Section 307(c)(1) of the Coastal Zone Management Act (CZMA)
provides that
"[e]ach Federal agency conducting or supporting activities
directly affecting the coastal zone shall conduct or support those
activities in a manner which is, to the maximum extent practicable,
consistent with approved state management programs."
CZMA defines the "coastal zone" to include state but not federal
land near the shorelines of the several coastal States, as well as
coastal waters extending "seaward to the outer limit of the United
States territorial sea." The territorial sea for the States
bordering on the Pacific Ocean or Atlantic Ocean extends three
geographical miles seaward from the coastline. Submerged lands
subject to the jurisdiction of the United States that lie beyond
the territorial sea constitute the Outer Continental Shelf (OCS).
By virtue of the Submerged Lands Act, the coastal zone belongs to
the States, while the OCS belongs to the Federal Government. In
these cases, the Department of the Interior (Interior), rejecting
California's demands that a consistency review was required under
§ 307(c)(1), sold oil and gas leases of certain tracts on the
OCS off the coast of California. California and other interested
parties then filed suits in Federal District Court to enjoin the
sale of some of the tracts, alleging that Interior had violated
§ 307(c)(1) in that leasing sets in motion a chain of events
that culminates in oil and gas development and therefore "directly
affects" the coastal zone within the meaning of § 307(c)(1).
The District Court entered a summary judgment for the plaintiffs,
holding that a consistency determination was required before the
sale. The Court of Appeals affirmed.
Held: Interior's sale of OCS oil and gas leases is not
an activity "directly affecting" the coastal zone within the
meaning of § 307(c)(1), and thus a consistency review is not
required under that section before such sales are made. Pp.
464 U. S.
320-343.
Page 464 U. S. 313
(a) CZMA nowhere defines or explains which federal activity
should be viewed as "directly affecting" the coastal zone, but the
legislative history of § 307(c)(1) discloses that Congress did
not intend the section to reach OCS lease sales. The "directly
affecting" language was aimed primarily at activities conducted or
supported by federal agencies on federal lands physically situated
in the coastal zone but excluded from the zone as formally defined
by CZMA. This reading of § 307(c)(1) finds further support in
the history of other sections of CZMA. Pp.
464 U. S.
321-330.
(b) Nor is a broader reading of § 307(c)(1) compelled by
the thrust of other CZMA provisions. It is clear that Congress
believed that CZMA's purposes could be adequately effectuated
without reaching federal activities conducted outside the coastal
zone. Moreover, an examination of § 307's structure suggests
that lease sales are a type of federal agency activity not intended
to be covered by § 307(c)(1). Section 307(c)(3), which deals
with private parties' activities authorized by a federal agency's
issuance of licenses and permits, is the provision that is more
pertinent to OCS lease sales, and that provision definitely does
not require consistency review of such sales. Pp.
464 U. S.
331-335.
(c) Congress has carefully codified the fine distinction between
a sale of a "lease" and the issuance of a permit to "explore for,"
"produce," or "develop" oil or gas. By the time the leases in
question here were sold, it was clear that a lease sale by Interior
did
not involve the submission or approval of "any plan
for the exploration or development of, or production from" the
lease tracts. Since 1978, when the Outer Continental Shelf Lands
Act of 1953 (OCSLA) was amended, there have been four statutory
stages to developing an offshore oil well: (1) preparation of a
leasing program, (2) lease sales (the stage in dispute here), (3)
exploration by the lessees, and (4) development and production. The
purchase of an OCS lease, standing alone, entails no right to
explore for, develop, or produce oil or gas resources on the OCS.
The first two stages are not subject to consistency review, but the
last two stages are. Under OCSLA's plain language, the purchase of
a lease entails no right to proceed with full exploration,
development, or production that might trigger § 307(c)(3)(B)'s
consistency review provisions; the lessee acquires only a priority
in submitting plans to conduct those activities. Pp.
464 U. S.
335-341.
(d) Even if OCS lease sales are viewed as involving an activity
"conduct[ed]" or "support[ed]" by a federal agency within the
meaning of § 307(c)(1), lease sales cannot be characterized as
"directly affecting" the coastal zone. Since 1978, the sale of a
lease grants the lessee the right to conduct only very limited
"preliminary activities" on the OCS, and does not authorize
full-scale exploration, development, or production.
Page 464 U. S. 314
Those activities may not begin until separate federal approval
has been obtained. In these circumstances, the possible effects on
the coastal zone that may eventually result from the sale of a
lease cannot be termed "direct." Pp.
464 U. S.
342-343.
683 F.2d 1253, reversed.
O'CONNOR, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which
BURGER, C.J., and WHITE, POWELL, and REHNQUIST, JJ., joined.
STEVENS, J., filed a dissenting opinion, in which BRENNAN,
MARSHALL, and BLACKMUN, JJ., joined,
post, p.
464 U. S.
344.
Page 464 U. S. 315
JUSTICE O'CONNOR delivered the opinion of the Court.
These cases arise out of the Department of the Interior's sale
of oil and gas leases on the Outer Continental Shelf (OCS) off the
coast of California. We must determine whether the sale is an
activity "directly affecting" the coastal zone under §
307(C)(1) of the Coastal Zone Management Act (CZMA). That section
provides in its entirety:
"Each Federal agency conducting or supporting activities
directly affecting the coastal zone shall conduct or support those
activities in a manner which is, to the maximum extent practicable,
consistent with approved state management programs."
86 Stat. 1285, 16 U.S.C. § 1456(C)(1) (1982 ed.). We
conclude that the Secretary of the Interior's sale of Outer
Continental Shelf oil and gas leases is not an activity "directly
affecting" the coastal zone within the meaning of the statute.
I
CZMA defines the "coastal zone" to include state, but not
federal, land near the shorelines of the several coastal States, as
well as coastal waters extending "seaward to the outer limit of the
United States territorial sea." 16 U.S.C. § 1453(1) (1982
ed.). The territorial sea for States bordering on the Pacific Ocean
or Atlantic Ocean extends three geographical miles seaward from the
coastline.
See 43 U.S.C. § 1301;
United States v.
California, 381 U. S. 139
(1965). Submerged lands subject to the jurisdiction of the
United
Page 464 U. S. 316
States that lie beyond the territorial sea constitute the "outer
Continental Shelf."
See 43 U.S.C. § 1331(a). By
virtue of the Submerged Lands Act, passed in 1953, the coastal zone
belongs to the States, while the OCS belongs to the Federal
Government. 43 U.S.C. §§ 1302, 1311.
CZMA was enacted in 1972 to encourage the prudent management and
conservation of natural resources in the coastal zone. Congress
found that the "increasing and competing demands upon the lands and
waters of our coastal zone" had
"resulted in the loss of living marine resources, wildlife,
nutrient-rich areas, permanent and adverse changes to ecological
systems, decreasing open space for public use, and shoreline
erosion."
16 U.S.C. § 1451(c) (1982 ed.). Accordingly, Congress
declared a national policy to protect the coastal zone, to
encourage the States to develop coastal zone management programs,
to promote cooperation between federal and state agencies engaged
in programs affecting the coastal zone, and to encourage broad
participation in the development of coastal zone management
programs. 16 U.S.C. § 1452 (1982 ed.).
Through a system of grants and other incentives, CZMA encourages
each coastal State to develop a coastal management plan. Further
grants and other benefits are made available to a coastal State
after its management plan receives federal approval from the
Secretary of Commerce. To obtain such approval, a state plan must
adequately consider the "national interest" and "the views of
Federal agencies principally affected by such program." 16 U.S.C.
§§ 1455(c)(8), 1456(b) (1982 ed.).
Once a state plan has been approved, CZMA § 307(c)(1)
requires federal agencies "conducting or supporting activities
directly affecting the coastal zone" to do so "consistent" with the
state plan "to the maximum extent practicable." 16 U.S.C. §
1456(c)(1) (1982 ed.). The Commerce Department has promulgated
regulations implementing that provision. Those regulations require
federal agencies to prepare a "consistency
Page 464 U. S. 317
determination" document in support of any activity that will
"directly affect" the coastal zone of a State with an approved
management plan. The document must identify the "direct effects" of
the activity and inform state agencies how the activity has been
tailored to achieve consistency with the state program. 15 CFR
§§ 930.34, 930.39 (1983).
II
OCS lease sales are conducted by the Department of the Interior
(Interior). Oil and gas companies submit bids, and the high bidders
receive priority in the eventual exploration for and development of
oil and gas resources situated in the submerged lands on the OCS. A
lessee does not, however, acquire an immediate or absolute right to
explore for, develop, or produce oil or gas on the OCS; those
activities require separate, subsequent federal authorization.
In 1977, the Department of Commerce approved the California
Coastal Management Plan. The same year, Interior began preparing
Lease Sale No. 53 -- a sale of OCS leases off the California coast
near Santa Barbara. Interior first asked several state and federal
agencies to report on potential oil and gas resources in this area.
The agency then requested bidders, federal and state agencies,
environmental organizations, and the public to identify which of
2,036 tracts in the area should be offered for lease. In October,
1978, Interior announced the tentative selection of 243 tracts,
including 115 tracts situated in the Santa Maria Basin located off
western Santa Barbara. Various meetings were then held with state
agencies. Consultations with other federal agencies were also
initiated. Interior issued a Draft Environmental Impact Statement
in April, 1980.
On July 8, 1980, the California Coastal Commission informed
Interior that it had determined Lease Sale No. 53 to be an activity
"directly affecting" the California coastal zone. The State
Commission therefore demanded a consistency determination -- a
showing by Interior that the lease sale
Page 464 U. S. 318
would be "consistent" to the "maximum extent practicable" with
the state coastal zone management program. Interior responded that
the lease sale would not "directly affect" the California coastal
zone. Nevertheless, Interior decided to remove 128 tracts, located
in four northern basins, from the proposed lease sale, leaving only
the 115 tracts in the Santa Maria Basin. In September, 1980,
Interior issued a final Environmental Impact Statement. On October
27, 1980, it published a proposed notice of sale, limiting bidding
to the remaining 115 blocks in the Santa Maria Basin. 45 Fed.Reg.
71140 (1980).
On December 16, 1980, the State Commission reiterated its view
that the sale of the remaining tracts in the Santa Maria Basin
"directly affected" the California coastal zone. The Commission
expressed its concern that oil spills on the OCS could threaten the
southern sea otter, whose range was within 12 miles of the 31
challenged tracts. The Commission explained that it
"has been consistent in objecting to proposed offshore oil
development within specific buffer zones around special sensitive
marine mammal and seabird breeding areas. . . ."
App. 77. The Commission concluded that 31 more tracts should be
removed from the sale because "leasing within 12 miles of the Sea
Otter Range in the Santa Maria Basin would not be consistent" with
the California Coastal Management Program.
Id. at 79.
[
Footnote 1] California
Governor Brown later took a similar position, urging that 34 more
tracts be removed.
Id. at 81. [
Footnote 2]
Interior rejected the State's demands. In the Secretary's view,
no consistency review was required, because the lease sale did not
engage CZMA § 307(c)(1), and the Governor's request was not
binding because it failed to strike a reasonable
Page 464 U. S. 319
balance between the national and local interests. On April 10,
1981, Interior announced that the lease sale of the 115 tracts
would go forward, and on April 27 issued a final notice of sale. 46
Fed.Reg. 23674 (1981).
California and other interested parties (hereafter respondents)
filed two substantially similar suits in Federal District Court to
enjoin the sale of 29 tracts situated within 12 miles of the Sea
Otter Range. [
Footnote 3] Both
complaints alleged,
inter alia, Interior's violation of
§ 307(c)(1) of CZMA. [
Footnote
4] They argued that leasing sets in motion a chain of events
that culminates in oil and gas development, and that leasing
therefore "directly affects" the coastal zone within the meaning of
§ 307(c)(1).
The District Court entered a summary judgment for respondents on
the CZMA claim.
California v. Watt, 520 F.
Page 464 U. S. 320
Supp. 1359 (CD Cal.1981). The Court of Appeals for the Ninth
Circuit affirmed that portion of the District Court judgment that
required a consistency determination before the sale. [
Footnote 5] California v. Watt, 683
F.2d 1253 (1982). We granted certiorari, 461 U.S. 925 (1983), and
we now reverse.
III
Whether the sale of leases on the OCS is an activity "directly
affecting" the coastal zone is not self-evident. [
Footnote 6] As
Page 464 U. S. 321
already noted, OCS leases involve submerged lands outside the
coastal zone, and as we shall discuss, an OCS lease authorizes the
holder to engage only in preliminary exploration; further
administrative approval is required before full exploration or
development may begin. Both sides concede that the preliminary
exploration itself has no significant effect on the coastal zone.
Both also agree that a lease sale is one (not the first,
see
infra at
464 U. S. 337)
in a series of decisions that may culminate in activities directly
affecting that zone.
A
We are urged to focus first on the plain language of §
307(c)(1). Interior contends that "directly affecting" means
"[h]av[ing] a [d]irect, [i]dentifiable [i]mpact on [t]he [c]oastal
[z]one." Brief for Federal Petitioners 20. Respondents insist that
the phrase means "[i]nitiat[ing] a [s]eries of [e]vents of
[c]oastal [m]anagement [c]onsequence." Brief for Respondent State
of California
et al. 10. [
Footnote 7] But CZMA nowhere defines or explains which
federal activities should be viewed as "directly affecting" the
coastal zone, and the alternative verbal formulations proposed by
the parties, both of which are superficially plausible, find no
support in the Act itself.
We turn therefore to the legislative history. [
Footnote 8] A fairly detailed review is
necessary, but that review persuades us that
Page 464 U. S. 322
Congress did not intend OCS lease sales to fall within the ambit
of CZMA § 307(c)(1).
In the CZMA bills first passed by the House and Senate, §
307(c)(1)'s consistency requirements extended only to federal
activities "in" the coastal zone. The "directly affecting" standard
appeared nowhere in § 307(c)(1)'s immediate antecedents. It
was the House-Senate Conference Committee that replaced "in the
coastal zone" with "directly affecting the coastal zone." Both
Chambers then passed the Conference bill without discussing or even
mentioning the change.
At first sight, the Conference's adoption of "directly
affecting" appears to be a surprising, unexplained, and
subsequently unnoticed expansion in the scope of § 307(c)(1),
going beyond what was required by either of the versions of §
307(c)(1) sent to the Conference. But a much more plausible
explanation for the change is available.
The explanation lies in the two different definitions of the
"coastal zone." The bill the Senate sent to the Conference defined
the coastal zone to exclude
"lands the use of which is by law subject solely to the
discretion of or which is held in trust by the Federal Government,
its officers or agents. [
Footnote
9]
Page 464 U. S. 323
This exclusion would reach federal parks, military
installations, Indian reservations, and other federal lands that
would lie within the coastal zone but for the fact of federal
ownership. Under the Senate bill, activities on these lands would
thus have been entirely exempt from compliance with state
management plans. By contrast, the House bill's definition of
'coastal zone' included lands under federal jurisdiction; thus
federal activities on those lands were to be fully subject to
§ 307(c)(1)'s consistency requirement. Under
both
bills, however, submerged lands on the OCS were entirely excluded
from the coastal zone, and federal agency activities in those areas
thus were exempt from § 307(c)(1)'s consistency
requirement."
Against this background, the Conference Committee's change in
§ 307(c)(1) has all the markings of a simple compromise. The
Conference accepted the Senate's narrower definition of the
"coastal zone," but then expanded § 307(c)(1) to cover
activities on federal lands not "in" but nevertheless "directly
affecting," the zone. By all appearances, the intent was to reach
at least some activities conducted in those federal enclaves
excluded from the Senate's definition of the "coastal zone."
