NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE
APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
This opinion shall not "constitute precedent or be binding upon any court." Although it is posted on the
internet, this opinion is binding only on the parties in the case and its use in other cases is limited. R. 1:36-3.
SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
APPELLATE DIVISION
DOCKET NO. A-4630-15T4
LEAGUE OF HUMANE VOTERS
OF NEW JERSEY, ANIMAL
PROTECTION LEAGUE OF
NEW JERSEY, DOREEN FREGA,
ANITA ROSINOLA, CATHERINE
MCCARTNEY, and ROBERTA
SHIELDS,
Appellants,
v.
NEW JERSEY DEPARTMENT OF
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION;
BOB MARTIN, in his capacity as
Commissioner of the NJDEP; DIVISION
OF FISH & WILDLIFE; DAVID CHANDA,
in his capacity as Director of the Division;
NEW JERSEY FISH & GAME COUNCIL;
and DAVID BURKE, in his capacity as
Acting Chair of the Council,
Respondents.
________________________________________
Argued November 9, 2018 – Decided February 13, 2019
Before Judges Simonelli, Whipple and DeAlmeida.
On appeal from the adoption of 47 N.J.R. 2753(c) by
the New Jersey Department of Environmental
Protection.
Doris Lin argued the cause for appellants.
Jacobine K. Dru, Deputy Attorney General, argued the
cause for respondents (Gurbir S. Grewal, Attorney
General, attorney; Jason W. Rockwell, Assistant
Attorney General, of counsel; Jacobine K. Dru and
Cristin D. Mustillo, Deputy Attorneys General, on the
brief).
PER CURIAM
Appellants League of Humane Voters of New Jersey (LOHV), Animal
Protection League of New Jersey (APLNJ), Doreen Frega, Roberta Shields,
Catherine McCartney, and Anita Rosinola appeal from the November 16, 2015
adoption of the 2015 Comprehensive Black Bear Management Policy (CBBMP).
Having reviewed the record, we affirm.
In 2015, the New Jersey Fish and Game Council (Council), an entity of
the New Jersey Division of Fish and Wildlife (DFW) (a division of the New
Jersey Department of Environmental Protection (NJDEP)), proposed certain
amendments to the Fish and Game Code (Code), regulating black bear hunting.
The amendments proposed a two-part bear hunt to take place in October and
December, respectively, and adopted the 2015 CBBMP as an appendix to the
Code. 47 N.J.R. 929(a) (May 18, 2015). The proposal was published in the
A-4630-15T4
2
New Jersey Register, and after a sixty-day comment period and public hearing,
during which the Council received over 10,000 written and oral comments, the
rule was adopted. 47 N.J.R. 2753(c) (Nov. 16, 2015). The final rule adoption
was published in the New Jersey Register. Ibid.
Appellants are all individuals and organizations who participated in the
commenting process and filed emergent petitions with this court and the
Supreme Court seeking a stay of the hunt pending their appeal. LOHV and
APLNJ are non-profit animal protection organizations, which work to enact
animal-friendly legislation and work towards educating the public on nonviolent
coexistence with animals. Frega, Shields, McCartney, and Rosinola are
individual residents of New Jersey who commented on the CBBMP during the
public comment period.
There is a lengthy history of litigation regarding the decision to permit
black bear hunting in New Jersey dating back to 1953 when the Council
designated black bears as a game animal. Ibid. That history has been well
chronicled and need not be restated here. See U.S. Sportsmen's All. Found. v.
N.J. Dep't of Envtl. Prot., 182 N.J. 461, 466 (2005) (U.S. Sportsmen's); Animal
Prot. League of N.J. v. N.J. Dep't of Envtl. Prot., 423 N.J. Super. 549, 555-57
(App. Div. 2011) (Animal Prot. League). In Animal Protection League, we
A-4630-15T4
3
upheld the 2010 CBBMP and bear hunts were held in 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013,
and 2014. See Animal Prot. League, 423 N.J. Super. at 554.
