U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Mitigation Policy, 36472-36475 [2018-16172]
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36472
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 146 / Monday, July 30, 2018 / Rules and Regulations
Act of 1973, as amended (16 U.S.C. 1531
et seq.); Fish and Wildlife Coordination
Act, as amended, (16 U.S.C. 661–
667(e)); and National Environmental
Policy Act (42 U.S.C. 4371 et seq.).
Dated: July 24, 2018.
Gregory J. Sheehan,
Principal Deputy Director, U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service.
[FR Doc. 2018–16171 Filed 7–27–18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4333–15–P
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Fish and Wildlife Service
50 CFR Chapter I
[Docket No. FWS–HQ–ES–2015–0126];
[FXHC11220900000–156–FF09E33000]
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
Mitigation Policy
Fish and Wildlife Service,
Interior.
ACTION: Policy; withdrawal.
AGENCY:
We, the U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service (Service), announce we
are withdrawing the Mitigation Policy
published November 21, 2016, which
guides Service recommendations on
mitigating the adverse impacts of land
and water developments on fish,
wildlife, plants, and their habitats. In
our document of November 6, 2017, we
requested additional public comments
regarding this policy’s overall mitigation
planning goal of net conservation gain.
We are now withdrawing this policy as
it is no longer appropriate to retain the
‘‘net conservation gain’’ standard
throughout various Service-related
activities and is inconsistent with
current Executive branch policy. Until
further notice, all policies that were
superseded by the 2016 Mitigation
Policy are reinstated, including the Fish
and Wildlife Service Mitigation Policy
(46 FR 7644–7663) published in the
Federal Register on January 23, 1981.
DATES: Withdrawal effective on July 30,
2018.
ADDRESSES: Comments and materials
received, as well as supporting
documentation, are available on the
internet at https://www.regulations.gov at
Docket Number FWS–HQ–ES–2015–
0126.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Craig Aubrey, U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service, Division of Environmental
Review, 5275 Leesburg Pike, Falls
Church, VA 22041–3803, telephone
703–358–2442.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The
Mitigation Policy (81 FR 83440,
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SUMMARY:
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November 21, 2016) was developed to
ensure consistency with directives in
effect at the time of issuance, including
former President Obama’s Memorandum
on Mitigating Impacts on Natural
Resources From Development and
Encouraging Related Private Investment
(November 3, 2015). Under the
memorandum, all Federal mitigation
policies were directed to clearly set a
net-benefit goal or, at minimum, a nonet-loss goal for natural resources,
wherever doing so is allowed by
existing statutory authority and is
consistent with agency mission and
established natural resource objectives.
The Presidential Memorandum was
subsequently rescinded by Executive
Order 13783, ‘‘Promoting Energy
Independence and Economic Growth’’
(March 28, 2017).
The Mitigation Policy also described
its consistency with the Secretary of the
Interior’s Order 3330 on Improving
Mitigation Policies and Practices of the
Department of the Interior (October 31,
2013), which established a Departmentwide mitigation strategy to ensure
consistency and efficiency in the review
and permitting of infrastructuredevelopment projects and in conserving
natural and cultural resources. The
Secretary’s Order was subsequently
revoked by Secretary of the Interior’s
Order 3349 on American Energy
Independence (March 29, 2017). It
directed Department of the Interior
bureaus to reexamine mitigation
policies and practices to better balance
conservation strategies and policies
with job creation for American families.
In light of the revocation of the 2015
Presidential Memorandum and
Secretary’s Order 3330, on November 6,
2017, the Service requested comment on
the Mitigation Policy, as well as the
Endangered Species Act—
Compensatory Mitigation Policy (81 FR
95316, December 27, 2016), specifically
‘‘regarding whether to retain or remove
net conservation gain as a mitigation
planning goal within our mitigation
policies.’’ Mitigation Policies of the U.S.
Fish and Wildlife Service; Request for
Comment (82 FR 51382, 51383,
November 6, 2017). The comment
period for this request ended on January
5, 2018.
Under Supreme Court precedent, the
Takings Clause of the Fifth Amendment
of the United States Constitution limits
the ability of government to require
monetary exactions as a condition of
permitting private activities,
particularly private activities on private
property. In Koontz v. St. Johns River
Water Management District, 570 U.S.
595 (2013), the Supreme Court held that
a proposal to fund offsite mitigation
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proposed by the State of Florida as a
condition of granting a land-use permit
must satisfy the test established in
Nollan v. California Coastal
Commission, 483 U.S. 825 (1987) and
Dolan v. City of Tigard, 512 U.S. 374
(1994). Specifically, ‘‘a unit of
government may not condition the
approval of a land-use permit on the
owner’s relinquishment of a portion of
his property unless there is a ‘nexus’
and ‘rough proportionality’ between the
government’s demand and the effects of
the proposed land use.’’ Id. at 599.
Compensatory mitigation
requirements in particular raise serious
questions of whether there is a sufficient
nexus between the potential harm and
the proposed remedy to satisfy
constitutional muster. Further, because
by definition compensatory mitigation
does not directly avoid or minimize the
anticipated harm, its application is
particularly ripe for abuse. These
concerns are particularly acute when
coupled with a net conservation gain
standard, which necessarily goes
beyond mitigating actual or anticipated
harm to forcing participants to pay to
address harms they, by definition, did
not cause.
