Puget Sound Crab Association v. Dept. Of Fish And Wildlife ( 2013 )


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  •                                                                                               F11 - ED
    COURT O     APPPALS
    1
    J141Siol"
    2013 APR 23 Pi's 12: 03
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF W
    1\
    E
    l ASS 1 "    ro
    DIVISION II
    F Y' ,
    PUGET        SOUND    ASSOCIATION;
    CRAB                                       No. 42718 4 II
    - -
    BRIAN        E.
    ALLISON;         RANTZ;JOHN
    VINTON WALDRON; KENNETH CREWS;
    BRIAN MELVIN; and BRIAN MACKEY,
    Appellants,
    V.
    STATE             OF      WASHINGTON                and         PUBLISHED OPINION
    DEPARTMENT OF FISH AND WILDLIFE,
    A
    PENOYAR, J. —The        Puget Sound Crab Association ( SCA) is challenging the new Puget
    P
    Sound Dungeness crab management policy, C 73609, and the rule defining the recreational crab
    season, WAC 220 56 330, as promulgated by the Department of Fish and Wildlife (the
    - -
    Department). The policy and rule expand the recreational season by adding an additional day a
    week to the recreational harvesting schedule. PSCA argues that (1) Department violated its
    the
    statutory duty under RCW 77. 4.to improve commercial fishing and to seek to maintain the
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    economic well being and stability of the fishing industry, 2)the Department acted arbitrarily
    -                                            (
    and capriciously, and (3)PSCA is entitled to attorney fees. We hold that the Department did not
    violate RCW 77. 4.because (1) must allocate a finite resource and it owes a duty to both
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    0              it
    recreational and commercial harvesters and (2)the fishing industry includes both recreational
    and    commercial      harvesters.   Additionally, the Department did not act arbitrarily and
    capriciously, and PSCA is not entitled to attorney fees.
    association of licensed Puget Sound commercial crab harvesters.'
    1
    PSCA is   an
    42718 4 II
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    FACTS
    There are three groups that harvest Puget Sound Dungeness crab: tribes with treaty rights,
    commercial harvesters, and recreational harvesters. Every year, the Department and the tribes
    look at past harvest trends to forecast the amount of harvestable crab. The tribes are allotted half
    of this amount, and the state is allotted the other half. The state must allocate its share between
    recreational and commercial harvesters.
    In 1982, the state capped the number of Puget Sound commercial permits at 249. The
    state has not capped the number of recreational permits, and the number of recreational
    harvesters has doubled between 2001 and 2010. The recreational season is in the summer, and
    the commercial season begins in October, after the recreational season closes. Additionally, the
    Department allows a winter recreational season if enough remains of the state's allocation.
    There is some variance in seasons based on geography.
    Because of complaints from both recreational and commercial crab harvesters, the
    Department revised    its   Puget Sound crab management policy           in 2010.       The former policy,
    adopted in 2000 and modified by regulations in 2004 had established harvest targets for
    recreational harvesters, restricted recreational    harvesting   to   four   days   a   week —Wednesday
    through. Saturday and imposed
    —                 a   five crab   daily bag   limit.   Recreational harvesters often
    exceeded the harvest targets, resulting in a reduced share for the commercial harvesters, who
    harvest after the close of the recreational season. Since the Department implemented the 2000
    policy, the commercial harvest has been approximately 68 percent of the state's allocation and
    the recreational harvest has been approximately 32 percent. Both recreational and commercial
    harvesters complained about this policy, and a State Auditor review recommended that the
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    42718 4 II
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    Department clarify    its   policy   on   the commercial recreational allocation.
    /                         The Department
    responded by beginning a policy review.
    In October 2010, the Department adopted a new crab management policy, C 3609, after
    -
    nine months of discussion, public hearings, and public comment. The policy allows a five day a
    week recreational   season —   including both weekend days from July to Labor Day, a five crab
    —
    daily bag limit, and a seven day a week winter season. This policy differs from the former policy
    in that it adds an extra day a week in the summer season and it lacks recreational harvest targets.
    The new policy also requires the Department to provide an annual report summarizing the
    commercial and recreational harvests and regulation compliance. The policy guidelines focus on
    conservation and public education to increase compliance with fishing regulations.
