City of Dania Beach v. Federal Aviation Administration

Opinion for the Court filed by Senior Circuit Judge WILLIAMS.

Opinion concurring in part, dissenting in part, and concurring in the judgment filed by Circuit Judge ROGERS.

WILLIAMS, Senior Circuit Judge:

Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International Airport no longer has the capacity to meet existing demand without substantial delays. Congestion and delay, indeed, are projected to increase. The parties dispute what to do about it.

The airport now has three runways. Two are widely spaced and run parallel in the east/west direction on either side of the airport terminal — the 9,000-foot by 150-foot “main” runway and a shorter south runway; the third runs diagonally from northwest to southeast. Only the main runway is long and wide enough to accommodate larger aircraft. The airport’s owner, Broward County, seeks to extend the south runway to 8,600 feet by 150 feet and to close the diagonal runway. It applied to the Federal Aviation Administration for federal funding and for the many FAA approvals needed to begin construction pursuant to the Airport and Airway Improvement Act (“AAIA”), 49 U.S.C. §§ 47101^47131, and related statutes. After considering several possible alternatives to the county’s proposal and conducting a lengthy environmental review process, the FAA issued a Record of Decision that with minor modifications approved the county’s proposal, dubbed Alternative Bib. 74 Fed.Reg. 978 (Jan. 9, 2009) (the “Decision”).

The cities of Dania Beach and Hollywood and several individuals challenge the adopted proposal. They argue that instead of approving Alternative Bib, the FAA should have chosen an alternative that is concededly preferable environmentally, “Alternative Cl,” consisting of a new runway to the north of the main runway. Besides a variety of other environmental benefits (discussed below), Alternative Cl *584would spare an area called “Brooks Park”; petitioners describe this as an “old neighborhood park” containing “1.5 acres, with picnic tables, parking, and ‘passive open space.’ ” Pet. Br. at 46-47.

Petitioners invoke two environmental statutes and an executive order: (1) 49 U.S.C. § 47106(c)(1)(B), a part of the AAIA, which conditions FAA approval, when a project such as the county’s is shown to have certain adverse environmental impacts, on a finding that there is no “possible and prudent” alternative; (2) § 4(f) of the Department of Transportation Act of 1966, 49 U.S.C. § 303(c), which somewhat similarly conditions approval of a project that will use a publicly owned park “of national, State, or local significance,” plus some other publicly owned amenities, on a finding that there is no “prudent and feasible” alternative; and (3) Executive Order 11,990, § 2(a), 42 Fed. Reg. 26,961 (May 24, 1977), which conditions federal assistance for construction in wetlands on a finding that there is no “practicable alternative.”

In its administrative proceedings and before us, the FAA points to airport delays that would continue and even be exacerbated if Alternative Cl were adopted, and to safety hazards associated with that option. It regards these problems as extreme enough, in context, to support its finding that Alternative Cl was not “prudent” under either statute, nor “practicable” under the Executive Order. It also found Brooks Park not to be a park of local significance.

After addressing the county’s arguments that the FAA decision is not final and that petitioners lack standing, we consider whether the FAA either was required to, or did, give the term “prudent” in the AAIA the same meaning that the Supreme Court found “prudent” to have in § 4(f) in Citizens to Preserve Overton Park v. Volpe, 401 U.S. 402, 411-13, 91 S.Ct. 814, 28 L.Ed.2d 136 (1971); we find that it was free to, and did, give it a somewhat laxer construction. Applying that construction, we find the FAA’s decision consistent with the AAIA. We also find that the FAA could reasonably conclude that Brooks Park was not a park protected by § 4(f). Finally, we hold that the agency was not arbitrary or capricious in viewing Alternative Cl as “impracticable” within the meaning of the Executive Order.

Finality and standing

Section 46110(a) of Title 49 provides this court jurisdiction to review orders issued by the FAA under the AAIA. Although the FAA does not contest jurisdiction, Bro-ward County has intervened and objected to subject matter jurisdiction on two grounds: lack of finality and lack of standing.

First, the county argues that the FAA’s challenged actions under 49 U.S.C. § 47106(c)(1)(B) and Executive Order 11,-990 are not final orders, because they merely determine eligibility for federal funds, rather than actually approving a grant of funds. Because the Decision does not award a grant, the county says that the petitioners’ objections are premature (with the exception of their § 4(f) claim).