On March 3, 2015, the Council held a public meeting to present the
proposed updates to the 2015 CBBMP. After a brief presentation and questions
from the public, the Council approved the 2015 CBBMP. On April 10, 2015,
the NJDEP Commissioner approved the proposed 2015 CBBMP. On May 18,
2015, the Council published a proposal in the New Jersey Register to make
certain amendments to N.J.A.C. 7:25-5.6 and 5.24 and to adopt the 2015
CBBMP as an appendix. 47 N.J.R. 929(a). A public hearing was scheduled for
June 2, 2015, and the original deadline for the submission of public comments
was July 17, 2015. Ibid.
At the hearing, twenty-one members of the public presented oral
comments and questions. APLNJ members attended and generally objected to
the policy, the procedures governing the hunt, and the introduction of an October
hunting season. Others generally objected to the hunt, the increase in permit
numbers, the allowance of bow-hunting, and the methods used to collect data on
bear complaints. No oral responses to the comments were provided at the
hearing.
A-4630-15T4
4
On November 16, 2015, the Council published the notice of rule adoption
in the New Jersey Register. 47 N.J.R. 2753(c). The publication included the
Council's responses to comments, which were grouped into forty-two objection
categories corresponding to various parts of the 2015 CBBMP and rule
amendments. Ibid. The proposed amendments to N.J.A.C. 7:25-5.6 included
the following:
The hunting season will consist of two six-day segments, one in
October and one in December, to "allow for more consistent
harvests, with essentially all bears available for hunting and with
fewer complications due to weather events." 47 N.J.R. 929(a).
Prior to this amendment, the bear hunting season ran concurrently
with the firearm deer season. Ibid.
A method to prematurely close the hunt was created. "If the harvest
rate reaches [thirty] percent [of tagged bears] during the bear
season, the season will be closed [twenty-four] hours from the day
on which [that] harvest rate was achieved." Ibid. Prior to this
amendment, the Council had the discretion to close the season early
but was not required to do so at any point.
Hunters can only use archery equipment and muzzleloaders during
the hunt's October segment. Ibid. No archery was permitted prior
to this amendment.
Hunters are permitted to purchase one permit per segment, allowing
for a new bag limit of two bears per hunter. Ibid. Previous rules
imposed an annual one-bear-per-hunter limit.
The boundaries of the Bear Management Zones (BMZs) were
changed, and a new BMZ was created. Ibid.
A-4630-15T4
5
If the harvest rate at the end of the December segment is below
twenty percent of tagged bears, the season will be extended for an
additional four consecutive days. Ibid.
The total number of permits for sale was increased from 10,000 to
11,000, and the permit lottery was ended. Ibid.; N.J.A.C. 7:25-
5.6(a)(1).
Archery is now a permissible method of harvest. 47 N.J.R. 929(a);
N.J.A.C. 7:25-5.24.
On November 25, 2015, APLNJ wrote to the NJDEP Commissioner and
the DFW requesting a stay of the hunt pending an appeal of the rule adoption.
On December 1, 2015, APLNJ requested a stay of the 2015 hunt from the
Council.1 Unsuccessful, APLNJ filed an emergent application with this court,
requesting a stay of the 2015 hunt pending the outcome of their appeal. We
denied the emergent application. The Supreme Court also denied an emergent
application, and a bear hunt has been held uninterrupted since. 2 Appellants
appealed on June 29, 2016.
1
The Council's response to this request was not provided as part of the record,
but the letter imposed a deadline of December 2, 2015 for the Council's
response.
2
The 2015 bear hunt was held between December 7 and 12, 2015, and between
December 16 and 19, 2015, and it resulted in a total harvest of 510 black bears.
Div. of Fish & Wildlife, 2015 Black Bear Season Harvest Information, N.J.
Dep't of Envtl. Prot., http://www.state.nj.us/dep/fgw/bearseas15_harvest.htm
(last updated Sept. 6, 2016).