In light of the change in national
policy reflected in Executive Order
13783 and Secretary’s Order 3349, the
comments received by the Service, and
concerns regarding the legal and policy
implications of compensatory
mitigation, particularly compensatory
mitigation with a net conservation gain
policy, the Service has concluded that it
is no longer appropriate to retain
references to or mandate a net
conservation gain standard in the
Service’s overall mitigation planning
goal within each document. Because the
net conservation gain standard is so
prevalent throughout the Mitigation
Policy, the Service is implementing this
conclusion by withdrawing the
Mitigation Policy.
Summary of Comments and Responses
Executive Order 13783—‘‘Promoting
Energy Independence and Economic
Growth’’ (March 28, 2017)—rescinded
the Presidential Memorandum on
Mitigating Impacts on Natural Resources
from Development and Encouraging
Related Private Investment. The
Secretary of the Interior subsequently
issued Secretarial Order 3349 on
American Energy Independence (March
29, 2017), which directed Department of
the Interior (DOI) bureaus to reexamine
mitigation policies and practices to
better balance conservation strategies
and policies with job creation for
American families. Pursuant to
Secretarial Order 3349, we published a
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notice on November 6, 2017 (82 FR
51382), requesting additional public
comments specifically addressing the
advisability of retaining or removing
references to net conservation gain as a
mitigation planning goal within our
mitigation policies. In addition, in
carrying out Executive Order 13777,
‘‘Enforcing the Regulatory Reform
Agenda,’’ DOI published a document
with the title ‘‘Regulatory Reform’’ in
the Federal Register of June 22, 2017
(82 FR 28429). The document requested
public comment on how DOI can
improve implementation of regulatory
reform initiatives and policies and
identify regulations for repeal,
replacement, or modification. This
notice addresses comments that DOI has
received in response to the regulatory
reform docket that relates to the
Service’s use of mitigation.
During the combined comment
periods, for the Service-wide Mitigation
Policy we received approximately 427
comments from Federal, State, and local
government entities, industry, trade
associations, conservation
organizations, nongovernmental
organizations, private citizens, and
others. Two of those submissions
transmitted the discrete comments from
an additional 1,756 citizens expressing
support for the Service’s mitigation
policy approach. The range of
comments otherwise varied from those
that provided general statements of
support or opposition to the draft or
final Policy, to those that provided
extensive comments and information
supporting or opposing the draft or final
Policy, or specific aspects thereof. The
majority of comments submitted
included detailed suggestions for
revisions addressing major concepts as
well as editorial suggestions for specific
wording or line edits.
We considered all of the comments
we received in the comment period
beginning November 6, 2017 (82 FR
51382), and following the DOI’s
‘‘Regulatory Reform’’ Federal Register
announcement (June 22, 2017, 82 FR
28429); we respond to the substantive
comments below.
A. Policy Addresses Multiple
Authorities
Comment (1): One commenter stated
there were constitutional limits on
requiring mitigation, referencing the
Koontz v. St. Johns River Water
Management District case decided by
the U.S. Supreme Court, 570 U.S. 595
(2013). This commenter noted that any
compensatory mitigation measures must
have an essential nexus with the
proposed impacts and be roughly
proportional, or have a reasonable
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relationship between the permit
conditions required and the impacts of
the proposed development being
addressed by those permit conditions.
Response: The Service agrees that the
Koontz case, as well as predecessor
cases including, but not limited to,
Nollan v. California Coastal
Commission, 483 U.S. 825 (1987), and
Dolan v. City of Tigard, 512 U.S. 374
(1994), raise serious constitutional
concerns about the viability of some
elements of the Service’s mitigation
programs. These concerns are
particularly acute for offsite
compensatory-mitigation programs and
programs that seek a net conservation
gain. Offsite compensatory-mitigation
programs raise concerns regarding an
appropriate nexus between the
anticipated impact and the mitigation
requirement. As mitigation moves
further away from the direct impacts of
a project, the risk that the connection
between required compensation and the
initial project becomes more attenuated
increases. Further, by seeking to err on
the side of mitigating above and beyond
the impacts of the specific project at
issue, a net conservation gain standard
raises inherent concerns about
proportionality, as well as the
appropriate nexus between project
impacts and mitigation methods,
particularly where mitigation is in
essence being used to rectify past,
unrelated harms. We, like all agencies,
must implement our authorities
consistent with any applicable case law
as appropriate. Consideration of the
Constitutional standard set forth in
Koontz is one reason, though not the
only reason, that the Service is
withdrawing its previous Mitigation
Policy. In light of the Koontz case and
any other relevant court decisions, the
Service, in using its previous policies
(e.g., 1981 Policy), will make sure that
any statutorily authorized mitigation
measures will have a clear connection
(i.e., have an essential nexus) and be
commensurate (i.e., have rough
proportionality) to the impact of the
project or action under consideration.
Comment (2): Several commenters
addressed aspects of the Service’s
authority under the Bald and Golden
Eagle Protection Act (Eagle Act). One
commenter supported the
acknowledgement that compensatory
mitigation for bald and golden eagles
may include preservation of those
species’ habitats and enhancing their
prey base. The commenter noted that
existing regulations establishing a
permit program for the non-purposeful
take of bald and golden eagles recognize
these options but that these options
have not been used. One commenter
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stated the Service was incorrect in
stating in the proposed Policy: ‘‘the
statute and implementing regulations
allow the Service to require habitat
preservation and/or enhancement as
compensatory mitigation for eagle take.’’
The commenter said that Congress has
not exercised jurisdiction over the
habitats of eagles, meaning the Service
lacks authority to require mitigation for
impacts to eagle habitats. One
commenter suggested the Policy should
articulate whether compensatory
mitigation would be in addition to
current requirements of a 1-for-1 take
offset.