    As a first step in implementing the new policy, the Department adopted the Recreational
    Season rule, WAC 220 56 330. The rule allows recreational crab harvesting from July 1 though
    - -
    Labor Day, Thursday through Monday of each week. This adds an additional weekend day to
    the previous rule. There continues to be some variation to the seasons based on geography. The
    rule does not include a recreational winter season, but the Department will consider one each
    year,based on the summer harvest, and establish the parameters using an emergency rule.
    In promulgating the rule, the Department considered the rule's conservation and
    economic impact as required under RCW 77. 4.which states that the Department "shall
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    conserve . . .   shellfish resources" and "shall seek to maintain the economic well being and .
    -
    stability of the fishing industry."For its conservation analysis, the Department relied on a state
    performance audit and its own compliance surveys. As part of the new crab management policy,
    the Department will increase public outreach and education and implement an adaptive
    management process that requires annual compliance and fishery performance reports. For its
    3
    42718 4 II
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    economic analysis, the Department relied on catch data, catch value data from commercial
    harvesters, and a report from TCW Economics discussing the economic impact of recreational
    fishing in Washington. The Department considers both recreational and commercial harvesters
    as part of the.fishing industry"whose economic interests it is-
    "                                             mandated to protect under RCW
    012.
    77. 4. Administrative Record (AR)at 5. The Department projected that the new policy and
    0
    rule would result in an increase of recreational crab harvested, an increase in the personal income
    associated with recreational crabbing, a slight decrease in the ex-
    vessel value for the commercial
    harvesters, and a possible 52 percent to 48 percent ratio of commercial to recreational
    harvestinga shift from the historic 68 percent to 32 percent ratio.
    —
    PSCA challenged the new policy and rule in the superior court, alleging that the
    Department exceeded its legislative authority and acted arbitrarily            and   capriciously.   The
    superior court affirmed the validity of the rule and the policy. PSCA appeals.
    ANALYSIS
    PSCA argues that the Department acted arbitrarily and capriciously and outside of its
    legislative authority when it adopted the new Puget Sound crab management policy . and
    accompanying rule. We disagree.
    I.     STANDARD OF REVIEW
    In a proceeding involving review of a rule, the reviewing court shall declare the rule
    invalid only if it finds that (1) rule violates constitutional provisions, 2) rule exceeds the
    the                                       ( the
    agency's statutory authority, 3)the rule was adopted without compliance with statutory rule -
    (
    making procedures, or (4) rule is arbitrary and capricious. RCW 34. 5.The party
    the                                    c).
    570(
    2
    0 )(
    rule's                bears the burden of   demonstrating   the   invalidity.     RCW
    asserting    the            invalidity
    a).
    570(
    34. 5.In reviewing an agency rule -making action, we sit in the same position as the
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    42718 4 II
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    superior court and apply the Administrative Procedure Act standards directly to the agency's
    administrative record. Port of Seattle v. Pollution Control Hearings, d., Wn. d 568, 587,
    B   151 2
    90 P. d 659 (
    3       2004).
    II.      STATUTORY AUTHORITY
    PSCA first argues that the Department acted outside its statutory authority as contained in
    RCW 77. 4.
    012.
    0                   Specifically, it argues that the Department violated its statutory duty to
    improve commercial fishing and to seek to maintain the.economic well being and stability of the
    -
    fishing industry. Because the Department must consider both recreational and commercial
    interests, it did not violate its statutory duty.
    We review        a   question   of statutory   interpretation   de    novo.    Estate of Haselwood v.
    Bremerton Ice                 166 Wn. d 489, 497, 210 P. d 308 (2009). In doing so, we must
    Arena, Inc.,     2                  3
    give   effect to   a   statute's   plain meaning. Dep't of Ecology            v.   Campbell & Gwinn, LLC, 146
    Wn. d 1, 9 10, 43 P. d 4 (2002).We discern plain meaning from the ordinary meaning of the
    2        -       3
    language at issue, the context of the statute in which that provision is found, related provisions,
    and the statutory scheme as a whole. State v. Engel, 166 Wn. d 572, 578, 210 P. d 1007 (2009).
    2                  3
    When a statutory term is undefined, we give it its ordinary meaning, which may be discerned
    from the dictionary. Estate ofHaselwood, 166 Wn. d at 498. If,after this inquiry, the statute is
    2
    susceptible to more than one meaning, we may look to aids of construction and legislative
    history. Campbell & Gwinn, LLC, 146 Wn. d at 12.
