1000 Friends of Oregon v. Land Conservation & Development Commission

688 P.2d 103, 69 Or. App. 717, 1984 Ore. App. LEXIS 4056
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedSeptember 19, 1984
Docket83-ACK-105; CA A29157
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 688 P.2d 103 (1000 Friends of Oregon v. Land Conservation & Development Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
1000 Friends of Oregon v. Land Conservation & Development Commission, 688 P.2d 103, 69 Or. App. 717, 1984 Ore. App. LEXIS 4056 (Or. Ct. App. 1984).

Opinion

*719 GILLETTE, P. J.

Petitioner 1000 Friends of Oregon (1000 Friends) seeks review of respondent Land Conservation and Development Commission’s (LCDC) acknowledgement of Jefferson County’s comprehensive plan. 1000 Friends attacks LCDC’s approval of 15 “exception” areas in agricultural land bordering the City of Madras and of a provision of the comprehensive plan’s Range Land (RL) zone permitting the unreviewed creation for three years of one 40-acre parcel per year out of larger parcels. We reverse and remand.

EXCEPTION AREAS

Because of recent statutory changes and decisions of this court, the first question to consider is the criteria by which we evaluate LCDC’s approval of the exception areas. Before August, 1983, LCDC recognized, in Goal 2 and in its administrative rules, three bases for exceptions to the requirements of the resource goals: need, built upon and committed. The needs exception was provided in Goal 2 itself, and required consideration of the need for the exception, alternatives to it and the effects of granting the exception. 1 LCDC, by rules adopted in July, 1982, made these Goal 2 requirements more specific. Former OAR 660-04-020 (amended December 30, 1983). LCDC developed the built upon and committed exceptions after the adoption of the goals; it also gave them formal status in July, 1982. Former OAR *720 660-04-025 (amended December 30, 1983). In August, 1983, after LCDC’s action in this case, we held that these last two exceptions procedures were invalid because they permitted exceptions that did not comply with the goal criteria; only the needs exception, which was in the goal itself, was permissible. Marion County v. Federation for Sound Planning, 64 Or App 226, 232-235, 668 P2d 406 (1983). On the same day, we applied our decision in Marion County to sustain 1000 Friends’ challenge to exceptions taken in the Marion County comprehensive plan, although 1000 Friends had not itself challenged the validity of the exceptions processes. We did so because our contemporaneous disposition of the two challenges to the same comprehensive plan justified our treating challenges to the exceptions in the two cases in the same manner. 1000 Friends of Oregon v. Marion County, 64 Or App 218, 224 n 4, 668 P2d 412 (1983).

In this case, as in 1000 Friends of Oregon v. Marion County, supra, 1000 Friends has challenged the application, not the validity, of the built upon or committed exceptions before LCDC and in this court, and there is no other party who does challenge their validity. Still, having once declared the built or committed exceptions improper, there would be a certain incongruity in our disposing of a later case as if the exceptions were permissible. Fortunately, this incongruity has been remedied by legislative developments.

One day before our Marion County decisions, a legislative revision of the exceptions process became law. Or Laws 1983, ch 827, § 19a (codified as ORS 197.732). It enacted into law all three bases for exceptions and provided new criteria for each. Future LCDC decisions on exceptions will be made according to the new statutory criteria and to the rules LCDC recently adopted to explain and expand on them. See OAR 660-04-000 to 660-04-035 (filed December 30, 1983, and March 21, 1984). The criteria do not affect exceptions which were validly adopted under the old criteria. ORS 197.732(9). 2 The statutory and rules changes place this judicial review proceeding in an interesting posture. If we were first to *721 examine the exceptions taken by the county and approved by LCDC under the old statutory scheme, we might find them impermissible for the reasons expressed in Marion County v. Federation for Sound Planning, supra, and 1000 Friends of Oregon v. Marion County, supra. However, on remand the new statutory criteria and administrative rules would apply. As it happens, those new rules and criteria are the functional equivalent of the ones under which LCDC believed (incorrectly) it was properly operating when it decided this case in the first place. We think it follows from the foregoing that this is a case in which it is appropriate to go ahead and examine the exceptions under the new criteria because LCDC has already expressed its view on how it would apply those criteria, and the new ones are sufficiently similar to the old ones. Any action which would be valid under the former rules would be valid under the new criteria and rules.

The contested exceptions areas encircle Madras and its Urban Growth Boundary (UGB) on three sides, starting on the north and continuing around the east, ending up south of the city. There is only one small gap. All the areas border on the UGB or are directly connected to it by other exceptions areas, including several which 1000 Friends does not challenge. Their physical arrangement gives the appearance that they have the effect of extending the UGB through the exceptions process. The county describes them as being in a transition area which cannot be included in the UGB because of the inability to extend sewer service to them. All the areas are planned RR (rural residential), with the ultimate planned use being scattered homes on one or two acre lots. Some of the challenged areas are presently zoned DR (development reserve), with a provision that the DR areas adjoining the Madras UGB be considered for inclusion in the UGB before rezoning to RR. 3 Much of the land in the DR areas is presently in irrigated agricultural use; most of the rest is undeveloped.

The basis on which the county took the challenged exceptions, and on which LCDC approved them, is unclear. *722 LCDC stated that the county took them “on the combined basis of commitment and need.” It also stated that “a ‘needs’ exception for these areas, standing alone, would be an inadequate basis for an exception. * * * [T]his report relies primarily on the findings of commitment provided in supporting the County’s exceptions taken on the combined basis of commitment and need.” 1000 Friends argues, with considerable force, that these statements show that LCDC failed to find that the areas met all requirements of either the needs or committed exceptions and, instead, approved them on some combination of the two. LCDC disputes this interpretation of its action, 4 apparently agreeing — as do we — that it could not properly approve the exceptions without finding that each area met all of the requirements for at least one kind of exception. The most plausible explanation of LCDC’s action is that it found that the county failed to show a need for the areas but used the information tending to show a need to bolster the claim that the areas are committed.

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Bluebook (online)
688 P.2d 103, 69 Or. App. 717, 1984 Ore. App. LEXIS 4056, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/1000-friends-of-oregon-v-land-conservation-development-commission-orctapp-1984.