Response: We agree that the authority
of the Eagle Act is limited, and the
Service has outlined its authority in its
regulations (50 CFR part 22). Nothing in
the Eagle Act directly addresses eagle
habitat, or requires that the Service
apply a net conservation gain standard.
Accordingly, the withdrawal of the 2016
Mitigation Policy and reinstatement of
the 1981 Mitigation Policy will not
change our authority under the Eagle
Act.
Comment (3): Several commenters
addressed the Service’s authority under
the Migratory Bird Treaty Act (MBTA).
One commenter said the Service was
incorrect in describing implied
authority to permit incidental take of
migratory birds under the MBTA and
noted that the Service has no authority
to require compensatory mitigation for
incidental take of migratory birds.
Several commenters said that mitigation
for migratory birds exceeds MBTA
authority and that the Policy should
exclude potential incidental impacts to
migratory birds under the MBTA until
the Service establishes statutory or
regulatory authority to require
landowners to obtain incidental take
authorization prior to undertaking
otherwise lawful activities. They added
that the MBTA does not directly address
mitigation or habitat impacts.
One commenter said the Service was
incorrect in writing that the Fish and
Wildlife Conservation Act implicitly
provided for mitigation of impacts to
migratory birds. The commenter said
that the language does not authorize the
Service to engage in any management
activities associated with migratory
birds, particularly over private parties,
only directing the Service to monitor
and assess population trends and
species status of migratory nongame
birds.
Response: DOI’s Office of the Solicitor
issued M-Opinion 37050, The Migratory
Bird Treaty Act Does Not Prohibit
Incidental Take (M-Opinion), on
December 22, 2017, which concludes
that the take of birds resulting from an
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activity is not prohibited by the MBTA
when the underlying purpose of that
activity is not to take birds. In addition,
the Service does not have specific
statutory authority pursuant to the
MBTA to require Federal action
agencies and/or their permittees to
provide compensatory mitigation for
unavoidable impacts to (loss of)
migratory bird habitat resulting from
federally conducted or approved,
authorized, or funded projects or
activities. Like the Eagle Act, the MBTA
does not directly protect habitat. When
the Service authorizes otherwise
prohibited intentional take, however, it
can make that authorization subject to
appropriate conditions, including noncompensatory mitigation, such as
measures to avoid, minimize, reduce, or
rectify anticipated harm. In addition,
Executive Order (E.O.) 13186 directs
Federal agencies ‘‘taking actions that
have, or are likely to have, a measurable
negative effect on migratory bird
populations’’ to sign a Memorandum of
Understanding with the Service ‘‘that
shall promote the conservation of
migratory bird populations.’’
Comment (4): One commenter
specifically questioned the treatment of
Natural Resource Damage Assessment
actions conducted under the
Comprehensive Environmental
Response, Compensation, and Liability
Act, Oil Pollution Act, and the Clean
Water Act, stating that the Presidential
Memorandum on Mitigating Impacts on
Natural Resources from Development
and Encouraging Related Private
Investment, dated November 3, 2015,
requires that separate guidance be
developed for when restoration banking
or advance restoration would be
appropriate.
Response: The Presidential
Memorandum on Mitigation was
rescinded by Executive Order 13783,
Promoting Energy Independence and
Economic Growth (March 28, 2017).
Furthermore, when a release of
hazardous substance or oil injures
natural resources subject to the natural
resource damage assessment and
restoration trusteeship of States, Tribes,
or the Federal Government, appropriate
restoration is determined by the scope
and scale of the injury and the nexus of
the restoration action to that specific
injury.
B. Net Conservation Gain/No Net Loss
Comment (5): Many commenters
addressed the Policy’s mitigation
planning goal of improving (i.e., a net
gain) or, at minimum, maintaining (i.e.,
no net loss) the current status of affected
resources. A number of commenters
supported the goal while a number of
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commenters opposed the inclusion of a
net conservation gain. Of commenters
opposed to net conservation gain, their
specific reasons included:
(a) The Service lacks the statutory
authority to implement the net
conservation gain goal for mitigation
planning.
(b) The net conservation gain goal
imposes a new standard for mitigation
and that mitigation requirements should
be commensurate with the level of
impacts.
(c) Concern about the costs associated
with achieving net conservation gain.
(d) Questions about the ability to
achieve net conservation gain and how
it would be measured.
(e) The Policy does not provide the
methodology to assess or measure the
net conservation gain.
(f) Net conservation gain is
incompatible with the standards of the
ESA sections 7 and 10. One commenter
asked that we clarify that the net
conservation gain goal does not modify
or expand proponents’ obligations
under ESA sections 7 or 10 permitting
programs. One commenter stated that
the Policy’s goal would have limited
relevance to section 10 decisions other
than serving as an aspiration or goal for
negotiating conservation measures. One
commenter asked that we specify how
the Policy’s goal will be applied to
processing incidental take permit
applications under section
10(a)(2)(B)(ii), especially for projects
predicted to directly kill listed species.
This commenter added that neither no
net loss nor net gain is an appropriate
goal under section 10 if the goal implies
that impacts at the individual level will
not be minimized to the maximum
extent practicable.