A-4630-15T4
6
Appellants contend: (1) the CBBMP was not adopted in compliance with
U.S. Sportsmen's, (2) no determination of a need for a bear hunt, pursuant to
N.J.S.A. 13:1B-30, was made, (3) the Council was arbitrary and capricious in
its rule adoption, (4) the rule was not adopted in compliance with the
Administrative Procedure Act (APA), and (5) bow hunting is cruel. We will
address, and reject, each argument.
I.
We apply the following standard of review. We will not overturn an
administrative action "in the absence of a showing that it was arbitrary,
capricious or unreasonable, or that it lacked fair support in the evidence[.]" In
re Carter, 191 N.J. 474, 482 (2007) (quoting Campbell v. Dep't of Civil Serv.,
636 bears were harvested in the 2016 bear hunt. Div. of Fish & Wildlife,
2016 Black Bear Season Harvest Information, N.J. Dep't of Envtl. Prot.,
http://www.state.nj.us/dep/fgw/bearseas16_harvest.htm (last updated Oct. 10,
2017).
The 2017 bear hunt produced a harvest of 409 bears. Div. of Fish &
Wildlife, 2017 Black Bear Season Harvest Information, N.J. Dep't of Envtl.
Prot., http://www.state.nj.us/dep/fgw/bearseas17_harvest.htm (last updated
June 22, 2018).
The most recent bear hunt, in 2018, resulted in a harvest of 225 bears.
Div. of Fish & Wildlife, 2018 Black Bear Season Harvest Information, N.J.
Dep't of Envtl. Prot., http://www.state.nj.us/dep/fgw/bearseas18_harvest.htm
(last updated Dec. 26, 2018).
A-4630-15T4
7
39 N.J. 556, 562 (1963)). "A reviewing court 'must be mindful of, and
deferential to, the agency's expertise and superior knowledge of a particular
field.'" Allstars Auto Grp., Inc. v. N.J. Motor Vehicle Comm'n, 234 N.J. 150,
158 (2018) (quoting Circus Liquors, Inc. v. Governing Body of Middletown
Twp., 199 N.J. 1, 10 (2009)). Therefore, "we grant administrative agency action
a 'strong presumption of reasonableness.'" Aqua Beach Condo. Ass'n v. Dep't
of Cmty. Affairs, 186 N.J. 5, 16 (2006) (quoting City of Newark v. Nat. Res.
Council, 82 N.J. 530, 539 (1980)).
An agency's findings of fact "are considered binding on appeal when
supported by adequate, substantial and credible evidence[.]" In re Taylor, 158
N.J. 644, 656 (1999) (quoting Rova Farms Resort, Inc. v. Inv'rs Ins. Co. of Am.,
65 N.J. 474, 484 (1974)). "Even if we might have chosen a different course, the
agency's decision must be affirmed if supported by the record." In re Visiting
Nurse Ass'n of Sussex Cty., Inc., 302 N.J. Super. 85, 95 (App. Div. 1997). "We
are not free to substitute our judgment as to the wisdom of a particular agency
action so long as it is statutorily authorized and not otherwise defective as
arbitrary and capricious." Ibid. Ultimately, we will not "micromanage" an
agency, but recognize that unless the agency's action is inconsistent with its
A-4630-15T4
8
legislative authority, we will act with restraint and not intervene. In re Failure
by the Dep't of Banking & Ins., 336 N.J. Super. 253, 262 (App. Div. 2001).
II.
We turn to appellants' first argument that the Council did not meet the
requirements established by U.S. Sportsmen's when adopting the 2015 CBBMP.
Appellants assert the 2015 CBBMP did not set "end-point goals" or describe the
factors to be considered when choosing the tools at DFW's disposal to be
utilized. We reject both arguments because the Council set an identifiable
harvest rate and provided a list of its bear management tools with discussion of
how certain factors influence use of certain tools.