    2
    RCW 77. 4.states that the Department
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    Chapter 34. 5 RCW.
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    42718 4 II
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    shall conserve the wildlife and food fish, game fish, and shellfish resources in a
    manner that does not impair the resource. In a manner consistent with this goal,
    the department shall seek to maintain the economic well being and stability of the
    -
    fishing industry in the state. The department shall promote orderly fisheries and
    shall enhance and improve recreational and commercial fishing in this state.
    As   a   preliminary matter, each   of these directives       uses   the word "shall." The word "shall"
    imposes     a   mandatory duty unless     a   contrary legislative intent is apparent.   Schweickert v.
    IVenwest Yachts, Inc., Wn. App. 886, 894, 176 P. d 577 (2008).Thus,the Department has a
    142                       3
    mandatory duty to conserve shellfish resources, to seek to maintain the economic well being and
    -
    stability of the fishing industry, and to enhance and improve recreational and commercial
    fishing. The issue here is whether the Department acted in compliance with these mandatory
    duties.
    A.       Enhancing and Improving Recreational and Commercial Fishing
    PCSA first argues that the Department violated the mandate that it shall enhance ,and
    improve recreational and commercial fishing because it expanded the recreational season at the
    expense of commercial harvesters.             The Department responds that the fishery resources are
    finite, meaning that refining seasons to adjust for changing demographics and crab abundance
    necessarily     increases the share for   one    sector   while decreasing it for another. Because the
    Department must balance its duty to both sectors, we hold that it did not violate this provision.
    Although the Department owes a duty to both recreational and commercial sectors, this
    should not be interpreted as a limitation on the Department's ability to allocate the state's share.
    PSCA's construction of the statute that commercial harvesting must be more protected than
    —
    recreational harvesting is unworkable where the Department must address both recreational
    —
    and commercial sectors and where there is competition over a finite resource. Over the years,
    the state has alternatively restricted commercial and recreational harvests in an attempt to
    M
    42718 4 II
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    manage both sectors.        For example, in 1980, the number of commercial licenses was capped,
    thereby limiting commercial harvesting.           RCW 77. 0. In
    110.
    7              2000, the Department created a
    crab management       policy   that limited recreational   harvesting. In 2004, the Department further
    limited recreational harvesting by rules that reduced the number of harvesting days per week and
    decreased the     bag limit. In order to balance both sectors, the Department must necessarily
    continue to have the flexibility to alter the allocation of the state's share.
    The former policy has resulted in a static two -thirds share for commercial harvesters,
    despite   a   significant   increase in   recreational harvesters.   The Department is charged with
    enhancing and improving the recreational harvest as well as the commercial harvest, meaning
    that it must also respond to the growth in the number of recreational harvesters. The new policy,
    which is projected to produce close to an equal division between the recreational and commercial
    harvesters, is an attempt to reasonably allocate the state's share. The duty the Department owes
    to commercial harvesters must be balanced against the duty it owes to recreational harvesters.
    PSCA's interpretation is that commercial harvesting must be more protected than recreational
    harvesting. This is not what the statute requires.
    PSCA contends that other provisions within Title 77 RCW evidence a legislative intent to
    protect commercial harvesters at the expense of recreational harvesters. PSCA points to RCW
    430,
    77. 2. which requires recreational harvesters to use catch record cards and obtain
    3
    endorsements to harvest Dungeness crab, and RCW 77. 0. which caps the number of
    110,
    7
    Dungeness crab commercial licenses           in   Puget Sound. Neither statute evidences a legislative
    intent to protect commercial crab harvesting at the expense of recreational crab harvesting. In
    fact, both statutes evidence the legislature's intent to balance recreational and commercial
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    42718 4 II
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    harvesting: one limits commercial harvesting and the other strengthens regulation of recreational
    harvesting.
