City of Wilsonville v. Department of Corrections

951 P.2d 128, 326 Or. 152, 1997 Ore. LEXIS 596
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 16, 1997
DocketSC S44165 (Control), S44254; SC S44255; SC S44256; SC S44270
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 951 P.2d 128 (City of Wilsonville v. Department of Corrections) 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
City of Wilsonville v. Department of Corrections, 951 P.2d 128, 326 Or. 152, 1997 Ore. LEXIS 596 (Or. 1997).

Opinion

VAN HOOMISSEN, J.

This is an original proceeding for judicial review of a decision to build certain new corrections facilities at the Dammasch State Hospital site in Wilsonville, Oregon.

Petitioners1 seek reversal of three separate, but sequential, decisions made by respondents Department of Corrections (the department), Corrections Facilities Siting Authority (the Siting Authority), and the Governor of the State of Oregon (the Governor), respectively, to nominate, select, and approve the Dammasch State Hospital property (the Dammasch site), as a site for the construction of new corrections facilities. The City of Wilsonville (the city) opposes locating any corrections facilities at the Dammasch site; it is joined in its opposition by local citizens and citizen groups. This court has exclusive jurisdiction to review the challenged decision. ORS 421.630(1). For the reasons that follow, we affirm the decisions of the department, the Siting Authority, and the Governor.

The 1995 legislature enacted Oregon Laws 1995, chapter 745, codified at ORS 421.611 to 421.630, which established an expedited process for selecting sites for new prison facilities. This expedited process is referred to as “supersiting.” See Dunning v. Corrections Facility Siting Authority, 325 Or 269, 271-73, 935 P2d 1209 (1997) (explaining process).

In Januaxy 1997, the Governor issued an executive order initiating the process for building a new corrections facility and its future expansion. The order stated that the planned facility would be located in Clackamas, Multnomah, or Washington County (the tri-county area). After meeting with local elected officials, the department nominated three sites: Dammasch, Seaport, and Butternut. Thereafter, the Siting Authority evaluated the three sites. Petitioners submitted proposed conditions to the Siting Authority. After [156]*156holding a public hearing, the Siting Authority issued its findings selecting the Dammasch site and rejecting some of petitioners’ proposed conditions. In May 1997, the Governor approved the selection of the Dammasch site. Petitioners timely filed a petition for judicial review.

The primary issues presented on judicial review are: (1) did the department rely on improper criteria in nominating the Dammasch property; (2) did the department’s pren-omination meeting with local elected officials satisfy the “discussion” requirement of ORS 421.618; (3) did a “memorandum of understanding” involving the Dammasch site, signed by the City of Wilsonville and several state agencies, preclude the department from finding that the Dammasch site was “available”; (4) is the limited substantial evidence standard of review provided in ORS 421.630(4)(b), set out below, 326 Or at 159, an adequate procedural safeguard or an adequate remedy under Article I, section 10, of the Oregon Constitution;2 (5) were the Siting Authority’s findings and its rejection of petitioners’ proposed conditions supported by substantial evidence; and (6) was the Siting Authority required to rank nominated sites and make findings explaining its ranking of the nominated sites. We proceed to consider petitioners’ assignments of error and arguments.3

NOMINATING CRITERIA

Petitioners first challenge the department’s nominating criteria. The statutory and rule criteria for nominating a corrections site are set out in ORS 421.614 and 421.616, and in OAR 291-073-0020 and 291-073-0030. Petitioners’ [157]*157challenge is untimely, because it is a challenge to the department’s promulgated rules, not a challenge under ORS 421.616 to the nomination of the Dammasch site. See ORS 421.630(2)(a) (“a petition based on a decision to adopt criteria pursuant to ORS 421.614 shall be filed within 21 days of the issuance of the criteria”); see also Committee in Opposition v. Oregon Emergency Correc., 309 Or 678, 689, 792 P2d 1203 (1990) (under 1989 siting law, the legislature required that challenges to discrete decisions in the siting process be made expeditiously so that, if no challenge is made, the next stage of the process could proceed with confidence that a belated challenge to an earlier decision would not cause delay).

Petitioners next argue that the Governor usurped the power of the legislature by incorporation of a geographic criterion in his executive order, and that by heeding the Governor’s directive to limit site selection to the tri-county area, the department exceeded its delegated authority. Again, because it is an attack on the Governor’s executive order, petitioners’ challenge fails. That order was an action or decision “relating to the * * * siting of a correctional facility,” for which this court may exercise exclusive judicial review on petition filed within 21 days of the issuance of the order. ORS 421.630(1) and (2)(a). Petitioners’ failure to challenge the Governor’s order within that time precludes consideration of it here. See Committee in Opposition, 309 Or at 689 (so holding under analogous process).

PRE-NOMINATION MEETING

ORS 421.618 provides:

“Prior to nominating sites pursuant to ORS 421.616, the Department of Corrections shall hold a meeting or multiple meetings with the elected local government officials involved to discuss the site selections, the on-site and off-site improvements needed at each site and the site preferences of the local governments.”

Petitioners acknowledge that the department held a meeting with elected local government officials before nominating the Dammasch site, but they argue that the discussions were not “meaningful.” Respondents answer that petitioners actually are complaining that the meeting was [158]*158procedurally inadequate and that an alleged error in procedure is beyond the scope of this court’s judicial review authority under ORS 421.630(4).

Assuming, arguendo, that petitioners’ claim is within this court’s scope of review (a question that we do not decide here), nothing in the text or context of ORS 421.618 suggests that the legislature intended to use the word “discuss” in other than its ordinary meaning, which is to talk about the subject.4

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Related

Webb v. Department of Corrections
952 P.2d 59 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1998)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
951 P.2d 128, 326 Or. 152, 1997 Ore. LEXIS 596, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-wilsonville-v-department-of-corrections-or-1997.