Second, the county objects to the petitioners’ standing, saying that a favorable decision in this case would not redress their alleged injury. Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife, 504 U.S. 555, 561, 112 S.Ct. 2130, 119 L.Ed.2d 351 (1992) (“it must be likely, as opposed to merely speculative, that the injury will be redressed by a favorable decision”) (internal quotations omitted). The county contends that it has an approved airport layout plan (“ALP”) (approved in the Decision itself, see Decision at 91), and could and would make the proposed changes to the airport even with*585out federal funding and thus, it argues, without the contested rulings under § 47106(c)(1)(B) or Executive Order 11,-990. The county is adamant that if federal funding were denied, its intent and ability to proceed with its expansion plans would be just as firm as O’Hare’s were shown to be in Village of Bensenville v. FAA, 457 F.3d 52, 70 (D.C.Cir.2006). It says that if the FAA approved the ALP under § 47107(a)(16), the challenged FAA determinations could only be reviewed in a final award of the grant, which the Decision clearly is not. See Decision at 89 (the Decision does “not signify an FAA commitment to provide financial support, which is a separate future decision”).

We discuss the two objections to our subject matter jurisdiction — the lack of finality and redressability — in reverse order. The county’s understanding of § 47106(c)(1)(B) is mistaken. A number of paragraphs in § 47106 specifically state conditions for approval of “project grant[s],” including paragraphs (a), (b), (e) and (g); but paragraph (c) is in this respect far broader. It governs every application for an airport development project involving the location of an “airport or runway or a major runway extension,” regardless of the applicant’s interest in federal funding. See Town of Stratford v. FAA, 285 F.3d 84, 90-91 (D.C.Cir.2002),

Assuming the county proceeded without federal funding, its theory would be correct that it and the FAA would have had no need to jump through § 47106(c)(1)(B) hoops, but only if its proposed changes to the ALP were minor. Here the county proposes a “major runway extension,” defined in FAA regulations as one that “causes a significant adverse environmental impact to any affected environmental resource.” FAA Order 5050.4B ¶ 9.1(£). So, even if the county declined federal aid, its airport expansion could proceed only if the FAA approved a new ALP, which it could do only on a finding that the project complied with § 47106(c). Because the county cannot begin the airport expansion without an approved ALP, a determination by this court that the FAA violated § 47016(c)(1)(B) would redress the petitioners’ injury by stopping the expansion in its tracks. Lujan, 504 U.S. at 561, 112 S.Ct. 2130; FAA Order 5050.4B, ¶ 202.c(2) (unconditional ALP approval signals that the FAA has authorized the airport sponsor to begin building the facilities or equipment depicted on the ALP).

For the same reasons, the county’s finality objection must fail. The Decision gave its approval to the new ALP, Decision at 91, a necessary condition for implementing Alternative Bib, and a sufficient one so far as FAA approvals are concerned. See United States v. Los Angeles & S.L.R. Co., 273 U.S. 299, 310, 47 S.Ct. 413, 71 L.Ed. 651 (1927) (holding that agency orders are final when they “determine [a] right or obligation”). See also Environmental Defense Fund, Inc. v. Ruckelshaus, 439 F.2d 584, 589 & n. 8 (D.C.Cir.1971).

The county also poses finality and standing objections to our reaching petitioners’ claims that the FAA violated the Executive Order. So far as we can determine, this challenge depends entirely on the county’s claims, set out in its discussion of the AAIA context, that the Decision did not establish any right, and that its reversal would not remedy Dania Beach’s prospective injury, because it was not a final grant of money. But as we have shown, the Decision did afford Broward County a right (the right to proceed with Alternative Bib), and its reversal would correspondingly relieve Dania Beach of the feared injury, namely the side effects of the airport expansion. The same points are *586equally true as to the FAA’s ruling under the Executive Order.

Merits

The first issue relating to § 47106(c)(1)(B) is whether “prudent” in that section must have the same meaning as it does in § 4(f) of the Department of Transportation Act of 1966, 49 U.S.C. § 303(c), as petitioners argue, or whether it is somewhat less demanding here than in that context, as the FAA says. The Supreme Court in Overton Park found that § 4(f) allowed use of the protected parks, recreation areas and wildlife resources for transportation projects only when an alternative was rendered imprudent by “truly unusual factors” or problems that rose to “extraordinary magnitudes.” 401 U.S. at 413, 91 S.Ct. 814. Petitioners make the seemingly common sense point that a word’s meaning should be the same across comparable contexts; after all, both the relevant provisions allow a federal agency to harm a natural resource only if there is no “possible and prudent” or “prudent and feasible” alternative to the proposed project. They also argue that the FAA’s internal rules, Order 5050.4B, ¶ 1007.e(4)(b), (5)(a), have assigned the two sections an identical meaning.

