FOR PUBLICATION
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FILED
FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT MAY 14 2008
MOLLY C. DWYER, CLERK
U .S. C O U R T OF APPE ALS
CENTER FOR BIOLOGICAL No. 07-16892
DIVERSITY; NATURAL RESOURCES
DEFENSE COUNCIL, INC.; SIERRA D.C. No. CV-05-00205-MCE
CLUB; THE WILDERNESS SOCIETY,
Plaintiffs - Appellants OPINION
SIERRA FOREST LEGACY,
Intervenor - Appellee
v.
MARK REY, in his official capacity as
Under Secretary of Agriculture; ABIGAIL
KIMBELL, in her official capacity as
Chief of the United States Forest Service;
BERNARD WEINGARDT, in his official
capacity as Regional Forester, United
States Forest Service Region 5; ALICE
CARLTON, in her official capacity as
Forest Supervisor, Plumas National Forest,
Defendants - Appellees
TUOLUMNE COUNTY ALLIANCE
FOR RESOURCES & ENVIRONMENT;
CALIFORNIA FOREST COUNTIES
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SCHOOLS COALITION; REGIONAL
COUNCIL OF RURAL COUNTIES;
WESTERN COUNCIL OF INDUSTRIAL
WORKERS; KLAMATH ALLIANCE
FOR RESOURCES & ENVIRONMENT;
COARSE GOLD RESOURCE
CONSERVATION DISTRICT/EASTERN
MADERA COUNTY FIRE SAFE
COUNCIL; TULARE COUNTY
RESOURCE CONSERVATION
DISTRICT; SIERRA RESOURCE
CONSERVATION DISTRICT;
STRAWBERRY PROPERTY OWNERS’
ASSOCIATION; HUNTINGTON LAKE
ASSOCIATION; HUNTINGTON LAKE
BIG CREEK HISTORICAL
CONSERVANCY; CALIFORNIA
EQUESTRIAN TRAILS & LANDS
COALITION; CALIFORNIA
FORESTRY ASSOCIATION;
CALIFORNIA LICENSED FORESTERS
ASSOCIATION; CALIFORNIA/
NEVADA SNOWMOBILE
ASSOCIATION; AMERICAN FOREST
& PAPER ASSOCIATION; AMERICAN
FOREST RESOURCE COUNCIL;
BLUERIBBON COALITION;
CALIFORNIA SKI INDUSTRY
ASSOCIATION; CALIFORNIA
CATTLEMEN’S ASSOCIATION;
QUINCY LIBRARY GROUP; PLUMAS
COUNTY,
Defendant-intervenors -
Appellees
2
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Eastern District of California
Morrison C. England, District Judge, Presiding
Argued and Submitted March 10, 2008
San Francisco, CA
Filed
Before: REINHARDT, NOONAN, FISHER, Circuit Judges
Opinion by Judge Noonan
NOONAN, Circuit Judge:
Sierra Forest Legacy (Sierra Forest) appeals the decision of the district court
denying a preliminary injunction against the United States Forest Service (the
USFS or the Forest Service) in a suit challenging its decision to permit logging in
accordance with changes made in 2004 by the USFS in the relevant forest plan.
Other parties, noted in the caption, have intervened on each side. The Attorney
General of California, Edmund G. Brown, Jr., has filed an amicus brief in support
of Sierra Forest.
We hold that the district court abused its discretion. We reverse and remand.
PROCEEDINGS
Sierra Forest is comprised of the Sierra Nevada Forest Protection Campaign,
Center for Biological Diversity, Natural Resources Defense Council, Sierra Club,
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and The Wilderness Society, many of whose members enjoy and are educated by
the affected forests and the wildlife dependent on habitats within them. This suit
was begun in 2005 in response to the Supplemental Environmental Impact
Statement (SEIS) issued by the USFS in January of 2004 as a supplement to the
Final Environmental Impact Statement (FEIS), issued by the USFS in 2001 in
implementation of the Sierra Nevada Forest Plan Amendment.
Under the SEIS, the USFS approved logging in three specific sites: Basin,
Empire, and Slapjack. On September 10, 2007, the USFS announced that it
intended to advertise and award logging contracts for these sites. On September
21, 2007, Sierra Forest moved for a preliminary injunction. On October 15, 2007,
the district court denied the motion.
Sierra Forest appeals, raising several claims under the National Forest
Management Act (NFMA), 16 U.S.C. §§ 1600-1614, and the National
Environmental Policy Act (NEPA), 42 U.S.C. §§ 4321-4370f. In light of our
disposition, we do not reach all of the arguments raised by Sierra Forest.