Though cryptic, the Conference Report's reference to the change
in § 307(c)(1) fully supports this explanation.
"The Conferees . . . adopted the Senate language . . . which
made it clear that Federal lands are not included within a state's
coastal zone.
As to the use of such lands which would affect a
state's coastal zone, the provisions of section 307(c) would
apply."
H.R.Conf.Rep. No. 92-1544, p. 12 (1972) (emphasis added). In the
entire Conference Report, this is the only mention of the
definition of the coastal zone chosen by the Conference, and the
only hint of an explanation for the change in § 307(c)(1). The
"directly affecting" language was not deemed worthy of note by any
Member of Congress in the subsequent floor debates. [
Footnote 10] The implication seems
clear:
Page 464 U. S. 324
"directly affecting" was used to strike a balance between two
definitions of the "coastal zone." The legislative history thus
strongly suggests that OCS leasing, covered by neither the House
nor the Senate version of § 307(c)(1), was also intended to be
outside the coverage of the Conference's compromise.
Nonetheless, the literal language of § 307(c)(1), read
without reference to its history, is sufficiently imprecise to
leave open the possibility that some types of federal activities
conducted on the OCS could fall within § 307(c)(1)'s ambit. We
need not, however, decide whether any OCS activities other than oil
and gas leasing might be covered by § 307(c)(1), because
further investigation reveals that, in any event, Congress
expressly intended to remove the control of OCS resources from
CZMA's scope.
B
If § 307(c)(1) and its history standing alone are less than
crystalline, the history of other sections of the original CZMA
bills impels a narrow reading of that clause. Every time it faced
the issue in the CZMA debates, Congress deliberately and
systematically insisted that no part of CZMA was to reach beyond
the 3-mile territorial limit.
There are, first, repeated statements in the House and Senate
floor debates that CZMA is concerned only with activities on land
or in the territorial sea, not on the OCS, and that the allocation
of state and federal jurisdiction over the coastal zone and the OCS
was not to be changed in any way. [
Footnote 11] But
Page 464 U. S. 325
Congress took more substantial and significant action as well.
Congress debated and firmly rejected at least four proposals to
extend parts of CZMA to reach OCS activities.
Section 313 of the House CZMA bill, as reported by Committee and
passed by the House, embodied the most specific of these proposals.
That section would have achieved explicitly what respondents now
contend § 307(c)(1) achieves implicitly. It provided:
"(a) The Secretary shall develop . . . a program for the
management of the area outside the coastal zone and within twelve
miles of the [coast]. . . . "
"(b) To the extent that any part of the management program . . .
shall apply to any high seas area, the subjacent seabed and subsoil
of which lies within the seaward boundary of a coastal state, . . .
the program shall be coordinated with the coastal state involved. .
. ."
"(c) The Secretary shall, to the maximum extent practicable,
apply the program . . . to waters which are adjacent to specific
areas in the coastal zone which have been designated by the states
for the purpose of preserving or restoring such areas for their
conservation, recreational,
Page 464 U. S. 326
ecological, or esthetic values."
H.R. 14146, 92d Cong., 2d Sess., § 313 (1972), reprinted in
H.R.Rep. No. 92-1049, p. 7 (1972).
Congressman Anderson of California, the drafter of this section
and coauthor of the House CZMA bill, explained the section's
purpose on the floor of the House. In light of the instant
litigation, his comments were remarkably prescient. By 1972,
Congressman Anderson pointed out, California had established seven
marine sanctuaries, including one located near Santa Barbara, Cal.,
in the area allegedly threatened by the leases here in dispute.
"These State-established sanctuaries, which extend from the
coastline seaward to 3 miles, account for nearly a fourth of the
entire California coast."
"However, the Federal Government has jurisdiction outside the
State area, from 3 miles to 12 miles at sea. All too often, the
Federal Government has allowed development and drilling to the
detriment of the State program."
"A case in point is Santa Barbara, where California established
a marine sanctuary banning the drilling of oil in the area under
State authority."
"Yet, outside the sanctuary -- in the federally controlled area
-- the Federal Government authorized drilling which resulted in the
January, 1969, blowout. This dramatically illustrated the point
that oil spills do not respect legal jurisdictional lines."
118 Cong.Rec. 26484 (1972). [
Footnote 12] House § 313, Congressman Anderson went
on to explain, would play the crucial role of encouraging federal
OCS oil
Page 464 U. S. 327
and gas leasing to be conducted in a manner consistent with
state management programs.
Ibid.; see also id. at 26495,
35549-35550.
Since House § 313 would have provided respondents with
precisely the protection they now seek here, it is significant that
the Conference Committee, and ultimately the Congress as a whole,
flatly rejected the provision. And the reason for the rejection, as
explained in the Conference Report, was to forestall conflicts of
the type before us now.
"The Conferees . . . excluded [House § 313] authorizing a
Federal management program for the contiguous zone of the United
States, because the provisions relating thereto did not prescribe
sufficient standards or criteria
and would create potential
conflicts with legislation already in existence concerning
Continental Shelf resources."
H.R.Conf.Rep. No. 92-1544, p. 15 (1972) (emphasis added).
The House bill included another similar provision that would
have been almost equally favorable to respondents here -- had it
not been rejected by the Conference and subsequently by Congress as
a whole. Sections 312(b), (c), of the House bill invited the
Secretary of Commerce to extend coastal zone marine sanctuaries
established by the States into the OCS region. [
Footnote 13] But the Conference Committee
rejected House § 312 as well. The Conference Report
explained:
"The Conferees agreed to delete the provisions of the House
Page 464 U. S. 328
version relating to extension of estuarine sanctuaries, in view
of the fact that the need for such provisions appears to be rather
remote and could cause problems, since they would extend beyond the
territorial limits of the United States."
H.R.Conf.Rep. No. 92-1544, pp. 14-15 (1972).
When the Conference bill returned to the House, with House
§§ 312 and 313 deleted, Congressman Anderson expressed
his dismay:
"I am deeply disappointed that the Senate conferees would not
accept the position of the House of Representatives regarding the
extension of State-established marine sanctuaries to areas under
Federal jurisdiction."
". . . [W]e were successful, in committee, in adding a provision
which I authored designed to protect State-established sanctuaries,
such as exis[t] off Santa Barbara, Calif., from federally
authorized development."
"This provision would have required the Secretary to apply the
coastal zone program to waters immediately adjacent to the coastal
waters of a State, which that State has designated for specific
preservation purposes."
"It was accepted overwhelmingly by the House of Representatives
despite the efforts of the oil and petroleum industry to defeat
it."
"But what they failed to accomplish in the House, they
accomplished in the conference committee. . . ."
118 Cong.Rec. 35549-35550 (1972).
In light of these comments by Congressman Anderson, and the
express statement in the Conference Report that House § 313
was removed to avoid "conflicts with legislation already in
existence concerning Continental Shelf resources,"
see
supra at
464 U. S. 327,
it is fanciful to suggest that the Conferees intended the "directly
affecting" language of § 307(c)(1) to substitute for the House
§ 313's specific and considerably more detailed language.
Certainly the author of House § 313 recognized that the
amended § 307(c)(1) could not serve that purpose.
Page 464 U. S. 329
Two similar attempts to extend CZMA's reach beyond the coastal
zone were made in the Senate. These, as well, were firmly rejected
on the Senate floor or in Conference. [
Footnote 14]
Page 464 U. S. 330
C
To recapitulate, the "directly affecting" language in §
307(c)(1) was, by all appearances, only a modest compromise,
designed to offset in part the narrower definition of the coastal
zone favored by the Senate and adopted by the Conference Committee.
Section 307(c)(1)'s "directly affecting" language was aimed at
activities conducted or supported by federal agencies on federal
lands physically situated in the coastal zone but excluded from the
zone as formally defined by the Act. Consistent with this view, the
same Conference Committee that wrote the "directly affecting"
language rejected two provisions in the House bill that would have
required precisely what respondents seek here -- coordination of
federally sponsored OCS activities with state coastal management
and conservation programs. In light of the Conference Committee's
further, systematic rejection of every other attempt to extend the
reach of CZMA to the OCS, we are impelled to conclude that the 1972
Congress did not intend § 307(c)(1) to reach OCS lease sales.
[
Footnote 15]
Page 464 U. S. 331
IV
A
A broader reading of § 307(c)(1) is not compelled by the
thrust of other CZMA provisions. First, it is clear beyond
Page 464 U. S. 332
peradventure that Congress believed that CZMA's purposes could
be adequately effectuated without reaching federal activities
conducted outside the coastal zone. Both the Senate and House bills
were originally drafted, debated, and passed, with § 307(c)(1)
expressly limited to federal activities in the coastal zone. Broad
arguments about CZMA's structure, the Act's incentives for the
development of state management programs, and the Act's general
aspirations for state-federal cooperation thus cannot support the
expansive reading of § 307(c)(1) urged by respondents.
Moreover, a careful examination of the structure of CZMA §
307 suggests that lease sales are a type of federal agency activity
not intended to be covered by § 307(c)(1) at all.
Section 307(c) contains three coordinated parts. Paragraph (1)
refers to activities "conduct[ed] or support[ed]" by a federal
agency. Paragraph (2) covers "development project[s]"
"undertake[n]" by a federal agency. Paragraph (3) deals with
activities by private parties authorized by a federal agency's
issuance of licenses and permits. The first two paragraphs thus
reach activities in which the federal agency is itself the
principal actor, the third reaches the federally approved
activities of third parties. Plainly, Interior's OCS lease sales
fall in the third category. Section 307(c)(1) should therefore be
irrelevant to OCS lease sales, if only because drilling for oil or
gas on the OCS is neither "conduct[ed]" nor "support[ed]" by a
federal agency. Section
Page 464 U. S. 333
307(c)(3), not § 307(c)(1), is the more pertinent
provision. Respondents' suggestion that the consistency review
requirement of § 307(c)(3) is focused only on the private
applicants for permits or licenses, not federal agencies, is
squarely contradicted by abundant legislative history and the
language of § 307(c)(3) itself. [
Footnote 16]
CZMA § 307(c)(3) definitely does
not require
consistency review of OCS lease sales. As enacted in 1972, that
section addressed the requirements to be imposed on federal
licensees whose activities might affect the coastal zone. A
federal
Page 464 U. S. 334
agency may not issue a "license or permit" for any activity
"affecting land or water uses in the coastal zone" without
ascertaining that the activity is consistent with the state program
or otherwise in the national interest. [
Footnote 17] Each affected State with an approved
management program must concur in the issuance of the license or
permit; a State's refusal to do so may be overridden only if the
Secretary of Commerce finds that the proposed activity is
consistent with CZMA's objectives or otherwise in the interest of
national security. Significantly, § 307(c)(3) contained no
mention of consistency requirements in connection with the sale of
a lease.
In 1976, Congress expressly addressed -- and preserved -- that
omission. Specific House and Senate Committee proposals to add the
word "lease" to § 307(c)(3) were rejected by the House and
ultimately by the Congress as a whole. [
Footnote 18] It is
Page 464 U. S. 335
surely not for us to add to the statute what Congress twice
decided to omit.
Instead of inserting the word "lease" in § 307(c)(3), the
House-Senate Conference Committee renumbered the existing §
307(c)(3) as § 307(c)(3)(A), and added a second subparagraph,
§ 307(c)(3)(B). Respondents apparently concede that of these
two subparagraphs, only the latter is now relevant to oil and gas
activities on the OCS. Brief for Respondent State of California
et al. 44, and n. 76; Brief for Respondent Natural
Resources Defense Council, Inc.,
et al. 7, n. 6. The new
subparagraph § 307(c)(3)(B), however, provides only that
applicants for federal licenses or permits to explore for, produce,
or develop oil or gas on the OCS must first certify consistency
with affected state plans. [
Footnote 19] Again, there is no suggestion that a lease
sale by Interior requires any review of consistency with state
management plans.
B
If the distinction between a sale of a "lease" and the issuance
of a permit to "explore for," "produce," or "develop" oil
Page 464 U. S. 336
or gas seems excessively fine, it is a distinction that Congress
has codified with great care. CZMA § 307(c)(3)(B) expressly
refers to the Outer Continental Shelf Lands Act of 1953, 67 Stat.
462, as amended, 43 U.S.C. § 1331
et seq. (1976 ed.,
Supp. V) (OCSLA), so it is appropriate to turn to that Act for a
clarification of the differences between a lease sale and the
approval of a plan for "exploration," "development," or
"production."
OCSLA was enacted in 1953 to authorize federal leasing of the
OCS for oil and gas development. The Act was amended in 1978 to
provide for the "expeditious and orderly development, subject to
environmental safeguards," of resources on the OCS. 43 U.S.C.
§ 1332(3) (1976 ed., Supp. V). As amended, OCSLA confirms
that, at least since 1978, the sale of a lease has been a distinct
stage of the OCS administrative process, carefully separated from
the issuance of a federal license or permit to explore for,
develop, or produce gas or oil on the OCS.
Before 1978, OCSLA did not define the terms "exploration,"
"development," or "production." But it did define a "mineral lease"
to be "any form of authorization for the exploration for, or
development or removal of deposits of, oil, gas, or other
minerals." 43 U.S.C. § 1331(c). The pre-1978 OCSLA did not
specify what, if any, rights to explore, develop, or produce were
transferred to the purchaser of a lease; the Act simply stated that
a lease should "contain such rental provisions and such other terms
and provisions as the Secretary may prescribe at the time of
offering the area for lease." 43 U.S.C. § 1337(b)(4). Thus,
before 1978, the sale by Interior of an OCS lease might well have
engaged CZMA § 307(c)(3)(B) by including express or implied
federal approval of a "plan for the exploration or development of,
or production from" the leased tract. [
Footnote 20]
Page 464 U. S. 337
The leases in dispute here, however, were sold in 1981. By then
it was quite clear that a lease sale by Interior did not involve
the submission or approval of "any plan for the exploration or
development of, or production from" the leased tract. Under the
amended OCSLA, the purchase of a lease entitles the purchaser only
to priority over other interested parties in submitting for federal
approval a plan for exploration, production, or development. Actual
submission and approval or disapproval of such plans occur
separately and later.
Since 1978, there have been four distinct statutory stages to
developing an offshore oil well: (1) formulation of a 5-year
leasing plan by the Department of the Interior; (2) lease sales;
(3) exploration by the lessees; (4) development and production.
Each stage involves separate regulatory review that may, but need
not, conclude in the transfer to lease purchasers of rights to
conduct additional activities on the OCS. And each stage includes
specific requirements for consultation with Congress, between
federal agencies, or with the States. Formal review of consistency
with state coastal management plans is expressly reserved for the
last two stages.
(1) Preparation of a leasing program. The first stage
of OCS planning is the creation of a leasing program. Interior is
required to prepare a 5-year schedule of proposed OCS lease sales.
43 U.S.C. § 1344 (1976 ed., Supp. V). During the preparation
of that program, Interior must solicit comments from interested
federal agencies and the Governors of affected States, and must
respond in writing to all comments
Page 464 U. S. 338
or requests received from the State Governors. 43 U.S.C. §
1344(c) (1976 ed., Supp. V). The proposed leasing program is then
submitted to the President and Congress, together with comments
received by the Secretary from the Governor of the affected State.
43 U.S.C. § 1344(d)(2) (1976 ed., Supp. V).
Plainly, prospective lease purchasers acquire no rights to
explore, produce, or develop at this first stage of OCSLA planning,
and consistency review provisions of CZMA § 307(c)(3)(B) are
therefore not engaged. There is also no suggestion that CZMA §
307(c)(1) consistency requirements operate here, though we note
that preparation and submission to Congress of the leasing program
could readily be characterized as "initiat[ing] a [s]eries of
[e]vents of [c]oastal [m]anagement [c]onsequence." Brief for
Respondent State of California
et al. 10.