Pursuant to N.J.S.A. 13:1B-28, the "Council shall, subject to the approval
of the commissioner, formulate comprehensive policies for the protection and
propagation of fish, birds, and game animals[.]" Our Supreme Court clarified
the definition of a "comprehensive policy," explaining it must "set forth not only
end-point objectives" but also "should at least include . . . broad preservation
goals . . ., the tools at the . . . Council's disposal to accomplish those goals, and
most importantly, the factors that should be considered when determining which
tools will be utilized." U.S. Sportsmen's, 182 N.J. at 478.
A-4630-15T4
9
Here, the Council set the following objectives for the management of the
State's black bear population:
Sustain a robust black bear population as part of
[New Jersey’s] natural resource base.
Advance the scientific understanding of black bears.
Educate the public about common-sense practices
that reduce the risk of negative black bear behavior
on humans, their homes, their property, and their
communities.
Enforce the law on bear feeding and garbage
containment.
Use lethal control on high-risk, dangerous bears.
Utilize non-lethal aversive conditioning techniques
on nuisance bears.
Reduce and stabilize the population at a level
commensurate with available habitat and consistent
with reducing risk to public safety and property.
Ensure that regulated hunting remains a safe and
effective management tool to provide recreation and
control [New Jersey’s] black bear population.
[47 N.J.R. 2753(c).]
The 2015 CBBMP establishes an "integrated black bear management
strategy [that] includes educating people about black bear ecology,
recommending human behavioral adjustments while in bear range, enforcing
laws that minimize human-bear conflicts, taking action against dangerous and
A-4630-15T4
10
nuisance bears, monitoring the bear population and implementing population
control." Ibid. For each of these identified parts of the strategy, the 2015
CBBMP includes methods available to achieve the stated goals, the history of
each method's use and effectiveness, and recommended methods to be
prioritized by the DFW. Particularly, the Council justifies the need for regulated
hunting by citing the bear population's sustainable-yield capacity and the
correlation between bear hunting seasons and a reduction in complaints by
explaining how alternative methods of population management, such as
relocation and fertility control, are unfeasible. This policy satisfies U.S.
Sportsmen's and appellants' argument is, therefore, meritless.
Appellants' contention that the Council set no end-point goals is also
meritless. The Council set an identifiable harvest-rate threshold of twenty-to-
thirty percent of the black bear population based on the population's sustained-
yield capabilities, as well by looking to the practices of other states. For the
first time, the Council established an in-season mechanism by which to close the
bear hunt if the harvest rate exceeds thirty percent. Contrary to appellants'
assertion, the Council was not required to identify a specific number it thought
the black bear population needed to be reduced by. Rather, the Council
A-4630-15T4
11
appropriately identified an acceptable range of population reduction and
provided the public with several metrics it uses to evaluate that goal.
III.
We also reject the arguments that the Council did not establish a need for
the bear hunt and the Council was arbitrary and capricious in its rule adoption.
A.
In 2011, we addressed similar challenges to the 2010 CBBMP. Animal
Prot. League, 423 N.J. Super. at 554. We also discussed a number of other
issues, including but not limited to: "education; control of human-derived food;
research and analysis of the State's black bear population; analysis of the State's
available black bear habitat; . . . [and] lethal and non-lethal means of controlling
bears to reduce the nuisances they create and their threat to human safety[.]" Id.
at 555-56.
In Animal Protection League, the appellants, several of whom are
appellants herein, argued the Council acted arbitrarily and capriciously by
enacting the bear hunt rules. Id. at 557-58. Specifically, they asserted the
Council manipulated bear complaint data; did not consider carrying capacities;
"acted arbitrarily and capriciously with regard to predicting, collecting,
reporting and reacting to information regarding the potential for over-harvesting
A-4630-15T4
12
the bears, particularly pregnant females"; failed to consider the risks of hunting;
and arbitrarily dismissed the use of non-lethal bear population control methods.
Id. at 563-70.