ANALYSIS
The Standard
Our review is a review of a motion preliminary to a trial. As the district
court’s decision is preliminary, so must our decision be preliminary. It is not on
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the merits. We need not address all aspects of the projects. Our decision must
defer to the discretion of the district judge who has had to act with some dispatch.
See Lands Council v. Martin, 479 F.3d 636, 639 (9th Cir. 2007) (citation omitted).
When a preliminary injunction is sought, there is a sense of urgency on each side –
to go ahead expeditiously with the project; to stop what is seen as harm that cannot
be undone. Deferential as we are, we cannot default in reviewing de novo the law
binding on the judge who has discretion but not carte blanche. See Sports Form,
Inc. v. United Press Int’l, Inc., 686 F.2d 750, 752 (9th Cir. 1982). We state only
the facts relevant to the result.
A district court abuses its discretion if it bases its decision on an erroneous
legal standard or clearly erroneous finding of fact. See Earth Island Inst. v. U.S.
Forest Serv., 351 F.3d 1291, 1298 (9th Cir. 2003) (citation omitted). The familiar
criteria to be met to obtain the issuance of an injunction before the trial are a strong
likelihood of success on the merits; the possibility of irreparable harm; a balance of
hardships favoring the plaintiffs; and advancement of the public interest. See id. at
1297-98 (citation omitted).
Probability of Success on the Merits
There is no disagreement that USFS is authorized to take action to prevent
the occurrence of forest fires. One necessary step is the clearing of brush,
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including the removal of small trees. Doing so involves the expenditure of funds.
The USFS does not assert, however, that it is necessary as a preventive measure to
cut down the larger trees that provide the habitat in which various species thrive.
These trees constitute a desirable prize for loggers who seek to convert them into
lumber for commercial purposes. The USFS acknowledges that its reason for
selling the forest trees to commercial loggers is to raise funds to carry on its fire
prevention duties. Sierra Forest and the State of California seek to preserve the
larger trees and so to preserve the habitat that supports various species. We need
decide here a limited and narrow issue: Does the 2004 SEIS prepared by USFS
regarding its plans to sell off the forest trees comply with the requirements of
NEPA?
Sierra Forest argues that USFS violated NEPA’s requirement to
“[r]igorously explore and objectively evaluate all reasonable alternatives” to a
proposed plan that has significant environmental effects. 40 C.F.R. § 1502.14(a)
(2000). USFS cannot rely on its discussion of alternatives in the 2001 FEIS to
satisfy this requirement for the 2004 SEIS. “[W]here changed circumstances affect
the factors relevant to the development and evaluation of alternatives,” USFS
“must account for such change in the alternatives it considers.” Natural Res. Def.
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Council v. U.S. Forest Serv., 421 F.3d 797, 813-14 (9th Cir. 2005) (citation
omitted).
Such changed circumstances plainly exist here. First, USFS altered its
modeling techniques between the issuance of the 2001 FEIS and the 2004 SEIS
and failed to update its analysis of the 2001 FEIS alternatives under these new
techniques. Second, the 2004 SEIS introduced substantively new objectives from
those contained within the 2001 FEIS. A primary purpose of the new framework
adopted by the SEIS is the provision of funds for the reduction of fuel, that is, for
the reduction of the risk of fire in the forests. This goal has become an imperative
after the catastrophic fires that have devastated forests in the northwest. Severe
wildfires have increased dramatically in the Sierra Nevada from an average of
43,000 acres per year ten years ago to an average of 63,000 acres per year. Control
of wildfires is an imperative for the inhabitants of land bordering the forests. It is
an imperative for defenders of the habitat and the wildlife within them. Fire is a
force that must be managed if the environment is to be protected.
The SEIS proposes a simple solution:
Opportunities for Leveraging Appropriated Funds to Accomplish
Fuels Treatments
Under Alternative S2, revenues from the sale of commercial
forest products could be obtained from some fuels treatments. This
would increase the likelihood of accomplishing the projected acres of
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treatment, an essential first step in achieving the desired reductions in
acres burned. Where consistent with desired conditions, area
treatments would be designed to be economically efficient and meet
multiple objectives.
Timber sale contracts provide a mechanism for the efficient
removal of commercially-valuable sawtimber. Contracts that have
sufficient value offer capabilities for funding the accomplishment of
additional resource management goals. Records from recent timber
offerings indicate that sales with higher volumes per acre attract
higher bids. Sales yielding an average 4.5 mbf/acre provide
approximately $112/mbf, compared to only $38/mbf for 1.5 mbf/acre
(Lamdram, pers comm).