(2) Lease sales. The second stage of OCS planning --
the stage in dispute here -- involves the solicitation of bids and
the issuance of offshore leases. 43 U.S.C. § 1337(a) (1976
ed., Supp. V). Requirements of the National Environmental Policy
Act and the Endangered Species Act must be met first. The Governor
of any affected State is given a formal opportunity to submit
recommendations regarding the "size, timing, or location" of a
proposed lease sale. 43 U.S.C. § 1345(a) (1976 ed., Supp. V).
Interior is required to accept these recommendations if it
determines they strike a reasonable balance between the national
interest and the wellbeing of the citizens of the affected State.
43 U.S.C. § 1345 (c) (1976 ed., Supp. V). Local governments
are also permitted to submit recommendations, and the Secretary
"may" accept these. 43 U.S.C. §§ 1345(a), (c) (1976 ed.,
Supp. V). The Secretary may then proceed with the actual lease
sale. Lease purchasers acquire the right to conduct only limited
"preliminary" activities on the OCS -- geophysical and other
surveys that do not involve seabed penetrations
Page 464 U. S. 339
greater than 300 feet and that do not result in any significant
environmental impacts. 30 CFR § 250.34-1 (1982).
Again, there is no suggestion that these activities, in
themselves, "directly affect" the coastal zone. But by purchasing a
lease, lessees acquire no right to do anything more. Under the
plain language of OCSLA, the purchase of a lease entails no right
to proceed with full exploration, development, or production that
might trigger CZMA § 307(c)(3)(B); the lessee acquires only a
priority in submitting plans to conduct those activities. If these
plans, when ultimately submitted, are disapproved, no further
exploration or development is permitted.
(3) Exploration. The third stage of OCS planning
involves review of more extensive exploration plans submitted to
Interior by lessees. 43 U.S.C. § 1340 (1976 ed., Supp. V).
Exploration may not proceed until an exploration plan has been
approved. A lessee's plan must include a certification that the
proposed activities comply with any applicable state management
program developed under CZMA. OCSLA expressly provides for federal
disapproval of a plan that is not consistent with an applicable
state management plan unless the Secretary of Commerce finds that
the plan is consistent with CZMA goals or in the interest of
national security. 43 U.S.C. § 1340(c)(2) (1976 ed., Supp. V).
The plan must also be disapproved if it would "probably cause
serious harm or damage . . . to the marine, coastal, or human
environment. . . ." 43 U.S.C. §§ 1334(a)(2)(A)(i),
1340(c)(1) (1976 ed., Supp. V). If a plan is disapproved for the
latter reason, the Secretary may "cancel such lease and the lessee
shall be entitled to compensation. . . " 43 U.S.C. §
1340(c)(1) (1976 ed., Supp. V).
There is, of course, no question that CZMA consistency review
requirements operate here. CZMA § 307(c)(3)(B) expressly
applies, and as noted, OCSLA itself refers to the applicable CZMA
provision.
Page 464 U. S. 340
(4) Development and production. The fourth and final
stage is development and production. 43 U.S.C. § 1351 (1976
ed., Supp. V). The lessee must submit another plan to Interior. The
Secretary must forward the plan to the Governor of any affected
State and, on request, to the local governments of affected States,
for comment and review. 43 U.S.C. §§ 1345(a), 1351(a)(3)
(1976 ed., Supp. V). Again, the Governor's recommendations must be
accepted, and the local governments' may be accepted, if they
strike a reasonable balance between local and national interests.
Reasons for accepting or rejecting a Governor's recommendations
must be communicated in writing to the Governor. 43 U.S.C. §
1345(c) (1976 ed., Supp. V). In addition, the development and
production plan must be consistent with the applicable state
coastal management program. The State can veto the plan as
"inconsistent," and the veto can be overridden only by the
Secretary of Commerce. 43 U.S.C. § 1351(d) (1976 ed., Supp.
V). A plan may also be disapproved if it would "probably cause
serious harm or damage . . . to the marine, coastal or human
environments." 43 U.S.C. § 1351(h)(1)(D)(i) (1976 ed., Supp.
V). If a plan is disapproved for the latter reason, the lease may
again be canceled, and the lessee is entitled to compensation. 43
U.S.C. § 1351(h)(2)(C) (1976 ed., Supp. V).
Once again, the applicability of CZMA to this fourth stage of
OCS planning is not in doubt. CZMA § 307(c)(3)(B) applies by
its own terms, and is also expressly invoked by OCSLA.
Congress has thus taken pains to separate the various federal
decisions involved in formulating a leasing program, conducting
lease sales, authorizing exploration, and allowing development and
production. Since 1978, the purchase of an OCS lease, standing
alone, entails no right to explore for, develop, or produce oil and
gas resources on the OCS. The first two stages are not subject to
consistency review; instead,
Page 464 U. S. 341
input from State Governors and local governments is solicited by
the Secretary of the Interior. The last two stages invite further
input for Governors or local governments, but also require formal
consistency review. States with approved CZMA plans retain
considerable authority to veto inconsistent exploration or
development and production plans put forward in those latter
stages. [
Footnote 21] The
stated reason for this four-part division was to forestall
premature litigation regarding adverse environmental effects that
all agree will flow, if at all, only from the latter stages of OCS
exploration and production. [
Footnote 22]
Page 464 U. S. 342
C
Having examined the coordinated provisions of CZMA §
307(c)(3) and OCSLA, we return to CZMA § 307(c)(1).
As we have noted, the logical paragraph to examine in connection
with a lease sale is not § 307(c)(1), but § 307(c)(3).
Nevertheless, even if OCS lease sales are viewed as involving an
OCS activity "conduct[ed]" or "support[ed]" by a federal agency,
lease sales can no longer aptly be characterized as "directly
affecting" the coastal zone. Since 1978, the sale of a lease grants
the lessee the right to conduct only very limited, "preliminary
activities" on the OCS. It does not authorize full-scale
exploration, development, or production. Those activities may not
begin until separate federal approval has been obtained, and
approval may be denied on several grounds. If approval is denied,
the lease may then be canceled, with or without the payment of
compensation to the lessee. In these circumstances, the possible
effects on the coastal zone that may eventually result from the
sale of a lease cannot be termed "direct."
It is argued, nonetheless, that a lease sale is a crucial step.
Large sums of money change hands, and the sale may therefore
generate momentum that makes eventual exploration, development, and
production inevitable. On the other side, it is argued that
consistency review at the lease sale stage is, at best,
inefficient, and at worst impossible: leases are sold before it is
certain if, where, or how exploration will actually occur.
The choice between these two policy arguments is not ours to
make; it has already been made by Congress. In the 1978, OCSLA
amendments Congress decided that the better course is to postpone
consistency review until the two later
Page 464 U. S. 343
stages of OCS planning, and to rely on less formal input from
State Governors and local governments in the two earlier ones. It
is not for us to negate the lengthy, detailed, and coordinated
provisions of CZMA § 307(c)(3)(B), and OCSLA, 43 U.S.C.
§§ 1344-1346 and 1351 (1976 ed., Supp. V), by a
superficially plausible, but ultimately unsupportable, construction
of two words in CZMA § 307(c)(1).
V
Collaboration among state and federal agencies is certainly
preferable to confrontation in or out of the courts. In view of the
substantial consistency requirements imposed at the exploration,
development, and production stages of OCS planning, Interior, as
well as private bidders on OCS leases, might be well advised to
ensure in advance that anticipated OCS operations can be conducted
harmoniously with state coastal management programs. [
Footnote 23] But our review of the
history of CZMA § 307(c)(1), and the coordinated structures of
the amended CZMA and OCSLA, persuade us that Congress did not
intend § 307(c)(1) to mandate consistency review at the lease
sale stage.
Accordingly, the decision of the Court of Appeals for the Ninth
Circuit is reversed insofar as it requires petitioners to conduct
consistency review pursuant to CZMA § 307(c)(1) before
proceeding with Lease Sale No. 53.
It is so ordered.
Page 464 U. S. 344
* Together with No. 82-1327,
Western Oil & Gas
Association et al. v. California et al., and No. 82-1511,
California et al. v. Secretary of the Interior et al.,
also on certiorari to the same court.
[
Footnote 1]
Four of the objectionable tracts were combined as two for sale
purposes, so the Commission's conclusion was actually directed to
29 sale tracts.
California v. Watt, 520 F.
Supp. 1359, 1367 (CD Cal.1981).
[
Footnote 2]
Again, the objection encompassed only 32 sale tracts.
Ibid.
[
Footnote 3]
The litigation was instituted through separate but similar
complaints filed by the State of California and by the Natural
Resources Defense Council, Inc., the Sierra Club, Friends of the
Earth, Friends of the Sea Otter, and the Environmental Coalition on
Lease Sale No. 53. Plaintiffs sought declaratory and injunctive
relief against the Secretary of the Interior and two other
officials within the Department of the Interior. The Department
itself, and the Bureau of Land Management, were also named as
defendants. Western Oil and Gas Association, a regional trade
association, and 12 of its members, intervened as defendants.
Subsequently, various local governmental entities within California
intervened as plaintiffs in the case commenced by the State.
Petitioner-defendants (hereafter petitioners) state their
disagreement with the Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit's
holding that environmental groups and local governments have
standing to sue under CZMA § 307(c)(1), but do not challenge
that standing decision here. Since the State of California clearly
does have standing, we need not address the standing of the other
respondents, whose position here is identical to the State's.
[
Footnote 4]
Respondents claimed below that petitioners had also violated
four other federal statutes. The District Court ruled for the
defendants on those four claims, and the Court of Appeals for the
Ninth Circuit affirmed the judgment on the non-CZMA claims that
were appealed. Those claims are not presented here.
[
Footnote 5]
The Court of Appeals went on to rule that the Federal
Government, not the State, makes the final determination as to
whether a federal activity is consistent "to the maximum extent
practicable" with the state management program. In view of our
conclusion that a lease sale is not subject to § 307(c)(1)'s
consistency review requirements, we need not decide who holds final
authority to determine when sufficient consistency has been
achieved.
[
Footnote 6]
The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) in
the Department of Commerce is the federal agency charged with
administering CZMA.
See 16 U.S.C. § 1463 (1982 ed).
Under normal circumstances, NOAA's understanding of the meaning of
CZMA § 307(c)(1) would be entitled to deference by the courts.
But in construing § 307(c)(1), the agency has walked a path of
such tortured vacillation and indecision that no help is to be
gained in that quarter.
In 1977, NOAA expressly declined to take a position on the
applicability of § 307(c)(1) to the leasing process.
See 42 Fed.Reg. 43591-43592 (1977). In 1978, NOAA issued
regulations purporting to clarify § 307(c)(1), but the agency
expressly acknowledged that the applicability of the section to
lease sales was "still under consideration." 43 Fed.Reg. 10512
(1978). Interior nevertheless objected to the new verbal
formulation of "directly affecting" that NOAA had proposed, and the
interdepartmental dispute was submitted to the Department of
Justice's Office of Legal Counsel (OLC). OLC rejected crucial
portions of NOAA's regulations as inconsistent with the statutory
language, and those portions were withdrawn by NOAA. App. 45-46; 44
Fed.Reg. 37142 (1979). In 1980, NOAA noted its view that OCS sales
trigger consistency review requirements in a letter from NOAA to
State Coastal Management Program Directors (Apr. 9, 1980). NOAA
later renewed its attempt to arrive at a general definition of
"directly affecting." Two weeks after the instant litigation
commenced, NOAA took the position that lease sales do not directly
affect the coastal zone. 46 Fed.Reg. 26660 (1981). But shortly
after the regulation was published in final form,
id. at
35253, the House Committee on Merchant Marine and Fisheries
exercised a "legislative veto,"
see 16 U.S.C. § 1463a
(1982 ed.), and the agency withdrew its regulation. 47 Fed.Reg.
4231 (1982).
[
Footnote 7]
This formulation finds support in 1980 House and Senate Reports.
H.R.Rep. No. 96-1012, p. 34; S.Rep. No. 96-783, p. 11. For reasons
explained in
n 15,
infra, we do not believe these Committee views,
articulated many years after CZMA's passage, are reliable guides to
the intent of the full Congress acting in 1972.
[
Footnote 8]
As discussed
infra at
464 U. S.
331-341, other sections of CZMA, as well as related
provisions in the Outer Continental Shelf Lands Act of 1953, have
been significantly amended since 1972. But § 307(c)(1) has not
been changed since its enactment. Our decision must therefore turn
principally on the language of § 307(c)(1) and the legislative
history of the original, 1972 CZMA.
[
Footnote 9]
S. 3507, 92d Cong., 2d Sess., § 304(a) (1972), reprinted at
118 Cong.Rec. 14188 (1972). The Senate's definition is now codified
(with subsequent minor amendments) in 16 U.S.C. § 1453(1)
(1982 ed.).
There was language in an earlier Senate Report (not the final
CZMA Senate Report) urging that federal activities determined to
have a "functional interrelationship" with the coastal zone
"should" be administered consistently with approved state
management programs. S.Rep. No. 92-526, pp. 20, 30 (1971). Nine
years later, a House Report reiterated the "functional
interrelationship" standard. H.R.Rep. No. 96-1012, p. 34 (1980).
But the Senate Report's language was purely precatory. It used
"should," rather than the "shall" that actually appears in §
307(c)(1), and more importantly, was written in connection with a
Senate bill that would have
entirely exempted activities
on all federal lands from § 307(c)(1)'s mandate. It is
fanciful to suggest that an early Senate
Report should be
read as endorsing an expansive interpretation of § 307(c)(1)'s
"directly affecting" language when the Senate
bill that
the Report accompanied did not include the relevant phrase and
indisputably did not reach OCS lease sales.
[
Footnote 10]
On the other hand, in comments on the floor made before the
House acted on the post-Conference bill, Congressman Mosher
stated:
"The final version in no way affects the jurisdictional
responsibilities of . . . the Department of the Interior in regard
to the administration of Federal lands, since the conferees have
specifically eliminated those land areas from the definition of
coastal zone."
118 Cong.Rec. 35548 (1972).
[
Footnote 11]
See, e.g., id. at 14180 ("This bill covers the
territorial seas; it does not cover the Outer Continental Shelf")
(remark of Sen. Stevens);
id. at 14184 (facilities in the
"contiguous zone" "would be outside the jurisdiction of the
neighboring States") (remark of Sen. Boggs);
ibid. ("this
bill attempts to deal with the Territorial Sea, not the Outer
Continental Shelf") (remark of Sen. Moss);
id. at 14185
("we wanted to make certain that Federal jurisdiction was
unimpaired beyond the 3-mile limit in the territorial sea") (remark
of Sen. Hollings);
ibid. ("this bill focuses on the
territorial sea or the area that is within State jurisdiction, and
preserves the Federal jurisdiction beyond, which is not to be
considered or disturbed by the bill at this time") (remark of Sen.
Moss);
id. at 26479 ("the measure does not diminish
Federal or State jurisdiction, responsibility, or rights under
other programs and does not supersede, modify, or repeal existing
Federal law") (remark of Cong. Mosher);
id. at 26484 ("the
Federal Government has jurisdiction outside the State area, from 3
miles to 12 miles at sea") (remark of Cong. Anderson);
id.
at 35548 ("The final version [of CZMA] in no way affects the
jurisdictional responsibilities of . . . the Department of Interior
in regard to the administration of Federal lands, since the
conferees have specifically eliminated those land areas from the
definition of coastal zone") (remark of Cong. Mosher);
id.
at 35550 ("the Federal Government has jurisdiction outside the
State area, from 3 to 12 miles at sea") (remark of Cong.
