Endangered and Threatened Wildlife and Plants; Revised Designation of Critical Habitat for the Northern Spotted Owl; Delay of Effective Date, 22876-22882 [2021-09108]
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Federal Register / Vol. 86, No. 82 / Friday, April 30, 2021 / Rules and Regulations
with the provisions of the Act and
applicable Federal regulations. 42
U.S.C. 7411(d); 42 U.S.C. 7429; 40 CFR
part 60, subparts B and FFFF; and 40
CFR part 62, subpart A. With regard to
negative declarations for designated
facilities received by the EPA from
states, the EPA’s role is to notify the
public of the receipt of such negative
declarations and revise 40 CFR part 62
accordingly. For that reason, this action:
• Is not a ‘‘significant regulatory
action’’ subject to review by the Office
of Management and Budget under
Executive Orders 12866 (58 FR 51735,
October 4, 1993) and 13563 (76 FR 3821,
January 21, 2011);
• Does not impose an information
collection burden under the provisions
of the Paperwork Reduction Act (44
U.S.C. 3501 et seq.);
• Is certified as not having a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities
under the Regulatory Flexibility Act (5
U.S.C. 601 et seq.);
• Does not contain any unfunded
mandate or significantly or uniquely
affect small governments, as described
in the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
of 1995 (Pub. L. 104–4);
• Does not have federalism
implications as specified in Executive
Order 13132 (64 FR 43255, August 10,
1999);
• Is not an economically significant
regulatory action based on health or
safety risks subject to Executive Order
13045 (62 FR 19885, April 23, 1997);
• Is not a significant regulatory action
subject to Executive Order 13211 (66 FR
28355, May 22, 2001);
• Is not subject to requirements of
section 12(d) of the National
Technology Transfer and Advancement
Act of 1995 (15 U.S.C. 272 note) because
application of those requirements would
be inconsistent with the CAA; and
• Does not provide the EPA with the
discretionary authority to address, as
appropriate, disproportionate human
health or environmental effects, using
practicable and legally permissible
methods, under Executive Order 12898
(59 FR 7629, February 16, 1994).
This rule also does not have Tribal
implications because it will not have a
substantial direct effect on one or more
Indian Tribes, on the relationship
between the Federal Government and
Indian Tribes, or on the distribution of
power and responsibilities between the
Federal Government and Indian Tribes,
as specified by Executive Order 13175
(65 FR 67249, November 9, 2000).
The Congressional Review Act, 5
U.S.C. 801 et seq., as added by the Small
Business Regulatory Enforcement
Fairness Act of 1996, generally provides
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that before a rule may take effect, the
agency promulgating the rule must
submit a rule report, which includes a
copy of the rule, to each House of the
Congress and to the Comptroller General
of the United States. The EPA will
submit a report containing this rule and
other required information to the U.S.
Senate, the U.S. House of
Representatives, and the Comptroller
General of the United States prior to
publication of the rule in the Federal
Register. A major rule cannot take effect
until 60 days after it is published in the
Federal Register. This action is not a
‘‘major rule’’ as defined by 5 U.S.C.
804(2).
Under section 307(b)(1) of the CAA,
petitions for judicial review of this
action must be filed in the United States
Court of Appeals for the appropriate
circuit by June 29, 2021. Filing a
petition for reconsideration by the
Administrator of this final rule does not
affect the finality of this action for the
purposes of judicial review nor does it
extend the time within which a petition
for judicial review may be filed, and
shall not postpone the effectiveness of
such rule or action. This action may not
be challenged later in proceedings to
enforce its requirements. (See section
307(b)(2).)
List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 62
Environmental protection,
Administrative practice and procedure,
Air pollution control, Intergovernmental
relations, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Waste treatment and
disposal.
Dated: April 23, 2021.
David Gray,
Acting Regional Administrator, Region 6.
For the reasons stated in the
preamble, the Environmental Protection
Agency amends 40 CFR part 62 as
follows:
PART 62—APPROVAL AND
PROMULGATION OF STATE PLANS
FOR DESIGNATED FACILITIES AND
POLLUTANTS
1. The authority citation for part 62
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 7401 et seq.
Subpart T—Louisiana
2. Add an undesignated center
heading and § 62.4675 to read as
follows:
■
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Emissions From Existing Other Solid
Waste Incineration Units
§ 62.4675 Identification of plan—negative
declaration.
Letter from the Louisiana Department
of Environmental Quality dated
November 24, 2020, certifying that there
are no incinerators subject to the Other
Solid Waste Incineration units (OSWI)
Emission Guidelines, at 40 CFR part 60,
subpart FFFF, within its jurisdiction in
the State of Louisiana.
[FR Doc. 2021–08915 Filed 4–29–21; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Fish and Wildlife Service
50 CFR Part 17
[Docket No. FWS–R1–ES–2020–0050;
FF09E21000 FXES11110900000 212]
RIN 1018–BF01
Endangered and Threatened Wildlife
and Plants; Revised Designation of
Critical Habitat for the Northern
Spotted Owl; Delay of Effective Date
Fish and Wildlife Service,
Interior.
ACTION: Final rule; delay of effective
date.
AGENCY:
We, the U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service (Service), are delaying
the effective date of a final rule we
published on January 15, 2021, revising
the designation of critical habitat for the
northern spotted owl (Strix occidentalis
caurina) under the Endangered Species
Act of 1973, as amended. This second
delay is necessary to avoid placing
undue risk on the conservation of
northern spotted owl caused by
allowing exclusions from its designated
critical habitat to go into effect while the
Service prepares a revision or
withdrawal of the January 15, 2021, rule
through additional rulemaking to
address apparent defects; this second
delay is also necessary to avoid
confusion and disruption with Federal
agencies in the implementation of
section 7 of the Endangered Species Act
while the Service initiates and
completes the rulemaking process for
revising or withdrawing the January 15,
2021, rule.
DATES: As of April 29, 2021, the
effective date of the final rule published
January 15, 2021, at 86 FR 4820, and
delayed on March 1, 2021 (86 FR
11892), is further delayed until
December 15, 2021.
SUMMARY:
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This final rule is available
on the internet at https://
www.regulations.gov under Docket No.
FWS–R1–ES–2020–0050 and at https://
www.fws.gov/oregonfwo. Comments and
materials we received on previous
documents related to this rulemaking
action, as well as some of the supporting
documentation we used in preparing
this rule, are available for public
inspection at https://
www.regulations.gov under Docket No.
FWS–R1–ES–2020–0050.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Paul
Henson, State Supervisor, U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service, Portland, OR 97030,
telephone 503–231–6179. Persons who
use a telecommunications device for the
deaf (TDD) may call the Federal Relay
Service at 800–877–8339.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
ADDRESSES:
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Background
On December 4, 2012, we published
in the Federal Register (77 FR 71876) a
final rule designating revised critical
habitat for the northern spotted owl.
Most of the areas designated as critical
habitat are located on Federal lands,
with a small amount of State and local
government lands included in the
designation. No areas of private land
were designated. On August 11, 2020,
we proposed a rule (85 FR 48487;
referred to hereafter as the August 11,
2020, Proposed Rule) to exclude
204,653 acres (82,820 hectares) in 15
counties in Oregon from that revised
designated critical habitat pursuant to
the Secretary of the Interior’s
discretionary authority under section
4(b)(2) of the Endangered Species Act of
1973, as amended (ESA; 16 U.S.C. 1531
et seq.), and we solicited public
comment on that proposed rule. On
January 15, 2021, we published a final
rule (86 FR 4820) (referred to hereafter
as the January 15, 2021, Final Rule)
revising the designated critical habitat
for the northern spotted owl by
excluding approximately 3,472,064
acres (1,405,094 hectares) in 14 counties
in Washington, 21 counties in Oregon,
and 10 counties in California. Of the
over 3.4 million acres excluded, about
20,000 acres (8,094 hectares) are Federal
Indian lands, recently transferred by
congressional action to be held in trust
for two federally recognized Tribes, and
the remainder are Federal lands
managed by either the Bureau of Land
Management (BLM) or the U.S. Forest
Service (USFS).
On March 1, 2021, we issued a final
rule delaying the effective date of the
January 15, 2021, Final Rule from March
16, 2021, to April 30, 2021, to allow for
review of issues of fact, law, and policy
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raised by that final rule, and we opened
a 30-day public comment period on the
January 15, 2021, Final Rule, as well as
on the potential for an additional delay
of the effective date so as to avoid
adverse consequences to conservation of
the species and to Federal agencies if
the exclusions were to go into effect
during that rulemaking process (86 FR
11892; referred to hereafter as the March
1, 2021, Delay Rule). On March 5, a
lawsuit was filed challenging the March
1, 2021, Delay Rule, American Forest
Resources Council et al. v. Williams et
al., No. 1:21–cv–00601 (D.D.C. March 5,
2021) (AFRC). Plaintiffs in that case
assert that our March 1, 2021, Delay
Rule extending the effective date of the
January 15, 2021, Final Rule violates the
Administrative Procedure Act (APA; 5
U.S.C. 551 et seq.) and the Oregon and
California Railroad and Coos Bay Wagon
Road Grant Lands Act of 1937 (O&C Act;
43 U.S.C. 2601 et seq.). The AFRC
plaintiffs seek implementation of the
January 15, 2021, Final Rule without
further delay. As of this writing, the
AFRC plaintiffs have filed a motion for
summary judgment, and the
Government filed a brief in opposition
on April 15, 2021. On March 23, 2021,
a lawsuit was filed challenging the
January 15, 2021, Final Rule, Audubon
Society of Portland, et al. v. United
States Fish and Wildlife Service, No.
3:21–cv–00443 (D. Or., March 23, 2021)
(Audubon). Plaintiffs in that case assert
that the January 15, 2021, Final Rule
violates both the APA and the ESA. The
Audubon plaintiffs request the court
vacate the January 15, 2021, Final Rule.
