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 - Center for Biological Diversity v. Haaland
 
Litigation
Center for Biological Diversity v. Haaland
About this case
Documents
Filing Date
Type
Action Taken
Document
Summary
05/26/2022
Decision
Motion for voluntary remand granted and 2020 withdrawal vacated.
The federal district court for the District of Montana granted the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service’s motion for voluntary remand of a challenge to the agency’s October 2020 withdrawal of a 2013 proposal to list wolverines living in the contiguous United States as threatened under the Endangered Species Act. The court, however, vacated the withdrawal, rejecting the FWS’s request that it be left in place. The court found that the seriousness of the withdrawal’s deficiencies weighed in favor of vacatur and that the FWS did not show that the disruptive consequences outweighed the benefits of vacatur. The FWS requested remand to reevaluate the withdrawal in light of the Ninth Circuit’s 2021 decision concerning the meaning of “foreseeable future” and in light of new studies that “undercut the agency’s reliance on Canadian wolverines to establish connectivity, genetic diversity, and population density.” The court—which previously remanded a 2014 withdrawal of the listing proposal for reevaluation of climate change and other threats to the wolverine—ordered the FWS to submit a new final listing determination for publication in the Federal Register within 18 months.
09/15/2021
Decision
Motion to intervene by snowmobile recreation groups and counties within Montana and Idaho denied.
–
03/12/2021
Motion To Intervene
Memorandum of law filed by State of Idaho in support of motion to intervene as defendant.
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Summary
Lawsuit challenging the withdrawal of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service's proposed rule to list the North American wolverine in the contiguous United States as a threatened distinct population segment.