Anderson).
[
Footnote 12]
Congressman Anderson repeated these remarks when he opposed an
amendment that would have weakened House § 312,
id.
at 26495, and again when he expressed his concern over the removal
of House § 312 by the Senate-House Conference,
id. at
35550.
[
Footnote 13]
The section provided:
"(b) When an estuarine sanctuary is established by a coastal
state . . . the Secretary, at the request of the state concerned, .
. . may extend the established estuarine sanctuary seaward beyond
the coastal zone, to the extent necessary to effectuate the
purposes for which the estuarine sanctuary was established."
"(c) The Secretary shall . . . assure that the development and
operation [of the sanctuary extension] is coordinated with the
development and operation of the estuarine sanctuary of which it
forms an extension."
H.R. 14146, 92d Cong., 2d Sess., §§ 312(b), (c)
(1972), reprinted in H.R.Rep. No. 92-1049, p. 7 (1972).
[
Footnote 14]
An amendment to CZMA proposed by Senator Boggs on the Senate
floor would have given respondents all that they are asking for
here. The amendment stated:
"Notwithstanding any other provision of this Act, no Federal
department or agency shall construct, or license, or lease, or
approve in any way the construction of any facility of any kind
beyond the territorial sea off the coast of the United States until
(1) such department or agency has filed with the Administrator of
the Environmental Protection Agency, a complete report with respect
to the proposed facility; (2) the Administrator has forwarded such
report to the Governor of each adjacent coastal State which might
be adversely affected by pollution from such facility; and (3) each
such Governor has filed an approval of such proposal with the
Administrator. . . ."
118 Cong.Rec. 14183 (1972). In proposing the amendment Senator
Boggs explained his concern with offshore oil transfer terminals
located at sites outside the 3-mile territorial limit.
"Such sites, of course, would place these facilities in the
contiguous zone, or in international waters on the Continental
Shelf. If that were so, of course, the facility would be outside
the jurisdiction of the neighboring States."
"Yet, the coastal zones of these neighboring States could be
severely and adversely affected by pollution that might come from
such an offshore facility."
". . . I believe it is important that the affected States play a
meaningful role in the plan to construct such a facility."
Id. at 14184.
But other Senators immediately attacked Senator Boggs'
amendment. Senator Hollings stated:
"The amendment . . . goes beyond the territorial sea and goes
into what we agreed on and compromised on awhile ago. It goes
beyond any territorial sea to construction of any facility on the
ocean floor, into what we call a contiguous zone from the 3-mile
limit to the 12-mile limit."
"This amendment provides the Governor would have a veto over
such matters. I do not think the Senate wants to go that far."
Ibid. Senator Moss agreed: "[T]his bill attempts to
deal with the Territorial Sea, not the Outer Continental Shelf."
Ibid. In response, Senator Boggs conceded that the problem
should be addressed in other legislation, and he withdrew the
proposed amendment.
Ibid.
"In addition, § 316(c)(1) of the Senate bill as amended on
the floor of the Senate called on the National Academy of Sciences
'to undertake a full investigation of the environmental hazards
attendant on offshore drilling on the Atlantic Outer Continental
Shelf.' S. 3507, 92d Cong., 2d Sess., § 316(c)(1) (1972),
reprinted in 118 Cong.Rec. 14191 (1972). In the Senate debate,
several Senators voiced their opposition even to this modest
venture outside the coastal zone. Senator Stevens, for example,
argued that the provision was inappropriate because the OCS 'is not
even covered by this bill. This bill covers the territorial seas;
it does not cover the Outer Continental Shelf.'
Id. at
14180. Senator Moss added:"
"[S]ince the State coastal zone management programs relate only
to the territorial sea, we should, therefore, be very careful of a
study which extends beyond the territorial sea to encompass the
Continental Shelf."
Id. at 14181. Again, the Conference Committee agreed;
it deleted Senate § 316(c) without comment in the Conference
Report. On the floor of the House, Congressman Downing explained
that the provision had been deleted "as nongermane."
Id.
at 35547.
[
Footnote 15]
Respondents rely heavily on four statements that appear in
Committee Reports issued years after CZMA was enacted.
(1) A 1975 Senate Report stated:
"The Committee's intent when the 1972 Act was passed was for the
consistency clause to apply to Federal leases for offshore oil and
gas development, since such leases were viewed by the Committee to
be within the phrase 'licenses or permits' [in § 307(c)(3)].
[The Report then discusses the proposed amendment that would insert
'lease' into § 307(c)(3).] In practical terms, this
[amendment] means that the Secretary of the Interior would need to
seek the certification of consistency from adjacent State governors
before entering into a binding lease agreement with private oil
companies."
S.Rep. No. 94-277, pp.19-20 (1975).
(2) One footnote in a 323-page House Report that accompanied the
1978 amendments to the Outer Continental Shelf Lands Act of 1953
stated:
"The committee is aware that under the [CZMA] certain OCS
activities including lease sales and approval of development and
production plans must comply with 'consistency' requirements as to
coastal zone management plans approved by the Secretary of
Commerce. Except for specific changes made by Titles IV and V of
the 1977 Amendments, nothing in this Act is intended to amend,
modify or repeal any provision of [CZMA]. Specifically, nothing is
intended to alter procedures under that Act for consistency once a
State has an approved Coastal Zone Management Plan."
H.R.Rep. No. 95-590, p. 153, n. 52 (1977).
(3) A 1980 House Report stated that the 1976 CZMA § 307
amendments
"did not alter Federal agency responsibility to provide States
with a consistency determination related to OCS decisions which
preceded issuance of leases."
H.R.Rep. No. 96-1012, p. 28.
(4) A 1980 Senate Report stated that, under CZMA,
"[t]he Department of the Interior's activities which preced[e]
lease sales . . . remain subject to the requirements of section
307(c)(1). As a result, intergovernmental coordination for purposes
of OCS development commences at the earliest practicable time in
the opinion of the Committee, as the Department of the Interior
sets in motion a series of events which have consequences in the
coastal zone."
"S.Rep. No. 96-783, p. 11."
In our view, these subsequent Committee interpretations of CZMA,
written three or more years after CZMA was passed, are of little
help in ascertaining the intent of Congress when CZMA §
307(c)(1) was passed in 1972. We note that the most relevant and
unambiguous statement of the House Committee's views appeared in
House §§ 312 and 313 as originally reported out of
Committee and passed by the House. But those sections were
emphatically rejected by the full Congress when CZMA was enacted in
1972,
see supra at
464 U. S.
324-329, and Committee-proposed amendments that would
have had a similar effect were rejected when the Act was amended in
1976,
see infra at
464 U. S.
334-335, and n. 18. Likewise, by 1976, the Senate
Committee had taken a position favoring the extension of
consistency review requirements to lease sales,
see ibid.,
but that position too was subsequently rejected by the full
Congress,
see n 18
infra. Legislative Committees' desires to reaffirm
positions they have taken that were rejected by the full Congress
are understandable enough, but of little help in construing the
intent behind the law actually enacted.
[
Footnote 16]
Both the original § 307(c)(3) and the amended §
307(c)(3)(B),
see infra at
464 U. S. 335,
and n.19, expressly address and constrain the actions of federal
agencies.
"No license or permit shall be granted by the Federal agency
until the state . . . has concurred with the applicant's
[consistency] certification. . . ."
16 U.S.C. § 1456(c)(3) (1982 ed.).
"No Federal official or agency shall grant such person any
license or permit for any activity . . . until [the affected] state
. . . receives a copy of [the applicant's certification of
consistency and concurs in the certification or is overridden by
the Secretary of Commerce]."
16 U.S.C. § 1456(c)(3)(B) (1982 ed.). Moreover, in the 1976
CZMA amendment debates, Members of Congress uniformly viewed §
307(c)(3) as directly concerned with the consistency obligations of
federal agencies. When Congress considered adding the word "lease"
to § 307(c)(3), the shared assumption was that consistency
requirements in § 307(c)(3) were functionally identical to
those of § 307(c)(1). One Senator was of the view that the
proposed amendment would "mak[e] it clear that Outer Continental
Shelf leasing is a Federal activity subject to the Federal
consistency provision. . . ." 121 Cong.Rec. 23075 (1975). Another
commented that the addition to § 307(c)(3) would establish
that "Federal agencies must conduct their activities consistent
with" applicable state management programs.
Id. at 23084.
The Senate Report stated that the proposed § 307(c)(3)
amendment,
"[i]n practical terms, . . . means that the Secretary of the
Interior would need to seek the certification of consistency from
adjacent State governors before entering into a binding lease
agreement with private oil companies."
S.Rep. No. 94-277, p. 20 (1975). And the House Report stated
that the amendment would establish that
"the OCS leasing process is indeed a federal action that
undoubtedly has the potential for affecting a state's coastal zone
and, hence, must conform with approved state coastal management
programs."
H.R.Rep. No. 94-878, p. 37 (1976);
see also id. at
52-53.
[
Footnote 17]
"[A]ny applicant for a required Federal license or permit to
conduct an activity affecting land or water uses in the coastal
zone . . . shall provide in the application to the licensing or
permitting agency a certification that the proposed activity . . .
will be conducted in a manner consistent with [the approved state
management] program. . . . At the earliest practicable time, the
state . . . shall notify the Federal agency concerned that the
state concurs with or objects to the applicant's certification. . .
. No license or permit shall be granted by the Federal agency until
the state . . . has concurred with the applicant's certification .
. . unless the Secretary . . . finds . . . that the activity is
consistent with the objectives of [CZMA] or is otherwise necessary
in the interest of national security."
16 U.S.C. § 1456(c)(3) (1982 ed.).
[
Footnote 18]
The bills reported out of House and Senate Committees would have
inserted the word "lease" in § 307(c)(3).
See
H.R.Rep. No. 94-878, pp. 52-53 (1976); S.Rep. No. 94-277, pp.19-20
(1975). The proposal passed the Senate, but was removed on the
floor of the House. 122 Cong.Rec. 6128 (1976).
The Conference Committee decided not to introduce "lease" into
§ 307(c)(3). Instead, the Committee created the new §
307(c)(3)(B). The Conference Report explained:
"The conference substitute follows the Senate bill in amending
the Federal consistency requirement [of] section 307(c)(3). . . .
The Senate bill required that each Federal lease (for example,
offshore oil and gas leases) had to be submitted to each state with
an approved coastal zone management program for a determination by
that state as to whether or not the lease was consistent with its
program. The conference substitute further elaborates on this
provision and specifically applies the consistency requirement to
the basic steps in the OCS leasing process -- namely, the
exploration, development and production plans submitted to the
Secretary of the Interior. This provision will satisfy the state
needs for complete information, on a timely basis, about the
details of the oil industry's offshore plans."
H.R.Conf.Rep. No. 94-1298, p. 30 (1976).
[
Footnote 19]
"[A]ny person who submits to the Secretary of the Interior any
plan for the exploration or development of, or production from, any
area which has been leased under the Outer Continental Shelf Lands
Act . . . shall, with respect to any exploration, development, or
production described in such plan and affecting any land use or
water use in the coastal zone . . . [certify] that each activity .
. . complies with [the] state's approved management program. . . .
No Federal official or agency shall grant such person any license
or permit for any activity . . . until [the state concurs or] . . .
the Secretary finds . . . that each activity . . . is consistent
with the objectives of [CZMA] or is otherwise necessary in the
interest of national security."
16 U.S.C. § 1456(c)(3)(B) (1982 ed.).
[
Footnote 20]
As discussed
infra at
464 U. S. 339,
§ 11 of the OCSLA, 43 U.S.C. § 1340 (1976 ed., Supp. V),
as amended in 1978, added a requirement for the submission and
separate approval of an exploration plan following the purchase of
a lease. However, that section made the requirements prospective
only, to come into force 90 days after September 18, 1978. 43
U.S.C. § 1340(b) (1976 ed., Supp. V). Similarly, the 1978
OCSLA amendments required oil or gas leases to provide that
development and production be conducted only in accordance with a
subsequently submitted and approved plan, but extended this
requirement only to leases issued after September 18, 1978. 43
U.S.C. § 1351(b) (1976 ed., Supp. V).
[
Footnote 21]
OCSLA contains a saving clause that provides:
"Except as otherwise expressly provided in this chapter, nothing
in this chapter shall be construed to amend, modify, or repeal any
provision of [CZMA]."
43 U.S.C. § 1866(a) (1976 ed., Supp. V). Our analysis of
CZMA § 307(c)(1) is entirely consistent with this clause. A
narrow construction of "directly affecting" is compelled by CZMA's
legislative history, standing alone. It is reinforced by CZMA
§ 307(c)(3), which expressly addresses the consistency review
requirements to be imposed on OCS oil and gas programs. Section
307(c)(3) provides for consistency review prior to exploration,
development, and production, not prior to lease sales. CZMA itself
invokes OCSLA, so it is appropriate to look to that Act for the
distinction between lease sales on the one hand, and exploration,
development, and production permits on the other. OCSLA confirms
that a lease sale is a separate, distinct stage of QCS planning,
not to be confused with exploration, development, or production.
The 1978 OCSLA amendments are relevant not because they change any
part of CZMA, but because they change, or at least substantially
clarify, the rights transferred by Interior when a lease is
sold.
[
Footnote 22]
The House Report accompanying the 1978 OCSLA amendments
explained:
"[The consistency review provision imposed at the production
stage] is intended to provide the mechanism for review and
evaluation of, and decision on, development and production in a
leased area, after consultation and coordination with all affected
parties."
"The committee considers this one of the most important
provisions of the 1977 amendments. It provides a means to separate
the Federal decision to allow private industry to explore for oil
and gas from the Federal decision to allow development and
production to proceed if the lessee finds oil and gas. The failure
to have such a mechanism in the past has led to extensive
litigation prior to lease sales, when onshore and environmental
impacts of production activity are not yet known."
H.R.Rep. No. 95-590, p. 164 (1977).
[
Footnote 23]
In his comments regarding the House's 1976 refusal to add the
word "lease" to CZMA § 307(c)(3), Congressman Murphy noted
that,
"even if an organization had a lease, it could not do much with
it, because the licenses and permits are required to deal with the
development of oil on the Continental Shelf."
122 Cong.Rec. 6128 (1976).
The California Coastal Commission is also well aware of its
power to demand consistency at later stages in OCS planning. In
voicing its objections to the sale of the 31 disputed tracts the
Commission warned:
"Any attempt to explore or develop these tracts will face the
strong possibility of an objection to a consistency certification
of the Plan of Exploration or Development by the Commission."
App. 79.
JUSTICE STEVENS, with whom JUSTICE BRENNAN, JUSTICE MARSHALL,
and JUSTICE BLACKMUN join, dissenting.
In these cases, the State of California is attempting to enforce
a federal statutory right. Its coastal zone management program was
approved by the Federal Government pursuant to a statute enacted in
1972. In § 307(c)(1) of that statute, the Coastal Zone
Management Act (CZMA), the Federal Government made a promise to
California:
"Each Federal agency conducting or supporting activities
directly affecting the coastal zone shall conduct or support those
activities in a manner which is, to the maximum extent practicable,
consistent with approved state management programs."
