Blue Mountain Alliance v. Energy Facility Siting Council

300 P.3d 1203, 353 Or. 465
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedApril 18, 2013
DocketS060803
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 300 P.3d 1203 (Blue Mountain Alliance v. Energy Facility Siting Council) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Blue Mountain Alliance v. Energy Facility Siting Council, 300 P.3d 1203, 353 Or. 465 (Or. 2013).

Opinion

*467 BALDWIN, J.

This case challenges a final order of the Energy Facility Siting Council (council) approving an amended site certificate for construction of a wind energy facility. 1 The central question on review is whether, in approving the amended site certificate, the council correctly declined to require compliance with a recently adopted county ordinance requiring a two-mile setback between wind turbines and rural residences pursuant to ORS 469.401(2). For the reasons set out in this opinion, we conclude that the council did not err in not requiring compliance with the ordinance. We further conclude that the council did not err in denying petitioners’ requests for a contested case proceeding. We therefore affirm the council’s final order approving the amended site certificate.

I. FACTS AND BACKGROUND

The following facts are taken from the council’s Final Order Denying a Contested Case Proceeding and Approving Amendment #2. In July 2009, the council issued a site certificate for the Helix Wind Power Facility, permitting up to 60 wind turbines covering 7,586 acres on private land in Umatilla County, northwest of Helix, Oregon. The site certificate holder is Helix Wind Power Facility LLC (Helix), also a respondent in this proceeding. The certificate included conditions to begin construction within three years and then complete construction within three years. The statutory process under which the council issued the original site certificate is generally described in Save Our Rural Oregon v. Energy Facility Siting, 339 Or 353, 356-57, 121 P3d 1141 (2005). In June 2011, the council issued a final order approving Amendment #1, expanding the size of the facility to include 134 turbines, covering 20,613 acres.

On February 3, 2012, Helix applied for Amendment #2, seeking to extend the construction start and completion dates by two years. In response, the Oregon Department of Energy (ODOE) posted public notice of the amendment *468 request and sent notice to various other persons and entities, including a list of residential owners within two miles of the site boundary and a special advisory group consisting of the Umatilla County Board of Commissioners (board). The council received multiple comments, and Helix responded to those comments. Following internal analysis, ODOE issued a proposed order, together with public notice setting a deadline for public comments and requests for a contested case proceeding.

In May 2012, the council held a listening session and received public comments. The council also received multiple written public comments and several requests for a contested case proceeding. Among other issues, public testimony and comments highlighted a Umatilla County ordinance — Ordinance 2012-04, adopted February 28, 2012— that required a two-mile setback between wind turbines and rural residences. Petitioners contended that the ordinance had been adopted as a public health and safety measure and submitted materials intended to show that noise implications from turbines posed a “significant threat” to public health and safety and that a setback of less than two miles would not adequately protect against turbine noise. Petitioners requested that the council require the facility to comply with the ordinance. 2

In August 2012, ODOE staff presented a recommendation on Amendment #2 to the council (“ODOE staff report” or “report”). ODOE staff recommended that the council not incorporate Ordinance 2012-04 in its analysis whether the facility, with Amendment #2, complied with statewide planning goals under ORS 469.504(1) and also not require compliance with the ordinance in Amendment #2 under ORS 469.401(2). The report specifically treated Ordinance 2012-04 as a “land use regulation[]”to be evaluated *469 under ORS 469.504(1), instead of as a “public health and safety” measure to be evaluated under ORS 469.401(2). The report additionally cited the council’s earlier approval of a smaller, 1/4-mile setback between wind turbines and residences in another, unrelated proceeding and an applicable noise-related “public health setback” with a distance that may exceed 1/4-mile, as adopted by the Oregon Department of Environmental Quality (ODEQ). 3 The report also observed that the council previously had determined that the facility complied with ODEQ noise regulations and that the time extension request did not implicate that finding. Finally, the report recommended that the council deny petitioners’ requests for a contested case proceeding under OAR 345-027-0070(7).

On August 24, 2012, the council issued its final order approving Amendment #2 and incorporating the ODOE staff recommendations. Among other things, the final order (1) stated that the council had considered all public and reviewing agency comments and requests for a contested case proceeding; (2) determined that Ordinance 2012-04 did not apply to the council’s determination whether the facility complied with statewide planning goals under ORS 469.504(1); (3) applied ODEQ noise control regulations as part of determining that the facility complied with administrative rules identified in the original project order; (4) adopted an ODOE staff recommendation to not require compliance with Ordinance 2012-04 under ORS 469.401(2); (5) denied petitioners’ requests for a contested case proceeding because they had raised no significant issues of fact or law under OAR 345-027-0070(7); and (6) ultimately concluded that the facility complied with applicable siting statutes, council standards, and other applicable state statutes and administrative rules. The final order granted Helix’s time-extension request, subject to revisions set out in the order that are not at issue in this proceeding. Petitioners filed a petition for judicial review in this court. See ORS 469.405(1), ORS 469.403(3) (providing for such review).

*470 II. PARTIES’ARGUMENTS

To frame the parties’ arguments, we first set out the statutes at issue. In deciding whether to issue a site certificate or an amended site certificate, the council must make a series of determinations as to whether a preponderance of the evidence supports several conclusions. See

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
300 P.3d 1203, 353 Or. 465, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blue-mountain-alliance-v-energy-facility-siting-council-or-2013.