As of this writing, briefing has not
commenced in that case.
On March 31, 2021, the comment
period we opened in our March 1, 2021,
Delay Rule closed. Based on the
comments received, and other new
information, we are extending the
effective date of the January 15, 2021,
Final Rule from April 30, 2021, until
December 15, 2021.
Public Comments
As described in our March 1, 2021,
Delay Rule, the January 15, 2021, Final
Rule raised several questions of law,
fact, and policy. We invited public
comment on those questions, as well as
comments on the impact of the delay of
the effective date and any further delay
that might be considered. We received
a total of 2,237 comments through the
comment period that ended March 31,
2021. The comments addressed matters
of substantive law and policy under the
ESA, as well as under the APA and
other laws. These comments raise new
issues and, in part, suggest legitimate
bases for the litigation challenging the
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January 15, 2021, Final Rule. During
this second period of delay, we will
conduct factual and legal research, and
address and respond to the substantive
comments specific to those issues in a
subsequent Federal Register
publication. We intend to prepare a
notice of proposed rulemaking to revise
or withdraw the January 15, 2021, Final
Rule to address apparent defects that the
public comments raised. This includes
publishing a proposed rule and seeking
public comment. In this rule delaying
the effective date, we summarize and
respond to the substantive comments
that specifically relate to the delay of
the January 15, 2021, Final Rule’s
effective date.
In this section, we identify potential
defects in the January 15, 2021, Final
Rule based on the comments received
and summarize the comments received
generally. Comments regarding the
impact of delaying the January 15, 2021,
Final Rule further, or implementing it
now, are addressed in greater detail
below under Discussion, as those
comments have the most bearing on this
final rule.
We received comments that identified
potential defects in the January 15,
2021, Final Rule—both procedurally
and substantively. In addition, since the
publication of the January 15, 2021,
Final Rule, our reexamination has
identified potential shortcomings of the
Final Rule. Potential defects and
shortcomings of the January 15, 2021,
Final Rule include:
1. That the January 15, 2021, Final
Rule was not a logical outgrowth of the
proposed rule because among other
things it excluded substantially more
acres and included new rationales for
the exclusions not discussed in the
proposed rule.
2. That the January 15, 2021, Final
Rule did not utilize the best scientific
data available, including from our
recent finding that the species warrants
reclassification as endangered—that is,
that the species is in danger of
extinction throughout all or a significant
portion of its range—among other new
information.
3. That the January 15, 2021, Final
Rule failed to address the economic
benefits of maintaining the designated
critical habitat particularly as to
environmental benefits to communities,
and thus failed to identify or address the
adverse economic costs of the
exclusions on these resources.
4. That the January 15, 2021, Final
Rule relied upon a large-scale barred
owl removal program that is not yet in
place and too uncertain to rely on.
5. That the January 15, 2021, Final
Rule relied upon a determination by the
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Secretary that the exclusions will not
result in the extinction of the northern
spotted owl, and that the determination
was not supported by information in the
record and is otherwise inconsistent
with the ESA.
6. That the January 15, 2021, Final
Rule inadequately explained a change in
our prior findings that areas designated
on lands managed under the O&C Act
were essential to the conservation of the
species.
Some commenters supported the
January 15, 2021, Final Rule, opposed
the delay in its effective date, and
sought no further delay in the
exclusions from critical habitat. The
American Forest Resource Council
(AFRC); Lewis and Skamania Counties,
Washington; and Douglas County,
Oregon, commented that the delay of
the effective date is unlawful in that we
did not provide the public with notice
and an opportunity to comment. These
commenters also assert that the Service
did not provide a sound rationale for
applying the ‘‘good cause’’ exceptions to
providing notice and the opportunity to
comment and for making the Delay Rule
effective immediately rather than in 30
days pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 553(b)(3)(B)
and (d)(3), respectively. Further, they
commented that the Delay Rule fails to
address the effects to regulated industry
and the public, including AFRC, and
delays providing the economic, safety,
and environmental benefits of the
January 15, 2021, Final Rule.
Specifically, AFRC stated that the delay
violates the sustained-yield mandate of
the O&C Act by placing those areas
substantially off-limits for timber
harvesting and interferes with fuels
reduction projects, thereby increasing
the risk of loss of life, property, and
habitat. These commenters disputed
that a ‘‘logical outgrowth’’ problem
exists with the January 15, 2021, Final
Rule and stated that the changes in that
final rule would have been reasonably
anticipated by our request for comments
in our August 11, 2020, Proposed Rule
on additional exclusions we should
consider. Additionally, they commented
that the January 15, 2021, Final Rule
should go into effect immediately
because the 2012 final rule was illegal
and irrational, citing concerns regarding
economic impacts to communities
dependent on timber harvest receipts
and their assertion that areas of nonhabitat were designated in the 2012
final rule.
The Confederated Tribe of the Coos,
Lower Umpqua, and Siuslaw Indians
(CTCLUSI) supported the revised
designation that excluded Tribal lands.
The Tribe expressed concern that a
delay of the effective date will cause the
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Tribe to alter its forest management
planning efforts due to the current
designation of critical habitat on lands
conveyed to Tribal management in 2020
from BLM. The CTCLUSI expressed that
this action threatens its self-governance
and Tribal sovereignty and has
economic impacts on the Tribe. The
CTCLUSI and Bureau of Indian Affairs
expressed that Secretarial Order 3206
should be followed and that it supports
the exclusion of the tribally managed
lands.
Conservation groups, on the other
hand, urged the Service to delay
implementation of the January 15, 2021,
Final Rule for 240 days until the Service
revised or eliminated the rule entirely.
In general, most of the comments
opposed the exclusions from designated
critical habitat determined in the
January 15, 2021, Final Rule.
Commenters raised concerns about
whether the most-current scientific
information provides a basis for
excluding 3.4 million acres of critical
habitat especially given our recent
finding that the species warrants
reclassification as endangered—that is,
that the species is in danger of
extinction throughout all or a significant
portion of its range. Other comments
opposing the exclusions in the January
15, 2021, Final Rule identified concerns
given the increased role of the invasive
barred owl in competing for the same
habitat with northern spotted owls and
the impact of recent wildfires in further
diminishing available habitat generally.
These commenters asserted that the
Service should be considering
expanding the areas designated as
critical habitat, not reducing them.
Additionally, commenters expressed
concerns about relying on a barred owl
removal program to support the
exclusions when a large-scale barred
owl removal program is likely not
feasible; therefore, habitat protections
and other recovery actions should
remain a priority. One commenter stated
that the phrase in the January 15, 2021,
Final Rule that ‘‘the Secretary has not
concluded that these exclusions will
result in the extinction of the species’’
is vague, creates uncertainty, and fails to
address the declining population of
northern spotted owls.
In terms of the process for developing
the January, 15, 2021, Final Rule, a few
commenters felt the exclusions
proposed in the August 11, 2020,
Proposed Rule, even though a much
smaller and narrower proposal, gave
sufficient notice that the final
exclusions could be larger and could
include areas throughout the range of
the owl. Many others strongly disagreed,
noting the huge increase in excluded
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areas, and the expansion beyond just the
original proposal of certain BLMmanaged lands and Tribal lands in
Oregon. The Washington Department of
Fish and Wildlife and California
Department of Fish and Wildlife also
disagreed with the expanded exclusions
and commented that they were not
aware that exclusions might occur
within their States. Commenters also
noted that there were entirely new
rationales for the final exclusions that
were not included in the August 11,
2020, Proposed Rule, and so they had
no opportunity to comment on these.
Commenters expressed that the
Secretary’s statement in the January 15,
2021, Final Rule that timber harvest
may occur at longer intervals was
speculative and unlikely to occur given
current timber harvest practices.
Another commenter expressed concern
that the excluded areas included
northern spotted owl core areas and
home ranges, particularly with the BLM
Harvest Land Base.
Conservation groups stated that the
Service failed to conduct an economic
analysis on the critical habitat revision
and consider potential adverse
economic impacts to communities,
especially in relation to the
environmental benefits associated with
designated critical habitat, and that the
Service instead relied on the 2012
economic analysis. These commenters
also stated that the Service erred in
concluding that the benefits of
exclusion outweigh the benefits of
inclusion and incorrectly justified its
decision in part based on the O&C Act,
noting longstanding Department and
Solicitor legal interpretations that the
designation of critical habitat does not
preclude the sustained-yield timber
management of O&C lands consistent
with the requirements of the O&C Act
(77 FR 72010, December 4, 2012). These
commenters noted the Service’s
previous conclusions that the O&C
lands and matrix lands significantly
contribute to the conservation of the
northern spotted owl, that recovery of
the owl cannot be attained without the
O&C lands, and that our modeling
showed that not including many of the
matrix lands in the critical habitat
network resulted in a significant
increase in the risk of extinction.
Conservation groups stated that the
Service’s conclusion that it may exclude
any and all areas from a designation up
until the point that doing so would
result in the extinction of the species is
inconsistent with the ESA in that this
perception ignores the vital role that
critical habitat plays in the recovery and
survival of the species and is not what
Congress intended. These commenters
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also stated that the January 15, 2021,
Final Rule fails to adopt the
‘‘precautionary principle’’ and it does
not give the species the ‘‘benefit of the
doubt’’ as the ESA is designed to do.
Discussion
Based on the comments received to
date, we believe there are sufficient
concerns about the merits of the January
15, 2021, Final Rule, as well as the
procedural steps we took to issue it, that
warrant our further consideration and
action. In particular, commenters have
asserted that our January 15, 2021, Final
Rule failed to consider the best available
science in making the requisite finding
that the exclusions will not result in the
extinction of the species. New
information, available after the January
15, 2021, Final Rule was finalized,
suggest this may be the case. As noted
in the January 15, 2021, Final Rule, our
findings regarding the extinction issue
were summarized in the rule and further
described in a memorandum from the
Director to the Secretary (FWS 2021a).