86 Stat. 1285, 16 U.S.C. § 1456(c)(1) (1982 ed.).
The question in these cases is whether the Secretary of the
Interior was conducting an activity directly affecting the
California Coastal Zone when he sold oil and gas leases in the
Pacific Ocean area immediately adjacent to that zone. One would
think that this question could be easily answered simply by
reference to a question of fact -- does this sale of leases
directly affect the coastal zone? The District Court made a finding
that it did, which the Court of Appeals affirmed, and which is not
disturbed by the Court. Based on a straightforward reading of the
statute, one would think that that would be the end of the
cases.
The Court reaches a contrary conclusion, however, based on
either or both of these two theories: (1) § 307(c)(1) only
applies to federal activities that take place within the coastal
zone itself or in a federal enclave within the zone -- it is wholly
inapplicable to federal activities on the Outer Continental Shelf
(OCS) no matter how seriously they may affect the coastal zone; (2)
even if the sale of oil leases by the Secretary of the Interior
would have been covered by § 307(c)(1) when the CZMA was
enacted in 1972, amendments to an entirely
Page 464 U. S. 345
different statute adopted in 1978 mean that the leases cannot
directly affect the coastal zone, notwithstanding the fact that
those amendments merely imposed additional obligations on private
lessees and did not purport to cut back on any obligation
previously imposed on federal agencies.
The Court's first theory is refuted by the plain language of the
1972 Act, its legislative history, the basic purpose of the Act,
and the findings of the District Court. The Court's second theory,
which looks at post-1972 legislative developments, is simply
overwhelmed by a series of unambiguous legislative pronouncements
that consistently belie the Court's interpretation of the intent of
Congress.
I
Because there is so much material refuting the Court's reading
of the 1972 Act, an index of what is to follow may be useful. I
shall first note that the plain language of § 307(c)(1) draws
no distinction between activities that take place outside the
coastal zone and those that occur within the zone; it is the effect
of the activities, rather than their location, that is relevant. I
shall then review the legislative history which demonstrates that
the words "directly affecting" were included in the section to make
sure that the statute covered activities occurring outside the
coastal zone if they are the functional equivalent of activities
occurring within the zone. I shall then identify some of the
statutory provisions indicating that Congress intended to require
long-range, advance planning. I shall conclude Part I with a
description of the findings that bring these cases squarely within
the congressional purpose.
Plain Language
In statutory construction cases, the Court generally begins its
analysis by noting that "[t]he starting point in every case
involving construction of a statute is the language itself."
E.g., Watt v. Alaska, 451 U. S. 259,
451 U. S. 265
(1981). Not much
Page 464 U. S. 346
is said, however, about the plain language of § 307(c)(1)
in the opinion of the Court, and no wonder. The words "activities
directly affecting the coastal zone" make it clear that §
307(c)(1) applies to activities that take place outside the zone
itself, as well as to activities conducted within the zone. There
are federal enclaves inside the boundaries of the coastal zone
that, as a matter of statutory definition, are excluded from the
zone itself. [
Footnote 2/1]
Moreover, the ocean areas on the OCS that are adjacent to, and
seaward of, the coastal zone are subject to the exclusive
jurisdiction of the Federal Government. [
Footnote 2/2] Quite plainly, the federal activities that
may directly affect the coastal zone can be conducted in the zone
itself, in a federal enclave, or in an adjacent federal area. The
plain meaning of the words thus indicates that the words "directly
affecting" were intended to enlarge the coverage of §
307(c)(1) to encompass activities conducted outside, as well as
inside, the zone. In light of this language, it is hard to see how
the Court can hold, as it does, that federal activities in the OCS
can never fall within the statute because they are outside the
outer boundaries of the coastal zone.
Page 464 U. S. 347
Legislative History
The plain meaning of the Act is confirmed by its legislative
history. Both the House and the Senate versions of the CZMA
originally applied only to federal agencies conducting "activities
in the coastal zone." [
Footnote
2/3] At the same time, Congress clearly recognized that the
most fundamental purpose of the CZMA was
"to preserve, protect, develop, and where possible, to restore
or enhance, the resources of the Nation's coastal zone for this and
succeeding generations."
86 Stat. 1281, 16 U.S.C. § 1452(1) (1982 ed.). In writing
the versions of the CZMA that went to conference, both Houses
stated that their purpose was to prevent adverse effects on the
coastal zone. [
Footnote 2/4] Yet it
plainly would have been impossible to achieve this purpose without
considering activities outside of the zone which nevertheless could
have a devastating impact on it -- activities such as those that
led to the 1969 Santa
Page 464 U. S. 348
Barbara, Cal., oil spill, which occurred in the OCS but which
had a devastating impact on the adjacent California coast.
[
Footnote 2/5] When the Conferees
adopted the definition of "coastal zone" that excluded federal
enclaves, they recognized the need to expand the description of
federal activities that should be conducted in a manner that is
consistent with an approved state program. The substitution of the
words "directly affecting" for the word "in" accomplished this
purpose. Thus, if an activity outside the zone has the same kind of
effect on the zone as if it had been conducted in the zone, it is
covered by § 307(c)(1). [
Footnote
2/6]
The Court's position seems to be that, since neither the Senate
nor House versions covered federal activities outside of the
coastal zone, the bill that emerged from the Conference Committee
could not have either.
See ante at
464 U. S.
322-324. To construe the Conference substitute otherwise
would be to find a "surprising, unexplained, and subsequently
unnoticed expansion in the scope of § 307(c)(1),"
ante at
464 U. S. 322.
Not only does that construction ignore the "directly affecting"
language used by Congress, but it rests on a demonstrably incorrect
assumption as to the scope of the earlier versions of the CZMA.
Page 464 U. S. 349
The House version of the CZMA clearly recognized that activities
outside the coastal zone could have a critical impact upon the
coastal zone, and therefore had to be covered by management plans.
It defined the coastal zone to extend inland to areas which could
have an impact on it,
see H.R. 14146, 92d Cong., 2d Sess.,
§ 304(a) (1972), reprinted in 118 Cong.Rec. 26501 (1972), in
order to enable the CZMA to achieve
"its basic underlying purpose, that is the management and the
protection of the coastal waters. It would not be possible to
accomplish that purpose without to some degree extending the
coverage to the shorelands which have an impact on those
waters."
H.R.Rep. No. 92-1049, p. 14 (1972). The House bill did not
extend the zone seaward, because it instead required the Secretary
of Commerce to develop a management program for activities on the
OCS that was consistent with the management program of the adjacent
State. H.R. 14146, 92d Cong., 2d Sess., § 313 (1972),
reprinted in 118 Cong.Rec. 26503 (1972); H.R.Rep. No. 92-1049, p.
23 (1972). [
Footnote 2/7] Section
313 was thus specifically premised on the recognition that federal
activities in the OCS, particularly the sale of oil and gas leases,
could have a direct impact on the coastal zone. [
Footnote 2/8] The House further recognized,
Page 464 U. S. 350
the need to regulate federal OCS activities to protect the
coastal zone in § 312 of its bill, which provided for the
expansion of coastal zone marine sanctuaries established by state
management plans into the OCS, in order to fully protect the
coastal zone. [
Footnote 2/9] The
House showed its concern about the impact of federal activities in
the OCS on the coastal zone by rejecting an amendment to § 312
which would have made it permissive, rather than mandatory, for the
Federal Government to establish sanctuaries in areas adjacent to
state sanctuaries, and another amendment that would have deleted
§ 312 altogether.
See 118 Cong.Rec. 26495-26496
(1972).
Page 464 U. S. 351
Thus it is plainly evident that the House did wish to protect
the integrity of state coastal zone management with respect to
federal activities in the OCS.
The Senate shared the House's concern that state management
plans must apply to federal activities in areas adjacent to the
coastal zone. The Senate Report on its version of the CZMA stated
that its version was derived from a bill it had reported favorably
during the previous year, S. 582. [
Footnote 2/10] In particular, the 1971 Senate version
of the CZMA used exactly the same language in framing the
consistency obligation as did the 1972 version. [
Footnote 2/11] The Report on the 1971 bill
construed
Page 464 U. S. 352
this language to extend the consistency obligation to federal
activities in waters outside of the coastal zone which functionally
interact with the zone:
"[A]ny lands or waters under Federal jurisdiction and control,
where the administering Federal agency determines them to have a
functional interrelationship from an economic, social, or
geographic standpoint with lands and waters within the territorial
sea, should be administered consistent with approved State
management programs except in cases of overriding national interest
as determined by the President."
S.Rep. No. 92-526, p. 20 (1971). [
Footnote 2/12] Since the 1972 Senate CZMA used
identical language to describe the consistency requirement, and
nothing in the 1972 Senate Report indicates that this language
should be construed differently than the 1971 language, it follows
that the 1972 Senate version placed a consistency obligation upon
federal activities in the OCS which affect the coastal zone.
Thus, the Court is simply wrong to say that both versions of the
CZMA sent to conference displayed no interest in regulating federal
activities occurring outside of the exterior boundaries of the
coastal zone. The Conferees' adoption of the "directly affecting"
language merely clarified the scope
Page 464 U. S. 353
of the consistency obligation. The House surrendered the
requirements that the Federal Government develop its own management
plan for OCS activities and that federal lands within the coastal
zone be included in the zone, but in return ensured that any
federal activities "directly affecting" the coastal zone would be
subject to the consistency requirement of § 307(c)(1). The
only explanations of this compromise to be found in the legislative
history can be briefly set out. The Conferees wrote:
"[A]s to Federal agencies involved in any activities directly
affecting the state coastal zone and any Federal participation in
development projects in the coastal zone,
the Federal agencies
must make certain that their activities are to the maximum extent
practicable consistent with approved state management
programs. In addition, similar consideration of state
management programs must be given in the process of issuing Federal
licenses or permits for activities affecting State coastal zones.
The Conferees also adopted language which would make certain that
there is no intent in this legislation to change Federal or state
jurisdiction or rights in specified fields, including submerged
lands."
H.R.Conf.Rep. No. 92-1544, p. 14 (1972) (emphasis supplied).
Senator Hollings, the floor manager of the CZMA, said when he
presented the Conference Report to the Senate:
"The bill provides States with national policy goals to control
those land uses which have a direct and significant impact upon
coastal waters."
118 Cong.Rec. 35459 (1972). That is the entire history of the
Conference compromise. There is not the slightest indication that
Congress intended to adopt the strange rule which the Court
announces today -- that OCS leasing cannot be subject to
consistency requirements. To the contrary, these statements
indicate that any federal activity
Page 464 U. S. 354
is covered as long as it directly affects the coastal zone. The
Conferees' reference to federal rights in "submerged lands" further
indicates that it recognized that the statute could be applied to
the OCS. The inescapable conclusion is that §§ 312 and
313 were deleted precisely because § 307(e)(1) had been
strengthened so as to protect the coastal zone from federal OCS
activities, which obviated the need for these sections. There is no
indication whatsoever that the deletion occurred because Congress
rejected any application of state management plans to federal
activities in the OCS. [
Footnote
2/13]
Page 464 U. S. 355
In sum, the substitution of the words "directly affecting the
coastal zone" for the words "in the coastal zone" plainly
effectuated the congressional intent to cover activities outside
the zone that are the functional equivalent of activities within
the zone, thereby addressing the concern of both Houses that the
consistency requirement extend to federal OCS activities. There is
simply no evidence that § 307(c)(1) was not intended to reach
federal OCS activities which directly affect the coastal zone.
Purposes of the CZMA
An examination of the underlying purposes of the CZMA confirms
that the most obvious reading of § 307(c)(1), which
Page 464 U. S. 356
would apply its consistency obligation to federal OCS leasing
that directly affects the coastal zone, is fully justified.
The congressional findings in § 302 of the CZMA first
identify the "national interest in the effective management,
beneficial use, protection, and development of the coastal zone,"
86 Stat. 1280, 16 U.S.C. § 1451(a) (1982 ed.), and then recite
the various conflicting demands on the valuable resources in such
zones, including those occasioned by the "extraction of mineral
resources and fossil fuels." Congress found that special natural
and scenic characteristics are "being damaged by ill-planned
development," and that "present state and local institutional
arrangements for planning and regulating land and water uses in
such areas are inadequate." §§ 1451(g) and (h). Finally,
Congress found that the effective protection of resources in the
coastal zone required the development of
"land and water use programs for the coastal zone, including
unified policies, criteria, standards, methods, and processes for
dealing with land and water use decisions of more than local
significance."
§ 1451(i). The declaration of national policy in § 303
of the 1972 CZMA unambiguously exhorted
"all Federal agencies engaged in programs affecting the coastal
zone to cooperate and participate with state and local governments
and regional agencies in effectuating the purposes of this
title."
86 Stat. 1281. The policy declaration concluded:
"With respect to implementation of such management programs, it
is the national policy to encourage cooperation among the various
state and regional agencies, including establishment of interstate
and regional agreements, cooperative procedures, and joint action
particularly regarding environmental problems."
Ibid.
These provisions surely indicate a congressional preference for
long-range planning and for close cooperation between federal and
state agencies in conducting or supporting activities
Page 464 U. S. 357
that directly affect the coastal zone. [
Footnote 2/14] Statutes should be construed in a manner
consistent with their underlying policies and purposes.
E.g.,
FBI v. Abramson, 456 U. S. 615,
456 U. S. 625,
and n. 7 (1982);
Pennhurst State School and Hospital v.
Halderman, 451 U. S. 1,
451 U. S. 18-19
(1981);
Philbrook v. Glodgett, 421 U.
S. 707,
421 U. S. 713
(1975). By applying the consistency obligation to the first
critical step in OCS development, the decision to lease, the
statute is construed in a manner consistent with its underlying
purpose.
The majority's construction of § 307(c)(1) is squarely at
odds with this purpose. Orderly, long-range, cooperative planning
dictates that the consistency requirement must apply to OCS leasing
decisions. The sale of OCS leases involves the expenditure of
millions of dollars. [
Footnote
2/15] If exploration and development of the leased tracts
cannot be squared with the requirements of the CZMA, it would be in
everyone's interest to determine that as early as possible. On the
other
Page 464 U. S. 358
hand, if exploration and development of the tracts would be
consistent with the state management plan, a preleasing consistency
determination would provide assurances to prospective purchasers,
and hence enhance the value of the tracts to the Federal Government
and, concomitantly, the public. Advance planning can only minimize
the risk of either loss or inconsistency that may ultimately
confront all interested parties. [
Footnote 2/16] It is directly contrary to the
legislative scheme not to make a consistency determination at the
earliest possible point. [
Footnote
2/17] It is especially incongruous since the Court agrees that
all federal activity "in" the coastal zone is subject to
consistency review. If activity in the OCS directly affects the
Page 464 U. S. 359
zone -- if it is in fact the functional equivalent of activity
"in" the zone -- it is inconceivable that Congress would have
wanted it to be treated any differently.
The
only federal activity that ever occurs with respect
to OCS oil and gas development is the decision to lease; all other
activities in the process are conducted by lessees, and not the
Federal Government. If the leasing decision is not subject to
consistency requirements, then the intent of Congress to apply
consistency review to federal OCS activities would be defeated, and
this part of the statute rendered nugatory. Such a construction
must be rejected.
See American Textile Mfrs. Institute, Inc. v.
Donovan, 452 U. S. 490,
452 U. S. 513
(1981);
Mercantile Nat. Bank v. Langdeau, 371 U.
S. 555,
371 U. S. 560
(1963);
United States v. Shirey, 359 U.
