers v. Harwood, 
    69 F.3d 622
    , 628 (1st
    Cir.1995)).
    -10-
    to return to the 1982 rules, instead of the 2000 transition
    provision, is not appealing where, as here, Sierra Club has not
    troubled to explain why the outcome would change (delay aside) if
    the 1982 rules were applied.     Nor do we find the Forest Service's
    reading of the transition provision patently wrong, a circumstance
    that might help persuade us to excuse the forfeiture.
    Utah Envtl. Cong. v. Troyer, 
    479 F.3d 1269
    , 1281 (10th
    Cir. 2007), agrees with Sierra Club's belated argument--indeed,
    probably   prompted   it--but   Troyer      is   quite   possibly    wrong   in
    thinking the word "current" can yield only one meaning. And Troyer
    is at odds with a 2004 interpretive rule issued by the Forest
    Service, 
    69 Fed. Reg. 58055
    , 58057 (2004),4 ordinarily entitled to
    "substantial     deference"   where   the    subject     is   "the   agency's
    interpretation of its own regulations."           N. Wind, Inc. v. Daley,
    
    200 F.3d 13
    , 17 (1st Cir. 1999).
    Next, Sierra Club contends that the Than Project EA was
    based on the Management Indicator Species Provision of the 2005
    rules, 
    36 C.F.R. § 219.14
    (f) (2005), which were enjoined nationwide
    in March 2007.    See Citizens for Better Forestry, 
    481 F. Supp. 2d at 1100
    .    Admittedly, the final Than Project EA says once that
    "[t]he analysis of MIS [the species analysis] was undertaken in the
    4
    The rule, directly addressing the claim now advanced by the
    Sierra Club as to the meaning of its transition rule, states that
    "the best available science" standard should be used in
    "implementing national forest land management plans." 69 Fed. Reg.
    at 58,056.
    -11-
    context of 
    36 C.F.R. § 219.14
    (f)" [which is only found in the
    enjoined 2005 rules].    Below, the Forest Service disclaimed this
    reference as a typographical error--and the district court agreed.
    It appears that when the revised draft Than EA was
    published for public comment in 2006, the 2005 rules had been
    adopted as a rewriting of the long deferred 2000 rules.     Once the
    injunction against the 2005 rules issued, the Forest Service
    removed almost all of the references in the draft to the 2005 rules
    and issued the final Than Project EA shortly thereafter, relying
    instead on the 2000 transition provision's "best available science"
    standard.    But, says the Forest Service, the one reference to the
    2005 rules was missed in the clean-up.
    This is hardly the "post hoc rationalization" claimed by
    Sierra Club, see NRDC v. U.S. Envtl. Prot. Agency, 
    824 F.2d 1258
    ,
    1286 n.19 (1st Cir. 1987), since the agency itself identified the
    typographical error as such in denying Sierra Club's administrative
    appeal and the explanation is therefore part of the administrative
    record.     Nor does Sierra Club provide any reason to doubt the
    Forest Service's explanation.       So the citation may fairly be
    treated as a typographical error; but this is not automatically
    dispositive.
    Had the revised draft Than EA relied on the 2005 rules in
    any way critical to the outcome, Sierra Club might well have an
    argument--regardless of missed citations--that the Than Project EA
    -12-
    could not be saved by an overnight mechanical deletion of specific
    references. But whatever weakening attended the 2005 rules, Sierra
    Club has not shown that those rules were pertinently less demanding
    than the 2000 rule's "best available science" standard.       Instead,
    the distinctions it draws are between the 1982 rules and the 2000
    rules, which is not the relevant comparison.
    Sierra Club also contends that because the 2005 rules
    were enjoined by a district court, the 1982 rules went back into
    effect.   Had we in fact found that the 2000 rules did not apply,
    this argument would have merit.    See Action on Smoking & Health,
    