Appellants in Animal Protection League relied on a report by Rutgers
University Professor Edward A. Tavss to assert the Council's data was inflated
by double counting bear complaints. Id. at 563. They also previously suggested
the Council improperly "includ[ed] in their 2009 figures complaints from
previously unused sources, . . . thereby allegedly making comparison of its 2009
figures to prior years' figures 'impossible.'" Ibid. Further, they argued the
Council ignored their own data showing bear hunting increases the bear
population, not decreases it. Id. at 565. We rejected those arguments one by
one, concluding the Council's decision to enact the 2010 CBBMP was "well -
supported by scientific data, and [such] complaints amount to a disagreement
with the data and the conclusions respondents drew from them." Id. at 566.
Here, appellants bring arguments largely unchanged since the challenge
to the 2010 CBBMP. They argue the Council inflated bear complaint data,
improperly included complaints from previously unused sources, excluded
unfavorable data, and failed to conduct carrying capacity studies. They assert
the Council misrepresented information regarding the sex ratio of harvested
A-4630-15T4
13
bears, arbitrarily claimed a December hunt would protect pregnant female bears,
and did not consider the effects of overharvesting. They also claim that the
Council's own data shows hunting causes an increase in the bear population.
Appellants again rely on the same Tavss 3 report and assert the Council
considered over 300 duplicative complaints and included complaint data from
improper sources. The Tavss report claimed the surge in the number of
complaints in 2008 and 2009 were statistical outliers caused by the sudden
inclusion of new complaint collection sources, including from police
departments across the state and the NJDEP's Communication Center. Once
Tavss removed the alleged duplicate and mischaracterized complaints and the
complaints taken by the new sources, he concluded the number of bear
complaints actually decreased between 1999 and 2009. Hence, Tavss found no
3
Professor Edward A. Tavss, Ph.D., according to the title page of his study, is
a professor at Rutgers University in the Department of Chemistry and Chemical
Biology. Chemical biology is the "the application of chemistry to the study of
molecular events in biological systems." Dep't of Chemistry & Chem. Biology,
Chemical Biology, Cornell Univ., http://chemistry.cornell.edu/chemical-
biology (last visited Jan. 15, 2019). Appellants do not provide a CV for
Professor Tavss, and he is not listed, as of the date of argument, on the Rutgers
University website as faculty of any kind.
The Tavss report is included in the appendix, but is not dated, and does
not appear to have been published in a scientific journal or to have been peer
reviewed.
A-4630-15T4
14
actual increases in bear complaints and urged non-lethal bear control methods
would render a bear hunt unnecessary. However, as we found in Animal
Protection League, the NJDEP Commissioner debunked the Tavss report in 2010
and summarized the results of the audit, saying:
[a]fter identifying [the] reports that represent potential
double-counting of same-day/same-location incidents,
the Department concluded that such double-counting
may affect only a fraction of reported incidents.
Specifically, potential double-counting may have
occurred in only [twenty-four] out of 2,844 recorded
incidents (or .83%) in 2008, and only [thirteen] out of
3,005 recorded incidents (or .43%) in 2009, resulting
primarily from duplication of incidents reported both to
the Department and to local police departments.
[Id. at 564 (first and second alterations in original)
(emphasis added).]
The NJDEP Commissioner concluded Professor Tavss's conclusions were
unfounded. Rather, the Council's own data, in 2010, showed the black bear
population was robust and expanding and negative bear/human interactions were
increasing. The Animal Protection League court regarded the Council's
rejection of the Tavss Report as reasonable under the circumstances and
therefore entitled to deference. Id. at 565.
Like in Animal Protection League, the Tavss Report still does not discredit
the Council's complaint collection methodology. Rather, we defer to the
A-4630-15T4
15
Council's finding that the ebb and flow of complaint data is related to the harvest
rate, as evidenced by the Council's response to a comment:
After the 2003 and 2005 bear hunting seasons, bear
complaints in 2004 and 2006 fell consistent with the
decrease in the bear population. However, after the
2004 decrease in complaints, levels in 2005 increased
before the impending 2005 season occurred . . . .