S. 255,
359 U. S.
259-260 (1959);
United States v. Harriss,
347 U. S. 612,
347 U. S.
622-623 (1954);
Sunshine Coal Co. v. Adkins,
310 U. S. 381,
310 U. S. 392
(1940). [
Footnote 2/18]
Page 464 U. S. 360
The Direct Effects
The lease sales at issue in these cases are, in fact, the
functional equivalent of an activity conducted in the zone. There
is no dispute about the fact that the Secretary's selection of
lease tracts and lease terms constituted decisions of major
importance to the coastal zone. The District Court described some
of the effects of those decisions:
"For example, a reading of the notice itself reveals some of the
many consequences of leasing upon the coastal zone. The 'Notice of
Oil and Gas Lease Sale No. 63 (Partial Offering),' as published in
the Federal Register, announced ten stipulations to be applied to
federal lessees. The activities permitted and/or required by the
stipulations result in direct effects upon the coastal zone.
Stipulation No. 4 sets forth the conditions for operation of boats
and aircraft by lessees. Stipulation No. 6 states the conditions
under which pipelines will be required; the Department of Interior,
as lessor, specifically reserves the right to regulate the
placement of 'any pipeline used for transporting production to
shore.' Lessees must agree, pursuant to stipulation No. 1, to
preserve and protect biological resources discovered during the
conduct of operations in the area."
"The Secretarial Issue Document ('SID'), prepared in October,
1980, by the Department of Interior to aid the Secretary in his
decision contains voluminous information indicative of the direct
effects of this project on the coastal zone. For instance, the SID
contains a table showing the overall probability of an oil spill
impacting a point within the sea otter range during the life of the
project in the northern portion of the Santa Maria Basin to be 52%.
Both the SID and the EIS [Environmental Impact Statement] contain
statistics showing the likelihood of oils pills during the life of
the leases; based on the unrevised USGS estimates, 1.65 spills are
expected during the project conducted in the Santa Maria
subarea.
Page 464 U. S. 361
According to the SID, the probability of an oil spill is even
higher when the revised USGS figures are utilized."
". . . Both documents refer to impacts upon air and water
quality, marine and coastal ecosystems, commercial fisheries,
recreation and sport fishing, navigation, cultural resources, and
socioeconomic factors. For instance, the EIS states that '[n]ormal
offshore operations would have unavoidable effects . . . on the
quality of the surrounding water.' Pipelaying, drilling, and
construction, chronic spills from platforms, and the discharge of
treated sewage contribute to the degradation of water quality in
the area. A s to commercial fisheries, drilling muds and cuttings
'could significantly affect fish and invertebrate populations;' the
spot prawn fishery in the Santa Maria Basin is particularly
vulnerable to this physical disruption. In reference to recreation
and sportfishing, the EIS indicates the possibility of adverse
impacts as a result of the competition for land between recreation
and OCS-related onshore facilities as a result of the temporary
disruption of recreation areas caused by pipeline burial. There are
the additional risks of"
"the degradation of the aesthetic environment conducive to
recreation and the damage to recreational sites as a result of an
oil spill."
"Another impact on the coastal zone will occur as a result of
the migration of labor into the area during the early years of oil
and gas operations. Impacts on the level of employment and the size
of the population in the coastal region are also predicted."
"The SID notes that there are artifacts of historic interest as
well as aboriginal archaeological sites reported in the area of the
Santa Maria tracts. The FWS and NMFS biological opinions, appended
to the SID, indicate the likelihood that development and production
activities may jeopardize the existence of the southern sea otter
and the gray whale."
"These effects constitute only a partial list. Further
enumeration is unnecessary. The threshold test under
Page 464 U. S. 362
§ 307(c)(1) would, in fact, be satisfied by a finding of a
single direct effect upon the coastal zone. Although the evidence
of direct effects is substantial, such a showing is not required by
the CZMA."
520 F.
Supp. 1359, 1380-1382 (CD Cal.1981) (footnotes and citations
omitted).
The Court of Appeals predicated its conclusion that the lease
sale in these cases directly affects the coastal zone on these
findings. It wrote:
"We agree that the lease sale in this case directly affects the
coastal zone. These direct effects of Lease Sale 53 on California's
coastal zone are detailed by the district court. We need not repeat
them here. It is enough to point out that decisions made at the
lease sale stage in this case establish the basic scope and charter
for subsequent development and production. Prior to the sale of
leases, critical decisions are made as to the size and location of
the tracts, the timing of the sale, and the stipulations to which
the leases would be subject. These choices determine, or at least
influence, whether oil will be transported by pipeline or ship,
which areas of the coastal zone will be exposed to danger, the flow
of vessel traffic, and the siting of on-shore construction."
"Under these circumstances Lease Sale 53 established the first
link in a chain of events which could lead to production and
development of oil and gas on the individual tracts leased. This is
a particularly significant link, because, at this stage, all the
tracts can be considered together, taking into account the
cumulative effects of the entire lease sale, whereas, at the later
stages, consistency determinations would be made on a
tract-by-tract basis under section 307(c)(3)."
683 F.2d 1253, 1260 (CA9 1982) (citations omitted).
Neither petitioners nor the Court challenges these findings,
which clearly state that the oil and gas lease sale at issue
here
Page 464 U. S. 363
will directly affect the coastal zone. Oil and gas exploration
and development are the expected and desired results of the leasing
decision which respondents seek to have reviewed under §
307(c)(1), and their impact on the coastal zone will be undeniably
significant. Moreover, the findings indicate some of those impacts
will occur almost immediately, prior to review under the Outer
Continental Shelf Lands Act (OCSLA), and can never be reviewed
adequately if they are not reviewed now. [
Footnote 2/19]
In my judgment, these rather sensible appraisals of the probable
consequences of the lease sale are entirely consistent with the
congressional intent reflected in § 307(c)(1). It cannot be
denied that, in reality, OCS oil and gas leasing "directly" looks
toward development of the OCS, and the consequences for the coastal
zone that the District Court found development would entail.
Development is the expected consequence of leasing; if it were not,
purchasers would
Page 464 U. S. 364
never commit millions of dollars to the acquisition of leases.
Congress views leasing in exactly this way; it has defined the
lease acquired by purchasers as a "form of authorization . . .
which authorizes exploration for, and development and production
of, minerals. . . ." 92 Stat. 632, 43 U.S.C. § 1331(c) (1976
ed., Supp. V). As the Court of Appeals observed, leasing sets into
motion a chain of events designed and intended to lead to
exploration and development. When the intended and most probable
consequence of a federal activity is oil and gas production that
will dramatically affect the adjacent coastal zone, that activity
is one "directly affecting" the coastal zone within the meaning of
§ 307(c)(1).
II
The Court's holding rests, in part, on selections from
legislative developments subsequent to the enactment of the CZMA in
1972. In my view, the 1978 amendment to the OCSLA on which the
Court relies lends no support to its reading of § 307(c)(1) of
the CZMA. On the contrary, a fair review of the post-1972 history
reveals such a dramatically different congressional understanding
of the meaning of its own work product that it merits a rather
detailed treatment. I shall comment on this history in
chronological order.
The 1976 Amendment to CZMA
The CZMA was amended in 1976. One of the primary purposes for
this legislation was the recognition that OCS leasing has a
dramatic impact on the coastal zone. The 1976 legislation created a
program of federal financial aid to coastal areas in order to help
them deal with the impact of OCS leasing. The amount of money each
State received was keyed to the amount of adjacent OCS acreage that
had been leased by the Federal Government. 90 Stat. 1019-1028, 16
U.S.C. § 1456a (1982 ed.). This provision was added
precisely
Page 464 U. S. 365
because Congress recognized that OCS leasing could dramatically
affect the adjacent coastal zone, not only environmentally but
socially and economically.
See S.Rep. No. 94-277, pp.
10-19 (1975); H.R.Rep. No. 94-878, pp. 13, 15-17 (1976); [
Footnote 2/20] 121 Cong.Rec. 23055-23056
(1975) (remarks of Sen. Stevens);
id. at 23060 (remarks of
Sen. Jackson);
id. at 23065 (remarks of Sen. Magnuson);
122 Cong.Rec. 6111-6112 (1976) (remarks of Rep. Sullivan);
id. at 6112 (remarks of Rep. Du Pont);
id. at
6113 (remarks of Rep. Mosher);
id. at 6114 (remarks of
Rep. Murphy);
id. at 6117 (remarks of Rep. Young);
id. at 6119 (remarks of Rep. Lagomarsino);
id. at
6120 (remarks of Rep. Hughes);
id. at 6121-6122 (remarks
of Rep. Drinan). [
Footnote 2/21]
This congressional recognition completely undermines the Court's
position that OCS oil and gas leasing can never directly affect the
coastal zone.
Both the Senate and House versions of the 1976 amendments
reported out of committee explicitly applied the consistency
requirement of § 307 to OCS oil and gas leasing.
See
S. 586, 94th Cong., 1st Sess., § 102(12) (1975), reprinted in
S.Rep. No. 94-277, p. 59 (1975); [
Footnote 2/22] H.R. 3981, 94th Cong., 2d Sess., §
2(15) (1976), reprinted in H.R.Rep. No. 94-878, p. 4 (1976). The
significant point here is that, at every opportunity, Congress
indicated that all it was doing by these provisions
Page 464 U. S. 366
was restating what had been its original intent in the 1972
CZMA. For example, the Senate Report stated:
"Section 307 is the portion of the Act which has come to be
known as the 'Federal consistency' section. It assures that, once
State coastal zone management programs are approved and a rational
management system for protecting, preserving, and developing the
State's coastal zone is in place (approved), the Federal
departments, agencies, and instrumentalities will not violate such
system, but will, instead, conduct themselves in a manner
consistent with the States' approved management program.
This
includes conducting or supporting activities in or out of the
coastal zone which affect that area. . . . As energy
facilities have been focused upon more closely recently, the
provisions of section 307 for the consistency of Federal actions
with the State coastal zone management programs has [
sic]
provided assurance to those concerned with the coastal zone that
the law already provides an effective mechanism for guaranteeing
that Federal activities, including those supported by, and those
carried on pursuant to, Federal authority (license, lease, or
permit) will accord with a rational management plan for protection,
preservation and development of the coastal zone.
One of the
specific federally related energy problem areas for the coastal
zone is, of course, the potential effects of Federal activities on
the Outer Continental Shelf beyond the State's coastal zones,
including Federal authorizations for non-Federal activity, but
under the act as it presently exists, as well as the S.
586 amendments, if the activity may affect the State coastal zone
and it has an approved management program, the consistency
requirements do apply."
S.Rep. No. 94-277,
supra, at 36-37 (emphasis supplied).
[
Footnote 2/23]
Page 464 U. S. 367
Similarly, the House Report states:
"Specifically, what the section does is add the word 'lease' to
'licenses and permits' in section 307(c)(3). This clarifies the
scope of the coverage of those federal actions which must be
certified as complying with a state's approved coastal management
program. The Committee felt, because of the intense interest in the
matter on the part of a number of states, it would make explicit
its view that
federal leasing is an activity already covered by
section 307 of the Act."
"To argue otherwise would be to maintain that a federal permit
for a wastewater discharge, for example, must be certified by the
applicant to be in compliance with a state program, the state being
given an opportunity to approve or disapprove of the proposal,
while a federal lease for an Outer Continental Shelf tract does not
have to so certify.
Given the obvious impacts on coastal lands
and waters which will result from the federal action to permit
exploration and development of offshore petroleum resources, it is
difficult to imagine that the original intent of the Act was not to
include such a major federal coastal action within the coverage of
'federal consistency.'"
H.R.Rep. No. 94-878,
supra, at 52 (emphasis supplied).
[
Footnote 2/24] Along the same
lines, the Report also stated that
"the Committee wants to assure coastal states in frontier areas
that the OCS leasing process is indeed a federal action that
undoubtedly
Page 464 U. S. 368
has the potential for affecting a state's coastal zone and,
hence, must conform with approved state coastal management
programs."
Id. at 37. Statements to similar effect were made by
sponsors of the legislation on the floors of both Houses. [
Footnote 2/25]
Though the explicit reference to OCS leasing was deleted by the
Conferees, their Report indicates that the reason for the deletion
was not disagreement with the concept of applying § 307 to OCS
leasing, but rather to supplement that requirement by applying
consistency to other stages in the process as well. [
Footnote 2/26] The subsequent debates on
the Conference Report evince no retreat from the position that OCS
leasing should be consistent with state management programs. In
light of the widespread agreement by Congress in 1976 that OCS
leasing was already subject to consistency review under the 1972
CZMA, the logical explanation for the Conferees' action is simply
that they saw no need to amend the CZMA, since everyone agreed that
it already applied to OCS oil and gas leasing. The only need was to
further extend
Page 464 U. S. 369
consistency review to subsequent stages in the process. This
view is explicitly supported by the House's consideration of the
amendments, where it was made clear that Congress believed that OCS
leasing was subject to consistency requirements. Representative
Hughes said:
"I am disappointed, however, that the amendment offered by Mr.
DU PONT to delete the provision requiring that Federal offshore
leasing be consistent with State coastal zone management plans has
been agreed to. I nevertheless rely upon the record established
during today's debate to show that it is the intent of this
legislation that offshore leasing not be in conflict with State
management plans."
122 Cong.Rec. 6120 (1976) (emphasis supplied). [
Footnote 2/27]
The failure of the Conferees to include the proposed language in
the CZMA is all the more illuminating in light of the fact that the
proposal before the Conferees was to amend § 307(c)(3), which
details the consistency obligations of private lessees. This
proposal was entirely irrelevant to the obligations of the
Secretary of the Interior, since that subsection does not apply to
the Secretary. Thus, the Conferees simply saw no reason to add
language covering OCS leasing to subsection (c)(3) when there was
agreement that it was already covered by (c)(1). [
Footnote 2/28] In any event, whatever the
explanation
Page 464 U. S. 370
for the Conferees' failure to amend § 307(C)(3), the
legislative history contains no ambiguities on one point --
everyone to address the issue agreed that § 307(C)(1) already
applied to federal OCS oil and gas leasing decisions. This is not
merely "postenactment" legislative history, for this was a central
premise on which Congress legislated when it decided that §
307 need be extended only to subsequent stages in the process of
oil and gas development.
The 1978 Amendments to OCSLA
In 1978, Congress passed the Outer Continental Shelf Lands Act
Amendments, 92 Stat. 629. The majority relies on these Amendments,
concluding that, since they require federal approval prior to
exploration or development by OCS lessees, they make it clear that
mere OCS leasing cannot invoke the consistency requirement of
§ 307(C)(1) of the CZMA.
Ante at
464 U. S.
337-340. After all, as the Court recites, these leases
are subject to cancellation and most of the specific activities
contemplated by the leases must be approved before they take place.
At most, however, this simply raises. a factual question that the
District Court has answered in these cases -- does the necessity
for approval of exploration and development under OCSLA mean that
the leasing decision does not "directly affect" the coastal zone
because of the contingent nature of the leasing? Posing that
question in no sense obviates the need for the factual analysis
demanded by § 307(c)(1). The question whether the leasing
decision "directly affects" the coastal zone must still be
confronted.
This is made clear by the text of the OCSLA Amendments, which
explicitly preserves the preexisting provisions of the
Page 464 U. S. 371
CZMA.
"Except as otherwise expressly provided in this Act, nothing in
this Act shall be construed to amend, modify, or repeal any
provision of the Coastal Zone Management Act of 1972. . . ."
92 Stat. 698, 43 U.S.C. § 1866(a) (1976 ed., Supp. V).
Moreover, the legislative history of this provision indicates that
it was intended to
require consistency review of federal
OCS leasing activity. In the only discussion of this question
during the entire consideration of the OCSLA Amendments, the House
Report [
Footnote 2/29] made it
clear that the consistency obligation of the CZMA would continue to
apply to OCS leasing decisions.