Response: We agree with concerns
expressed by commenters that the
Service generally lacks the statutory
authority to implement ‘‘net
conservation gain’’ for mitigation
planning. No statute within the
Service’s purview mandates that the
Service directly apply a net
conservation gain standard. For
example, under the Endangered Species
Act (ESA), the standard for section 7 is
that a ‘‘Federal agency shall, in
consultation with and with the
assistance of the Secretary, insure that
any action . . . is not likely to
jeopardize the continued existence of
any endangered species or threatened
species or result in the destruction or
adverse modification of habitat’’
(§ 7(a)(2)); under section 10, the
requirement is ‘‘to the maximum extent
practicable, minimize and mitigate the
impacts of such taking’’
(§ 10(a)(2)(B)(ii)). As one court has
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noted, ‘‘[t]he words ‘maximum extent
practicable’ signify that the applicant
may do something less than fully
minimize and mitigate the impacts of
the take where to do more would not be
practicable. Moreover, the statutory
language does not suggest that an
applicant must ever do more than
mitigate the effect of its take of species.’’
National Wildlife Federation v. Norton,
306 F. Supp. 2d 920, 928 (E.D. Cal.
2004); see also Union Neighbors United,
Inc. v. Jewell, 831 F.3d 564 (D.C. Cir.
2016) (holding that the obligation to
minimize and mitigate to the maximum
extent practicable was satisfied by a
plan that the Service found to fully
offset the impact of the proposed
taking). Since what is ‘‘practicable’’ may
not fully offset proposed take, the
‘‘maximum extent practicable’’ standard
is inconsistent with both a general net
conservation gain and a no-net-loss
mitigation objective. Nothing in the ESA
requires that the Service apply a net
conservation gain or no-net-loss
standard.
Those commenters supporting the
goal generally asserted, among other
points, that the Service has the authority
to require compensatory mitigation,
found the measures to be clear, and
thought the policy encouraged
consistent implementation. While we
appreciate these comments, for the
reasons described above, we are not
persuaded.
As ‘‘net conservation gain’’ was
central to and integrated throughout the
policies, in addition to the more
recently issued 2017 Executive and
Secretarial Orders, modifying these
policies would likely have caused even
more confusion. Thus, we are
withdrawing the 2016 Mitigation Policy,
and restoring the policies and guidance
that were superseded by the 2016
policies.
C. Landscape-Scale Approach
Comment (6): Several commenters
described their concerns with the
implications of the Policy’s inclusion of
a landscape-scale approach:
(a) There is no statutory authority for
taking a landscape-scale approach.
(b) Including a landscape-scale
approach would lead to the Service
seeking mitigation for impacts beyond a
project under review, including impacts
that happened in the past or in
unrelated locations. They said that
meeting the standards of an applicable
authority within the narrow geographic
scope of their project is the proponent’s
only responsibility.
(c) General concern that a landscapescale approach would mean Federal
overreach, including disregard for the
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plans, processes, and resource interests
of States, tribes, and local governments.
Response: We agree with commenters
that proponents’ and action agencies’
responsibilities include the provisions
of relevant authorities and that those
responsibilities do not extend to
impacts unrelated to their action.
Requiring mitigation to impacts
unrelated to a proponent’s action would
likely conflict with the ‘‘essential
nexus’’ required under Koontz for
property development (see Comment 1
above). Accordingly, any effort to apply
a landscape-scale approach to
mitigation must ensure that there is an
essential nexus between the proposed
activity and the contemplated
mitigation and that mitigation is not
being imposed to correct for past
impacts by other actors.
Section 5 of the Mitigation Policy,
‘‘Mitigation Framework,’’ calls for both
consideration of a landscape-scale
approach in addition to ‘‘net
conservation gain.’’ Because net
conservation gain is integral to the
policies, even though considerations of
landscape-scale approaches may be
useful in some cases, withdrawing these
policies will reduce confusion over the
net conservation gain goal. This notice
does not affect the Service authorities
that already allow the flexibility to
consider landscape-scale approach. In
some cases, taking the broader
ecological context of both impacts and
mitigation opportunities into account by
applying a landscape-scale approach is
an effective means of implementing the
Service’s mission in a way that also
benefits proponents.
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National Environmental Policy Act
(NEPA)
We have analyzed the withdrawals of
this policy in accordance with the
criteria of the National Environmental
Policy Act, as amended (NEPA) (42
U.S.C. 4332(c)), the Council on
Environmental Quality’s Regulations for
Implementing the Procedural Provisions
of NEPA (40 CFR parts 1500–1508), and
the Department of the Interior’s NEPA
procedures (516 DM 2 and 8; 43 CFR
part 46). Issuance of policies, directives,
regulations, and guidelines that are of
an administrative, financial, legal,
technical, or procedural nature, or
whose environmental effects are too
broad, speculative, or conjectural to
lend themselves to meaningful analysis
and will later be subject to the NEPA
process, either collectively or case-bycase may be categorically excluded
under NEPA (43 CFR 46.210(i)). We
have determined that a categorical
exclusion applies to withdrawing this
policy.
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
This policy withdrawal does not
contain any new collections of
information that require approval by the
Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) under the Paperwork Reduction
Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.).
OMB has reviewed and approved the
information collection requirements for
applications for incidental take permits,
annual reports, and notifications of
incidental take for native endangered
and threatened species for safe harbor
agreements, candidate conservation
agreements with assurances, and habitat
conservation plans under OMB Control
Number 1018–0094, which expires on
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36475
March 31, 2019. We may not conduct or
sponsor and a person is not required to
respond to a collection of information
unless it displays a currently valid OMB
control number.
Government-to-Government
Relationship With Tribes
In accordance with the President’s
memorandum of April 29, 1994,
‘‘Government-to-Government Relations
with Native American Tribal
Governments’’ (59 FR 22951), Executive
Order 13175 ‘‘Consultation and
Coordination with Indian Tribal
Governments,’’ and the Department of
the Interior Manual at 512 DM 2, we
have considered possible effects on
federally recognized Indian tribes and
have determined that there are no
potential adverse effects of withdrawing
this policy. Our intent with
withdrawing these policies is to reduce
confusion of mitigation programs,
projects, and measures, including those
taken on Tribal lands. We will work
with Tribes as applicants proposing
mitigation as part of proposed actions
and with Tribes as mitigation sponsors.