That memorandum relied in part on
information requested and received
from the Service’s field office in Oregon,
which has the first-line responsibility
for managing issues related to the
species. The field office, however, upon
seeing the final Director’s memo,
identified areas where the Director’s
memo was inaccurate or unclear in
terms of its characterization of the
scientific information and detailed those
concerns in a followup memo (see FWS
2021b). Our concerns represented in
that followup memo (FWS 2021b) align
with the Service’s and Department’s
Code of Scientific and Scholarly
Conduct (305 DM 3.2; 212 FW 7), which
obligates Service staff to use the ‘‘most
appropriate, best available, high quality
scientific and scholarly data and
information’’ to inform sound
decisionmaking.
Given the potential errors in the
January 15, 2021, Final Rule, as well as
concerns that the rule’s implementation
will hasten the decline of this imperiled
species and diminish its prospects for
recovery, we have concluded that the
January 15, 2021, Final Rule should not
become effective before our further
review and reconsideration is
completed and we have had the
opportunity to fully address the issues
summarized herein. As discussed
further below, to do otherwise risks the
removal of that habitat in the interim.
Giving the benefit of the doubt to the
species when designating critical habitat
reflects the institutionalized caution
embedded in the ESA, which gives
primacy to the protection of listed
species. See Tennessee Valley Authority
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v. Hill, 437 U.S. 153, 174 (1978) (in
enacting the ESA, it is ‘‘beyond doubt
that Congress intended endangered
species to be afforded the highest of
priorities’’). Also as discussed below, to
allow the exclusions to become effective
while we undertake additional
rulemaking to revise or withdraw them
will cause confusion and disruption
with Federal agencies in the ESA
section 7(a)(2) consultation process. The
comments expressing concern with the
delay in the implementation of the
January 15, 2021, Final Rule focused in
particular on the perceived impacts to
timber production from Federal lands
and effects that may flow from that.
These commenters assert that the 3.4
million acres of exclusions were either
appropriate or legally required under
the O&C Act, and that further delay will
continue to hamper Federal agency
efforts to authorize and implement
timber harvest on Federal lands. As we
noted in the January 15, 2021, Final
Rule, we acknowledge this perception of
the impact of the critical habitat
designation for the northern spotted owl
on timber production. However, as
noted in our January 15, 2021, Final
Rule, ‘‘the implementation of critical
habitat occurs within a complex set of
factors, including volatility in global
demand for wood products, general
timber industry transformation, and
existing regulatory and statutory
requirements, among other factors’’ (IEc
2020). See our discussion of economic
issues in the January 15, 2021, Final
Rule (at 86 FR 4825–4828) and in the
December 4, 2012, final critical habitat
rule (at 77 FR 71945–71947). Since the
species listing itself influences the
impacts to timber production, we
determine the economic effects that
result from the critical habit designation
beyond the economic effects that result
from listing and other regulations (50
CFR 17.90(a)). The courts have upheld
this approach, also referred to as an
‘‘incremental impacts analysis,’’ to
determine the economic impacts of
critical habitat designations (e.g.,
Arizona Cattle Growers’ Ass’n v.
Salazar, 606 F.3d 1160 (9th Cir. 2010)).
Even with the listing of the northern
spotted owl and the designation of
critical habitat on Federal lands, timber
continues to be produced from Federal
lands within the areas designated. For
example, between 2013 and 2018, the
Service completed section 7
consultations on over 100,000 acres
(40,469 hectares) of timber sales within
the critical habitat designation across
Washington, Oregon, and California
(USFWS, unpub. data). And, as
described in the response to Comment
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22879
21(b) in the January 15, 2021, Final Rule
(at 86 FR 4827), average annual timber
harvest on Federal lands in the range of
the northern spotted owl has increased
significantly in the years after the 2012
critical habitat designation, when
compared with such harvest during the
preceding decade.
In regard to concerns raised about
limitations on fuels management and
increased risk of wildfire, in the 2012
critical habitat rule the Service
accounted for the drier provinces and
parts of the range and recognized that
forest management needs to be tailored
to the forest type and climatic
conditions, including the dry forests in
California and the Eastern Washington
Cascades. As part of the critical habitat
rule, the Service expressly encouraged
land managers to consider
implementation of active forest
management, using ‘‘ecological forestry’’
practices, and to restore natural
ecological processes where they have
been disrupted or suppressed (e.g.,
natural fire regimes). This flexibility is
provided to reduce the potential for
adverse impacts associated with
commercial timber harvest when such
harvest is planned within or adjacent to
critical habitat and consistent with land
use plans (USDI FWS 2012b: 77 FR
71877, December 4, 2012). The Service
recognizes that land managers have a
variety of forest management goals,
including maintaining or improving
ecological conditions where the intent is
to provide long-term benefits to forest
resiliency and restore natural forest
dynamic processes (USDI FWS 2011,
p. III–45). The Service has consulted on
fuels reduction, stand resiliency, and
pine restoration projects in dry forest
systems, for example in the Klamath
Province of southern Oregon, that
promote ecological restoration and are
expected to reduce future losses of
spotted owl habitat and improve overall
forest ecosystem resilience to climate
change. We concluded in these
consultations that the actions do not
adversely modify critical habitat. Many
of these treatment areas include
reduction in forest canopy to obtain
desired silvicultural outcomes and meet
the purpose and need of the project. In
sum, the critical habitat designation
supports and encourages active
management of forests to address
catastrophic wildfire risk where
planned appropriately and informed by
the best available science in order to
protect communities from property
losses, restore forest health, and for the
long-term recovery of the owl.
Regarding the impact of a delay on
Tribal activities on forest lands, the
Service is available to assist Tribes in
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developing their forest management
plans and any related consultation
needs to address management and
economic concerns. The Service has
been working with the Tribes to address
their concerns since the initial proposal
to exclude areas from the critical habitat
designation, and that has continued
through the time of the March 1, 2021,
Delay Rule. The Service is committed to
upholding Secretarial Order 3206.
Lastly, with regard to comments
received that the failure to implement
the January 15, 2021, Final Rule
precludes the BLM and USFS from
implementing their obligations under
the O&C Act, as we noted in the
January, 15, 2021, Final Rule, there is
ongoing litigation challenging BLM’s
management of O&C lands under the
2016 Resource Management Plans
(RMPs) (BLM 2016a, 2016b). One
district court has concluded that the
2016 RMPs (including their
consideration of the ESA) do not
conflict with the O&C Act, see Pac.
Rivers v. U.S. Bureau of Land Mgmt.,
No. 6:16–CV–01598–JR, 2019 WL
1232835 (D. Or. Mar. 15, 2019), aff’d sub
nom. Rivers v. Bureau of Land Mgmt.,
815 F. App’x. 107 (9th Cir. 2020). In a
separate proceeding, the U.S. District
Court for the District of Columbia, in a
consolidated set of cases, found that the
BLM RMPs violate the O&C Act because
BLM excluded portions of O&C
timberland from sustained yield harvest
(i.e., the BLM allocated some
timberlands to reserves instead of the
Harvest Land Base); see, e.g., American
Forest Resource Council et al. v.
Hammond, 422 F. Supp. 3d 184 (D.D.C.
2019). The parties briefed the court on
the appropriate remedy, but the court
has not yet issued an order. In the
absence of a remedy order or resolution
of any further proceedings in that
litigation, we decline to speculate on the
outcome as a reason to implement the
January 15, 2021, Final Rule
immediately.
In sum, substantial issues have been
raised that our January 15, 2021, Final
Rule may be detrimental to the
conservation of the northern spotted
owl, a species we recently found
warrants reclassifying as an endangered
species in danger of extinction
throughout its range. There are also
substantial concerns that we failed to
provide the public with adequate notice
and opportunity to review and comment
on the extent of, and reasons for, the
change from our proposed exclusion of
approximately 200,000 acres (80,937
hectares) to the approximately 3.4
million acres (1.3 million hectares)
excluded by our January 15, 2021, Final
Rule. This additional delay to consider
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these exclusions and conduct
rulemaking to either revise or withdraw
them will not result in a long-term or
irreversible economic impact; timber
harvest already scheduled to occur on
BLM and USFS land will continue to
proceed as planned. We are, therefore,
further delaying the effective date of the
January 15, 2021, Final Rule that revised
the designation of critical habitat for the
northern spotted owl to give us the
needed time to fully consider questions
of law, policy, and fact in regard to that
final rule, and allow us to take action to
remedy procedural and substantive
defects identified in order to provide for
conservation of the species and avoid
undue disruption in the required
consultation process with Federal
agencies. The effective date of the
January 15, 2021, Final Rule, as
modified by the March 1, 2021, Delay
Rule (86 FR 11892), was April 30, 2021.
With this document, we are delaying the
effective date of the January 15, 2021,
Final Rule, until December 15, 2021.
During this time, we expect to complete
our review and reconsideration of the
January 15, 2021, Final Rule, and to
undertake and complete new notice and
comment rulemaking as needed to
address the substantive and procedural
questions raised.
We note that the Office of
Management and Budget deemed the
January 15, 2021, Final Rule to be
economically significant under
Executive Order 12866. However, we do
not consider this delay rule to be
economically significant.
Good Cause Under the Administrative
Procedure Act
In our March 1, 2021, Delay Rule, we
invited public comments on the impact
of the initial delay of the January 15,
2021, Final Rule. We also expressly
sought comment on whether we should
extend the effective date of the January
15, 2021, Final Rule beyond April 30,
2021, and, if so, for how long and what,
if any, the impacts of that delay would
be. In addition, we identified the legal
authority under which we promulgated
it, and we described the subjects and
issues involved. As a result, ‘‘[f]ormal
labels aside, the [March 1, 2021, Delay
rule] contained all of the elements of a
notice of proposed rulemaking as
required by the APA’’ (Little Sisters of
the Poor Saints Peter and Paul Home v.