    713 F.2d at 797
     (holding that where one agency rule is invalidated
    the previous rule in force applies).    However, because we hold the
    best available science standard applied, that portion of the 2000
    rules went back into effect when the 2005 rules were enjoined.
    Sierra Club next says that the EAs were inconsistent in
    identifying which rules governed and did not explicitly use the
    "best available science" standard on which the Forest Service now
    relies.   Sierra   Club's   argument   rests   heavily   on the Second
    Circuit's opinion in Forest Watch v. U.S. Forest Service, 
    410 F.3d 115
    , 119 (2d Cir. 2005), which held that Forest Service's failure
    to "consider or mention the 'best available science' standard" in
    implementing two site-specific projects amounted to conduct that
    was arbitrary and capricious.
    -13-
    In fact, the Batchelder EA did refer to the best evidence
    standard, the Forest Service says that the Than EA complied with it
    in substance and the FONSIs for the projects state the Forest
    Service relied on the "best available science"--all consistent with
    the Forest Service's view of the 2000 transition provision.     By
    contrast, in Forest Watch, the EAs and the FONSIs made no reference
    to "best available science" and, more significant, there were
    repeated citations to the 1982 rules.    Forest Watch, 
    410 F.3d at 119
    .
    On top of all this, it is not clear why references to
    "best available science" matter: unlike Forest Watch, there is no
    indication here that the Forest Service invoked the 1982 rules,
    allegedly misapplied them and is now claiming that it used the
    newer standard instead.   Of course, Sierra Club could point us to
    some specific substantive dispute and then argue the science relied
    upon by the agency was not "the best."   But Sierra Club identifies
    no such controversy in this case.
    Sierra Club next argues that even if the 1982 rules did
    not apply to the Than and Batchelder projects by their own force,
    they apply because the Forest Service chose to revise the 2005
    Forest Plan so as to incorporate the 1982 rules for future site-
    specific projects.   The Forest Service agrees that the conclusion
    would follow if the premise were correct, see Troyer, 479 F.3d at
    -14-
    1282; but it denies that the 2005 Plan adopted the 1982 rules as
    requirements for subsequent projects like Than and Batchelder.
    The district court found that the 2005 Plan did not
    "specifically incorporate" the 1982 rules and so they did not apply
    under   an   "adoption"   theory   to   the   Than   and   Batchelder   Brook
    projects.     Wagner, 
    2008 WL 4560669
    , at *11.         The 2005 Plan does
    refer to the 1982 rules on several different occasions, notably
    several references to "MIS Monitoring." But the 2005 Plan does not
    say that the 1982 rules govern plan projects; in fact, it states
    that "[t]he regulations do not require MIS monitoring on every
    project."
    In addition to its "wrong rules" arguments, Sierra Club
    objects to the Forest Service's substantive finding that the Than
    and Batchelder projects would have no significant impact on the
    environment.     This is an argument that one might think could have
    promise because the two projects are not trivial and the Forest
    Service itself conceded that there would be some negative effects.
    But Sierra Club's own arguments do not seriously undermine the
    FONSI findings.
    A substantive attack on an impact assessment is not easy.
    The Council on Environmental Quality ("CEQ") and case law standards
    for "significance" are (perhaps inevitably) general, and courts
    have good reason to take seriously the deference due to the agency
    in technical and scientific matters.          Kleppe v. Sierra Club, 427
    -15-
    U.S. 390, 410 n.21 (1976); see also Sierra Club v. Marsh, 
    769 F.2d 868
    , 871 (1st Cir. 1985) (Breyer, J.).   Ordinarily, the attack has
    to start by explaining just what harms might result and make, in
    the Third Circuit's words,
    at least some effort . . . to advance specific
    allegations    that   the   agency   .   .   .
    misinterpreted    the   evidence,   overlooked
    certain testimony, or unreasonably reached its
    'no significant impact determination.'
    Lower Alloways Creek Twp. v. Pub. Serv. Elec. & Gas Co., 
    687 F.2d 732
    , 747 (3d Cir. 1982).
    The Forest is almost 800,000 acres and has a history of
    mixed uses included timber harvesting.    The Than Project involves
    timber harvesting, subject to maximum amounts, on 929 acres, with
    clear cutting for new timber on up to 231 acres; Batchelder Brook
    Project involves harvesting on 380 acres; some of the harvesting in
    each case is in inventoried roadless areas. Than requires 500 feet
    of new road; Batchelder none.   On an order of magnitude basis these
    do not seem like negligible enterprises but--without more--neither
    are they self-evidently "significant" in potential negative impact.
    Yet Sierra Club makes only a single concrete point as to
    immediate harm: it argues that harvesting, especially clear cutting
    for new growths, creates visual scars visible even from outside the
    area; that the Forest Service concedes that the effects could
    endure for a decade or two; and that in California v. Block, 
    690 F.2d 753
    , 763 (9th Cir. 1982), the court said that "[t]he 'critical
    -16-
    decision' to commit [roadless] areas for nonwilderness uses, at
    least for the next ten to fifteen years, is 'irreversible and
    irretrievable.'"
    Block, very different from this case, involved a decision
    by the Forest Service to "command that [certain roadless areas
    nationwide] be used for non-wilderness purposes" without troubling
    to "assess the wilderness value of each area [that would have been
    allocated] and to evaluate the impact of Nonwilderness designations
    upon each area's wilderness characteristics and value."                         
    Id. at 764
    .     Here we have a narrow judgment that neither of the two
    precisely     defined      projects   will     have   a    "significant"    adverse
    effect.
    In estimating duration, the Forest Service was talking
    only of the visual effect from clear-cutting, which diminishes over
    time and a more complete version of its verdict is that the effects
    "should not be noticeable to the untrained eye within a decade or
    two."     If so, the visual blight would begin to be dissipating
    almost from the start. So, too, harvesting would disturb solitude;
    but    this   would   be    primarily   limited       to   the   period    in    which
    harvesting was occurring.
    It is perhaps more troubling that the Forest Service EAs
    also conceded that there would or could be negative effects from
    sedimentation in waters due to erosion and other effects from
    logging and that disturbances could harm both water and wildlife.
    -17-
    Still, mitigating measures were promised and are relevant, e.g.,
    Cabinet Mountains Wilderness/Scotchman's Peak Grizzly Bears v.
    Peterson, 
    685 F.2d 678
    , 682 (D.C. Cir. 1982), and Sierra Club's
    brief makes no effort to develop an attack on their adequacy.
    Sierra Club does argue that the Forest Service failed to
    consider the impact the projects would have on so-called "roadless
    characteristics," which are identified in the 2001 Roadless Area
    Conservation Rule ("Roadless Rule"), 
    36 C.F.R. § 294
    .                    The Forest
    Service    says,    without      any   answer   from    Sierra   Club,    that   the
    Roadless Rule does not apply to these projects.5                    Sierra Club
    concedes    in     its   reply    brief   that    the    Roadless   Rule    merely
    identifies concerns that the Forest Service must address.
    The so-called roadless characteristics to which Sierra
    Club points are a catch-all list of potential concerns,6 and some
    5
    The Forest Service says that the Roadless Rule applies only
    to areas so designated at the time the new regime was established
    in November 2000 or before, 66 Fed. Reg. at 3272, and that the IRAs
    involved in Than and Batchelder were not included.
    6
    They are as follows:
    (1) high quality or undisturbed soil, water, and air;
    (2) sources of public drinking water;
    (3) diversity of plant and animal communities;
    (4) habitat for threatened, endangered, proposed, candidate,
    and sensitive species and for those species dependent on
    large, undisturbed areas of land;
    (5) primitive, semi-primitive nonmotorized and semi-primitive
    motorized classes of dispersed recreation;
    (6) reference landscapes;
    (7) natural appearing landscapes with high scenic quality;
    (8) traditional cultural properties and sacred sites; and
    (9) other locally identified unique characteristics.
    -18-
    were certainly considered (soil and water quality, appearance)
    while others (e.g., sacred sites) are not even alleged to be of
    issue.         It   is   up     to    Sierra    Club     to   identify      important
    considerations that were presented by the record but were not
    seriously addressed in an EA.            The generality of the argument made
    renders it ineffective.
    Sierra Club next says that the Forest Service failed to
    consider whether the timber harvesting would disqualify any of the
    land involved from future recommended designation for wilderness
    protection that Congress may afford.                   The Forest Service fairly
    responds that harvesting does not automatically preclude such a
    designation7 and that the South Carr Mountain area was considered
    for    designation       despite     past     timber    harvesting    but    thought
    unsuitable for other reasons.
    Further, the 2005 Plan (to whose analysis the Than and
    Batchelder      projects      were    tiered)   contains      even   more   specific
    analysis, including explicit findings that the areas in question
    were       inappropriate      for    future    wilderness     designation.       See
    Heartwood, Inc. v. U.S. Forest Serv., 
    380 F.3d 428
    , 433 (8th Cir.
    
