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SUPREME COURT REJECTS ANTI-ACCESS
GROUP'S SUIT AGAINST BLM
Unanimous decision upholds ruling in Utah District
Court made by BRC
June 15, 2004
Pocatello Idaho
In
a unanimous decision, the Supreme Court upheld a
Utah District Court ruling dismissing claims brought
in 1999 by the Southern Utah Wilderness Alliance
(SUWA) and other anti-access groups against the
Bureau of Land Management (BLM). The suit targeted
BLM's alleged inaction in managing off highway vehicle
("OHV") access. SUWA's demands to immediately close
nine popular OHV recreation areas were rejected
by the Utah District Court, but that decision was
reversed by the 10th Circuit Court of Appeals. Both
the BLM and the OHV groups petitioned for review
with the Supreme Court. The Court granted review
and heard argument in March of this year.
"Needless to say, we're delighted", said Bill
Dart, Executive Director of the BlueRibbon Coalition
(BRC). BRC led a coalition of OHV enthusiast groups
who successfully petitioned for defendant-intervenor
status to aid BLM's defense of OHV management. "We
are pleased the Justices rejected the 'management
through litigation' model that is popular with anti-access
groups," Dart added.
The case before the Supreme Court turned on a
fairly complex jurisdictional point. The Administrative
Procedure Act allows lawsuits to compel nondiscretionary
actions that have been unlawfully withheld or unreasonably
delayed. The OHV groups convinced the District Court
that SUWA?s claims went far beyond this standard
and were really attempting to dictate the everyday
activity of the BLM. Thus, the case focused on the
degree to which private parties dissatisfied with
government action can sue the agency under an alternate
"failure to act" theory.
Justice Antonin Scalia said SUWA's argument would
insert the court into the day-to-day operations
of the agency and "would divert BLM's energies from
other projects throughout the country that are in
fact more pressing. While such a decree might please
the environmental plaintiffs in the present case,
it would ultimately operate to the detriment of
sound environmental management."
"We
have raised these arguments with limited success
since the mid 1990's, and it is reassuring to see
the Court has ultimately agreed with our analysis,"
noted Paul Turcke, the Boise, Idaho lawyer acting
as lead counsel for the OHV groups. "This case was
never about limiting legitimate review of formal
agency decisions, but will clarify that disgruntled
and well-funded special interest groups cannot interfere
with the ongoing administrative process simply by
claiming the agency is failing to act," Turcke concluded.
According to BlueRibbon Coalition sources, there
are numerous other cases at various levels of the
federal court system that will be affected by this
ruling.
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