Pennsylvania, 140 S. Ct. 2367, 2384
(2020)). We have now considered and
addressed in this final rule the
comments regarding the initial delay
and the potential impacts of an
additional delay. As a result, seeking
additional public comment on the delay
until December 15, 2021, would be
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unnecessary and duplicative, and is not
required by the APA. It is, therefore, not
necessary to assess whether this second
delay in the effective date of the January
15, 2015, Final Rule meets the ‘‘good
cause’’ exceptions to notice and
comment rulemaking of the APA.
Nonetheless, out of an abundance of
caution, we again review our action here
against the good-cause exception. We
also in this section evaluate whether we
have good cause to make this final rule
effective immediately, rather than make
it effective in 30 days.
Our implementation of this action
extending the effective date of the
January 15, 2021, Final Rule from April,
30, 2021, to December 15, 2021, without
opportunity for further public comment,
effective immediately upon publication
in the Federal Register, is consistent
with the good-cause exceptions
provided in the APA. Pursuant to 5
U.S.C. 553(b)(3)(B) and (d)(3), we have
determined that good cause exists to
forgo the requirements to provide
additional prior notice and an
opportunity for public comment on this
delay in the effective date of the January
15, 2021, Final Rule, and to make this
action announcing the delay effective
immediately upon publication.
Under the totality of the
circumstances presented here, notice
and comment would be unnecessary, as
well as impracticable and contrary to
the public interest, because the public
has had notice of and opportunity to
comment on further extension of the
effective date of the January 15, 2021,
Final Rule, and taking the time to
provide for additional public notice and
comment would thwart the conservation
purposes of the ESA, create confusion
and disruption for Federal agencies in
implementing the ESA section 7(a)(2)
consultation process, and prevent the
Service from performing its functions.
First, additional notice and comment
is unnecessary. As noted above, our
March 1, 2021, Delay Rule expressly
provided notice that we might further
delay the effective date, and also sought
public comment on that possibility. We
received public comments on that
question and considered them in this
final rule. As also noted above, this is
all that the APA requires. But even if
this process did not constitute technical
compliance with the APA, and a
showing of good cause were required,
good cause exists here because further
public notice and additional comment is
unnecessary given the opportunity
provided pursuant to the March 1, 2021,
Delay Rule.
Second, additional notice and
comment is also impractical and
contrary to the public interest. As noted
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in our March 1, 2021, Delay Rule (86 FR
11892), we were reviewing whether the
determinations made in the January 15,
2021, Final Rule were a ‘‘logical
outgrowth’’ of the August 11, 2020,
Proposed Rule. In addition, there has
been substantial litigation in the past on
critical habitat designations for this
species, and we have now in fact been
sued regarding the legality of the
January 15, 2021, Final Rule. As
identified above, we conclude that there
are likely procedural and substantive
defects in the January 15, 2021, Final
Rule. Our agency’s ‘‘due and required’’
execution of its functions under the ESA
would be unavoidably prevented if we
allow the effective date to be triggered
without undertaking efforts to address
and rectify the defects in the January 15,
2021, Final Rule. See S. Doc. No. 248,
79th Cong., 2d Sess. At 200 (1946). That
is, if the January 15, 2021, final
exclusions from designated critical
habitat of more than 3 million acres of
northern spotted owl habitat become
effective, there is the potential that we
will not have met our obligations under
the ESA to provide required protections
for listed species. Specifically, once the
exclusions become effective, Federal
agencies will no longer be required to
consult with the Service under section
7(a)(2) of the ESA to determine if agency
actions will result in the destruction or
adverse modification of that formerly
designated habitat. Federal agencies
could proceed to undertake (or to
authorize others to undertake) activities
that would remove that habitat before
the Service could reconsider whether
those exclusions were appropriate in the
first place. Because the habitat is
defined by forested stands, particularly
of older trees, it cannot be replaced for
many decades once removed. Even if
the January 15, 2021, Final Rule were to
become effective only briefly such that
immediate implementation of habitatremoval activities would be unlikely or
limited, having areas previously
designated be excluded, then
reconsidered and potentially included
again, would cause confusion and
disruption in the section 7(a)(2)
consultation process, again impeding
the Federal agencies from executing
their conservation functions, and also
affecting third parties reliant on Federal
agency activities.
In designated critical habitat for the
northern spotted owl in Washington,
Oregon, and California, at least 35
separate section 7 consultations have
been completed or are underway for
ongoing and proposed Federal actions
addressing a range of activities—
including both forest management to
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improve fire resiliency and oversee
commercial timber harvest. If the 3.4
million acres (1.3 million hectares) were
excluded from the critical habitat
designation on April 30, 2021, those
Federal agencies would no longer be
required to address whether the
activities destroy or adversely modify
the excluded critical habitat and could
proceed with such activities. If the
Service, following its review of the
January 15, 2021, Final Rule, again
modifies the exclusions or withdraws
them through rulemaking, these Federal
agencies would need to reinitiate
section 7 consultation to determine if
their ongoing activities impact the
revised critical habitat, and would be
constrained by section 7(d) of the ESA
from certain ‘‘irreversible or
irretrievable commitment of resources’’
during the consultation period. This
kind of uncertainty in knowing what
areas are within or outside of the critical
habitat designation creates project
delays that can be avoided by
maintaining the status quo of the
current designated habitat while the
Service reconsiders the January 15,
2021, exclusions.
The ESA does not require exclusion of
areas from critical habitat—the authority
to exclude particular areas from
designations of critical habitat under the
second sentence of section 4(b)(2) of the
ESA is in the discretion of the Secretary.
In contrast, other duties relating to
critical habitat are mandatory: The duty
for the Service to designate critical
habitat (16 U.S.C. 1533(a)(3)) and the
duty of Federal agencies to ensure that
their actions are not likely to result in
the destruction or adverse modification
of critical habitat (16 U.S.C. 1536(a)(2)).
Therefore, a delay in the effective date
of the January 15, 2021, Final Rule
excluding areas from critical habitat for
the northern spotted owl does not delay
compliance with a mandate of the ESA.
Delaying the effective date of the
January 15, 2021, Final Rule, which
purported to exercise that discretionary
section 4(b)(2) authority, simply
preserves the status quo while we
undertake additional review and
undertake additional actions as needed
to ensure compliance with the legal
mandates and conservation purposes of
the ESA.
In sum, we find that the totality of the
circumstances here—the fact that notice
and comment have now occurred with
regard to a delay in the effective date of
the January 15, 2021, Final Rule; the
now-pending judicial review; our
concerns about substantive defects in
the rule and the associated potential to
affect the Service’s execution of its
statutory functions by having an impact
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22881
on ESA-listed species; the likelihood of
a ‘‘logical outgrowth’’ deficiency in the
January 15, 2021, Final Rule; and
concerns expressed by affected States
regarding a lack of opportunity to
comment, among other issues—indicate
that there is good cause to forgo notice
and comment procedures because it is
unnecessary, impracticable, and
contrary to the public interest for the
Service to provide another notice and
opportunity to comment on a further
extension of the effective date for the
January 15, 2021, Final Rule.
We also find that there is good cause
to make this rule effective immediately
instead of waiting until 30 days after
publication for it to become effective.
The APA’s legislative history indicates
that the purpose of the notice
requirement at 5 U.S.C. 553(d)(3) is to
‘‘afford persons affected a reasonable
time to prepare for the effective date of
a rule or rules or to take any other action
which the issuance of rules may
prompt.’’ S. Rep. No. 752, 79th Cong.,
1st Sess. 201 (1946) and H.R. Rep. No.
1980, 79th Cong., 2nd Sess. 259 (1946).
See, e.g., Riverbend Farms, Inc. v.
Madigan, 958 F.2d 1479, 1485 (9th Cir.
1992). However, the APA provides an
exception to this 30-day grace period for
good cause (5 U.S.C. 553(d)). There is
good cause to allow this extension of the
January 15, 2021, Final Rule’s effective
date to go into effect immediately
because it preserves the status quo and
there is no change to which parties
would need time to adjust their
behavior. Delaying the effective date
provides certainty for the Federal
agencies involved in ESA section 7
consultations during the delay period
while the Service addresses issues with
the January 15, 2021, Final Rule. The
Service is committed to ensuring
transparency and providing certainty in
the adequacy and finality of the January
15, 2021, Final Rule. Thus, it would be
contrary to the public interest for the
January 15, 2021, Final Rule to go into
effect, with its accompanying changes in
analyses of impacts, while the January
15, 2021, Final Rule remains under
review and subject to revision or
withdrawal. The potential for
fluctuating between the presence and
absence of a requirement for Federal
agencies to consult would lead to
uncertainty and confusion and a
potential and unnecessary increase in
administrative costs.
Further, if this rule extending the
effective date were itself not to become
effective for 30 days, it would mean that
the January 15, 2021, Final Rule would
go into effect on April 30, 2021. That
effective date would create the same
issues as discussed in the preceding
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paragraphs, i.e., thwart the conservation
purposes of the ESA, create confusion
and disruption for Federal agencies in
implementing the ESA section 7(a)(2)
consultation process, and prevent the
Service from performing its functions
under the Act.
In the March 1, 2021, Delay Rule, the
Service anticipated that a second delay
might be necessary (see 86 FR 11892).
For the reasons stated above, we
conclude that we have good cause to
issue this final rule, effective
immediately, extending the effective
date of the January 15, 2021, Final Rule
until December 15, 2021.