    66 Fed. Reg. 3,244
    , 3272 (Jan. 12, 2001).
    7
    The Forest Service has recognized in its own handbook the
    difference between Eastern and Western forests, with Eastern land
    with up to 20 percent of a given area harvested for timber still
    eligible for wilderness designation. FSH 1909.12 ch. 71.12 (2005).
    Land is eligible in the west for wilderness designation only in
    "areas where logging and prior road construction are not evident."
    FSH 1909.12 ch. 71.1, 71.11 (2005).
    -19-
    2004) (EA permissible when tiered to broader plan that did address
    impact). And contrary to Sierra Club's assertion that wildlife was
    not taken into consideration, the Forest Service explicitly looked
    at the impact on a host of species.
    Independent of concrete harms from this project, Sierra
    Club makes a set of arguments that the projects are significant
    because of their "context" and ostensibly controversial nature.
    One might be surprised to discover that even if a particular
    project threatens no significant environmental harm, the decision
    to permit it may still be significant, depending on "contextual
    factors."    Yet, the regulations do suggest such a reading.     
    40 C.F.R. § 1508.27
     (2008).    Sierra Club argues that the Forest
    Service failed to consider that "these projects are the first to
    authorize commercial logging and road building in an IRA in the
    eastern United States and the first to enter a roadless area under
    the 'Forest Plan IRAs' theory, since promulgation of the Roadless
    Rule."   However, such a broad definition of context is explicitly
    disclaimed by the relevant regulation, which states that the
    relevant context for "site specific action[s] . . . would usually
    depend upon the effects in the locale rather than in the world as
    a whole."   
    40 C.F.R. § 1508.27
     (2008).
    Its other argument is that the effects of the projects
    were "controversial," requiring the completion of an EIS. But once
    again, the highly general character of this claim deprives it of
    -20-
    force.   We are not told where the controversy lies, or even amongst
    whom there is a meaningful dispute.            As best we can tell, the
    controversy is that the Sierra Club disagrees with the conclusions
    the Forest Service reaches, which is not sufficient by itself to
    warrant an EIS.      Cf. Native Ecosystems Council v. United States
    Forest Serv., 
    428 F.3d 1233
    , 1240 (9th Cir. 2005).
    The Forest Service did no EIS but also did not brush off
    environmental concerns.      Its EAs that are lengthy by any standard
    (appendices aside, the Than EA is 194 pages and the Batchelder EA
    is 146 pages) addressing in detail the environmental concerns that
    might    arise   before   concluding   that,   as   subject   to   intended
    mitigation, the impacts were not significant.            The substantive
    decisions thus did not ignore the possible environmental effects.
    The Forest Service's EA discussion makes clear that it
    considered all of the arguable categories of harm--such as visual
    effects, noise, soil effects, impact on wildlife, road and bridge
    construction or maintenance, and impact on watershed--and that it
    addressed and answered claims concerning precedential significance,
    impact on wilderness designation and the impact of the roadless
    rule.    Possibly little was saved by doing EAs of this character
    instead of EISs, but it is not clear that anything was lost.
    Sierra Club ends with a procedural argument that the
    Forest Service violated NEPA by not making the FONSIs available
    for thirty days of notice and comment.          CEQ regulations require
    -21-
    that draft FONSIs be made available for public review and comment,
    inter alia, when "[t]he proposed action is, or is closely similar
    to,   one     which   normally   requires   the   preparation   of   an
    environmental impact statement."         
    40 C.F.R. § 1501.4
    (e)(2)(i)
    (2008).     Sierra Club says that the projects here meet the test for
    such notice.
    Whether or not this is so, the evident intent to allow
    public comment on FONSI findings seems to have been satisfied here
    in spades.     An agency that adopts a FONSI without seeking input
    can be expected at least to accept comments before acting on the
    merits of a decision; but here both EAs were circulated in draft
    form and comments solicited even before any FONSI was finally
    adopted.     Why this does not satisfy the purpose of the thirty day
    rule Sierra Club does not explain.
    Affirmed.
    -22-
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 08-1978