The size of tree made available for harvest has a significant
influence on sale volume per acre averages and thus, per unit bid
values. Assuming typical heights, the board foot volume for a 12-inch
dbh tree is 39, compared to 317 for a 20 inch tree and 710 for a 24
inch tree. Using these assumptions, 77 twelve-inch dbh tress would
be needed to reach the minimum economically feasible sale volume
(estimated at 3 mbf/acre). This compares to 9 trees of 20-inch dbh
and 4 trees of 24-inch dbh. In summary, including only a few
medium-sized trees can make an impact on the economic viability of a
given project.
A number of options are available for deriving commercially-
valuable wood products from fuels treatments. Where wood-fired
electrical generation facilities exist and sufficient sawtimber value is
present, small trees, e.g. biomass, can be removed. Bids in excess of
required collections may also be made available for fuel reduction
treatments within the sale area boundary. These may include:
1) Shredding of ladder fuels, i.e. small trees, woody shrubs, and
surface fuel,
2) Prescribed fire treatment following timber harvest, or
3) Fuel reduction treatment outside timber sale units (within the
time sale area boundary).
Alternatively, a stewardship contract package (a service
contract, not a timber sale contract), that includes commercially-
valuable sawtimber, may provide for cost-effective implementation of
multiple fuels reduction projects within the contracted area.
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In amplification, the USFS replied to the following public comment:
9.2.4. Public Concern: The Final SEIS should not claim that
increased logging levels will increase forest protection, or it should
scientifically justify that assertion.
Response: Alternative S2 in the SEIS was developed to provide
opportunities for increasing available funds for fuels reduction work
on the national forests. This alternative increases revenues by
permitting the removal of some medium-sized trees from some areas.
The SEIS does not suggest that removing these trees will alter stand
structure in ways that significantly enhance fire protection. It is the
increase in available funds from logging that can be used to increase
fuels reduction work. But the work would be done on other lands.
See the discussion on fuels treatment economics in the SEIS (Chapter
4, Economics of Fuels Treatments) for more information about
treatment costs and the value of additional timber harvest to fuels
reduction work. The Final SEIS (Chapter 4, Fire and Fuels
Management) has an expanded discussion regarding the economics of
fuels treatments.
Sell trees to loggers. Use the money to clear areas of what is potential fuel
for fire. The solution has a secondary benefit: what the loggers cut can, at least in
part, be timber that was potential for fire. In one sale, a fire hazard can be removed
and the USFS paid so that it can remove the fuel of future fires.
Two for one always has an attractive ring. But are there no alternative ways
of getting money to do the clearing that is imperative? Obviously, there may be.
First of all, there is the USFS’s own budget. Does that budget contain any funds
that could be devoted to fuel removal? Is every one of its activities so necessary
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and so tightly allocated that no money could be shifted? We do not know the
answer because this alternative has not been explored.
Suppose that the USFS and its parent, the Department of Agriculture, cannot
spare a dime. What then? Appropriate appropriations come from Congress. The
work of fire prevention is work of the first importance. If the USFS does not have
enough, why should not Congress be asked to give it more? Surely the avoidance
of catastrophic fire in the national forests must rate a high priority among the needs
of the nation.
Alternatives considered in the 2001 FEIS address the critical problem of fuel
reduction. Several of them (F3, F4, F6, and F7) are projected as achieving an
acreage reduction of over 30% in the first five decades as opposed to a 22%
reduction that is projected in the adopted Alternative S2. These alternatives do not
appear to have been reexamined in the light of the new urgency of fire prevention.
The Attorney General of California raised several alternative methods to
fund USFS’s fire reduction objectives, including requesting a special appropriation
from Congress, re-prioritizing other funding, and altering its fuel treatment
program. USFS failed to consider these alternatives in its implementation of the
2004 SEIS. So long as all these alternatives remain unexamined or unreexamined,
so long does the SEIS fail to conform to the law. The district court abused its
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discretion in concluding that USFS complied with NEPA’s requirement to
“[r]igorously explore and objectively evaluate all reasonable alternatives.” 40
C.F.R. § 1502.14(a) (2000).
Balancing of Equities
The legal merits of the Sierra Forest’s case, at this stage of the litigation,
are strong. To justify a preliminary halt to the projects the real possibility of
irreparable harm is still required. It is not necessary to canvass all the species that
may be affected and all the environmental harm that might ensue. It suffices in this
case to take account of the status of the spotted owl whose range relates to the
affected forests. True, the species exists in southern California as well as in the
northwest; but the species as a whole has been classified as “sensitive” by the
Forest Service. The proposed logging will not destroy the species. What it will do
is reduce its established habitat. The possibility that this reduction in its range will
irreparably damage the sensitive species cannot be dismissed.