References Cited
A list of the references cited in this
document may be found at https://
www.regulations.gov under Docket No.
FWS–R1–ES–2020–0050.
Authority
The authorities for this action are 5
U.S.C. 553 and 16 U.S.C. 1531–1544
unless otherwise noted.
Martha Williams
Principal Deputy Director, Exercising the
Delegated Authority of the Director, U.S. Fish
and Wildlife Service.
[FR Doc. 2021–09108 Filed 4–29–21; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4333–15–P
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration
50 CFR Part 635
[Docket No. 210422–0085]
RIN 0648–BI09
Atlantic Highly Migratory Species;
Modification to the North Atlantic
Swordfish and Shark Retention Limits
for Certain Permit Holders and Add
Inseason Adjustment Authorization
Criteria
National Marine Fisheries
Service (NMFS), National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA),
Commerce.
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
NMFS is adjusting the current
regulations for North Atlantic swordfish
and shark retention limits for certain
permit holders in U.S. Atlantic and
Caribbean waters. Specifically, this
action will modify swordfish retention
limits for highly migratory species
(HMS) Commercial Caribbean Small
Boat permit holders, Swordfish General
Commercial permit holders, and HMS
Charter/Headboat permit holders with a
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SUMMARY:
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commercial endorsement on a non-for
hire (i.e., commercial) trip. This action
will also modify the shark retention
limits for HMS Commercial Caribbean
Small Boat permit holders.
Additionally, this action will add
regulatory criteria for inseason
adjustment of swordfish and shark
retention limits for the HMS
Commercial Caribbean Small Boat
permit. The changes are expected to
provide fishermen with greater
flexibility, establish greater consistency
across regions, and improve the
efficiency of swordfish and shark
management.
DATES: This final rule is effective on
June 1, 2021.
ADDRESSES: Copies of the supporting
documents, including the Final
Environmental Assessment (EA),
Regulatory Impact Review (RIR), and
Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
(FRFA) for this action, and the 2006
Consolidated Atlantic HMS Fishery
Management Plan (FMP) and its
amendments are available from the
HMS website at: https://
www.fisheries.noaa.gov/topic/atlantichighly-migratory-species.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Nicolas Alvarado at 727–824–5399,
Delisse Ortiz at 240–681–9037, or Steve
Durkee at (202) 670–6637.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Atlantic
HMS are managed under the dual
authorities of the Magnuson-Stevens
Fishery Conservation and Management
Act (Magnuson-Stevens Act) and the
Atlantic Tunas Convention Act (ATCA).
The implementing regulations for the
2006 Consolidated Atlantic HMS FMP
and its amendments are at 50 CFR part
635.
Background
In response to requests from HMS
Advisory Panel members and other
members of the public, NMFS
undertook this rulemaking to provide
consistency between the three open
access swordfish handgear permits, all
of which allow similar gears to be used
within U.S. Atlantic and Caribbean
waters, and to provide increased fishing
opportunities for sharks in the U.S.
Caribbean. Overall, this final rule
should increase administrative
efficiencies and increase management
flexibility by managing the swordfish
commercial open access permits in the
different regions similarly. Additionally,
this final rule should improve the
efficiency of swordfish and shark
management in all regions, while
continuing to prevent overfishing.
The proposed rule published on April
27, 2020 (85 FR 23315). The details of
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this rulemaking can be found in that
proposed rule, and are not repeated
here. Additional information can be
found in the Final EA supporting this
action, along with the 2006
Consolidated HMS FMP and its
amendments [see ADDRESSES].
The comment period for the proposed
rule closed on June 26, 2020. NMFS
held two public hearings via webinar,
and consulted with the HMS Advisory
Panel. In addition to the comments
received during the webinars and from
the HMS Advisory Panel, NMFS
received 29 written comments,
including comments from the Puerto
Rico Department of Natural Resources,
Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation,
environmental non-governmental
organizations, recreational and
commercial fishermen, and the general
public. The comments received, and
responses to those comments, are
summarized below in the Response to
Comments section.
After considering the management
goals of this final action and public
comments, NMFS is adjusting some of
the proposed measures. Specifically, for
swordfish, this final rule will increase
the default retention limit to 18
swordfish per vessel per trip for the
HMS Commercial Caribbean Small Boat
and Swordfish General Commercial
permit holders, and HMS Charter/
Headboat permit holders with a
commercial endorsement on a non-for
hire (i.e., commercial) trip in all regions
except for the Florida Swordfish
Management Area, which will remain at
0 swordfish per vessel per trip. This
measure is a change from the proposed
retention limit of six swordfish per
vessel per trip for all regions except for
the Florida Swordfish Management
Area. For sharks, this rule will establish
a default retention limit of three nonprohibited smoothhound sharks, nonblacknose small coastal sharks, or large
coastal (other than hammerhead, silky,
and sandbar) sharks (combined) per
vessel per trip for the HMS Commercial
Caribbean Small Boat permit holders.
This measure is a change from the
proposed default retention limit of three
smoothhound and/or tiger sharks
(combined) per vessel per trip for the
HMS Commercial Caribbean Small Boat
permit holders. Lastly, this action will
establish inseason adjustment
procedures for the HMS Commercial
Caribbean Small Boat permit swordfish
and shark retention limits. This measure
is unchanged from the proposed rule,
and will allow NMFS to make inseason
adjustments to the retention limits, as is
already allowed for other swordfish and
shark permits. These final actions are
expected to provide fishermen with
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[Federal Register Volume 86, Number 82 (Friday, April 30, 2021)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 22876-22882]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2021-09108]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Fish and Wildlife Service
50 CFR Part 17
[Docket No. FWS-R1-ES-2020-0050; FF09E21000 FXES11110900000 212]
RIN 1018-BF01
Endangered and Threatened Wildlife and Plants; Revised
Designation of Critical Habitat for the Northern Spotted Owl; Delay of
Effective Date
AGENCY: Fish and Wildlife Service, Interior.
ACTION: Final rule; delay of effective date.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: We, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (Service), are delaying
the effective date of a final rule we published on January 15, 2021,
revising the designation of critical habitat for the northern spotted
owl (Strix occidentalis caurina) under the Endangered Species Act of
1973, as amended. This second delay is necessary to avoid placing undue
risk on the conservation of northern spotted owl caused by allowing
exclusions from its designated critical habitat to go into effect while
the Service prepares a revision or withdrawal of the January 15, 2021,
rule through additional rulemaking to address apparent defects; this
second delay is also necessary to avoid confusion and disruption with
Federal agencies in the implementation of section 7 of the Endangered
Species Act while the Service initiates and completes the rulemaking
process for revising or withdrawing the January 15, 2021, rule.
DATES: As of April 29, 2021, the effective date of the final rule
published January 15, 2021, at 86 FR 4820, and delayed on March 1, 2021
(86 FR 11892), is further delayed until December 15, 2021.
[[Page 22877]]
ADDRESSES: This final rule is available on the internet at https://www.regulations.gov under Docket No. FWS-R1-ES-2020-0050 and at https://www.fws.gov/oregonfwo. Comments and materials we received on previous
documents related to this rulemaking action, as well as some of the
supporting documentation we used in preparing this rule, are available
for public inspection at https://www.regulations.gov under Docket No.
FWS-R1-ES-2020-0050.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Paul Henson, State Supervisor, U.S.
Fish and Wildlife Service, Portland, OR 97030, telephone 503-231-6179.
Persons who use a telecommunications device for the deaf (TDD) may call
the Federal Relay Service at 800-877-8339.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
On December 4, 2012, we published in the Federal Register (77 FR
71876) a final rule designating revised critical habitat for the
northern spotted owl. Most of the areas designated as critical habitat
are located on Federal lands, with a small amount of State and local
government lands included in the designation. No areas of private land
were designated. On August 11, 2020, we proposed a rule (85 FR 48487;
referred to hereafter as the August 11, 2020, Proposed Rule) to exclude
204,653 acres (82,820 hectares) in 15 counties in Oregon from that
revised designated critical habitat pursuant to the Secretary of the
Interior's discretionary authority under section 4(b)(2) of the
Endangered Species Act of 1973, as amended (ESA; 16 U.S.C. 1531 et
seq.), and we solicited public comment on that proposed rule. On
January 15, 2021, we published a final rule (86 FR 4820) (referred to
hereafter as the January 15, 2021, Final Rule) revising the designated
critical habitat for the northern spotted owl by excluding
approximately 3,472,064 acres (1,405,094 hectares) in 14 counties in
Washington, 21 counties in Oregon, and 10 counties in California. Of
the over 3.4 million acres excluded, about 20,000 acres (8,094
hectares) are Federal Indian lands, recently transferred by
congressional action to be held in trust for two federally recognized
Tribes, and the remainder are Federal lands managed by either the
Bureau of Land Management (BLM) or the U.S. Forest Service (USFS).
On March 1, 2021, we issued a final rule delaying the effective
date of the January 15, 2021, Final Rule from March 16, 2021, to April
30, 2021, to allow for review of issues of fact, law, and policy raised
by that final rule, and we opened a 30-day public comment period on the
January 15, 2021, Final Rule, as well as on the potential for an
additional delay of the effective date so as to avoid adverse
consequences to conservation of the species and to Federal agencies if
the exclusions were to go into effect during that rulemaking process
(86 FR 11892; referred to hereafter as the March 1, 2021, Delay Rule).
On March 5, a lawsuit was filed challenging the March 1, 2021, Delay
Rule, American Forest Resources Council et al. v. Williams et al., No.