Authority
The multiple authorities for this
action include the Endangered Species
Act of 1973, as amended (16 U.S.C. 1531
et seq.); Fish and Wildlife Coordination
Act, as amended, (16 U.S.C. 661–
667(e)); and National Environmental
Policy Act (42 U.S.C. 4371 et seq.).
Dated: July 24, 2018.
Gregory J. Sheehan,
Principal Deputy Director, U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service.
[FR Doc. 2018–16172 Filed 7–27–18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4333–15–P
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 83, Number 146 (Monday, July 30, 2018)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 36472-36475]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2018-16172]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Fish and Wildlife Service
50 CFR Chapter I
[Docket No. FWS-HQ-ES-2015-0126]; [FXHC11220900000-156-FF09E33000]
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Mitigation Policy
AGENCY: Fish and Wildlife Service, Interior.
ACTION: Policy; withdrawal.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: We, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (Service), announce we
are withdrawing the Mitigation Policy published November 21, 2016,
which guides Service recommendations on mitigating the adverse impacts
of land and water developments on fish, wildlife, plants, and their
habitats. In our document of November 6, 2017, we requested additional
public comments regarding this policy's overall mitigation planning
goal of net conservation gain. We are now withdrawing this policy as it
is no longer appropriate to retain the ``net conservation gain''
standard throughout various Service-related activities and is
inconsistent with current Executive branch policy. Until further
notice, all policies that were superseded by the 2016 Mitigation Policy
are reinstated, including the Fish and Wildlife Service Mitigation
Policy (46 FR 7644-7663) published in the Federal Register on January
23, 1981.
DATES: Withdrawal effective on July 30, 2018.
ADDRESSES: Comments and materials received, as well as supporting
documentation, are available on the internet at https://www.regulations.gov at Docket Number FWS-HQ-ES-2015-0126.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Craig Aubrey, U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service, Division of Environmental Review, 5275 Leesburg Pike, Falls
Church, VA 22041-3803, telephone 703-358-2442.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The Mitigation Policy (81 FR 83440, November
21, 2016) was developed to ensure consistency with directives in effect
at the time of issuance, including former President Obama's Memorandum
on Mitigating Impacts on Natural Resources From Development and
Encouraging Related Private Investment (November 3, 2015). Under the
memorandum, all Federal mitigation policies were directed to clearly
set a net-benefit goal or, at minimum, a no-net-loss goal for natural
resources, wherever doing so is allowed by existing statutory authority
and is consistent with agency mission and established natural resource
objectives. The Presidential Memorandum was subsequently rescinded by
Executive Order 13783, ``Promoting Energy Independence and Economic
Growth'' (March 28, 2017).
The Mitigation Policy also described its consistency with the
Secretary of the Interior's Order 3330 on Improving Mitigation Policies
and Practices of the Department of the Interior (October 31, 2013),
which established a Department-wide mitigation strategy to ensure
consistency and efficiency in the review and permitting of
infrastructure-development projects and in conserving natural and
cultural resources. The Secretary's Order was subsequently revoked by
Secretary of the Interior's Order 3349 on American Energy Independence
(March 29, 2017). It directed Department of the Interior bureaus to
reexamine mitigation policies and practices to better balance
conservation strategies and policies with job creation for American
families.
In light of the revocation of the 2015 Presidential Memorandum and
Secretary's Order 3330, on November 6, 2017, the Service requested
comment on the Mitigation Policy, as well as the Endangered Species
Act--Compensatory Mitigation Policy (81 FR 95316, December 27, 2016),
specifically ``regarding whether to retain or remove net conservation
gain as a mitigation planning goal within our mitigation policies.''
Mitigation Policies of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service; Request for
Comment (82 FR 51382, 51383, November 6, 2017). The comment period for
this request ended on January 5, 2018.
Under Supreme Court precedent, the Takings Clause of the Fifth
Amendment of the United States Constitution limits the ability of
government to require monetary exactions as a condition of permitting
private activities, particularly private activities on private
property. In Koontz v. St. Johns River Water Management District, 570
U.S. 595 (2013), the Supreme Court held that a proposal to fund offsite
mitigation proposed by the State of Florida as a condition of granting
a land-use permit must satisfy the test established in Nollan v.
California Coastal Commission, 483 U.S. 825 (1987) and Dolan v. City of
Tigard, 512 U.S. 374 (1994). Specifically, ``a unit of government may
not condition the approval of a land-use permit on the owner's
relinquishment of a portion of his property unless there is a `nexus'
and `rough proportionality' between the government's demand and the
effects of the proposed land use.'' Id. at 599.
Compensatory mitigation requirements in particular raise serious
questions of whether there is a sufficient nexus between the potential
harm and the proposed remedy to satisfy constitutional muster. Further,
because by definition compensatory mitigation does not directly avoid
or minimize the anticipated harm, its application is particularly ripe
for abuse. These concerns are particularly acute when coupled with a
net conservation gain standard, which necessarily goes beyond
mitigating actual or anticipated harm to forcing participants to pay to
address harms they, by definition, did not cause.