    PSCA also points to a later portion of RCW 77. 4.that states "[ he commission shall
    012
    0               t]
    attempt to maximize the public recreational game fishing and hunting opportunities of all:
    citizens."    PSCA argues that the use of "
    game fishing,"
    which ostensibly excludes shellfish
    harvesting, in this provision means that the legislature was directing the Department to not
    maximize recreational shellfish    harvesting. PSCA's argument that "game fishing" excludes
    shellfish harvesting has merit; however, other provisions in Title 77 RCW, indeed, within the
    same statute, evidence the legislature's intent to protect recreational harvesting. This includes
    two instances where the game fishingshellfish harvesting distinction would also have been made
    /
    were it the legislature's intention to exempt shellfish harvesting from its mandate to improve
    recreational   fishing. For example, the provision of RCW 77. 4.at issue here requires the
    012
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    Department     to "enhance and   improve recreational and commercial fishing' —without limiting
    recreational fishing to. game fishingand RCW 77. 4. requires the Department to
    —       055(
    1
    0 )
    maximize fishing, hunting, and outdoor recreational opportunities," which, on its face,
    encompasses recreational crab      harvesting.     Despite the "game fishing" language in RCW
    012,
    77. 4.there is other evidence within Title 77 RCW that the legislature intended to protect
    0
    recreational crab harvesting, and PSCA has not shown that the legislature intended superior
    protection for commercial harvesters.
    PSCA postulates that the new rule and policy will cause recreational harvesters to
    continue to grow in number and eventually consume the entire state allocation. This scenario is
    unlikely. The Department has protected the commercial allocation in the past by reducing the
    length of the recreational   season.   Further,   even as   the number of recreational harvesters has
    42718 4 II
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    grown and the recreational harvest has exceeded its harvest targets, the commercial harvesters
    thirds of the state share.
    have continued to receive two -                              Although RCW 77. 4. does not
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    require the Department to preserve the commercial harvest at the expense of the recreational
    harvest, it does require a balancing of interests. The 2010 policy allocating a potentially greater
    share of the harvest to recreational harvesters does not violate the statute, but a policy that
    completely divested the commercial harvesters of their allocation would.
    B.       Economic Well Being and Stability of the Fishing Industry
    -
    PSCA next argues that the Department violated the mandate that it "shall seek to
    maintain the economic well being and stability of the fishing industry." Appellant's Br. at 32.
    -
    The Department interprets "fishing industry"to include both recreational and commercial fishing
    interests.   It therefore considered the economic impact of the new policy and rule on both
    commercial and recreational harvesters and the businesses that support them. PSCA argues that
    -
    fishing industry" is limited to commercial fishing and that it was improper for the Department
    to consider the impacts of the new policy and rule on businesses that support recreational
    harvesters..The definition of fishing industry" is ambiguous, but legislative history supports a
    "
    construction that includes recreational harvesting.
    Fishing industry"is undefined in the statute. Its plain meaning may be discerned from
    its ordinary meaning in the dictionary; the context of the statute in which it is found; related
    provisions;   and the statutory scheme    as   a   whole.   Engel, 166 Wn. d at 578; Estate of
    2
    Haselwood, 166 Wn. d
    2        at 498.   PSCA urges us to adopt the dictionary definition of "ishing
    f
    industry,"
    arguing that it applies only to activity involving the production and sale of fish. The
    dictionary defines " industry" as " a group of productive or profit-
    making enterprises or
    organizations that have a similar technological structure of production and that produce or supply
    E
    42718 4 II
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    technically substitutable goods, services,     or   sources   of income." WEBSTER'S THIRD NEW
    INTERNATIONAL DICTIONARY 1155 56.
    -
    The Department argues that the text and structure of Title 77 RCW support its
    consideration of recreational support businesses      as   part   of the   fishing industry. First, there is
    evidence within the statutory scheme that the legislature intended for the Department to consider
    recreational interests on par with commercial interests. RCW 77. 4.requires the Department
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    to enhance and improve recreational and commercial fishing and RCW 77. 4.
    055(
    1 requires the
    0 )
    Department to maximize fishing, hunting, and outdoor recreational opportunities. Second, RCW
    012
    77. 4.uses both "
    0             fishing industry" and "commercial fishing,"
    implying that the two are not
    synonymous. These competing definitions of fishing industry" render it ambiguous; thus, it is
    "
    necessary to resort to legislative history.
    Legislative history supports the Department's interpretation of "
    fishing industry" as
    encompassing both recreational and commercial fishing. In 1983, the legislature amended the
    language in what is now RCW 77. 4. striking the word "commercial" from the phrase
    012,
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    commercial    fishing industry."LAWS     OF   1983, lst Ex. Sess.,ch. 46 §        5.   This implies that the
    legislature intended the Department to maintain the well being and stability of more than just the
    -
    commercial sector of the     fishing industry.      The digest discussing. the changes to the code
    confirms this; it states that RCW 75. 8.the statute that contained the language of the current
    012 (
    0
    RCW 77. 4.was amended to give "commercial and recreational fisheries co equal status in
    012)
    0                                                                 -
    the]Department's management goals."Clerk's Papers at 451 (citing Memorandum from Office
    of Program Research, House of      Representatives, HB        278 —Fisheriers      Code Revision (Jan. 31,
    1983).   Given the legislature's expressed intent that commercial and recreational fishing be
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    42718 4 II
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    treated equally, the Department's consideration of the recreational sector as part of the fishing
    industry was not improper.