Similarly, complaint levels dropped between 2011 and
2013 as a result of the 2010 through 2012 bear seasons.
After the 2013 bear season, complaint numbers rose
significantly in 2014 consistent with the increase in the
bear population.
[47 N.J.R. 2753(c) (emphasis added).]
Thus, the Council acted reasonably in assessing and adopting the complaint data
and we reject the assertion this was an arbitrary or capricious decision.
We similarly reject appellants' claim that the Council did not properly
consider both biological and cultural carrying capacity in the 2015 CBBMP. 4 In
response to a comment claiming bears self-regulate, the Council stated the bear
population in certain northwest counties (BMZs 1-4) exceeds the area's cultural
carrying capacity. Ibid. BMZs 1-4 are home to roughly 3500 bears and account
4
Biological carrying capacity is the "maximum number of animals an
environment can support without damage to the environment while maintaining
the animals in a healthy and vigorous condition." Animal Prot. League, 423 N.J.
Super. at 567 n.10. Cultural carrying capacity "is the number of bears that can
co-exist compatibly with the local human population in a given area." 47 N.J.R.
2753(c).
A-4630-15T4
16
for a substantial share of the 1951 complaints made in 2014. Ibid. The Council
estimates there is a density of two-to-three bears per square mile in certain
northwest counties, far greater than the one bear per 2.5 square miles
recommended by the 1997 CBBMP. Ibid.
Appellants take these data and run with them. They point to the 1951
complaints filed in 2014 and compare that figure to the total State population to
suggest the statewide bear-complaint-to-human ratio actually undermines the
Council's density calculations.5 However, neither bears nor humans are equally
dispersed throughout the State. Northwest counties also deal with bears crossing
the Pennsylvania and New York borders. Therefore, the Council's conclusion
that bear density is more problematic in certain northwest counties, as compared
to the rest of the State, was reasonable considering it was based on DFW
research and years of specialized black bear expertise.
Moreover, we already rejected the notion that the need for a hunt can only
be based on the bear population exceeding the biological or cultural carrying
5
Appellants also fault the Council for not preparing a biological carrying
capacity study. However, in Animal Protection League, we explained it was
reasonable to defer to the Council's judgment that managing any wildlife species
based on biological carrying capacity was ineffective and irresponsible. 423
N.J. Super. at 567, 571. Considering appellants offer no new reason to dispute
this conclusion, we do not depart from it.
A-4630-15T4
17
capacity and discern no reason to change our decision. In Animal Protection
League, we were unpersuaded by the argument:
respondents may only employ a hunt as a last resort
when necessary to control the bear population or reduce
bear complaints. However, . . . the Council's enabling
statutes permit it to consider "public recreation" when
determining if and when game animals may be hunted,
indicating that there is no requirement that the hunt be
a last resort.
[423 N.J. Super. at 571 (emphasis added) (citations
omitted).]
Even if appellants' carrying capacity argument had merit, the 2015 CBBMP
justifies the need for a hunt by identifying the Council's population management
goals and ruling out alternative methods of population control as ineffective
compared to hunting.
B.
Appellants next argue the Council misrepresented sex ratio data from the
2003 hunt. In 2003, sixty-four percent of bears harvested were female, while
thirty-six percent were male. But in response to a 2015 comment, the Council
explained the sex and age structure of the 2003 harvest "matched that of bears
captured during research and control activities." 47 N.J.R. 2753(c). The 2004
bear status report reflects forty-two percent of the bears captured for research
A-4630-15T4
18
and control activities in 2003 were male, while fifty-seven percent were female.
Appellants argue this discrepancy reveals the Council's bad faith.
We disagree because the answer was given in response to a concern about
trophy hunting, not sex ratio data. The Council explained a trophy hunt would
only target adult bears, whereas under the CBBMP, bears of any sex or age can
be hunted. The Council's response merely explained how the variance in the
harvested population was useful for data collection purposes, and was not, as
appellants suggest, representing that the sex ratio of the 2003 hunt was
something other than what was recorded. This statement was not made in bad
faith nor was it arbitrary and capricious.