Citation Numbers: 555 F.3d 21

Judges: Boudin, Selya, Stahl

Filed Date: 2/6/2009

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 8/3/2023

Authorities (24)

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Sierra Club v. John O. Marsh, Jr. , 769 F.2d 868 ( 1985 )

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Northern Wind, Inc. v. Daley , 200 F.3d 13 ( 1999 )

Save Our Heritage, Inc. v. Federal Aviation Administration , 269 F.3d 49 ( 2001 )

Plymouth Savings Bank v. United States Internal Revenue ... , 187 F.3d 203 ( 1999 )

Utah Environmental Congress v. Troyer , 479 F.3d 1269 ( 2007 )

Forest Watch, Forest Conservation Council, Friends of the ... , 410 F.3d 115 ( 2005 )

United States v. Julio La Guardia, United States of America ... , 902 F.2d 1010 ( 1990 )

National Association of Social Workers v. John B. Harwood , 69 F.3d 622 ( 1995 )

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WorldNet Telecommunications, Inc. v. Puerto Rico Telephone ... , 497 F.3d 1 ( 2007 )

natural-resources-defense-council-inc-conservation-law-foundation-of-new , 824 F.2d 1258 ( 1987 )

in-re-boston-regional-medical-center-inc-debtor-commonwealth-of , 291 F.3d 111 ( 2002 )

native-ecosystems-council-v-united-states-forest-service-an-agency-of-the , 428 F.3d 1233 ( 2005 )

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state-of-california-v-john-r-block-in-his-official-capacity-as , 690 F.2d 753 ( 1982 )

Cabinet Mountains Wilderness/scotchman's Peak Grizzly Bears ... , 685 F.2d 678 ( 1982 )

Action on Smoking and Health v. Civil Aeronautics Board , 713 F.2d 795 ( 1983 )

blue-mountains-biodiversity-project-blue-mountain-native-forest-alliance , 161 F.3d 1208 ( 1998 )

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