Petitioners invoke our decision in Citizens Against Burlington, Inc. v. Busey, 938 F.2d 190 (D.C.Cir.1991), in support of their argument that the FAA has no discretion to interpret the term “prudent” more narrowly than the Supreme Court’s interpretation of § 4(f). But that case does not resolve the point. Having first found that the agency had not violated § 4(f), i.e., that it non-arbitrarily found the proposed alternative imprudent under § 4(f), we said that we had “little trouble” deciding that there was no violation of the predecessor of § 47106(c)(1)(B). Id. at 205. The proposition that compliance with § 4(f) necessarily entails compliance with § 47106(c)(1)(B) does not, however, mean the reverse — not if § 4(f) restricts the agency more severely than does § 47106(c)(1)(B).

Given the range of plausible interpretations, some deference is due the agency’s interpretation under either Chevron U.S.A. v. Natural Resources Defense Council, 467 U.S. 837, 104 S.Ct. 2778, 81 L.Ed.2d 694 (1984), or Skidmore v. Swift & Co., 323 U.S. 134, 140, 65 S.Ct. 161, 89 L.Ed. 124 (1944); here we need not resolve which. The FAA discusses the meaning of “prudent” in both statutes in its Order 5050.4B, an agency “manual” adopted pursuant to a notice-and-comment process as directed by the Vision 100— Century of Aviation Reauthorization Act. Pub.L. 108-176, § 307, 117 Stat. 2490, 2539 (2003). The order, though hardly unequivocal, does not equate the two. Paragraph 1007.e(5)(a) directs FAA officials, in determining whether an alternative is “prudent” for purposes of § 4(f), to “[u]se” seven listed factors, such as whether the park-preserving alternative would cause “extraordinary safety or operational problems.” Paragraph 1007.e(4)(b) addresses “prudent” in the context of § 47106(c)(1)(B); it in turn refers to the ¶ 1007.e(5)(a) factors, but does so, we think, more vaguely and with somewhat less insistence, saying that e(5)(a) defines prudent “relative to Section 4(f)” but is still “very useful” for application of § 47106(e)(1)(B). (Both sections say that “ ‘prudent’ refers to rationale [sic] judgment”; neither counsel relied on that language or could offer any interpretive help.)

In its brief before us the FAA explicitly offers an interpretation of § 47106(c)(1)(B) and Order 5050.4B distinctly laxer than that of Overton Park’s reading of § 4(f); it argues that it may find an option imprudent if it “is significantly inferior at serv*587ing the FAA’s statutory mandates under the AAIA, including the mandates to increase capacity, accommodate demand with less delay, and ensure safety.” Resp. Br. at 23. As an interpretation of the FAA’s regulation, such an interpretation is entitled to deference so long as it reflects “the agency’s fair and considered judgment on the matter in question,” not just its litigating position. Auer v. Robbins, 519 U.S. 452, 462-63, 117 S.Ct. 905, 137 L.Ed.2d 79 (1997). Here, the briefs interpretation is not new: the FAA elaborated a very similar interpretation in its legal brief submitted in May 2007 in its Brief for Respondent at 27-28, 31-34, Natural Resources Defense Council v. FAA, 564 F.3d 549 (2d Cir.2009) (“NRDC v. FAA ”). The NRDC court substantially accepted this interpretation. See NRDC v. FAA, 564 F.3d at 565-67.1

Despite the two statutes’ general similarity in context, the FAA reasons that the greater breadth of resources protected by § 47106(c)(1)(B) cuts against an idea of “prudent” identical to that of § 4(f). The latter applies only to parks, recreation areas, and wildlife or waterfowl refuges that have been declared significant; § 47106(c)(1)(B) protects “natural resources, including fish and wildlife, natural, scenic, and recreation assets, water and air quality, or another factor affecting the environment.” Section 4(f) prohibits “use” while § 47106(c)(1)(B) bans “significant adverse effect[s].”

