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The Climate Litigation Database
Litigation

Monroe County Board of Commissioners v. U.S. Forest Service

About this case

Documents

Filing Date
Type
Action Taken
Document
Summary
09/11/2024
Complaint
Complaint filed.
The Monroe County Board of Commissioners and three environmental organizations filed a third lawsuit challenging the U.S. Forest Service’s Houston South Vegetation Management and Restoration Project, which the plaintiffs alleged would entail “thousands of acres of commercial logging, road building and trail improvements, herbicide application, and prescribed burning over the next 15-20 years in the Hoosier National Forest” in the Lake Monroe watershed. The federal district court for the Southern District of Indiana concluded in both of the earlier cases (filed in <a href="https://climatecasechart.com/case/monroe-county-board-of-commissioners-v-us-forest-service/">2020</a> and <a href="https://climatecasechart.com/case/monroe-county-board-of-commissioners-v-us-forest-service-2/">2023</a>) that the Forest Service failed to take a hard look at the project’s environmental consequences. In this third challenge, the plaintiffs again asserted that the Forest Service violated NEPA and the Administrative Procedure Act, including by using an “inapplicable” definition of “old-growth” to avoid the need for compliance with President Biden’s Executive Order 14,072, which required identification of old-growth and mature forests on federal lands and analysis of threats to their existence. The plaintiffs alleged that the reliance on the inapplicable definition resulted in an arbitrary predetermination of the outcome of the Forest Service’s analysis.

Summary

Third challenge to environmental review of Houston South Vegetation Management and Restoration Project in the Hoosier National Forest.