Appellants also argue the Council's reasoning that "[t]he hunting season
structure of 2003, 2005, and 2010 through 2014 was timed to be conservative,
restricting harvest to bears that had not yet entered winter dens and also
protecting pregnant females" is directly contradicted by the reported harvest sex
ratios. Ibid. However, this statement is also taken out of context. First, the
statement only explained why the Council decided to introduce a new October
segment of the bear hunt. Second, because pregnant black bears have a tendency
to enter their dens first, usually in mid-November, it was not arbitrary or
A-4630-15T4
19
capricious to reason that a black bear hunt held in December would grant
enhanced protection to pregnant female black bears.
C.
We also reject the argument that the Council's harvest rate limits are
arbitrary and capricious. New Jersey's black bear population was found to be
"robust and viable" with a "high reproductive and survival rate." Ibid. The
Council explained that regulated hunting is an effective method of managing the
population and is responsible considering the amount of complaints and
agricultural damage. Therefore, the Council concluded "black bear populations
can sustain annual harvest rates of [fifteen-to-twenty percent] with little or no
decline in population size." Ibid. To ensure the harvest stays within a
sustainable parameter, DFW is obliged to close the season if the harvest rate
reaches thirty percent of tagged bears. N.J.A.C. 7:25-5.6(a). This rate is
supported by scientific research and is reasonable considering the historical bear
population data provided by the Council. Therefore, the harvest rate is not
arbitrary or capricious.
D.
Appellants next assert the Council's own data show that bear hunts cause
an increase in the state's bear population. To support this argument, they point
A-4630-15T4
20
to a chart from the 2005 CBBMP predicting the bear population in 2009 would
be 2694 if hunting was prohibited. According to the 2010 CBBMP, the Council
estimated the 2009 black bear population to be 3438. Appellants say this proves
a bear hunt causes an increase in the overall population.
However, appellants mistake correlation for causation. The Council
found both the bear population and complaints were reduced after the 2003,
2005, 2010, 2011, and 2012 hunting seasons. The Council attributed the 2013
population increase to declining harvest rates. As such, the argument that bear
hunts cause an increase in the bear population is meritless.
IV.
Appellants assert the Council violated the APA, N.J.S.A. 52:14B-1 to -15.
Specifically, appellants allege: the Council failed to respond to questions at the
public hearing on the CBBMP, failed to publish all the amendments to the Code
in the New Jersey Register, failed to adopt criteria to approve permits for
fertility control research, and failed to respond, or did so disingenuously, to
many comments. We reject these claims and conclude the APA was not
violated.
To be valid, a rule must be adopted in "substantial compliance" with the
APA. N.J.S.A. 52:14B-4(d). Prior to adopting or amending a rule, an agency
A-4630-15T4
21
must provide notice of its intended action and "[a]fford all interested persons a
reasonable opportunity to submit data, views, comments, or arguments, orally
or in writing." N.J.S.A. 52:14B-4(a)(1), (3). Public comments should be "given
a meaningful role" in the rule adoption process. In re Adoption of Rules
Concerning Conduct of Judges of Comp., 244 N.J. Super. 683, 687 (App. Div.
1990). In response, the agency must "make available . . . through publication .
. . a report listing all parties offering written or oral submissions concerning the
rule, summarizing the content of the submissions and providing the agency's
response to the data, views, comments, and arguments contained in the
submissions." N.J.S.A. 52:14B-4(a)(4).