1:21-cv-00601 (D.D.C. March 5, 2021) (AFRC). Plaintiffs in that case
assert that our March 1, 2021, Delay Rule extending the effective date
of the January 15, 2021, Final Rule violates the Administrative
Procedure Act (APA; 5 U.S.C. 551 et seq.) and the Oregon and California
Railroad and Coos Bay Wagon Road Grant Lands Act of 1937 (O&C Act; 43
U.S.C. 2601 et seq.). The AFRC plaintiffs seek implementation of the
January 15, 2021, Final Rule without further delay. As of this writing,
the AFRC plaintiffs have filed a motion for summary judgment, and the
Government filed a brief in opposition on April 15, 2021. On March 23,
2021, a lawsuit was filed challenging the January 15, 2021, Final Rule,
Audubon Society of Portland, et al. v. United States Fish and Wildlife
Service, No. 3:21-cv-00443 (D. Or., March 23, 2021) (Audubon).
Plaintiffs in that case assert that the January 15, 2021, Final Rule
violates both the APA and the ESA. The Audubon plaintiffs request the
court vacate the January 15, 2021, Final Rule. As of this writing,
briefing has not commenced in that case.
On March 31, 2021, the comment period we opened in our March 1,
2021, Delay Rule closed. Based on the comments received, and other new
information, we are extending the effective date of the January 15,
2021, Final Rule from April 30, 2021, until December 15, 2021.
Public Comments
As described in our March 1, 2021, Delay Rule, the January 15,
2021, Final Rule raised several questions of law, fact, and policy. We
invited public comment on those questions, as well as comments on the
impact of the delay of the effective date and any further delay that
might be considered. We received a total of 2,237 comments through the
comment period that ended March 31, 2021. The comments addressed
matters of substantive law and policy under the ESA, as well as under
the APA and other laws. These comments raise new issues and, in part,
suggest legitimate bases for the litigation challenging the January 15,
2021, Final Rule. During this second period of delay, we will conduct
factual and legal research, and address and respond to the substantive
comments specific to those issues in a subsequent Federal Register
publication. We intend to prepare a notice of proposed rulemaking to
revise or withdraw the January 15, 2021, Final Rule to address apparent
defects that the public comments raised. This includes publishing a
proposed rule and seeking public comment. In this rule delaying the
effective date, we summarize and respond to the substantive comments
that specifically relate to the delay of the January 15, 2021, Final
Rule's effective date.
In this section, we identify potential defects in the January 15,
2021, Final Rule based on the comments received and summarize the
comments received generally. Comments regarding the impact of delaying
the January 15, 2021, Final Rule further, or implementing it now, are
addressed in greater detail below under Discussion, as those comments
have the most bearing on this final rule.
We received comments that identified potential defects in the
January 15, 2021, Final Rule--both procedurally and substantively. In
addition, since the publication of the January 15, 2021, Final Rule,
our reexamination has identified potential shortcomings of the Final
Rule. Potential defects and shortcomings of the January 15, 2021, Final
Rule include:
1. That the January 15, 2021, Final Rule was not a logical
outgrowth of the proposed rule because among other things it excluded
substantially more acres and included new rationales for the exclusions
not discussed in the proposed rule.
2. That the January 15, 2021, Final Rule did not utilize the best
scientific data available, including from our recent finding that the
species warrants reclassification as endangered--that is, that the
species is in danger of extinction throughout all or a significant
portion of its range--among other new information.
3. That the January 15, 2021, Final Rule failed to address the
economic benefits of maintaining the designated critical habitat
particularly as to environmental benefits to communities, and thus
failed to identify or address the adverse economic costs of the
exclusions on these resources.
4. That the January 15, 2021, Final Rule relied upon a large-scale
barred owl removal program that is not yet in place and too uncertain
to rely on.
5. That the January 15, 2021, Final Rule relied upon a
determination by the
[[Page 22878]]
Secretary that the exclusions will not result in the extinction of the
northern spotted owl, and that the determination was not supported by
information in the record and is otherwise inconsistent with the ESA.
6. That the January 15, 2021, Final Rule inadequately explained a
change in our prior findings that areas designated on lands managed
under the O&C Act were essential to the conservation of the species.
Some commenters supported the January 15, 2021, Final Rule, opposed
the delay in its effective date, and sought no further delay in the
exclusions from critical habitat. The American Forest Resource Council
(AFRC); Lewis and Skamania Counties, Washington; and Douglas County,
Oregon, commented that the delay of the effective date is unlawful in
that we did not provide the public with notice and an opportunity to
comment. These commenters also assert that the Service did not provide
a sound rationale for applying the ``good cause'' exceptions to
providing notice and the opportunity to comment and for making the
Delay Rule effective immediately rather than in 30 days pursuant to 5
U.S.C. 553(b)(3)(B) and (d)(3), respectively. Further, they commented
that the Delay Rule fails to address the effects to regulated industry
and the public, including AFRC, and delays providing the economic,
safety, and environmental benefits of the January 15, 2021, Final Rule.
Specifically, AFRC stated that the delay violates the sustained-yield
mandate of the O&C Act by placing those areas substantially off-limits
for timber harvesting and interferes with fuels reduction projects,
thereby increasing the risk of loss of life, property, and habitat.
These commenters disputed that a ``logical outgrowth'' problem exists
with the January 15, 2021, Final Rule and stated that the changes in
that final rule would have been reasonably anticipated by our request
for comments in our August 11, 2020, Proposed Rule on additional
exclusions we should consider. Additionally, they commented that the
January 15, 2021, Final Rule should go into effect immediately because
the 2012 final rule was illegal and irrational, citing concerns
regarding economic impacts to communities dependent on timber harvest
receipts and their assertion that areas of non-habitat were designated
in the 2012 final rule.
The Confederated Tribe of the Coos, Lower Umpqua, and Siuslaw
Indians (CTCLUSI) supported the revised designation that excluded
Tribal lands. The Tribe expressed concern that a delay of the effective
date will cause the Tribe to alter its forest management planning
efforts due to the current designation of critical habitat on lands
conveyed to Tribal management in 2020 from BLM. The CTCLUSI expressed
that this action threatens its self-governance and Tribal sovereignty
and has economic impacts on the Tribe. The CTCLUSI and Bureau of Indian
Affairs expressed that Secretarial Order 3206 should be followed and
that it supports the exclusion of the tribally managed lands.
Conservation groups, on the other hand, urged the Service to delay
implementation of the January 15, 2021, Final Rule for 240 days until
the Service revised or eliminated the rule entirely. In general, most
of the comments opposed the exclusions from designated critical habitat
determined in the January 15, 2021, Final Rule. Commenters raised
concerns about whether the most-current scientific information provides
a basis for excluding 3.4 million acres of critical habitat especially
given our recent finding that the species warrants reclassification as
endangered--that is, that the species is in danger of extinction
throughout all or a significant portion of its range. Other comments
opposing the exclusions in the January 15, 2021, Final Rule identified
concerns given the increased role of the invasive barred owl in
competing for the same habitat with northern spotted owls and the
impact of recent wildfires in further diminishing available habitat
generally. These commenters asserted that the Service should be
considering expanding the areas designated as critical habitat, not
reducing them. Additionally, commenters expressed concerns about
relying on a barred owl removal program to support the exclusions when
a large-scale barred owl removal program is likely not feasible;
therefore, habitat protections and other recovery actions should remain
a priority. One commenter stated that the phrase in the January 15,
2021, Final Rule that ``the Secretary has not concluded that these
exclusions will result in the extinction of the species'' is vague,
creates uncertainty, and fails to address the declining population of
northern spotted owls.
In terms of the process for developing the January, 15, 2021, Final
Rule, a few commenters felt the exclusions proposed in the August 11,
2020, Proposed Rule, even though a much smaller and narrower proposal,
gave sufficient notice that the final exclusions could be larger and
could include areas throughout the range of the owl. Many others
strongly disagreed, noting the huge increase in excluded areas, and the
expansion beyond just the original proposal of certain BLM-managed
lands and Tribal lands in Oregon. The Washington Department of Fish and
Wildlife and California Department of Fish and Wildlife also disagreed
with the expanded exclusions and commented that they were not aware
that exclusions might occur within their States. Commenters also noted
that there were entirely new rationales for the final exclusions that
were not included in the August 11, 2020, Proposed Rule, and so they
had no opportunity to comment on these.
Commenters expressed that the Secretary's statement in the January
15, 2021, Final Rule that timber harvest may occur at longer intervals
was speculative and unlikely to occur given current timber harvest
practices. Another commenter expressed concern that the excluded areas
included northern spotted owl core areas and home ranges, particularly
with the BLM Harvest Land Base.
Conservation groups stated that the Service failed to conduct an
economic analysis on the critical habitat revision and consider
potential adverse economic impacts to communities, especially in
relation to the environmental benefits associated with designated
critical habitat, and that the Service instead relied on the 2012
economic analysis. These commenters also stated that the Service erred
in concluding that the benefits of exclusion outweigh the benefits of
inclusion and incorrectly justified its decision in part based on the
O&C Act, noting longstanding Department and Solicitor legal
interpretations that the designation of critical habitat does not
preclude the sustained-yield timber management of O&C lands consistent
with the requirements of the O&C Act (77 FR 72010, December 4, 2012).
These commenters noted the Service's previous conclusions that the O&C
lands and matrix lands significantly contribute to the conservation of
the northern spotted owl, that recovery of the owl cannot be attained
without the O&C lands, and that our modeling showed that not including
many of the matrix lands in the critical habitat network resulted in a
significant increase in the risk of extinction.
Conservation groups stated that the Service's conclusion that it
may exclude any and all areas from a designation up until the point
that doing so would result in the extinction of the species is
inconsistent with the ESA in that this perception ignores the vital
role that critical habitat plays in the recovery and survival of the
species and is not what Congress intended. These commenters
[[Page 22879]]
also stated that the January 15, 2021, Final Rule fails to adopt the
``precautionary principle'' and it does not give the species the
``benefit of the doubt'' as the ESA is designed to do.