    III.   ARBITRARY AND CAPRICIOUS
    PSCA also argues that the policy and its accompanying rule are arbitrary and capricious
    because the Department did not project the impact of the rule beyond the first season, the
    Department increased recreational access in spite of concerns about recreational rule breaking,
    and the Department did not adequately justify its economic analysis. The Department did not act
    arbitrarily and capriciously: it committed to annual reviews of the harvest, it addressed
    compliance concerns in both the rule and policy, and it appropriately considered the economic
    impacts on both recreational and commercial harvesters.
    An agency action is arbitrary and capricious .if it is willful and unreasoning and taken
    without regard to the attending facts or circumstances. Puget Sound Harvesters Ass'n v. Wash.
    Dep't of Fish & Wildlife, 
    157 Wn. App. 935
    , 945, 239 P. d 1140 (2010).The reviewing court
    3
    must consider the relevant portions of the rule -making file and the agency's explanations for
    adopting the rule. Puget Sound Harvesters Assn, 157 Wn. App. at 945. "Where there is room
    for two opinions, an action taken after due consideration is not arbitrary and capricious even
    though a reviewing court may believe it to be erroneous."Hillis v. Dep't ofEcology, 131 Wn. d
    2
    373, 383, 932 P. d 139 (1997).We give substantial weight to an agency's determination when it
    2
    is based on factual matters, especially factual matters within the agency's expertise. Hillis, 131
    Wn. d at 396.
    2
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    PSCA first argues that the Department acted arbitrarily and capriciously when it failed to
    project   the    impact   of the   new   policy   and rule    beyond   the first year.   It argues that future
    projections would reveal that the growing numbers of recreational harvesters will further cut the
    commercial allocation.        The Department responds that it is difficult to predict future fishery
    outcomes and that the policy and rule require annual reviews of the harvest to determine if
    changes are needed. In light of the Department's mandatory annual harvest reviews, it was not
    arbitrary and capricious for it to not project outcomes beyond one year. The Department has a
    duty to review each harvest and a duty to balance both the recreational and commercial sectors.
    These mandatory harvest reviews will allow the Department to fairly allocate the state's share in
    future; ears. PSCA's argument assumes that the Department will base its allocation on demand
    y
    alone. This assumption is unfounded where the Department has a duty,to balance both sectors
    and where it has, in the past, limited recreational harvesting when it threatens the commercial
    share.
    J PSCA next argues that the Department acted arbitrarily and capriciously when it
    expanded        the recreational   season    despite problems      with recreational rule     breaking.   The
    Department responds that it considered compliance issues and included programs in the policy to
    combat these issues.
    The Department did not act arbitrarily and capriciously with regard to compliance issues.
    First, the Department was aware of and considered compliance issues in formulating the policy
    and rule. The policy requires the Department to submit an annual report that includes regulation
    compliance       data.    The policy guidelines require the Department to develop and implement
    enhanced enforcement strategies, develop outreach programs with community groups to assist
    with recreational compliance, and provide increased public access to fishery rules. Further, the
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    concise explanatory statement accompanying the new rule lists five action steps that the
    Department took in response to compliance concerns: it conducted its own compliance survey,
    partnered .with community organizations to educate the public about regulations, engaged in
    conversations with the tribes regarding compliance issues, developed a program to remove
    derelict crab pots, and requested legislative authority to raise the endorsement fee to cover the
    costs of increased regulation, education, and crab pot removal. These actions align with the State
    Auditor's suggestions for improving fishery management.
    Second, although the Department noted recreational rule violations, the violations were
    about recreational harvest risks to conservation.      For
    relatively minor, reducing   concerns
    example, in a sample of about 2,00 recreational harvesters, 81 percent of the undersized crab
    0
    harvested were between 6 and 6.5 inches. The size limit for Puget Sound is 6.5 inches, but it
    2                                             2
    varies along the coast from 5.5 to 6.5 inches. Six inch crab are large enough to have had at
    7      2               -
    least one or two breeding opportunities, so their removal is less of a threat to conservation.