In light of the change in national policy reflected in Executive
Order 13783 and Secretary's Order 3349, the comments received by the
Service, and concerns regarding the legal and policy implications of
compensatory mitigation, particularly compensatory mitigation with a
net conservation gain policy, the Service has concluded that it is no
longer appropriate to retain references to or mandate a net
conservation gain standard in the Service's overall mitigation planning
goal within each document. Because the net conservation gain standard
is so prevalent throughout the Mitigation Policy, the Service is
implementing this conclusion by withdrawing the Mitigation Policy.
Summary of Comments and Responses
Executive Order 13783--``Promoting Energy Independence and Economic
Growth'' (March 28, 2017)--rescinded the Presidential Memorandum on
Mitigating Impacts on Natural Resources from Development and
Encouraging Related Private Investment. The Secretary of the Interior
subsequently issued Secretarial Order 3349 on American Energy
Independence (March 29, 2017), which directed Department of the
Interior (DOI) bureaus to reexamine mitigation policies and practices
to better balance conservation strategies and policies with job
creation for American families. Pursuant to Secretarial Order 3349, we
published a
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notice on November 6, 2017 (82 FR 51382), requesting additional public
comments specifically addressing the advisability of retaining or
removing references to net conservation gain as a mitigation planning
goal within our mitigation policies. In addition, in carrying out
Executive Order 13777, ``Enforcing the Regulatory Reform Agenda,'' DOI
published a document with the title ``Regulatory Reform'' in the
Federal Register of June 22, 2017 (82 FR 28429). The document requested
public comment on how DOI can improve implementation of regulatory
reform initiatives and policies and identify regulations for repeal,
replacement, or modification. This notice addresses comments that DOI
has received in response to the regulatory reform docket that relates
to the Service's use of mitigation.
During the combined comment periods, for the Service-wide
Mitigation Policy we received approximately 427 comments from Federal,
State, and local government entities, industry, trade associations,
conservation organizations, nongovernmental organizations, private
citizens, and others. Two of those submissions transmitted the discrete
comments from an additional 1,756 citizens expressing support for the
Service's mitigation policy approach. The range of comments otherwise
varied from those that provided general statements of support or
opposition to the draft or final Policy, to those that provided
extensive comments and information supporting or opposing the draft or
final Policy, or specific aspects thereof. The majority of comments
submitted included detailed suggestions for revisions addressing major
concepts as well as editorial suggestions for specific wording or line
edits.
We considered all of the comments we received in the comment period
beginning November 6, 2017 (82 FR 51382), and following the DOI's
``Regulatory Reform'' Federal Register announcement (June 22, 2017, 82
FR 28429); we respond to the substantive comments below.
A. Policy Addresses Multiple Authorities
Comment (1): One commenter stated there were constitutional limits
on requiring mitigation, referencing the Koontz v. St. Johns River
Water Management District case decided by the U.S. Supreme Court, 570
U.S. 595 (2013). This commenter noted that any compensatory mitigation
measures must have an essential nexus with the proposed impacts and be
roughly proportional, or have a reasonable relationship between the
permit conditions required and the impacts of the proposed development
being addressed by those permit conditions.
Response: The Service agrees that the Koontz case, as well as
predecessor cases including, but not limited to, Nollan v. California
Coastal Commission, 483 U.S. 825 (1987), and Dolan v. City of Tigard,
512 U.S. 374 (1994), raise serious constitutional concerns about the
viability of some elements of the Service's mitigation programs. These
concerns are particularly acute for offsite compensatory-mitigation
programs and programs that seek a net conservation gain. Offsite
compensatory-mitigation programs raise concerns regarding an
appropriate nexus between the anticipated impact and the mitigation
requirement. As mitigation moves further away from the direct impacts
of a project, the risk that the connection between required
compensation and the initial project becomes more attenuated increases.
Further, by seeking to err on the side of mitigating above and beyond
the impacts of the specific project at issue, a net conservation gain
standard raises inherent concerns about proportionality, as well as the
appropriate nexus between project impacts and mitigation methods,
particularly where mitigation is in essence being used to rectify past,
unrelated harms. We, like all agencies, must implement our authorities
consistent with any applicable case law as appropriate. Consideration
of the Constitutional standard set forth in Koontz is one reason,
though not the only reason, that the Service is withdrawing its
previous Mitigation Policy. In light of the Koontz case and any other
relevant court decisions, the Service, in using its previous policies
(e.g., 1981 Policy), will make sure that any statutorily authorized
mitigation measures will have a clear connection (i.e., have an
essential nexus) and be commensurate (i.e., have rough proportionality)
to the impact of the project or action under consideration.
Comment (2): Several commenters addressed aspects of the Service's
authority under the Bald and Golden Eagle Protection Act (Eagle Act).
One commenter supported the acknowledgement that compensatory
mitigation for bald and golden eagles may include preservation of those
species' habitats and enhancing their prey base. The commenter noted
that existing regulations establishing a permit program for the non-
purposeful take of bald and golden eagles recognize these options but
that these options have not been used. One commenter stated the Service
was incorrect in stating in the proposed Policy: ``the statute and
implementing regulations allow the Service to require habitat
preservation and/or enhancement as compensatory mitigation for eagle
take.'' The commenter said that Congress has not exercised jurisdiction
over the habitats of eagles, meaning the Service lacks authority to
require mitigation for impacts to eagle habitats. One commenter
suggested the Policy should articulate whether compensatory mitigation
would be in addition to current requirements of a 1-for-1 take offset.
Response: We agree that the authority of the Eagle Act is limited,
and the Service has outlined its authority in its regulations (50 CFR
part 22). Nothing in the Eagle Act directly addresses eagle habitat, or
requires that the Service apply a net conservation gain standard.
