What are the facts?
The Department of the Interior (DOI), acting through the Bureau of Land Management (BLM), undertook what it described internally as a "land withdrawal review program" to reexamine and, in many instances, revoke or modify prior withdrawals or classifications that had limited mining and other uses on millions of acres of federal public lands. As BLM moved tracts from withdrawn or classified status to multiple-use or open-to-mineral-entry status, the National Wildlife Federation (NWF), a nationwide conservation organization, sued the Secretary of the Interior and BLM officials under the Administrative Procedure Act (APA). NWF challenged what it termed the agency's overarching program, alleging that the agency's actions were unlawful under the Federal Land Policy and Management Act and other statutes and that opening lands risked environmental degradation affecting NWF members who used nearby public lands for recreation, aesthetic enjoyment, and wildlife observation. In response to the government's motion for summary judgment, NWF submitted affidavits from two individual members generally attesting to their use and enjoyment of public lands in the vicinity of areas in states such as Wyoming and Colorado, and their concern that agency actions would harm these interests. NWF sought broad declaratory and injunctive relief to set aside the "land withdrawal review program." The district court granted summary judgment to the government, concluding the challenge was not to a final agency action and that NWF lacked standing supported by specific facts. The D.C. Circuit reversed in relevant part, holding that NWF had adequately demonstrated standing and could proceed. The Supreme Court granted certiorari.
What is the legal issue?
Whether plaintiffs may maintain a broad, programmatic challenge to an agency's alleged "land withdrawal review program" under the APA without identifying a discrete, final agency action, and whether generalized affidavits sufficed to establish Article III standing at the summary judgment stage.
What rule applies?
Under the APA, judicial review is available only for "final agency action" for which there is no other adequate remedy in court. 5 U.S.C. §§ 702, 704. "Agency action" is defined to encompass discrete actions such as a rule, order, license, sanction, relief, or the failure to act. 5 U.S.C. § 551(13). Plaintiffs must challenge an identifiable, discrete, and final action rather than an abstract "program" or general course of conduct. Additionally, Article III standing requires injury in fact, causation, and redressability; at the summary judgment stage, a plaintiff must set forth specific facts by affidavit or other evidence showing standing, not merely rely on allegations. Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(e).
What did the court hold?
The Supreme Court reversed the court of appeals, holding that NWF's broad challenge to the DOI/BLM "land withdrawal review program" did not identify a reviewable, final agency action under the APA and that NWF's affidavits failed to establish standing with the requisite specificity at the summary judgment stage. The district court's summary judgment for the government was reinstated.
What is the reasoning?
1) Final agency action and programmatic challenge: The Court emphasized that the APA's waiver of sovereign immunity and cause of action is limited to challenges to "final agency action," not to agency programs writ large. The "land withdrawal review program" was a label appearing in internal materials and reflected an aggregation of many separate decisions across time and geography. That aggregation was not itself an "agency action" within § 551(13), and there was no single, discrete, consummated action to set aside under § 704. The APA does not provide a general license for wholesale judicial review of agency operations; plaintiffs must point to a specific rule, order, or comparable discrete action for which an administrative record can be compiled and judicial review meaningfully conducted. 2) Standing at summary judgment: The Court reiterated that at the summary judgment stage, a plaintiff must support standing with specific facts in affidavits or other evidence. NWF's two member declarations described general recreation and aesthetic use of public lands in the vicinity of areas affected by BLM's decisions, but did not tie the claimed injuries to specific tracts actually opened or reclassified by the agency. Without identifying particular sites the members used that were subject to the challenged action, the affidavits did not establish a concrete, particularized injury traceable to the agency decisions and redressable by the requested relief. General proximity or speculative future harm was insufficient. As a result, NWF failed to meet its burden to demonstrate standing. 3) Procedural posture and litigation framing: The Court also rejected efforts to recast the complaint to encompass particular site-specific actions during summary judgment proceedings. Plaintiffs cannot avoid Rule 56's evidentiary burdens by re-labeling a programmatic grievance as a challenge to a moving target of unspecified decisions. If plaintiffs wish to press claims relating to specific parcels or decisions, they must amend in a timely manner and demonstrate standing with evidence particular to those actions. Because NWF neither identified a reviewable, final agency action nor substantiated standing with specific facts, summary judgment for the government was proper.
Why is this case significant?
Lujan v. National Wildlife Federation is a foundational case on two fronts. First, it limits APA litigation to discrete, final agency actions, precluding sweeping, across-the-board "program" challenges. This principle later anchors cases like Norton v. SUWA, which require a specifically identifiable agency duty or action. Second, it elevates the evidentiary rigor for Article III standing at summary judgment: plaintiffs must submit competent, specific evidence tying an injury to the particular agency action challenged. For environmental and administrative litigants, Lujan instructs that suits must be structured around concrete, reviewable decisions, with member declarations that establish a direct, site-specific nexus to those decisions. For civil procedure, it underscores Rule 56's demand for specific facts and the inadmissibility of vague or conclusory affidavits.
What did the Court mean by rejecting a "programmatic" challenge under the APA?
The Court held that the APA authorizes review of discrete, final agency actions—like a rule, order, or license—not generalized challenges to an agency's overall operations or policies. A "program" is too amorphous to review because it encompasses numerous decisions over time. Plaintiffs must identify a specific action that marks the consummation of the agency's decision-making and has legal consequences, so a record can be compiled and a court can apply APA standards to something concrete.
Why did the National Wildlife Federation lack standing at the summary judgment stage?
NWF's member affidavits described use of public lands generally near areas affected by BLM actions, but did not identify particular tracts actually opened or reclassified that those members used or planned to use imminently. Without a concrete, particularized injury tied to a specific agency action, NWF failed to show injury in fact or traceability. At summary judgment, plaintiffs cannot rely on allegations; they must provide specific, admissible facts establishing standing.
How does this case relate to Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife (1992)?
Both cases, authored by Justice Scalia, reinforce strict standing requirements. National Wildlife Federation focuses on the need for specific evidence of injury and the APA's final-agency-action requirement, while Defenders of Wildlife emphasizes imminence and redressability and rejects broad citizen-suit style standing absent concrete injury. Together, they form a core standing framework in public law litigation.
What practical steps should plaintiffs take after this decision when challenging agency conduct?
Plaintiffs should: (1) identify a discrete, final agency action (e.g., a particular rule, order, or site-specific decision); (2) compile member declarations linking concrete use and harm to that action and locale; (3) build an administrative record tailored to that action; and (4) avoid framing claims as challenges to an entire program or policy unless they can be anchored to a specific, reviewable decision with legal consequences.
What evidence is sufficient in standing affidavits post-Lujan?
Affidavits should specify the exact location of the member's use, the nature and frequency of that use, the specific agency action affecting that location (e.g., a decision opening a named tract to mining), how the action harms the member's interests, and why the requested relief would redress that harm. Conclusory statements about general enjoyment of public lands or speculative future visits are inadequate.
Does Lujan bar all systemic challenges to agency behavior?
No. It bars abstract, wholesale program challenges under the APA. Systemic issues can still be addressed by aggregating multiple discrete challenges to final actions or by targeting a rule or policy that itself qualifies as a final agency action with legal consequences. Congress can also authorize broader review through specific statutory schemes, but absent that, plaintiffs must proceed action-by-action.