Appellants' first contention is that the Council did not respond to oral
comments at the public meeting on June 2, 2015. The Council acknowledges it
did not provide contemporaneous oral responses, but instead responded to the
comments in the adoption document. The APA requires "[a]t the beginning of
each hearing . . . the agency . . . shall present a summary of the factual
information on which its proposal is based, and shall respond to questions posed
by any interested party." N.J.S.A. 52:14B-4(g). In Animal Protection League,
we explained that the Council's failure to contemporaneously respond to
questions, and instead respond to oral comments in the published summary, was
A-4630-15T4
22
not fatal to adoption of the regulation. 423 N.J. Super. at 577. Here, the Council
conducted the public meeting in the same way by fielding comments, not giving
substantive answers, but making it clear the proposed CBBMP was available.
The Council then responded to the comments and concerns in the written
summary contained in the rule adoption. Like in Animal Protection League, the
Council held the public meeting in substantial compliance with the APA.
Next, appellants take issue with the Council's use of "(No change)" in its
publication of the revised version of N.J.A.C. 7:25-5.6. For example, under
N.J.A.C. 7:25-5.6(a)(1)(iv)(1) in the rule adoption document, instead of
reproducing the regulation's text, the Council includes "(No change)." 47 N.J.R.
2753(c). Appellants argue this means the Council failed to publish the adopted
regulation. But nothing in the APA requires an agency to re-publish the entirety
of an amended regulation. As the Council points out, agencies frequently use
"(No change)" to communicate the provision is left untouched and it is an
efficient way to be clear about what language the regulation is altering. Thus,
the Council's omission of unchanged language does not mean it fell out of
substantial compliance with the APA.
Appellants take issue with the Council's support of further fertility control
research and argue this was impermissible because the Council did not re -adopt
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the regulations relating to fertility control permits, N.J.A.C. 7:25-5.37(a). This
argument is unpersuasive because amendment of one regulation does not open
the door to criticize all other rules it interacts with. See Am. Cyanamid Co. v.
State, Dep't of Envtl. Prot., 231 N.J. Super. 292, 314 (App. Div. 1989).
Moreover, the APA only requires the "agency [to] consider fully all written and
oral submissions respecting the proposed rule[.]" N.J.S.A. 52:14B-4(a)(3).
Finally, appellants argue, as they did in regard to the 2010 CBBMP, that
the Council failed to respond, or did so disingenuously, to several comments .
The Council fielded nearly 10,000 comments concerning the 2015 CBBMP. In
the rule adoption, the Council published the name of each commenter, grouped
the comments in forty-two question-type categories, and provided responses to
each category of comments. Many of the responses were thorough and directly
addressed the commenters' concerns. This includes responses to several of the
comments appellants say were ignored. As for the claim that some responses
were disingenuous, we view appellants' argument here as nothing more than
disagreement with reasonable and supported agency opinions. Thus, we discern
no APA violation.
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V.
Finally, we reject appellants' argument that the apprentice hunting license
allows untrained persons to hunt bears, as well as appellants' assertion that the
Council needed to consider the humaneness of bow-hunting before permitting
it. First, apprentice hunters are precluded from participating in any black bear
hunt. See N.J.A.C. 7:25-5.6(a)(1) ("Apprentice licenses are not valid for the
taking of bear."); see also N.J.A.C. 7:25-5.1(d)(7) ("A holder of an apprentice
license may hunt in any open season . . . except as provided at N.J.A.C. 7:25 -
5.6 . . . ."). Moreover, the apprentice hunter license regulations are not being
challenged. See Am. Cyanamid Co., 231 N.J. Super. at 314.
Second, appellants only dispute the cruelness of bow-hunting but not its
efficacy or safety. Yet, appellants offer no argument as to why it was arbitrary
or otherwise unreasonable for the Council not to consider the cruelness of bow-
hunting. Therefore, we defer to the Council's judgment.
We wholly reject appellants' challenge to the 2015 CBBMP. After careful
review of the record, none of appellants' arguments are capable of showing the
Council acted arbitrarily or failed to substantially comply with the APA. Even
though appellants strongly oppose the Council's findings and policies, "simple
disagreement . . . is insufficient to overcome the presumption of reasonableness
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ascribed to [the agency's] findings." Animal Prot. League, 423 N.J. Super. at
562.
Affirmed.
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