"The committee is aware that, under the Coastal Zone Management
Act of 1972, as amended in 1976 (16 U.S.C. 1451
et seq.),
certain OCS activities,
including lease sales and approval
of development and production plans, must comply with 'consistency'
requirements as to coastal zone management plans approved by the
Secretary of Commerce. Except for specific changes made by Titles
IV and V of the 1977 Amendments, nothing in this act is intended to
amend, modify, or repeal any provision of the Coastal Zone
Management Act. Specifically, nothing is intended to alter
procedures under that Act for consistency once a State has an
approved Coastal Zone Management Plan."
H.R.Rep. No. 95-590, p. 153, n. 52 (1977) (emphasis supplied).
[
Footnote 2/30] One could not ask
for a more explicit indication of legislative intent. The Court can
find no indication of any intent to the
Page 464 U. S. 372
contrary. Thus, the premise of the 1978 legislation, like the
1976 amendment to the CZMA, was that consistency review would be
applied to OCS leasing.
Even more important is § 18 of the OCSLA, 92 Stat. 649, 43
U.S.C. § 1344 (1976 ed., Supp. V), which governs the OCS
leasing program. Subsection (f) provides, in pertinent part:
"The Secretary shall, by regulation, establish procedures for .
. . consideration of the coastal zone management program being
developed or administered by an affected coastal State pursuant to
Section 1454 or 1455 of title 16 [the CZMA]."
This provision was added
"for coordination of the [leasing] program with management
programs and consistency requirements established pursuant to the
Coastal Zone Management Act of 1972."
H.R.Rep. No. 95-590,
supra, at 151; S.Rep. No. 95-284,
p. 77 (1977). [
Footnote 2/31]
Section 18 of the OCSLA makes it clear, if it were not previously,
that state coastal management plans must be considered by the
Secretary at the OCS leasing stage. [
Footnote 2/32] Thus, both the saving clause and §
18(f) establish that Congress intended that consistency
determination under the CZMA be made for OCS leasing decisions when
it enacted the 1978 OCSLA Amendments.
In any event, the fact that additional licensing is required
under the OCSLA scheme for exploration and development hardly makes
those steps "indirect" consequences of leasing in the sense that
any effect on the coastal zone is the result of intervening causes,
which is the definition of "indirect" urged by petitioners.
[
Footnote 2/33] Approval for
exploration and development
Page 464 U. S. 373
by the lessee is obviously the expected and intended result of
leasing; if it were not, the Secretary would not bother to lease
and the lessees would not bother to bid. Subsequent exploration and
development is hardly an intervening cause; it is the natural and
expected consequence of the original lease, and hence the "direct"
effect of leasing. It would be disapproval of exploration and
development that would constitute an intervening cause, not the
expected approval. [
Footnote
2/34]
The 1980 Amendment to CZMA
In 1980, the CZMA was reauthorized and again amended. 94 Stat.
2060. In the course of considering the statute, Congress once again
addressed the precise problem we are faced with today. Once again,
its answer was the same -- OCS oil and gas leasing is subject to
the consistency obligation of § 307(c)(1) of the CZMA. The
House Report for example, observed that the 1976 amendments had not
altered this obligation.
"The change did not alter Federal agency responsibility to
provide States with a consistency determination related to OCS
decisions which preceded issuance of leases."
H.R.Rep. No. 96-1012, p. 28 (1980). The Report then went on to
consider whether § 307 needed to be amended, and declined to
do so only after determining that it clearly applied to OCS
leasing.
"Finally, the committee has not recommended any changes in the
Federal consistency provision, section 307 of the existing act.
During its oversight phase, the
Page 464 U. S. 374
committee heard much testimony on these provisions. However, the
consensus of witnesses advocated no change. . . ."
". . . Generally, all consistency provisions have been properly
construed. The only uncertainty that has arisen concerns the
interpretation of section 307(c)(1), the threshold test of
'directly affecting' the coastal zone. The committee points out
that, in the preamble to NOAA's Federal consistency regulations,
this threshold test was considered during earlier congressional
deliberations and was determined to apply whenever a Federal
activity had a functional interrelationship from an economic,
geographic or social standpoint with a State coastal program's land
or water use policies. Under such circumstances, a State has a
legitimate interest in reviewing a proposed Federal activity, since
the management program's policies are likely to apply to the
activity. Thus, when a Federal Agency initiates a series of events
of coastal management consequence, the intergovernmental
coordination provisions of the Federal consistency requirements
should apply."
Id. at 34.
Similarly, the Senate Report described the 1976 amendments as
having maintained the consistency obligation for OCS leasing:
"The Department of Interior's activities which preceded OCS
lease sales were to remain subject to the requirements of section
307(c)(1) [under the 1976 CZMA]. As a result, intergovernmental
coordination for purposes of OCS development commences at the
earliest practicable time in the opinion of the Committee, as the
Department of the Interior sets in motion a series of events which
have consequences in the coastal zone. Coordination must continue
during the critical exploration, development, and production
stages."
"The Committee see[s] no justification to depart from this point
of view. The Committee hopes that, through
Page 464 U. S. 375
the rulemaking, future areas of disagreement over the
application of Federal consistency will be substantially reduced,
especially given the excellent record of application shown by the
coastal States."
S.Rep. No. 96-783, p. 11 (1980). [
Footnote 2/35]
Thus, the 1980 legislative history indicates that, when Congress
reauthorized the CZMA, it intended § 307(c)(1) to be applied
to OCS leasing decisions. Congress unmistakably rejected the
position embraced by the majority today. [
Footnote 2/36]
Page 464 U. S. 376
Postscript in 1981
After the new administration took office in 1981, the Secretary
of Commerce proposed a CZMA regulation which would have removed OCS
leasing decisions from the scope of consistency review. [
Footnote 2/37] The House Committee on
Merchant Marine and Fisheries promptly considered whether to
exercise a legislative veto over the regulations, [
Footnote 2/38] and overwhelmingly voted to veto
the regulations. H.R.Rep. No. 97-269, pp. 7-8 (1981). The
regulations were later withdrawn, in an apparent administrative
concession of error. 47 Fed.Reg. 4231 (1982). Apparently this is
the last of a long series of congressional actions indicating that
body's intent that OCS leasing be subject to consistency review
under § 307(c)(1) of the CZMA.
In sum, the intent of Congress, expressed in the plain language
of the statute and in its long legislative history, unambiguously
requires consistency review if an OCS lease sale directly affects
the coastal zone. The affirmative findings of fact made by the
lower courts on that score are amply supported, and are not
disturbed by the Court today.
I therefore respectfully dissent.
[
Footnote 2/1]
Section 304(a) defines the coastal zone as follows:
"(a) The term 'coastal zone' means the coastal waters (including
the lands therein and thereunder) and the adjacent shorelands
(including the waters therein and thereunder), strongly influenced
by each other and in proximity to the shorelines of the several
coastal states, and includes islands, transitional and intertidal
areas, salt marshes, wetlands, and beaches. The zone extends, in
Great Lakes waters, to the international boundary between the
United States and Canada and, in other areas, seaward to the outer
limit of the United States territorial sea. The zone extends inland
from the shorelines only to the extent necessary to control
shorelands, the uses of which have a direct and significant impact
on the coastal waters. Excluded from the coastal zone are lands the
use of which is by law subject solely to the discretion of or which
is held in trust by the Federal Government, its officers or
agents."
86 Stat. 1281, as amended, 16 U.S.C. § 1453(1) (1982
ed.).
[
Footnote 2/2]
See United States v. Maine, 420 U.
S. 515 (1975); 43 U.S.C. §§ 1302, 1332(1)
(1976 ed. and Supp. V).
[
Footnote 2/3]
See H.R. 14146, 92d Cong., 2d Sess., § 307(c)(1)
(1972), reprinted in 118 Cong.Rec. 26502 (1972) ("Each Federal
agency conducting or supporting activities in the coastal zone
shall conduct or support those activities in a manner which is, to
the maximum extent practicable, consistent with approved state
management programs"); S. 3507, 92d Cong., 2d Sess., §
314(b)(1) (1972), reprinted in 118 Cong.Rec. 14190 (1972) ("All
Federal agencies conducting or supporting activities in the coastal
zone shall administer their programs consistent with approved State
management programs except in cases of overriding national interest
as determined by the President").
[
Footnote 2/4]
The Senate's version stated that the purpose of a state coastal
zone management plan must be "to minimize direct, significant, and
adverse impact on the coastal waters. . . ." S. 3507, 92d Cong., 2d
Sess., § 304(g) (1972), reprinted in 118 Cong.Rec. 14188
(1972). Plans were required to state
"what shall constitute permissible land and water uses within
the coastal zone so as to prevent such uses which have a direct,
significant, and adverse impact on the coastal waters. . . ."
§ 305(b)(2), reprinted in 118 Cong.Rec. 14188 (1972). The
House bill contained similar language,
see H.R. 14146, 92d
Cong., 2d Sess., § 305(b) (1972), reprinted in 118 Cong.Rec.
26501 (1972).
See also S.Rep. No. 92-753, p. 10
(1972).
[
Footnote 2/5]
The Santa Barbara incident was referred to on several occasions
during the consideration of the CZMA.
See 118 Cong.Rec.
14180 (1972) (remarks of Sen. Boggs);
id. at 26484
(remarks of Rep. Anderson);
id. at 26495 (same);
ibid. (remarks of Rep. Teague);
id. at 35550
(remarks of Rep. Anderson).
[
Footnote 2/6]
The Court seems to read this history as indicating that only
federal activities in the coastal zone or on federal enclaves may
directly affect the zone.
See ante at
464 U. S.
323-324. If that were a correct reading, §
307(C)(1) would have no application at all in the ocean area
adjacent to the coastal zone. None of the litigants has advanced
such an improbable construction of "directly affecting." It is
perfectly obvious that, when Congress adopted language that
excluded federal enclaves from the zone, it realized that
activities which are conducted outside the zone itself can have the
same kind of effect within the zone as an activity conducted in the
zone. An oil well adjacent to the zone will affect the zone in
precisely the same way whether it is in a federal enclave or in
federal water just outside the zone.
[
Footnote 2/7]
The House version provided that the Secretary's management
program "shall be coordinated with the [adjacent] coastal state
involved." H.R. 14146, 92d Cong., 2d Sess., § 313(b) (1972),
reprinted in 118 Cong. Rec 26503 (1972). It further provided:
"The Secretary shall, to the maximum extent practicable, apply
the program developed pursuant to this section to waters which are
adjacent to specific areas in the coastal zone which have been
designated by the states for the purpose of preserving or restoring
such areas for their conservation, recreational, ecological, or
esthetic values."
§ 313(c), reprinted in 118 Cong.Rec. 26503 (1972).
[
Footnote 2/8]
"Mr. Chairman, of particular interest to me is a subsection,
which I authored, designed to protect State-established coastal
sanctuaries, such as exists off California, from federally
authorized development."
"The State of California in 1955 created five marine sanctuaries
to protect the beaches from oil spills. In 1963, two more
sanctuaries were created."
"These State-established sanctuaries, which extend from the
coastline seaward to 3 miles, account for nearly a fourth of the
entire California coast."
"However, the Federal Government has jurisdiction outside the
State area, from 3 miles to 12 miles at sea. All too often, the
Federal Government has allowed development and drilling to the
detriment of the State program."
"A case in point is Santa Barbara, where California established
a marine sanctuary banning the drilling of oil in the area under
State authority."
"Yet outside the sanctuary -- in the federally controlled area
-- the Federal Government authorized drilling which resulted in the
January, 1969, blowout. This dramatically illustrated the point
that oil spills do not respect legal jurisdictional lines."
"In order to protect the desires of the citizens of the coastal
States who wish to establish marine sanctuaries, I offered a
provision which"
"requires that the Secretary of Commerce shall, to the maximum
extent practicable, apply the coastal zone program to waters
immediately adjacent to the coastal waters of a State, which the
State has designated for specific preservation purposes."
"The Merchant Marine and Fisheries Committee approved this
provision."
Id. at 26484 (remarks of Rep. Anderson).
[
Footnote 2/9]
"When an estuarine sanctuary is established by a coastal state .
. . whether or not Federal funds have been made available for a
part of the costs of acquisition, development, and operation, the
Secretary, at the request of the state concerned, and after
consultation with interested Federal departments and agencies and
other interested parties, may extend the established estuarine
sanctuary seaward beyond the coastal zone, to the extent necessary
to effectuate the purposes for which the estuarine sanctuary was
established."
H.R. 14146, 92d Cong., 2d Sess., § 312(b) (1972), reprinted
in 118 Cong.Rec. 26503 (1972).
[
Footnote 2/10]
"During the first session of the 92d Congress, the Subcommittee
on Oceans and Atmosphere, formerly the Subcommittee on
Oceanography, held an additional three days of hearings during May,
1971. Fifteen witnesses were heard and 39 new letters, articles and
publications were received for the record, which was published by
the Committee as Serial No. 92-15."
"In the ensuing period, S. 582 was redrafted by the
Subcommittee, incorporating additional ideas from S. 638 and S.
992, which the Subcommittee felt strengthened the bill. The
Subcommittee also drew substantially upon ideas propounded by the
Council on Environmental Quality, whose assistance was invaluable.
The Subcommittee reported the bill favorably to the Committee on
Commerce on August 4, 1971, and on September 30, 1971, the
Committee ordered the bill reported favorably with amendments."
"On March 14, 1972, at the request of Senator Hollings, S. 582
was recommitted to the Committee. Changes were made in the bill so
as to clear up conflicting matters of jurisdiction, to place
limitations on the coastal zone, and to broaden the participation
of local governments, interstate agencies and area-wide agencies in
the preparation and operation of management programs. Additional
changes were made to make the bill compatible with proposed land
use policy legislation as proposed by the Administration. (See S.
992) Then, on Tuesday, April 11, 1972, the Committee ordered S.
3507 be reported favorably as an original bill."
S.Rep. No. 92-753, p. 7 (1972).
[
Footnote 2/11]
The 1971 bill stated:
"All Federal agencies conducting or supporting activities in the
coastal and estuarine one shall administer their programs
consistent with approved State management programs except in cases
of overriding national interest as determined by the
President."
S. 582, 92d Cong., 1st Sess., § 313(b)(1) (1971), reprinted
in S.Rep. No. 92-526, p. 7 (1971). The 1972 version is identical,
except that what the 1971 version called the "coastal and estuarine
zone" the 1972 version shortened to the "coastal zone."
[
Footnote 2/12]
The Report repeated itself, apparently for emphasis:
"As noted previously, it is intended that any lands or waters
under Federal jurisdiction and control, within or adjacent to the
coastal and estuarine zone, where the administering Federal agency
determines them to have a functional interrelationship from an
economic, social, or geographic standpoint with lands and waters
within the coastal and estuarine zone, should be administered
consistent with approved State management programs."
Id. at 30.
[
Footnote 2/13]
There is not a word in the Conference Report on the CZMA
indicating that the Conferees rejected the concept that the coastal
zone be protected from federal OCS activities through consistency
review. The Court relies on Representative Anderson's statement
concerning the Conference Report,
ante at
464 U. S. 328,
but in fact he spoke only with reference to the
"provision [that] would have required the Secretary to apply the
coastal zone program to waters immediately adjacent to the coastal
waters of a State, which that State has designated for specific
preservation purposes."
118 Cong.Rec. 35549-35550 (1972). His remarks did not concern
the scope of § 307(c)(1). Moreover, with respect to §
313, the Conferees indicated that it was deleted only because
"the provisions relating thereto did not prescribe sufficient
standards or criteria [for coastal management] and would create
potential conflicts with legislation already in existence
concerning Continental Shelf resources."
