Candela v. MILLCREEK TP. ZONING HEARING BD.

887 A.2d 335
CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 22, 2005
StatusPublished

This text of 887 A.2d 335 (Candela v. MILLCREEK TP. ZONING HEARING BD.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Candela v. MILLCREEK TP. ZONING HEARING BD., 887 A.2d 335 (Pa. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

887 A.2d 335 (2005)

Brian A. CANDELA and Antoinette Candela, husband and wife, Appellants,
v.
MILLCREEK TOWNSHIP ZONING HEARING BOARD
v.
Waldameer Park, Inc., Paul T. Nelson and Stephen F. Gorman and Nancy Gorman, husband and wife, and Millcreek Township.

Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania.

Argued October 18, 2005.
Decided November 22, 2005.

*336 Christopher J. Sinnott, Timothy M. Zieziula, Erie, for appellants.

Thomas E. Kuhn, Erie, for appellee, Millcreek Township Zoning Hearing Board.

Jeffrey J. Cole, Erie, for appellee, Waldameer Park, Inc.

BEFORE: LEADBETTER, J., and LEAVITT, J., and FLAHERTY, Senior Judge.

OPINION BY Judge LEAVITT.

Brian and Antoinette Candela appeal an order of the Court of Common Pleas of Erie County that affirmed a decision of the Millcreek Township Zoning Hearing Board. In this case we consider whether the Board erred in granting to the owners of an amusement park a variance from the setback provisions of the Township's Bluff Setback Ordinance[1] thereby authorizing the construction and operation of a roller-coaster. We affirm.

Waldameer Park is an amusement park that has been in operation for over 100 years at its present location in Millcreek Township, Erie County, adjacent to, but not abutting, Lake Erie. The 14-acre park is comprised of several parcels of land owned by Paul T. Nelson and Stephen and Nancy Gorman. The park parallels the lake on an east-west axis and is bisected by Peninsula Drive,[2] which continues to *337 Presque Isle. The northwest side of the park slopes down[3] to a sandy shelf, approximately 500 feet wide, on which the home and campground of the Candelas is located. Beyond the sandy shelf lies Lake Erie. The northeast side of the park slopes down to the neck of Presque Isle.

A rollercoaster known as the Ravine Flyer was built at the park's northern edge, on both sides of the slope, overlooking the lake and Presque Isle. The Ravine Flyer was dismantled in the late 1920's, but its station building remains at its original site and is currently used as a picnic pavilion. In the late 1990's, Waldameer Park advised the Township of its interest in constructing a successor rollercoaster on the site of the original, to be known as the "Ravine Flyer II." The proposed Ravine Flyer II will be located on land west and east of Peninsula Drive, along the top of the slope and down its sides. It is presently a vacant area covered by grass, trees, brush and other vegetation.

The design of the Ravine Flyer II, as proposed, calls for construction of a station house where riders will access and depart the ride, a suspended track upon which two trains of passenger cars will travel, and a bridge crossing Peninsula Drive. Most of the structure will be located on the western side of Peninsula Drive. The project also calls for construction of a paved access road at the foot of the slope with a retaining wall. The proposed Ravine Flyer II was designed by licensed engineers who evaluated the slope at the site and determined that the subsurface soils and bedrock are sufficiently strong to support the structure.

On October 27, 2003, Waldameer Park applied for a building permit to construct the Ravine Flyer II. The code enforcement officer denied the application because the land making up the park is designated a "bluff recession hazard area." The slope is, legally, a "bluff," and the slope's high point is considered the crest of the bluff. Because construction along Lake Erie's bluffs is regulated by setbacks, a permit for the construction of Ravine Flyer II required a variance from the setbacks.

By way of further background, in 1980 the General Assembly enacted the Bluff Recession and Setback Act (Act)[4] in an effort to create a comprehensive and coordinated program to encourage sound land use planning and development in bluff areas.[5] The Act directs the Environmental Quality Board (EQB) to identify municipalities containing "bluff recession hazard areas"[6] and establish minimum bluff setback *338 requirements for those areas. Sections 4(c) and 5(a) of the Act, 32 P.S. §§ 5204(c), 5205(a). The EQB is further directed to adopt regulations providing standards and procedures for obtaining variances to the bluff setback requirements. Section 5(c) of the Act, 32 P.S. § 5205(c). Any municipality subject to bluff recession hazards is required under the Act to regulate, by ordinance, construction and development activities in bluff recession hazard areas in a manner consistent with the minimum bluff setback requirements prescribed by the EQB. Section 6(a) of the Act, 32 P.S. § 5206(a). The Act further provides that "[t]he adoption and administration by municipalities of bluff setback ordinances and regulations ... shall be governed by the provisions of the [Pennsylvania Municipalities Planning Code[7]]." Section 6(b) of the Act, 32 P.S. § 5206(b).

The EQB has designated Millcreek Township as one of eight municipalities in Erie County possessing a bluff recession hazard area. 25 Pa.Code § 8526(c).[8] Development in a bluff recession hazard area is, in accordance with the Act, subject to the following minimum setback distances, as measured from the crest of the bluff landward: 50 feet for residential structures, 75 feet for commercial structures and 100 feet for industrial structures. 25 Pa.Code § 85.26(c). The purpose of these setbacks is to discourage construction on land next to the edge of a bluff because that land is subject to erosion, which, over time, will move the bluff edge landward.

The Township adopted its Bluff Setback Ordinance (Ordinance) in August 1981. It incorporates the setback distances identified in the Act and regulations, generally prohibiting the construction, installation or substantial improvement of structures within the minimum bluff setback distances. Ordinance § 4(3). Like the Act and the regulations, the Ordinance provides for a variance from the setback requirements in two situations:

1. When a parcel, established prior to a bluff recession hazard area designation, does not have adequate depth considering the minimum bluff setback requirements to provide for any reasonable use of the land. The variance may be granted only when each of the following criteria are met.
a. The structure and all associated structures and utility facilities shall be located on the property as far landward of the bluff line as allowed by other municipal ordinances.
b. The structure shall be designed and constructed to be movable in accordance with proper engineering standards and building moving restrictions applicable to the subject area prior to damage by bluff recession. Structures in this category may include trailers or modular homes. Review and approval of the design shall be conducted by the Code Enforcement Officer. All construction materials, including foundations, shall be removed or disposed of as part of the moving operation. Access to and from the structure site shall be of sufficient *339 width and acceptable grade to allow for moving of the structure.
2. When the proposed structure or utility facilities require access to the body of water and there is no feasible alternative for obtaining such access.

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Candela v. Millcreek Township Zoning Hearing Board
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887 A.2d 335, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/candela-v-millcreek-tp-zoning-hearing-bd-pacommwct-2005.