Postponement of the Forest Service plans may increase the danger posed by
fires; but the Forest Service and Congress do not appear helpless to find the funds
to decrease the dangers. The question we address here is whether USFS’s choice
of funding for fire reduction – rather than fire reduction itself – outweighs
California’s preservation interests. We conclude that it does not, given that
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“special solicitude” should be afforded California’s stake in its natural resources
and that the Forest Service did not consider alternatives to its choice of funding.
Massachusetts v. Envtl. Prot. Agency, 127 S. Ct. 1438, 1454-55 (2007).
Public interests are further implicated: the importance of preserving the
environment and of enforcing the law intended to preserve it. See Amoco Prod.
Co. v. Vill. of Gambell, 480 U.S. 531, 545 (1987).
For the reasons stated, the judgment of the district court is REVERSED and
the three proposed projects are preliminarily enjoined to the extent that they are
inconsistent with the 2001 FEIS. The case is REMANDED for further proceedings
in accordance with this opinion.
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FILED
MAY 14 2008
MOLLY C. DWYER, CLERK
U .S. C O U R T OF APPE ALS
NOONAN, Circuit Judge, concurring:
Impaired Impartiality. That judges cannot supplement their salaries,
however inadequate they may be, by imposing fines provided by law on those
convicted of lawbreaking seems to be a pretty elementary principle of justice. Yet
the civilized state of Ohio and the Supreme Court of that state saw nothing to
object to in the practice until the Supreme Court of the United States unanimously
held it to be a deprivation of due process for a municipal officer to get $12 out of a
$100 fine that he had legally imposed. Tumey v. Ohio, 273 U.S. 510 (1927).
Almost as elementary is the extension of this principle to administrative
adjudicators. See Gibson v. Berryhill, 411 U.S. 564, 579 (1973) (citation omitted).
The bias created need not be personal, that is, the adjudicator to be found
biased need not be paid off by his decision. The bias can arise from his decision
being a way of raising money for the municipality he serves. Ward v. Vill. of
Monroeville, 409 U.S. 57 (1972). Once again, the civilized state of Ohio and its
Supreme Court had to be corrected by the United States Supreme Court finding a
denial of due process when fines imposed by the mayor were “a substantial
portion” of the municipality’s income, although the mayor’s own salary was fixed
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and independent of the fines. Id. at 59. The test, failed by Ohio’s statutory
scheme, was whether “a possible temptation” was offered the mayor acting as
judge “not to hold the balance nice, clear, and true.” Id. at 60 (quoting Tumey, 273
U.S. at 532).
It would not seem to require a Euclid to draw appropriate inferences from
the governing principle of impartiality. Yet it has not been easy. Two justices
dissented in Gibson, asserting that only personal gain disqualified the decider. 411
U.S. at 84 (White, J. and Rehnquist, J., dissenting). Forty years after Tumey, three
states still used the statutory scheme of a judge supporting himself by his own
judgments that was condemned as unconstitutional in Tumey. See K. Davis,
Administrative Law Text § 12.04 (1972). In many instances the necessity of having
a judge has been allowed to trump the necessity of a judge who is impartial. Id. at
§ 12.05. A distinction has also been drawn between a judicial or quasi-judicial role
and a legislative role where impartiality is not a requisite. Id. at § 12.04. A
financial interest may also be so slight as to be discounted as a disqualifier.
Marshall v. Jerrico, Inc., 446 U.S. 238, 245-46 (1980).
Custom or indifference cannot legalize a departure from what is required by
the criterion of impartiality. Necessity may make an inroad, and it might be argued
that the USFS is necessitous; it says it doesn’t have the money it needs unless it
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sells the forests. That argument takes too narrow a view of the position of the
USFS. It has a budget that may be malleable. It exists within a department that
may have discretionary funds. It is the arm of a nation whose credit, not
inexhaustible, is strong enough not to require supplementation by sales of the
nation’s timber. Necessity, in a word, has not been established.
We do not need, on the facts of this case, more information on the budget of
the Forest Service. It has been suggested in earlier litigation concerning similar
timber sales by the Forest Service that this information should be furnished. See
Earth Island Inst. v. U.S. Forest Serv., 442 F.3d 1147, 1178 (9th Cir. 2006)
(Noonan, J., concurring); Earth Island Inst. v. U.S. Forest Serv., 351 F.3d 1291,
1309 (9th Cir. 2003) (Noonan, J., concurring). In this case, the Forest Service
makes no secret of the importance of the sales to its approval of the projects.