In addition, the NRDC court observed that § 4(f) protects only publicly owned resources, so their use will almost always be less costly to “the public purse,” id. at 566 (citing Overton Park, 401 U.S. at 412, 91 S.Ct. 814); and because no one normally lives or works in § 4(f)-protected areas, ño one will have to be driven from his home or business, id. Thus the § 4(f) context requires exceptional agency push-back if the resources are to have any chance. By contrast, NRDC v. FAA reasoned, the AAIA protected privately owned as well as public lands, so that an alternative affecting the protected resources was less likely to have an automatic advantage.

Besides the difference in range of protected resources and NRDC v. FAA’s arguments, § 47106(c)(1)(B) is part of a larger statute, the AAIA, which boosts airport development unusually aggressively. See 49 U.S.C. § 47101(a)(7) (“airport construction and improvement projects that increase the capacity of facilities to accommodate passenger and cargo traffic [should] be undertaken to the maximum feasible extent so that safety and efficiency increase and delays decrease”).

This case falls somewhere between the conditions for deference to agency interpretations of their regulations under Auer and the restricted conditions for deference to interpretations of an enabling statute under Mead. United States v. Mead Corp., 533 U.S. 218, 121 S.Ct. 2164, 150 L.Ed.2d 292 (2001). If Order 5050.4B simply echoed the exact language of § 47106(c)(1)(B), the agency’s brief could enjoy no Auer deference. Gonzales v. Oregon, 546 U.S. 243, 256-57, 126 S.Ct. 904, 163 L.Ed.2d 748 (2006). But given Order 5050,4B’s suggestion of a gap between the statutes’ meanings, the FAA briefs’ apparently consistent articulation of such a difference, and the evident differences in the two provisions’ scope and purpose, we find the interpretation offered here by the FAA within its discretion.

*588Quite apart from questions of degree of prudence or imprudence, the FAA invokes Order 5050.4B, ¶ 1007.e(4)(b) for the principle that under § 47106(c)(1)(B) it may consider not only how well each alternative meets the project’s purpose and need, the FAA’s statutory mandates under the AAIA, and the county’s goals, but also the competing proposals’ varying levels of environmental harm. As it points out, all the alternatives it considered would have some significant adverse effects on natural resources. While Alternative Cl was the “environmentally preferred alternative,” it would nevertheless cause noise impacts to 285 households, could result in destruction of 15.40 acres of wetlands in order to relocate displaced airport tenants, and may affect a federally-listed species — compared with noise impacts to 1051 households and destruction of 15.41 acres of wetlands under Alternative Bib. Decision at Tbl.3. To be sure, § 47106(e)(1)(B) does not allow the FAA to engage in an open-ended, fully discretionary balancing of competing interests. But we think that where protected resources are on both sides of the balance, the FAA may properly consider not only the non-environmental defects of the environmentally preferred option, but also the margin by which its environmental advantages exceed those of the alternative.

With these principles in mind, we have little difficulty finding that there was nothing arbitrary or capricious in the FAA’s finding that Alternative Cl was not “prudent,” and that § 47106(c)(l)(B)’s demands were satisfied. The FAA found that although the selected Alternative Bib would have more adverse environmental impacts than Alternative Cl, it would have a radical edge in meeting the transportation purposes of reducing delays, ensuring safety and increasing capacity. See Id. at 46-48. The delay differences alone are striking. Alternative Bib would have 3.1 minutes of average delay per operation and would perform almost as well in poor-weather conditions: 3.2 average minutes of delay in East Flow operations and 8.3 average minutes of delay in West Flow operations. Id. at 46 & n. 96. By contrast, Alternative Cl would have average delays of 5.0 minutes of per operation, skyrocketing in poor-weather conditions to 32.2 minutes in East Flow operations and 79.1 minutes in West Flow ones. Id.

Petitioners try to parry the delay figures with the point that poor-weather delays are rare (occurring only 7% of the time). They also argue that § 47106(e)(1)(B) requires the FAA to select the environmentally-preferred alternative so long as it meets the project’s predefined purpose and need, which had been set as six minutes of average delay per operation, even if it meets that criterion only minimally.

But projections prepared in the final EIS showed that Alternative Cl would perform as poorly as the no action alternative in poor weather conditions (and worse than Alternative Bib by a factor of 10). Final Environmental Impact Statement for the Development and Expansion of Runway 9R/27L and Other Associated Airport Projects at Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International Airport (June 2008), App. F at F-19. And the 7% frequency of poor weather amounts to an average of 25 days a year. We think the FAA entirely within its discretion in placing weight on defects in Alternative Cl that were not foreseen in the original formulation of goals.