Discussion
Based on the comments received to date, we believe there are
sufficient concerns about the merits of the January 15, 2021, Final
Rule, as well as the procedural steps we took to issue it, that warrant
our further consideration and action. In particular, commenters have
asserted that our January 15, 2021, Final Rule failed to consider the
best available science in making the requisite finding that the
exclusions will not result in the extinction of the species. New
information, available after the January 15, 2021, Final Rule was
finalized, suggest this may be the case. As noted in the January 15,
2021, Final Rule, our findings regarding the extinction issue were
summarized in the rule and further described in a memorandum from the
Director to the Secretary (FWS 2021a). That memorandum relied in part
on information requested and received from the Service's field office
in Oregon, which has the first-line responsibility for managing issues
related to the species. The field office, however, upon seeing the
final Director's memo, identified areas where the Director's memo was
inaccurate or unclear in terms of its characterization of the
scientific information and detailed those concerns in a followup memo
(see FWS 2021b). Our concerns represented in that followup memo (FWS
2021b) align with the Service's and Department's Code of Scientific and
Scholarly Conduct (305 DM 3.2; 212 FW 7), which obligates Service staff
to use the ``most appropriate, best available, high quality scientific
and scholarly data and information'' to inform sound decisionmaking.
Given the potential errors in the January 15, 2021, Final Rule, as
well as concerns that the rule's implementation will hasten the decline
of this imperiled species and diminish its prospects for recovery, we
have concluded that the January 15, 2021, Final Rule should not become
effective before our further review and reconsideration is completed
and we have had the opportunity to fully address the issues summarized
herein. As discussed further below, to do otherwise risks the removal
of that habitat in the interim. Giving the benefit of the doubt to the
species when designating critical habitat reflects the
institutionalized caution embedded in the ESA, which gives primacy to
the protection of listed species. See Tennessee Valley Authority v.
Hill, 437 U.S. 153, 174 (1978) (in enacting the ESA, it is ``beyond
doubt that Congress intended endangered species to be afforded the
highest of priorities''). Also as discussed below, to allow the
exclusions to become effective while we undertake additional rulemaking
to revise or withdraw them will cause confusion and disruption with
Federal agencies in the ESA section 7(a)(2) consultation process. The
comments expressing concern with the delay in the implementation of the
January 15, 2021, Final Rule focused in particular on the perceived
impacts to timber production from Federal lands and effects that may
flow from that. These commenters assert that the 3.4 million acres of
exclusions were either appropriate or legally required under the O&C
Act, and that further delay will continue to hamper Federal agency
efforts to authorize and implement timber harvest on Federal lands. As
we noted in the January 15, 2021, Final Rule, we acknowledge this
perception of the impact of the critical habitat designation for the
northern spotted owl on timber production. However, as noted in our
January 15, 2021, Final Rule, ``the implementation of critical habitat
occurs within a complex set of factors, including volatility in global
demand for wood products, general timber industry transformation, and
existing regulatory and statutory requirements, among other factors''
(IEc 2020). See our discussion of economic issues in the January 15,
2021, Final Rule (at 86 FR 4825-4828) and in the December 4, 2012,
final critical habitat rule (at 77 FR 71945-71947). Since the species
listing itself influences the impacts to timber production, we
determine the economic effects that result from the critical habit
designation beyond the economic effects that result from listing and
other regulations (50 CFR 17.90(a)). The courts have upheld this
approach, also referred to as an ``incremental impacts analysis,'' to
determine the economic impacts of critical habitat designations (e.g.,
Arizona Cattle Growers' Ass'n v. Salazar, 606 F.3d 1160 (9th Cir.
2010)).
Even with the listing of the northern spotted owl and the
designation of critical habitat on Federal lands, timber continues to
be produced from Federal lands within the areas designated. For
example, between 2013 and 2018, the Service completed section 7
consultations on over 100,000 acres (40,469 hectares) of timber sales
within the critical habitat designation across Washington, Oregon, and
California (USFWS, unpub. data). And, as described in the response to
Comment 21(b) in the January 15, 2021, Final Rule (at 86 FR 4827),
average annual timber harvest on Federal lands in the range of the
northern spotted owl has increased significantly in the years after the
2012 critical habitat designation, when compared with such harvest
during the preceding decade.
In regard to concerns raised about limitations on fuels management
and increased risk of wildfire, in the 2012 critical habitat rule the
Service accounted for the drier provinces and parts of the range and
recognized that forest management needs to be tailored to the forest
type and climatic conditions, including the dry forests in California
and the Eastern Washington Cascades. As part of the critical habitat
rule, the Service expressly encouraged land managers to consider
implementation of active forest management, using ``ecological
forestry'' practices, and to restore natural ecological processes where
they have been disrupted or suppressed (e.g., natural fire regimes).
This flexibility is provided to reduce the potential for adverse
impacts associated with commercial timber harvest when such harvest is
planned within or adjacent to critical habitat and consistent with land
use plans (USDI FWS 2012b: 77 FR 71877, December 4, 2012). The Service
recognizes that land managers have a variety of forest management
goals, including maintaining or improving ecological conditions where
the intent is to provide long-term benefits to forest resiliency and
restore natural forest dynamic processes (USDI FWS 2011, p. III-45).
The Service has consulted on fuels reduction, stand resiliency, and
pine restoration projects in dry forest systems, for example in the
Klamath Province of southern Oregon, that promote ecological
restoration and are expected to reduce future losses of spotted owl
habitat and improve overall forest ecosystem resilience to climate
change. We concluded in these consultations that the actions do not
adversely modify critical habitat. Many of these treatment areas
include reduction in forest canopy to obtain desired silvicultural
outcomes and meet the purpose and need of the project. In sum, the
critical habitat designation supports and encourages active management
of forests to address catastrophic wildfire risk where planned
appropriately and informed by the best available science in order to
protect communities from property losses, restore forest health, and
for the long-term recovery of the owl.
Regarding the impact of a delay on Tribal activities on forest
lands, the Service is available to assist Tribes in
[[Page 22880]]
developing their forest management plans and any related consultation
needs to address management and economic concerns. The Service has been
working with the Tribes to address their concerns since the initial
proposal to exclude areas from the critical habitat designation, and
that has continued through the time of the March 1, 2021, Delay Rule.
The Service is committed to upholding Secretarial Order 3206.
Lastly, with regard to comments received that the failure to
implement the January 15, 2021, Final Rule precludes the BLM and USFS
from implementing their obligations under the O&C Act, as we noted in
the January, 15, 2021, Final Rule, there is ongoing litigation
challenging BLM's management of O&C lands under the 2016 Resource
Management Plans (RMPs) (BLM 2016a, 2016b). One district court has
concluded that the 2016 RMPs (including their consideration of the ESA)
do not conflict with the O&C Act, see Pac. Rivers v. U.S. Bureau of
Land Mgmt., No. 6:16-CV-01598-JR, 2019 WL 1232835 (D. Or. Mar. 15,
2019), aff'd sub nom. Rivers v. Bureau of Land Mgmt., 815 F. App'x. 107
(9th Cir. 2020). In a separate proceeding, the U.S. District Court for
the District of Columbia, in a consolidated set of cases, found that
the BLM RMPs violate the O&C Act because BLM excluded portions of O&C
timberland from sustained yield harvest (i.e., the BLM allocated some
timberlands to reserves instead of the Harvest Land Base); see, e.g.,
American Forest Resource Council et al. v. Hammond, 422 F. Supp. 3d 184
(D.D.C. 2019). The parties briefed the court on the appropriate remedy,
but the court has not yet issued an order. In the absence of a remedy
order or resolution of any further proceedings in that litigation, we
decline to speculate on the outcome as a reason to implement the
January 15, 2021, Final Rule immediately.
In sum, substantial issues have been raised that our January 15,
2021, Final Rule may be detrimental to the conservation of the northern
spotted owl, a species we recently found warrants reclassifying as an
endangered species in danger of extinction throughout its range. There
are also substantial concerns that we failed to provide the public with
adequate notice and opportunity to review and comment on the extent of,
and reasons for, the change from our proposed exclusion of
approximately 200,000 acres (80,937 hectares) to the approximately 3.4
million acres (1.3 million hectares) excluded by our January 15, 2021,
Final Rule. This additional delay to consider these exclusions and
conduct rulemaking to either revise or withdraw them will not result in
a long-term or irreversible economic impact; timber harvest already
scheduled to occur on BLM and USFS land will continue to proceed as
planned. We are, therefore, further delaying the effective date of the
January 15, 2021, Final Rule that revised the designation of critical
habitat for the northern spotted owl to give us the needed time to
fully consider questions of law, policy, and fact in regard to that
final rule, and allow us to take action to remedy procedural and
substantive defects identified in order to provide for conservation of
the species and avoid undue disruption in the required consultation
process with Federal agencies. The effective date of the January 15,
2021, Final Rule, as modified by the March 1, 2021, Delay Rule (86 FR
11892), was April 30, 2021. With this document, we are delaying the
effective date of the January 15, 2021, Final Rule, until December 15,
2021. During this time, we expect to complete our review and
reconsideration of the January 15, 2021, Final Rule, and to undertake
and complete new notice and comment rulemaking as needed to address the
substantive and procedural questions raised.
We note that the Office of Management and Budget deemed the January
15, 2021, Final Rule to be economically significant under Executive
Order 12866. However, we do not consider this delay rule to be
economically significant.
Good Cause Under the Administrative Procedure Act
In our March 1, 2021, Delay Rule, we invited public comments on the
impact of the initial delay of the January 15, 2021, Final Rule. We
also expressly sought comment on whether we should extend the effective
date of the January 15, 2021, Final Rule beyond April 30, 2021, and, if
so, for how long and what, if any, the impacts of that delay would be.