Fund-raising for fuel-reduction is a substantial purpose.
The Forest Service has a final argument, unfurled as its lead argument in
oral argument. It is that its approval of the three contested projects denies no
person the right to life, liberty or property. Hence due process of law is not
required and nothing but due process requires impartiality. This bold claim calls
for careful consideration.
15
Undisputed is the standing of Sierra Forest to assert the interest of those
individual members affected by the destruction of the environment and its species.
“Aesthetic and environmental well-being, like economic well-being, are important
ingredients of the quality of life in our society,” important enough to confer
standing under the Administrative Procedure Act, 5 U.S.C. § 702, to redress an
injury in fact. Sierra Club v. Morton, 405 U.S. 727, 734 (1972). These are
elements of the liberty enjoyed by a citizen. An injury in fact inflicted by a
decision of the USFS must necessarily be the denial of a result to which the
plaintiffs were legally entitled. If the plaintiffs were entitled to the result, were the
plaintiffs not entitled to an unbiased decision-maker? The injury asserted here is
alleged to arise under NEPA. Invoking the federal law, Sierra Forest was entitled
to seek its application by an agency which was without an interest of its own in a
result contrary to the law.
Why is there a case before us if no person’s rights were at stake? We do not
sit to adjudicate general policy disputes but to decide controversies. A controversy
calls for two parties, each asserting an interest and a right that protects that interest.
So here, Sierra Forest is not a plaintiff without an interest and a right. We do not
need to dismiss the case for want of a controversy. Nor do we need to find that no
right is at issue. The right Sierra Forest seeks to vindicate here did not arise with
16
the USFS’s decision. The right was what Sierra Forest sought to vindicate before
the USFS.
It is possible that a crucial distinction here may be made between rulemaking
and adjudicating, if it is meaningful to separate administrative action into these two
tight compartments. Rulemaking by an administrative agency, like legislation by a
legislature, seems exempted from scrutiny for conflict of interest. When the Forest
Service develops a forest plan it is engaged in rulemaking and it needs only to
provide for the kind of notice and comment that rulemaking requires. See 36
CF.R. § 219.9. Forest plans “do not grant, withhold, or modify any contract,
permit, or other legal instrument, subject anyone to civil or criminal liability, or
create any legal rights.” Id. at § 219.3(b). A forest plan in itself “does not give
anyone a legal right to cut trees, nor does it abolish anyone’s legal authority to
object to trees being cut.” Ohio Forestry Ass’n, Inc. v. Sierra Club, 523 U.S. 726,
733 (1998).
Rights enter the picture when the Forest Service moves to site-specific
projects. In this step, the Forest Service implements the plan in a specific location
by selecting a timber sale area, preparing an environmental assessment in
accordance with NEPA, allowing public comment, and awarding a timber
harvesting contract to the highest bidder. See id. at 729-30; Sierra Club v.
17
Peterson, 228 F.3d 559, 562 (5th Cir. 2000); 36 C.F.R. § 223.1. Each site-specific
project and timber sale contract must be consistent with the applicable forest plan.
36 C.F.R. § 219.8(e), § 223.30.
The Forest Service introduces its bias at the stage of making the forest plan,
while case law prohibits bias only at the stage of awarding contracts. This delay in
the bite of the bias should not insulate it from judicial review. The financial
incentive of the Forest Service in implementing the forest plan is as operative, as
tangible, and as troublesome as it would be if instead of an impartial agency
decision the agency was the paid accomplice of the loggers.
That the difference between judicial and legislative functions makes a
difference as to the impropriety of monetary benefit to the decision-makers is a
fallacy. The bribery of a congressman is a crime. See 18 U.S.C. § 201; United
States v. Brewster, 408 U.S. 501 (1972). It would not make a difference if the
bribe came from a trade association on behalf of a whole industry. See, e.g.,
United States v. Sun-Diamond Growers of California, 526 U.S. 398 (1999). In the
instant case the decision-makers are influenced by the monetary reward to their
agency, a reward to be paid by a successful bidder as part of the agency’s plan.
Independently of the grounds set out in my opinion for the court, I would
hold this defect in the process to vitiate entirely the ultimate decisions, without the
18
necessity of balancing, and to require judicial setting aside of the implementation
of the process.
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Counsel List
David Edelson, Berkeley, California, for plaintiffs-appellants.
Jennifer Scheller, Washington, D.C., for defendants-appellees.
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