The different alternatives also vary considerably in their fit with the existing airport layout, with the edge decisively in favor of Alternative Bib. Under it, both the main runway and the extended south runway could operate independently, reducing complexity in coordinating arrivals and departures. Decision at 46-47. Un*589der Alternative Cl, no such independent operation would be possible for the main runway and the proposed new one. Instead, air traffic control would have to take extra precautions in coordinating takeoffs and landings. Id. And under Alternative Cl, once airplanes were on the ground they could access the terminal from either runway only by crossing an active runway. Id. at 46.

The petitioners respond that this is nothing extraordinary, and that air traffic control could easily coordinate ah’ traffic and runway crossings. But the fact that air traffic control could choreograph the dance of the airplanes does not suggest that such coordination is not more cumbersome or less safe than the alternative. Human error is the most common cause of aviation accidents. See Scott Shappbll et al., DOT/FAA/AM-06/18, Human Error and Commercial Aviation Accidents: A Comprehensive, Fine-Grained Analysis Using HFACS, at 1 (2006) (reporting that “60-80% of aviation accidents are due, at least in part, to human error”). The FAA can reasonably determine that concerns about safety combined with substantially greater delays would render Alternative Cl imprudent under § 47106(c)(1)(B). See NRDC v. FAA, 564 F.3d at 568 (“[t]he AAIA entrusts the agency with the responsibility for assessing prudence by deciding for itself the appropriate weight to accord myriad relevant factors”); Order 5050.4B, ¶ 1007.e(5)(a) (suggesting that accumulation of adverse factors collectively can render an alternative imprudent).

In sum, we find that the FAA was not in violation of law in its construction of “prudent” for the purposes of § 47106(c)(1)(B), nor was it arbitrary or capricious in finding that the use of Alternative Cl would not have been prudent.

Petitioners’ “Brooks Park” argument has two elements: first, a substantive claim that the area qualified for § 4(f) protection as a “public park ... of ... local significance”; second, a motion to supplement the administrative record with draft environmental impact statements (“EISs”) prepared in 2001 and 2002 evaluating a different (albeit similar) proposal to expand the airport, and with documents submitted during those processes. If admitted, they argue, these would reinforce its argument that the FAA’s determination that the area was not a park was arbitrary and capricious.

The record before the FAA indicated that the primary public function of the space in question, lying between the airport fence and a perimeter road on the east side of the airport, was for airplane-viewing, though with some later encroachment by commercial vehicles using it as a waiting area. Joint Appendix (“J.A.”) 114-15. There is no claim that the area featured the sort of “natural beauty” that is among the values § 4(f) seeks to protect. See 49 U.S.C. § 303(a). Invoking the section’s references to “historical sites,” however, petitioners suggest that the area was an “old neighborhood park” that “existed for many years,” that Dania Beach’s 1994 comprehensive plan included a reference to it, J.A. 20, and that it dates back to “a time when the Airport was much smaller.” Pet. Br. at 46-47. As a result, they argue, its significance must be presumed. Pet. Reply Br. at 24 (citing to 23 C.F.R. § 774.11(c)).

None of this seems to undermine the FAA’s refusal to regard this plane-viewing site as a public park of local significance. Petitioners reinforce their claim, however, by invoking an FAA handbook provision against manipulative redesignations of sites:

Where the use of a property is changed ... from a section 4(f) type use to a transportation use in anticipation of a *590request for FAA approval, section 4(f) shall be considered to apply.

Order 1050.1E, App. A, ¶ 6.2d. They argue that the county, after it bought the area from Dania Beach in 1997, changed its formal “use” from park to transportation. Under the handbook, they say, it follows that § 4(f) must be “considered to apply.”

The petitioners are deeply overreading Order 1050.1E, App. A, ¶ 6.2d. The fact that the designated use of the area was changed from park to transportation does not convert a non-§ 4(f) resource into a § 4(f) resource. The evidence in the record supports the FAA’s conclusion that the land was never a § 4(f) resource. The county as its owner never considered the land to be a park. J.A. 114. In fact, it has said that the land was used “illegally by commercial vehicles ... as a waiting area” (a use that prevented use of the picnic tables). Id. Apart from their assertion, petitioners introduced no evidence that the area had been used as a pax-k — unless the FAA was obliged to regard any airplane-watching site with picnic tables as a “park of local significance.” See also Stewart Park & Reserve Coalition, Inc. v. Slater, 352 F.3d 545, 557 (2d Cir.2003) (holding that “uninterrupted and purposeful use by the public” makes particular lands a public park and recreation area within the meaning of § 4(f)). It was not arbitrary or capricious for the FAA to conclude that § 4(f) did not apply to this tract.