H.R. Conf Rep. No. 92-1544, p. 15 (1972). As for § 312, the
objection to it was not that it applied state management plans to
the OCS; in fact, it did not. The objections were of a much
different nature -- concern that § 312 might automatically
foreclose OCS development without judicial or administrative
review,
see 118 Cong.Rec. 26495 (1972) (remarks of Rep.
Clark), and that it duplicated existing programs which already
achieved the same purpose.
Id. at 26495-26496 (remarks of
Rep. Kyl). All the Conferees said about their reasons for rejecting
§ 312 was:
"[T]he need for such provisions appears to be rather remote, and
could cause problems, since they would extend beyond the
territorial limits of the United States."
H.R.Conf.Rep. No. 92-1544, pp. 14-15 (1972).
The Court also relies on the Senate's rejection of an amendment
which would have required the Federal Government to submit leasing
proposals to affected States for approval, and the Conferees'
rejection of a provision of the Senate version of the CZMA
providing for a study of the environmental hazards attendant to
drilling in the Atlantic OCS.
Ante at
464 U. S.
329-330, n. 14. As for the Senate amendment, the
objection to it had nothing to do with whether consistency
obligations applied to federal OCS activity. The objections
centered around the veto it gave to the States. Senator Hollings
said:
"This amendment provides the Governor would have a veto over
such matters. I do not think the Senate wants to go that far. The
amendment comes without public hearing and full consideration,
which we have not had the benefit of."
118 Cong.Rec. 14184 (1972). Then, Senator Moss pointed out that
a study of this problem was then underway in the Committee on
Interior and Insular Affairs.
Ibid. It was for that
reason, and that reason alone, that the sponsor of the amendment
voluntarily withdrew it:
"I am happy that these hearings and studies are continuing. I
believe and hope they will shed full light on this important
subject, so that the Senate can give the fullest consideration in
light of these hearings and further studies. Mr. President, with
the chairman's permission, I ask unanimous consent to withdraw the
amendment."
Ibid. (remarks of Sen. Boggs). As for the study in the
Senate version, S. 3507, 92d Cong., 2d Sess., § 316(c)(1)
(1972), reprinted in 118 Cong.Rec. 14191 (1972), it was deleted in
conference for no other reason than that it was nongermane.
Id. at 35547 (remarks of Rep. Downing). Moreover, the
Court misstates the objections to this provision. Senators Stevens
and Moss objected only because they thought the study should also
produce recommendations as to how to eliminate the environmental
hazards posed by OCS drilling.
See id. at 14180 (remarks
of Sen. Stevens). The sponsor, Senator Pell, offered an amendment
providing for such recommendations, and then both Senators withdrew
their objections to the study.
See id. at 14181 (remarks
of Sen. Stevens);
id. at 14181-14182 (remarks of Sen.
Moss).
[
Footnote 2/14]
Construing the CZMA to begin federal-state cooperation at the
OCS leasing stage enhances such long-range planning and maximizes
cooperation. Indeed, the 1980 House Report on the CZMA stated that
Congress intended consistency review to apply at the OCS leasing
stage for precisely this reason:
"The benefits of this [construction] are significant. First, it
fosters consultation between Federal and State agencies at the
earliest practicable time. This, in turn, enhances the ability of
the States to plan for and manage the coastal zone effects which
are directly linked to Federal commitment of resources for Federal
activities likely to lead to results inconsistent with the
requirements of approved State programs."
"Secondly, broad opportunities for States to influence Federal
activities enhances the incentive of the consistency provisions,
thereby reinforcing voluntary State participation in the national
program. Finally, an expansive interpretation of the threshold test
is compatible with the amendment to section 303 calling for Federal
agencies and others to participate and cooperate in carrying out
the purposes of the act."
"H.R.Rep. No. 96-1012, pp. 34-35 (1980)."
[
Footnote 2/15]
In the lease sale at issue in this case, $220 million was bid on
the disputed tracts.
[
Footnote 2/16]
Petitioners complain that at the leasing stage there may be
inadequate information on which to base a consistency
determination. The applicable regulations dispose of this
objection. While they require a consistency determination at the
earliest possible time, the determination need not be made until
sufficient information is developed to make a consistency
determination practicable.
See 15 CFR § 930.34(b)
(1983). The regulations also permit consistency determinations to
be made in phases as new information develops.
See §
930.37(c).
[
Footnote 2/17]
In this connection, the arrangement of the four subparagraphs of
§ 307 is instructive. That section obligates four categories
of parties to conform their activities, to the maximum extent
practicable, with approved state management programs. The four
categories are (1) federal agencies conducting or supporting
activities directly affecting the coastal zone; (2) federal
agencies undertaking development projects in the coastal zone; (3)
private parties who apply for a license or permit to conduct
activities in the coastal zone; and (4) state and local governments
submitting applications for federal assistance under programs
affecting the coastal zone. Neither subparagraph (2) nor (4) has
any application to the case before us. It is subparagraph (3), that
requires private parties to comply with state programs. Unless
subparagraph (1) applies to the Secretary of the Interior, Congress
simply omitted entirely the federal activity of selecting the
tracts that will be leased from the conformity requirement. If
lessees must ultimately conform their activities, to the maximum
extent practicable, with the approved state programs, it is
difficult to understand why Congress would not have wanted the
original planning that preceded the lease sales also to be
consistent with the approved program.
[
Footnote 2/18]
My view, unlike the Court's, is consistent with that of the
agency charged by Congress with administering the CZMA, the
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA). While the
majority correctly points out that NOAA has waffled on the specific
issue of whether there should be a special rule for OCS oil and gas
leasing,
ante at
464 U. S.
320-321, n. 6, it has consistently rejected the
majority's position that federal activities in the OCS need not be
evaluated to see if they directly affect the coastal zone. To the
contrary, NOAA has agreed with the position formerly taken by the
Department of Justice (which itself later waffled on this issue,
see n. 35,
infra), that the question whether OCS
leasing activity is subject to consistency review is one of fact to
be decided on a case-by-case basis.
See 44 Fed.Reg. 37142
(1979). The NOAA regulation on this subject (which remains in
effect) states:
"Federal activities outside of the coastal zone (
e.g.,
on excluded Federal lands, on the Outer Continental Shelf, or
landward of the coastal zone) are subject to Federal agency review
to determine whether they directly affect the coastal zone."
15 CFR 930.33(c) (1983). NOAA also urged federal agencies
"to construe liberally the 'directly affecting' test in
borderline cases so as to favor inclusion of Federal activities
subject to consistency review."
44 Fed.Reg. 37146-37147 (1979).
[
Footnote 2/19]
The California Coastal Commission, the state agency responsible
for the administration of the state management plan, made this same
point in objecting to the lease sale at issue here.
"The Commission's objections to Lease Sale 53 cannot be resolved
later at the plan of exploration stage, because they involve such
major concerns as the lack of onshore facilities, land, and
population that can accommodate oil development."
App. 118. The Commission believed that inclusion of four
specific areas in the sale is inconsistent with its management plan
because (1) it leases tracts that are close to areas considered
marine sanctuaries or marine resource areas which must be protected
from development under the state plan, (2) it will require
transportation of oil through the range of the endangered sea
otter, which is an environmentally sensitive area that must be
protected from such transportation under the state plan, (3) it
would affect the scenic and visual qualities of protected
recreational areas, (4) it will require the construction of
facilities that are not sufficiently justified in terms of the
"public welfare" as defined by the plan, and (5) there was not
sufficient planning for future demands on coastal resources as
required by the state plan.
Id. at 120-132. The area of
dispute involves 29 of 111 tracts proposed for leasing, containing
about 8 percent of the oil reserves projected from the sale area.
Id. at 148. Prior to this sale, the Commission had
concurred in 26 out of 27 OCS lease sales proposed by the
Department of the Interior.
Id. at 117-120, 154.
[
Footnote 2/20]
In fact, the House Report contains an attachment which details
at some length the impacts of OCS oil and gas leasing on the
coastal zone.
See H.R.Rep. No. 94-878, pp. 119-126
(1976).
[
Footnote 2/21]
For additional statements demonstrating the effects of leasing
decisions on the coastal zone,
see Congressional Research
Service, Effects of Offshore Oil and Natural Gas Development on the
Coastal Zone, A Study Prepared for the Ad Hoc Select Committee on
Outer Continental Shelf, 94th Cong., 2d Sess., 93 (Comm. Print
1976); Office of Technology Assessment, Offshore Oil and Gas
Development, A Study for the Ad Hoc Select House Committee on Outer
Continental Shelf, 95th Cong., 1st Sess., 155-157 (Comm. Print
1977).
[
Footnote 2/22]
See also S.Rep. No. 94-277, pp.19-20 (1975).
[
Footnote 2/23]
See also id. at 52-53.
[
Footnote 2/24]
The Senate Report also stated:
"There is very little coordination or communication between
Federal agencies and the affected coastal States prior to major
energy resource development decisions,
such as the decision to
lease large tracts of the OCS for oil and gas. . . . Full
implementation of the Coastal Zone Management Act of 1972 and
recognition of its capability to solve energy-related conflicts
could go far to institute the broad objectives of Federal-State
cooperative planning envisioned by the framers of the act."
Id. at 3 (emphasis supplied).
[
Footnote 2/25]
See 121 Cong.Rec. 23075 (1975) (remarks of Sen.
Tunney);
id. at 23082 (remarks of Sen. Kennedy);
id. at 23084 (remarks of Sen. Williams); 122 Cong.Rec.
6117 (1976) (remarks of Rep. Forsythe). Similar statements were
made emphasizing the breadth of the consistency requirement.
See, e.g., id. at 6112 (remarks of Rep. Du Pont) ("Once a
State has an approved coastal zone management plan in place, all
subsequent Federal activities which affect the coastal zone must be
found to be consistent with adopted State management programs");
id. at 6113 (remarks of Rep. Lent) (The 1972 CZMA
"provides for the representation of local, State, and regional
interests . . . in the making of decisions affecting the coastal
zone areas").
[
Footnote 2/26]
"The Senate bill required that each Federal lease (for example,
offshore oil and gas leases) had to be submitted to each state with
an approved coastal zone management program for a determination by
that state as to whether or not the lease was consistent with its
program. The conference substitute further elaborates on this
provision, and specifically applies the consistency requirement to
the basic steps in the OCS leasing process -- namely, the
exploration, development and production plans submitted to the
Secretary of the Interior."
H.R.Conf.Rep. No. 94-1298, p. 30 (1976).
[
Footnote 2/27]
Representative Du Pont himself stated that he also believed that
OCS leasing was subject to consistency requirements.
See
122 Cong.Rec. 6128 (1976).
[
Footnote 2/28]
This observation was later made in a statement signed by one of
the principal sponsors of the 1976 legislation, Representative
Studds.
"Nowhere, in this entire set of deliberations [in 1976], was
there any explilct [
sic] or implicit reference to
consistency decisions by the Department of the Interior in its
pre-lease activity pursuant to Section 307(c)(1). The focus was on
the proper time for a state to certify a private company's activity
-- not on the federal agency's obligations under Section
307(c)(1)."
"The deletion of 'lease' from Section 3[0]7(c)(3) was an
agreement by the Congress that a State would have better
information on which to base a 307(c)(3) decision later in the
process --
i.e., at the exploration and development stage
-- than when the oil company simply had been awarded a lease. Such
deletion, however, had absolutely no reference to the range of
pre-leasing decisions made by the Interior Department, and no
implication is warranted with respect to the Section 307(c)(1)
issue here."
H.R.Rep. No. 97-269, p. 14 (1981) (additional views of Reps.
Studds and D'Amours).
[
Footnote 2/29]
The Report also incorporates by reference the earlier
Congressional Research Service report, cited in
464
U.S. 312fn2/21|>n. 21,
supra, detailing the impact
of OCS leasing decisions on the coastal zone.
See H.R.Rep.
No. 95-590, P. 55, n. 1 (1977).
[
Footnote 2/30]
See also 124 Cong.Rec. 2057-2058 (1978) (remarks of
Rep. Murphy) ("I want to assure my colleagues that we are simply
making sure that the provisions of the 1976 Coastal Zone Management
Act consistency amendments will continue to operate in these
revised OCS procedures").
[
Footnote 2/31]
See also S.Rep. No. 95-284, pp. 43-44 (1977);
S.Conf.Rep. No. 95-1091, P. 105 (1978).
[
Footnote 2/32]
Regulations have been issued governing oil and gas leasing which
implement this requirement by requiring consideration of state
coastal zone management plans.
See 43 CFR § 3310.4
(1982).
[
Footnote 2/33]
The Court does not offer a definition of the term "directly" for
purposes of § 307(C)(1), since it takes the position that the
statute does not extend to OCS activities. Therefore, I address
only petitioners' definition.
[
Footnote 2/34]
Moreover, petitioners argue only that any "physical" impacts on
the coastal zone depend on future licensing and hence are indirect.
Petitioners cannot address the economic or social impacts of the
leasing decision, however, which are not dependent upon subsequent
approval, and which may well result in direct effects on the
coastal zone, as Congress recognized both in the 1971 Senate Report
and the 1976 CZMA amendments. As noted above, the findings of fact
made by the lower courts indicate that the proposed lease sale at
issue here would have had direct economic and social effects on the
coastal zone.
[
Footnote 2/35]
To make sure of the correct construction of the Act, two
sponsors of the 1980 amendments conducted a colloquy on the floor
of the House in which they indicated that the intent of Congress
was to apply § 307(c)(1) to OCS leasing decisions if, as a
factual matter, they affected the coastal zone.
"[Mr. MCCLOSKEY.] Do any portions of the Coastal Zone Management
Improvement Act or the report language change the provisions of
section 307 of the Coastal Zone Management Act on coordination and
cooperation, the so-called Federal consistency provision?"
"Mr. STUDDS. I would like to assure my colleague that nothing in
H.R. 6979 nor its accompanying report changes the intent of the
Federal consistency provision. In testimony before the Subcommittee
on Oceanography, we heard from many witnesses that this section is
critical for the effective implementation of State management
programs. Since the consistency provisions are important to the act
and appear to be working, no changes were made to section 307 of
the act."
"Mr. MCCLOSKEY. I assume that this means also that there are no
changes in the bill or the report language which further modify the
term 'directly affecting' which occurs in section 307(c)(1) of the
original statute."
"Mr. STUDDS. The gentleman from Washington is correct. The term
'directly affecting is essentially one of fact,' as the Department
of Justice has previously concluded."
126 Cong.Rec. 28458 (1980).
Representative Studds' reference was to the Department of
Justice's previously stated position that § 307(c)(1) did
apply to OCS leasing activity if, in fact, a given leasing decision
could be said to directly affect the coastal zone.
See
App. 35-47.
[
Footnote 2/36]
Even if the Court were correct to view the 1980 history as not
part of the legislative history of the CZMA, despite the fact that
Congress in fact reauthorized the CZMA in 1980 and explicitly
stated its view as to the correct construction of § 307(c)(1),
this nevertheless qualifies as the view of a subsequent Congress,
and is not without persuasive value.
See, e.g., Bell v. New
Jersey, 461 U. S. 773,
461 U. S.
784-785 (1983);
Bob Jones Univ. v. United
States, 461 U. S. 574,
461 U. S.
599-602 (1983);
Andrus v. Shell Oil Co.,
446 U. S. 657,
446 U. S. 666,
n. 8 (1980).
[
Footnote 2/37]
See 46 Fed.Reg. 26660 (1981).
[
Footnote 2/38]
See 16 U.S.C. § 1463a (1982 ed.).