City of Ashland v. Bear Creek Valley Sanitary Authority

650 P.2d 975, 59 Or. App. 199, 1982 Ore. App. LEXIS 3193
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedSeptember 15, 1982
Docket81-008; 81-010; CA A21211
StatusPublished

This text of 650 P.2d 975 (City of Ashland v. Bear Creek Valley Sanitary Authority) 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
City of Ashland v. Bear Creek Valley Sanitary Authority, 650 P.2d 975, 59 Or. App. 199, 1982 Ore. App. LEXIS 3193 (Or. Ct. App. 1982).

Opinion

BUTTLER, P. J.

Petitioners City of Ashland and Jackson County seek judicial review of a final order of the Land Use Board of Appeals (LUBA) dismissing their consolidated petitions for review of an action taken by the respondent sanitary district identifying a public health-related problem and authorizing construction of an expanded sewer system, on the ground that the action taken is not a reviewable land use decision. We reverse and remand.

On December 23, 1980, Bear Creek Valley Sanitary Authority (BCVSA) adopted Ordinance 81-14, which states in relevant part:

“In accordance with the findings and determinations made by the Board of Directors of the Bear Creek Valley Sanitary Authority following the public hearing held pursuant to ORS 450.850 and Ordinance No. 72-1, as amended, of the Authority, within the Bear Creek Valley Sanitary Authority, it having been found and determined that there is a violation or threatened violation of the water quality standards established by OAR 340-41-365 pursuant to ORS 468.735, and that to protect the public health, safety and welfare of the residents and inhabitants of the Bear Creek Valley Sanitary Authority, including the area within the boundaries of Project No. 79-3, the Authority is authorized to construct sanitary sewer lines within the Bear Creek Valley Sanitary Authority in the area served by the North Ashland Interchange Project No. 79-3 consisting of:
<<* * * * *
“all in accordance with the proposed revised plans and specifications contained in the Manager’s Report dated June 18, 1980, which have been approved by the Health Division of the Department of Human Resources, the Department of Environmental Quality of the State of Oregon and the Board of Directors of the Bear Creek Valley Sanitary Authority, and the Board of Directors has considered the recommendations of the Jackson County Planning Commission endorsed by the Jackson County Board of Commissioners and has found and determined that Project No. 79-3 implements the comprehensive sewer plan of the Bear Creek Valley Sanitary Authority, is consistent with the Jackson County Comprehensive Plan and does not violate statewide planning goals adopted pursuant to ORS 197.040. * * *”

[202]*202The area within the project boundaries consists of about 350 acres north of the city limits of Ashland and outside the city’s urban growth boundary. One hundred ninety acres are either vacant or are in farm use. The project consists of over 17,000 linear feet of sewer pipe and two pump stations.

Petitioners filed petitions with LUBA alleging that the adoption of the ordinance violated statewide planning goals 2, 3, 11 and 14; that BCVSA lacked authority to declare a health hazard; and that the findings of a health hazard were not supported by substantial evidence in the record. The cases were consolidated before LUBA. In the order of dismissal, despite its recognition that extension of sewer services can affect land use development,1 LUBA ruled that this action was not within the scope of its reviewing authority, relying on two Supreme Court cases.

In West Side Sanitary District v. LCDC, No. 26780, 289 Or 393, 614 P2d 1141 (1980) (West Side I), the court held that the declaration of a health hazard by the Health Division of the Department of Human Resources was not a land use action to which statewide planning goals apply under ORS 197.180(1)2 and over which LCDC had jurisdiction:

“A Health Division order finding a danger to public ■ health is not an action ‘with respect to programs affecting [203]*203land use’ to which the legislature intended ORS 197.180(1) to apply. The ‘program’ required of the Health Division by ORS 222.870 and 222.880 involves a single factfinding procedure. When the Health Division must determine whether a danger to public health exists in a territory, it is concerned with current public health conditions and not with future land use implications. Statewide planning goals are of no assistance in determining whether a health hazard exists in a territory. We conclude, therefore, that the legislature did not intend, in either ORS 197.180(1) or ORS 222.880, that the Health Division consider planning goals when it determines whether a health hazard presently exists in an area.” 289 Or at 398.

LUBA concluded here that a declaration of a health hazard, even though made by a special district, was essentially no different from that made by the Health Division in West Side I; therefore, the statewide goals were inapplicable to such a declaration. Assuming that the sanitary authority here had authority to “declare a health hazard,”3 we agree: the declaration alone does not invoke statewide land use goals.

The ordinance here, however, did substantially more than identify a public health-related problem; it authorized construction of an extensive sewer line with two pumping stations. LUBA also relied on West Side Sanitary District v. LCDC, No. 26779, 289 Or 409, 614 P2d 1148 (1980) (West Side II), a companion case to West Side I. In West Side II, the court held that an order made by the Environmental Quality Commission (EQC) approving a plan by the city of Klamath Falls to construct sewers was not a land use decision reviewable by LCDC, because EQC’s [204]*204reviewing authority under ORS 222.8984 was limited to determining whether the plan was adequate to solve the health problem:

“We are of the opinion that the legislature did not intend application of ORS 222.898, by either EQC or the Health Division, to involve a consideration of land use planning goals. ORS 222.898 is directed toward solving a health problem efficiently and adequately. If the city does not present an adequate plan, ORS 222.898(3) requires the city to revise its proposals. If the city plan is adequate, then city annexation is mandated by the statute. EQC has no discretion to apply land use planning goals in its evaluation under ORS 222.898 of whether the city plan is adequate to solve the health problems.

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Bluebook (online)
650 P.2d 975, 59 Or. App. 199, 1982 Ore. App. LEXIS 3193, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-ashland-v-bear-creek-valley-sanitary-authority-orctapp-1982.