    Additionally, increases in recreational harvests have not resulted in decreases of harvestable crab
    in subsequent years. While there are compliance issues in the recreational sector, they do not
    appear to create a great conservation risk. Although the Department could have taken a different
    approach to combat recreational rule breaking, its chosen approach took the relevant facts into
    consideration and was not arbitrary and capricious.
    PSCA also contends that the State Auditor's report suggests that the Department
    strengthen" the existing allocation system and that the Department acted arbitrarily and
    capriciously by ending the existing system rather than strengthening it. Appellant's Br. at 44.
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    This argument is not persuasive. The report recommends that the Department " larify"its policy
    c
    on commercial recreational allocation. AR at 1471. It does not suggest that the Department only
    /
    work within       or   strengthen   the   existing policy. The Department did not act arbitrarily and
    capriciously in responding to this recommendation.
    Finally, PSCA argues that the Department acted arbitrarily and capriciously regarding its
    economic justifications for the new policy. PSCA contends that the Department should not have
    relied on the TCW Economics report analyzing the economics of recreational and commercial
    fishing and that the Department failed to consider the negative economic impacts of the new
    policy    on    commercial    fishing.        We disagree and hold that the Department appropriately
    considered the economic report and the possible economic impact on the commercial sector.
    It was not arbitrary and capricious for the Department to consider the TCW Economics
    report.     The governor requested the report to summarize the economic impact of both
    recreational and commercial fishing in Washington. The report found that both fishing sectors
    contribute to employment, personal income, and quality of life for Washington residents. The
    report determined that the net economic value of recreational shellfish harvesting was $ per
    43
    day.      The Department used this number to estimate the economic impact of increasing
    recreational crab harvesting.
    As PSCA correctly points out, the net economic value is not the amount of income
    generated by recreational harvesters, it is the amount recreational harvesters are willing to pay
    over and above what they actually pay to fish. The report states that net economic value may be
    used in a cost -benefit analysis to determine the economic efficiency of policy actions, which is
    what the       Department used      it for.    Although the Department arguably confused net economic
    value with personal income, net economic value is an economic indicator that may be useful in
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    making policy decisions; thus, it was not improper for the Department to consider it.
    Additionally, although the report has limitationsit specifically states that it should not be used
    —
    to compare recreational and commercial fisheries the Department did not use the values in the
    —
    report to compare the two sectors, it used the report to conclude that an increase in recreational
    harvesting would likely lead to a positive economic impact.
    Further, the Department did not fail to consider the possible negative impact of the new
    rule on the commercial sector. The Department estimated catch data and ex-
    vessel values for
    commercial harvesters under the         new    rule.     The Department acknowledged that the rule will
    likely result in the recreational sector harvesting a larger share of the state's allocation.
    Additionally, the Department received public testimony from members of PSCA regarding the
    new   rule's   impact   on    commercial harvesters.        The Department had information regarding the
    economic       impact   on   commercial harvesters.        It acknowledged this information in the concise
    explanatory statement and noted the difficulty in allocating a finite resource. The Department's
    failure to adopt the result that the commercial harvesters advocated does not mean that the
    Department ignored evidence before            it   or   acted   arbitrarily and capriciously. Given the other
    facts and circumstances before the Department—he increase in recreational harvesters, the
    t
    economic impact of recreational harvesting, and conservation concerns the possible negative
    —
    impact on commercial harvesters does not make the rule arbitrary and capricious.
    IV.     ATTORNEY FEES
    PSCA argues that it is entitled to attorney fees under RAP 18.1 and RCW 4.4.the
    350,
    8
    equal access to justice act (EAJA).Under the EAJA,the "court shall award a qualified party that
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    42718 4 II
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    prevails in a judicial review of an agency action fees and other expenses, including reasonable
    attorneys' fees, unless the court finds that the agency action was substantially justified or that
    circumstances make an award unjust."PSCA did not prevail, and, as such, it is not entitled to
    attorney fees.
    Affirmed.
    We concur:
    w ewodr -,, .-
    1
    -  Quinn -
    Brintnall, J.
    Van Deren, J.
    16
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 42718-4

Filed Date: 4/23/2013

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/30/2014