Cameron Variance Application

CourtVermont Superior Court
DecidedSeptember 20, 2006
Docket128-06-05 Vtec
StatusPublished

This text of Cameron Variance Application (Cameron Variance Application) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Vermont Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cameron Variance Application, (Vt. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

STATE OF VERMONT

ENVIRONMENTAL COURT

} In re: State of Vermont, } Department of Fish and Wildlife } Docket No. 128‐6‐05 Vtec (garage/storage building for use of Cameron) } (Appeal of Dawson and Sullivan) } }

Decision and Order

Appellants Margaret J. Dawson and Martha J. Sullivan appealed from a decision of

the Development Review Board (DRB) of the Town of Salisbury which issued a variance

from the front and side setback requirements of the zoning ordinance for the construction

of a 24ʹ x 30ʹ garage/storage building at the State of Vermont Salisbury Fish Culture

Station.1 Appellants appeared and represented themselves; Appellee‐Applicant State of

Vermont (the State) is represented by Stephen K. Hill, Esq. (Special Assistant Attorney

General); the Town of Salisbury entered an appearance through Donald R. Powers, Esq.,

but did not participate at trial. An evidentiary hearing was held in this matter before

Merideth Wright, Environmental Judge, who issued findings and a ruling orally on the

record, to be followed by this written decision and judgment order.

The Salisbury Fish Culture Station is a state facility located in a Low Density

Residential zoning district. The facility raises brook trout, brown trout, rainbow trout,

steelhead and lake trout; its mission is to raise these fish to an age old enough to provide

broodstock capable of producing eggs that are then shipped to the other fish culture

stations around the state. Just‐hatched fish or “fry” are valued at only pennies per fish,

yearling fish are valued at $2 to $3 per fish, while brood fish, as they are raised to an older

1 Facilities such as this were formerly called fish hatcheries, but as the state in fact rears the fish for a period of time after hatching, the term ‘fish culture station’ is now used.

1 age and are bigger, and are certified as being disease free, are more valuable. They are also

more valuable because they have been genetically selected to provide the state with several

genetic lines, to maintain genetic diversity in the state’s fish population.

The quality and quantity of the water circulating through the fish culture station is

most important to the success of these breeding populations. The water must be monitored

24 hours per day, seven days a week, as the fish obtain their oxygen supply from the

flowing water. It only takes fifteen to twenty minutes after water stops flowing for all the

fish to die. Loss of the broodstock would affect the state’s fish population for two to six

years before replacement genetic brood lines could be redeveloped for all the stocked

species. Some 180 million fish statewide would be affected annually, including thirty to

forty million salmonid fish supplied to Lake Champlain. Unlike some of the other fish

culture stations in the state which are supplied by gravity flow of water unaffected by

electrical outages or mechanical pump failures, the Salisbury station is dependent on

pumped water, making it necessary for there to be a qualified supervisor or assistant

supervisor actually on‐site at all times. The assistant supervisor at the Salisbury facility

must be on‐site for 16 hours a day for 26 weeks in the year, and therefore must live at the

facility. The short time frame available for responding to an emergency affecting the

pumps makes the position a high‐stress position and makes it harder for the State to recruit

qualified employees.

In order for the State to recruit and keep a qualified supervisor and assistant

supervisor for the Salisbury facility, or indeed for any similar facility with pumped water,

the employment contract must include adequate living facilities, as well as appropriate

overtime or standby pay for the additional hours, as both the supervisor and assistant

supervisor must live on‐site. At the Salisbury facility, the supervisor (facility manager)

lives in a house at the hatchery building. The Salisbury facility has been listed on the

National Register of Historic Places since the early 1990s; however, unlike the hatchery

2 building, the assistant supervisor’s residence is not a contributing feature to the historic

listing of the facility as a whole.

The pump house, which must be reached quickly on foot in an emergency, is located

approximately halfway between the manager’s residence and the assistant supervisor’s

residence. At the Salisbury facility, the assistant supervisor’s residence is a small modular

home built in approximately 20022 on a slab, on the original pad of the previously‐existing

trailer for the assistant supervisor, placed at that location at some time more than twenty

years previously.3 The assistant supervisor’s residence has no basement or attic and no

garage or other sizeable outbuilding is associated with it, and accordingly no adequate

storage space. It is inadequate for an employee with a family, such as the present assistant

supervisor, Mr. Cameron. Previous assistant supervisors at the site had been single, so that

the issue of the adequacy of the residence for a family did not arise in the past. The

proposed garage/storage building is necessary to provide sufficient room at the assistant

supervisor’s residence to allow a family to live there, due primarily to the provision of

storage in the proposed building rather than to the provision of shelter for a vehicle.

Unlike the zoning ordinances for some other municipalities, the Salisbury Zoning

Regulations do not provide for reduced side and front setbacks for accessory buildings

such as the proposed garage/storage building. One well serving the modular home is on

2 We note that nothing about the placement of the modular home where it is located is before the Court in the present proceeding. That home and its septic tank and leach field were installed no later than about 2002; the zoning permit to install the modular home was not appealed or otherwise challenged at that time. Under 24 V.S.A. §4472(d), the placement of the modular home cannot now be challenged, either directly or indirectly, even if its placement is what drives the location of the proposed garage/storage building at issue in the present appeal.

3 It is possible that the former assistant supervisor housing was placed at the site before the adoption of zoning in Salisbury; however, no evidence was presented as to when the first zoning regulations were adopted or what they provided as to setbacks in this location.

3 one end of the concrete slab, the septic tank and leach field are on the other end of the

concrete slab, and the second well, together with two springs and a ditch, indicating wet

ground, are located behind the concrete slab. Other than the proposed location, there is

insufficient room between the residence and the road or the very large trees to locate the

proposed building and provide for sufficient room to maneuver vehicles. A storage

building much farther from the house elsewhere on the facility’s property would be

impractical for the family’s daily or short‐term storage use. The proposed building is as

small as practical to provide both the storage and the garage function needed to make the

small modular home practical for the use of a family.

Ordinarily, in order to qualify for a variance, Appellant must meet all five

requirements of §341 of the Zoning Regulations (underlining in original):

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Related

In re Appeal of Mutschler
2006 VT 43 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 2006)

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