In addition, we identified the legal authority under which we
promulgated it, and we described the subjects and issues involved. As a
result, ``[f]ormal labels aside, the [March 1, 2021, Delay rule]
contained all of the elements of a notice of proposed rulemaking as
required by the APA'' (Little Sisters of the Poor Saints Peter and Paul
Home v. Pennsylvania, 140 S. Ct. 2367, 2384 (2020)). We have now
considered and addressed in this final rule the comments regarding the
initial delay and the potential impacts of an additional delay. As a
result, seeking additional public comment on the delay until December
15, 2021, would be unnecessary and duplicative, and is not required by
the APA. It is, therefore, not necessary to assess whether this second
delay in the effective date of the January 15, 2015, Final Rule meets
the ``good cause'' exceptions to notice and comment rulemaking of the
APA. Nonetheless, out of an abundance of caution, we again review our
action here against the good-cause exception. We also in this section
evaluate whether we have good cause to make this final rule effective
immediately, rather than make it effective in 30 days.
Our implementation of this action extending the effective date of
the January 15, 2021, Final Rule from April, 30, 2021, to December 15,
2021, without opportunity for further public comment, effective
immediately upon publication in the Federal Register, is consistent
with the good-cause exceptions provided in the APA. Pursuant to 5
U.S.C. 553(b)(3)(B) and (d)(3), we have determined that good cause
exists to forgo the requirements to provide additional prior notice and
an opportunity for public comment on this delay in the effective date
of the January 15, 2021, Final Rule, and to make this action announcing
the delay effective immediately upon publication.
Under the totality of the circumstances presented here, notice and
comment would be unnecessary, as well as impracticable and contrary to
the public interest, because the public has had notice of and
opportunity to comment on further extension of the effective date of
the January 15, 2021, Final Rule, and taking the time to provide for
additional public notice and comment would thwart the conservation
purposes of the ESA, create confusion and disruption for Federal
agencies in implementing the ESA section 7(a)(2) consultation process,
and prevent the Service from performing its functions.
First, additional notice and comment is unnecessary. As noted
above, our March 1, 2021, Delay Rule expressly provided notice that we
might further delay the effective date, and also sought public comment
on that possibility. We received public comments on that question and
considered them in this final rule. As also noted above, this is all
that the APA requires. But even if this process did not constitute
technical compliance with the APA, and a showing of good cause were
required, good cause exists here because further public notice and
additional comment is unnecessary given the opportunity provided
pursuant to the March 1, 2021, Delay Rule.
Second, additional notice and comment is also impractical and
contrary to the public interest. As noted
[[Page 22881]]
in our March 1, 2021, Delay Rule (86 FR 11892), we were reviewing
whether the determinations made in the January 15, 2021, Final Rule
were a ``logical outgrowth'' of the August 11, 2020, Proposed Rule. In
addition, there has been substantial litigation in the past on critical
habitat designations for this species, and we have now in fact been
sued regarding the legality of the January 15, 2021, Final Rule. As
identified above, we conclude that there are likely procedural and
substantive defects in the January 15, 2021, Final Rule. Our agency's
``due and required'' execution of its functions under the ESA would be
unavoidably prevented if we allow the effective date to be triggered
without undertaking efforts to address and rectify the defects in the
January 15, 2021, Final Rule. See S. Doc. No. 248, 79th Cong., 2d Sess.
At 200 (1946). That is, if the January 15, 2021, final exclusions from
designated critical habitat of more than 3 million acres of northern
spotted owl habitat become effective, there is the potential that we
will not have met our obligations under the ESA to provide required
protections for listed species. Specifically, once the exclusions
become effective, Federal agencies will no longer be required to
consult with the Service under section 7(a)(2) of the ESA to determine
if agency actions will result in the destruction or adverse
modification of that formerly designated habitat. Federal agencies
could proceed to undertake (or to authorize others to undertake)
activities that would remove that habitat before the Service could
reconsider whether those exclusions were appropriate in the first
place. Because the habitat is defined by forested stands, particularly
of older trees, it cannot be replaced for many decades once removed.
Even if the January 15, 2021, Final Rule were to become effective only
briefly such that immediate implementation of habitat-removal
activities would be unlikely or limited, having areas previously
designated be excluded, then reconsidered and potentially included
again, would cause confusion and disruption in the section 7(a)(2)
consultation process, again impeding the Federal agencies from
executing their conservation functions, and also affecting third
parties reliant on Federal agency activities.
In designated critical habitat for the northern spotted owl in
Washington, Oregon, and California, at least 35 separate section 7
consultations have been completed or are underway for ongoing and
proposed Federal actions addressing a range of activities--including
both forest management to improve fire resiliency and oversee
commercial timber harvest. If the 3.4 million acres (1.3 million
hectares) were excluded from the critical habitat designation on April
30, 2021, those Federal agencies would no longer be required to address
whether the activities destroy or adversely modify the excluded
critical habitat and could proceed with such activities. If the
Service, following its review of the January 15, 2021, Final Rule,
again modifies the exclusions or withdraws them through rulemaking,
these Federal agencies would need to reinitiate section 7 consultation
to determine if their ongoing activities impact the revised critical
habitat, and would be constrained by section 7(d) of the ESA from
certain ``irreversible or irretrievable commitment of resources''
during the consultation period. This kind of uncertainty in knowing
what areas are within or outside of the critical habitat designation
creates project delays that can be avoided by maintaining the status
quo of the current designated habitat while the Service reconsiders the
January 15, 2021, exclusions.
The ESA does not require exclusion of areas from critical habitat--
the authority to exclude particular areas from designations of critical
habitat under the second sentence of section 4(b)(2) of the ESA is in
the discretion of the Secretary. In contrast, other duties relating to
critical habitat are mandatory: The duty for the Service to designate
critical habitat (16 U.S.C. 1533(a)(3)) and the duty of Federal
agencies to ensure that their actions are not likely to result in the
destruction or adverse modification of critical habitat (16 U.S.C.
1536(a)(2)). Therefore, a delay in the effective date of the January
15, 2021, Final Rule excluding areas from critical habitat for the
northern spotted owl does not delay compliance with a mandate of the
ESA. Delaying the effective date of the January 15, 2021, Final Rule,
which purported to exercise that discretionary section 4(b)(2)
authority, simply preserves the status quo while we undertake
additional review and undertake additional actions as needed to ensure
compliance with the legal mandates and conservation purposes of the
ESA.
In sum, we find that the totality of the circumstances here--the
fact that notice and comment have now occurred with regard to a delay
in the effective date of the January 15, 2021, Final Rule; the now-
pending judicial review; our concerns about substantive defects in the
rule and the associated potential to affect the Service's execution of
its statutory functions by having an impact on ESA-listed species; the
likelihood of a ``logical outgrowth'' deficiency in the January 15,
2021, Final Rule; and concerns expressed by affected States regarding a
lack of opportunity to comment, among other issues--indicate that there
is good cause to forgo notice and comment procedures because it is
unnecessary, impracticable, and contrary to the public interest for the
Service to provide another notice and opportunity to comment on a
further extension of the effective date for the January 15, 2021, Final
Rule.
We also find that there is good cause to make this rule effective
immediately instead of waiting until 30 days after publication for it
to become effective. The APA's legislative history indicates that the
purpose of the notice requirement at 5 U.S.C. 553(d)(3) is to ``afford
persons affected a reasonable time to prepare for the effective date of
a rule or rules or to take any other action which the issuance of rules
may prompt.'' S. Rep. No. 752, 79th Cong., 1st Sess. 201 (1946) and
H.R. Rep. No. 1980, 79th Cong., 2nd Sess. 259 (1946). See, e.g.,
Riverbend Farms, Inc. v. Madigan, 958 F.2d 1479, 1485 (9th Cir. 1992).
However, the APA provides an exception to this 30-day grace period for
good cause (5 U.S.C. 553(d)). There is good cause to allow this
extension of the January 15, 2021, Final Rule's effective date to go
into effect immediately because it preserves the status quo and there
is no change to which parties would need time to adjust their behavior.
Delaying the effective date provides certainty for the Federal agencies
involved in ESA section 7 consultations during the delay period while
the Service addresses issues with the January 15, 2021, Final Rule. The
Service is committed to ensuring transparency and providing certainty
in the adequacy and finality of the January 15, 2021, Final Rule. Thus,
it would be contrary to the public interest for the January 15, 2021,
Final Rule to go into effect, with its accompanying changes in analyses
of impacts, while the January 15, 2021, Final Rule remains under review
and subject to revision or withdrawal. The potential for fluctuating
between the presence and absence of a requirement for Federal agencies
to consult would lead to uncertainty and confusion and a potential and
unnecessary increase in administrative costs.
Further, if this rule extending the effective date were itself not
to become effective for 30 days, it would mean that the January 15,
2021, Final Rule would go into effect on April 30, 2021. That effective
date would create the same issues as discussed in the preceding
[[Page 22882]]
paragraphs, i.e., thwart the conservation purposes of the ESA, create
confusion and disruption for Federal agencies in implementing the ESA
section 7(a)(2) consultation process, and prevent the Service from
performing its functions under the Act.
In the March 1, 2021, Delay Rule, the Service anticipated that a
second delay might be necessary (see 86 FR 11892). For the reasons
stated above, we conclude that we have good cause to issue this final
rule, effective immediately, extending the effective date of the
January 15, 2021, Final Rule until December 15, 2021.
References Cited
A list of the references cited in this document may be found at
https://www.regulations.gov under Docket No. FWS-R1-ES-2020-0050.
Authority
The authorities for this action are 5 U.S.C. 553 and 16 U.S.C.
1531-1544 unless otherwise noted.
Martha Williams
Principal Deputy Director, Exercising the Delegated Authority of the
Director, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.
[FR Doc. 2021-09108 Filed 4-29-21; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4333-15-P