Accordingly, the withdrawal of the 2016 Mitigation Policy and
reinstatement of the 1981 Mitigation Policy will not change our
authority under the Eagle Act.
Comment (3): Several commenters addressed the Service's authority
under the Migratory Bird Treaty Act (MBTA). One commenter said the
Service was incorrect in describing implied authority to permit
incidental take of migratory birds under the MBTA and noted that the
Service has no authority to require compensatory mitigation for
incidental take of migratory birds. Several commenters said that
mitigation for migratory birds exceeds MBTA authority and that the
Policy should exclude potential incidental impacts to migratory birds
under the MBTA until the Service establishes statutory or regulatory
authority to require landowners to obtain incidental take authorization
prior to undertaking otherwise lawful activities. They added that the
MBTA does not directly address mitigation or habitat impacts.
One commenter said the Service was incorrect in writing that the
Fish and Wildlife Conservation Act implicitly provided for mitigation
of impacts to migratory birds. The commenter said that the language
does not authorize the Service to engage in any management activities
associated with migratory birds, particularly over private parties,
only directing the Service to monitor and assess population trends and
species status of migratory nongame birds.
Response: DOI's Office of the Solicitor issued M-Opinion 37050, The
Migratory Bird Treaty Act Does Not Prohibit Incidental Take (M-
Opinion), on December 22, 2017, which concludes that the take of birds
resulting from an
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activity is not prohibited by the MBTA when the underlying purpose of
that activity is not to take birds. In addition, the Service does not
have specific statutory authority pursuant to the MBTA to require
Federal action agencies and/or their permittees to provide compensatory
mitigation for unavoidable impacts to (loss of) migratory bird habitat
resulting from federally conducted or approved, authorized, or funded
projects or activities. Like the Eagle Act, the MBTA does not directly
protect habitat. When the Service authorizes otherwise prohibited
intentional take, however, it can make that authorization subject to
appropriate conditions, including non-compensatory mitigation, such as
measures to avoid, minimize, reduce, or rectify anticipated harm. In
addition, Executive Order (E.O.) 13186 directs Federal agencies
``taking actions that have, or are likely to have, a measurable
negative effect on migratory bird populations'' to sign a Memorandum of
Understanding with the Service ``that shall promote the conservation of
migratory bird populations.''
Comment (4): One commenter specifically questioned the treatment of
Natural Resource Damage Assessment actions conducted under the
Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act,
Oil Pollution Act, and the Clean Water Act, stating that the
Presidential Memorandum on Mitigating Impacts on Natural Resources from
Development and Encouraging Related Private Investment, dated November
3, 2015, requires that separate guidance be developed for when
restoration banking or advance restoration would be appropriate.
Response: The Presidential Memorandum on Mitigation was rescinded
by Executive Order 13783, Promoting Energy Independence and Economic
Growth (March 28, 2017). Furthermore, when a release of hazardous
substance or oil injures natural resources subject to the natural
resource damage assessment and restoration trusteeship of States,
Tribes, or the Federal Government, appropriate restoration is
determined by the scope and scale of the injury and the nexus of the
restoration action to that specific injury.
B. Net Conservation Gain/No Net Loss
Comment (5): Many commenters addressed the Policy's mitigation
planning goal of improving (i.e., a net gain) or, at minimum,
maintaining (i.e., no net loss) the current status of affected
resources. A number of commenters supported the goal while a number of
commenters opposed the inclusion of a net conservation gain. Of
commenters opposed to net conservation gain, their specific reasons
included:
(a) The Service lacks the statutory authority to implement the net
conservation gain goal for mitigation planning.
(b) The net conservation gain goal imposes a new standard for
mitigation and that mitigation requirements should be commensurate with
the level of impacts.
(c) Concern about the costs associated with achieving net
conservation gain.
(d) Questions about the ability to achieve net conservation gain
and how it would be measured.
(e) The Policy does not provide the methodology to assess or
measure the net conservation gain.
(f) Net conservation gain is incompatible with the standards of the
ESA sections 7 and 10. One commenter asked that we clarify that the net
conservation gain goal does not modify or expand proponents'
obligations under ESA sections 7 or 10 permitting programs. One
commenter stated that the Policy's goal would have limited relevance to
section 10 decisions other than serving as an aspiration or goal for
negotiating conservation measures. One commenter asked that we specify
how the Policy's goal will be applied to processing incidental take
permit applications under section 10(a)(2)(B)(ii), especially for
projects predicted to directly kill listed species. This commenter
added that neither no net loss nor net gain is an appropriate goal
under section 10 if the goal implies that impacts at the individual
level will not be minimized to the maximum extent practicable.
Response: We agree with concerns expressed by commenters that the
Service generally lacks the statutory authority to implement ``net
conservation gain'' for mitigation planning. No statute within the
Service's purview mandates that the Service directly apply a net
conservation gain standard. For example, under the Endangered Species
Act (ESA), the standard for section 7 is that a ``Federal agency shall,
in consultation with and with the assistance of the Secretary, insure
that any action . . . is not likely to jeopardize the continued
existence of any endangered species or threatened species or result in
the destruction or adverse modification of habitat'' (Sec. 7(a)(2));
under section 10, the requirement is ``to the maximum extent
practicable, minimize and mitigate the impacts of such taking'' (Sec.
10(a)(2)(B)(ii)). As one court has noted, ``[t]he words `maximum extent
practicable' signify that the applicant may do something less than
fully minimize and mitigate the impacts of the take where to do more
would not be practicable. Moreover, the statutory language does not
suggest that an applicant must ever do more than mitigate the effect of
its take of species.'' National Wildlife Federation v. Norton, 306 F.