The petitioners have moved before us to supplement the administrative record with hundreds of pages of documents introduced in prior EIS processes that contemplated the airport expansion. We deny their motion. As we explained in Texas Rural Legal Aid v. Legal Services Corp., we do not allow parties to supplement the record “unless they can demonstx’ate unusual circumstances justifying a departare from this general rule.” 940 F.2d 685, 698 (D.C.Cir.1991). In American Wildlands v. Kempthorne, 530 F.3d 991 (D.C.Cir.2008), we held that the record can be supplemented in three instances: (1) if the agency “deliberately or negligently excluded documents that may have been adverse to its decision,” (2) if background information was needed “to detex'mine whether the agency considered all the relevant factors,” or (3) if the “agency failed to explain administrative action so as to frustrate judicial review,” id. at 1002. None of these conditions is met here.

The FAA has been considering the expansion of the airpox't since 1996. 61 Fed. Reg. 14,190 (Mar. 29, 1996). In 2001 and 2002, the FAA issued a draft EIS and two supplemental draft EISs analyzing that proposal. In 2005, the county substantially revised the proposed expansion, and the FAA began the process anew, including holding new public hearings and preparing a completely new EIS. 70 Fed.Reg. 3095 (Jan. 19, 2005). The petitioners contend that the administrative record nevertheless must include documents produced since the FAA first began considering the airport’s expansion. They claim that the FAA selectively excluded adverse documents from the eax-lier administx'ative process. Those documents would show that the FAA once considered Brooks Park to be a § 4(f) resource (they are also said to show that the alleged pi’oblems with Alternative Cl wex-e exaggerated).

Instead of identifying pax*ticular documents advei'se to the FAA, the petitioners have simply submitted the entirety of the three draft EIS statements prepared in 2001 and 2002 during the prior EIS processes. But this vague proffer hardly supplies the requisite “unusual circumstances” to justify an order supplementing the record with 1500 pages of additional material. Texas Rural Legal Aid, 940 F.2d at 698. *591Petitioners’ positions about Brooks Park and Alternative Cl have by no means been scanted, and they make no claim that they were denied a chance to press those positions. In fact, they submitted a number of comments and objections regarding Brooks Park during the process and the FAA properly considered them. See Decision, App. A at A.9-1. As regards problems with Alternative Cl, the court is satisfied that FAA’s treatment in the Decision under review was complete and thorough. Petitioners’ claim that the supplementary documents would manifest FAA exaggeration of the problems with Alternative Cl is too generalized to support such a massive inflation of the record. Accordingly, we deny the motion to supplement the record.

Petitioners’ final argument invokes Executive Order 11,990, § 2(a), 42 Fed. Reg. 26,961 (May 24, 1977), which conditions federal assistance for construction in wetlands on a finding that there is no “practicable alternative”; in resolving that issue, the agency is to consider “economic, environmental and other pertinent factors.” Id. Alternative Bib would destroy 15.41 acres of wetlands, the FAA found, of which 3.05 acres are mangrove wetlands. Alternative Cl would destroy 15.40 acres of wetlands, but the FAA believed the impacts could be reduced with further planning. Decision at 28, 47 & n. 97.

The Ninth Circuit has found that the standard under Executive Order 11,990 is “less prohibitive and contemplates more balancing of other factors” than § 4(f). Nat’l Wildlife Federation v. Adams, 629 F.2d 587, 591 (9th Cir.1980). For reasons similar to those behind our decision about § 47106(c)(1)(B) — the greater breadth of the resources protected, the section’s application regardless of private or public ownership, and the ubiquity of application — we find that conclusion persuasive.

Even assuming for the purposes of argument that Alternative Cl would cause no impacts to wetlands, the FAA’s determination was not arbitrary and capricious. As we discussed above, Alternative Cl’s inferiority to Alternative Bib, in its longer delays (particularly in poor weather) and the safety drawbacks of the requisite runway-crossing, render it not only imprudent under § 47106(c)(1)(B) but impracticable under the Executive Order.

The motion to supplement the record and the petition for review are accordingly

Denied.

. The court speaks of the FAA’s AAIA definition of 'prudent” as “broader,” 564 F.3d at 567, but given the various negatives it is surely narrower, with the implied “imprudent” being broader.