Supp. 2d 920, 928 (E.D. Cal. 2004); see also Union Neighbors United,
Inc. v. Jewell, 831 F.3d 564 (D.C. Cir. 2016) (holding that the
obligation to minimize and mitigate to the maximum extent practicable
was satisfied by a plan that the Service found to fully offset the
impact of the proposed taking). Since what is ``practicable'' may not
fully offset proposed take, the ``maximum extent practicable'' standard
is inconsistent with both a general net conservation gain and a no-net-
loss mitigation objective. Nothing in the ESA requires that the Service
apply a net conservation gain or no-net-loss standard.
Those commenters supporting the goal generally asserted, among
other points, that the Service has the authority to require
compensatory mitigation, found the measures to be clear, and thought
the policy encouraged consistent implementation. While we appreciate
these comments, for the reasons described above, we are not persuaded.
As ``net conservation gain'' was central to and integrated
throughout the policies, in addition to the more recently issued 2017
Executive and Secretarial Orders, modifying these policies would likely
have caused even more confusion. Thus, we are withdrawing the 2016
Mitigation Policy, and restoring the policies and guidance that were
superseded by the 2016 policies.
C. Landscape-Scale Approach
Comment (6): Several commenters described their concerns with the
implications of the Policy's inclusion of a landscape-scale approach:
(a) There is no statutory authority for taking a landscape-scale
approach.
(b) Including a landscape-scale approach would lead to the Service
seeking mitigation for impacts beyond a project under review, including
impacts that happened in the past or in unrelated locations. They said
that meeting the standards of an applicable authority within the narrow
geographic scope of their project is the proponent's only
responsibility.
(c) General concern that a landscape-scale approach would mean
Federal overreach, including disregard for the
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plans, processes, and resource interests of States, tribes, and local
governments.
Response: We agree with commenters that proponents' and action
agencies' responsibilities include the provisions of relevant
authorities and that those responsibilities do not extend to impacts
unrelated to their action. Requiring mitigation to impacts unrelated to
a proponent's action would likely conflict with the ``essential nexus''
required under Koontz for property development (see Comment 1 above).
Accordingly, any effort to apply a landscape-scale approach to
mitigation must ensure that there is an essential nexus between the
proposed activity and the contemplated mitigation and that mitigation
is not being imposed to correct for past impacts by other actors.
Section 5 of the Mitigation Policy, ``Mitigation Framework,'' calls
for both consideration of a landscape-scale approach in addition to
``net conservation gain.'' Because net conservation gain is integral to
the policies, even though considerations of landscape-scale approaches
may be useful in some cases, withdrawing these policies will reduce
confusion over the net conservation gain goal. This notice does not
affect the Service authorities that already allow the flexibility to
consider landscape-scale approach. In some cases, taking the broader
ecological context of both impacts and mitigation opportunities into
account by applying a landscape-scale approach is an effective means of
implementing the Service's mission in a way that also benefits
proponents.
National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA)
We have analyzed the withdrawals of this policy in accordance with
the criteria of the National Environmental Policy Act, as amended
(NEPA) (42 U.S.C. 4332(c)), the Council on Environmental Quality's
Regulations for Implementing the Procedural Provisions of NEPA (40 CFR
parts 1500-1508), and the Department of the Interior's NEPA procedures
(516 DM 2 and 8; 43 CFR part 46). Issuance of policies, directives,
regulations, and guidelines that are of an administrative, financial,
legal, technical, or procedural nature, or whose environmental effects
are too broad, speculative, or conjectural to lend themselves to
meaningful analysis and will later be subject to the NEPA process,
either collectively or case-by-case may be categorically excluded under
NEPA (43 CFR 46.210(i)). We have determined that a categorical
exclusion applies to withdrawing this policy.
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
This policy withdrawal does not contain any new collections of
information that require approval by the Office of Management and
Budget (OMB) under the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3501
et seq.). OMB has reviewed and approved the information collection
requirements for applications for incidental take permits, annual
reports, and notifications of incidental take for native endangered and
threatened species for safe harbor agreements, candidate conservation
agreements with assurances, and habitat conservation plans under OMB
Control Number 1018-0094, which expires on March 31, 2019. We may not
conduct or sponsor and a person is not required to respond to a
collection of information unless it displays a currently valid OMB
control number.
Government-to-Government Relationship With Tribes
In accordance with the President's memorandum of April 29, 1994,
``Government-to-Government Relations with Native American Tribal
Governments'' (59 FR 22951), Executive Order 13175 ``Consultation and
Coordination with Indian Tribal Governments,'' and the Department of
the Interior Manual at 512 DM 2, we have considered possible effects on
federally recognized Indian tribes and have determined that there are
no potential adverse effects of withdrawing this policy. Our intent
with withdrawing these policies is to reduce confusion of mitigation
programs, projects, and measures, including those taken on Tribal
lands. We will work with Tribes as applicants proposing mitigation as
part of proposed actions and with Tribes as mitigation sponsors.
Authority
The multiple authorities for this action include the Endangered
Species Act of 1973, as amended (16 U.S.C. 1531 et seq.); Fish and
Wildlife Coordination Act, as amended, (16 U.S.C. 661-667(e)); and
National Environmental Policy Act (42 U.S.C. 4371 et seq.).
Dated: July 24, 2018.
Gregory J. Sheehan,
Principal Deputy Director, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.
[FR Doc. 2018-16172 Filed 7-27-18; 8:45 am]
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