Columbia Riverkeeper v. Clatsop County

341 P.3d 790, 267 Or. App. 578
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedDecember 17, 2014
Docket2010109; A157374; 2013106; A157375
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 341 P.3d 790 (Columbia Riverkeeper v. Clatsop County) 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
Columbia Riverkeeper v. Clatsop County, 341 P.3d 790, 267 Or. App. 578 (Or. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

DEVORE, P. J.

Oregon Pipeline Company, LLC (OPC) petitions for review of two decisions of the Land Use Board of Appeals (LUBA) that relate to OPC’s application for land-use approvals from Clatsop County for a 41-mile segment of a natural gas pipeline. In November 2010, the Clatsop County Board of Commissioners (the board)1 approved the application, and parties that opposed the application appealed that decision to LUBA. Before the county provided the record to LUBA, the board — with three newly elected commissioners — voted to withdraw its approval and reconsider its decision. OPC challenged the board’s withdrawal through a mandamus action in the circuit court. The circuit court dismissed the mandamus action, and we affirmed that dismissal on appeal. State ex rel Oregon Pipeline v. Clatsop County, 253 Or App 138, 288 P3d 1024 (2012), rev den, 353 Or 428 (2013). Thereafter, on reconsideration, the board denied OPC’s application.

OPC appealed to LUBA, challenging the board’s decisions to withdraw the approval and to deny the application. On appeal, LUBA rejected some of OPC’s procedural challenges, but determined that Commissioner Huhtala, of the newly elected commissioners who had participated in the board’s decisions to withdraw the approval and to deny the application on reconsideration, had demonstrated disqualifying bias against OPC’s application. LUBA remanded the board’s denial of OPC’s application for a new reconsideration without the participation of Huhtala. LUBA did not reach the merits of the board’s decision to deny the application.

OPC petitions for review of two LUBA final orders that relate to its application. The first LUBA decision, LUBA No. 2010-109, dismissed an appeal of the board’s original decision to approve OPC’s application. Wrapped up in that LUBA proceeding were issues related to the validity of the board’s withdrawal of the November 2010 approval [582]*582decision. The second LUBA decision, LUBA No. 2013-106, rejected a number of OPC’s procedural challenges to the board’s decision on reconsideration, but remanded that decision for reconsideration without the participation of Huhtala.

On review, OPC contends in its first assignment that, under ORS 197.835(10)(a)(B),2 LUBA should have reinstated the board’s original approval of the application because the county took actions after that approval that were “for the purpose of avoiding the requirements of ORS 215.427.” In relevant part, ORS 215.427 requires a governing body to take “final action” on certain applications for a permit within 150 days.3 In its second assignment, OPC contends that the “taint” of Huhtala’s bias also applied to the board’s decision to withdraw its approval decision and that LUBA should have remanded for the board to revisit that decision also. In its third assignment, OPC argues that the board’s withdrawal of its approval decision was untimely. In its fourth and final assignment of error, OPC asserts that LUBA incorrectly rejected arguments that the three newly elected commissioners failed to properly disclose ex parte contacts that related to the application. The county cross-petitions for review of LUBA’s decision remanding the county’s decision, arguing that LUBA incorrectly determined that Huhtala was biased.

We reject OPC’s first, third, and fourth assignments of error for the reasons given below. We agree with the county’s contention in its cross-petition that LUBA incorrectly determined that OPC had proven Huhtala’s actual bias, and we reverse that portion of LUBA’s final [583]*583order in LUBA No. 2013-106. Because we agree with the county’s cross-petition, we need not address OPC’s second assignment. We remand to LUBA for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

I. BACKGROUND

We summarize the procedural history here and recount the facts about Commissioner Huhtala later when we reach the bias issue. In 2009, OPC filed an application for a land-use approval for a 41-mile segment of a natural gas transmission pipeline through Clatsop County.4 After a public hearing process, a hearings officer approved the application subject to conditions of approval. Respondents Columbia Riverkeeper and NW Property Rights Coalition (collectively, “Columbia Riverkeeper”) and other parties appealed the hearings officer’s decision to the board. On November 8, 2010, the board issued a decision approving the application with conditions.

Columbia Riverkeeper appealed the board’s approval decision to LUBA, and LUBA docketed that appeal as LUBA No. 2010-109.5 Pursuant to statute, ORS 197.830(10)(a), and LUBA’s administrative rule, OAR 661-010-0025(2), the county had until December 15, 2010, to transmit the record of the proceedings under review to LUBA. On December 14, 2010, the county moved for a thirty-day extension of time to transmit the record “due to an unusually large and voluminous compilation of the Record.” The record would prove to be 11,754 pages. OPC did not object to the extension request, and LUBA, pursuant to its rule regarding extensions of time, OAR 661-010-0067, granted the county until January 14, 2011, to transmit the record.

Meanwhile, in May 2010, Lee, Huhtala, and Birkby had been elected to the board. They were sworn into office on January 12, 2011. That same day, in a 4-to-l vote, the board decided to withdraw the November 2010 approval for [584]*584reconsideration pursuant to ORS 197.830(13)(b).6 The three new commissioners voted in favor of withdrawal. The next day, the county filed a notice with LUBA that it was withdrawing for reconsideration its November 8, 2010, decision. OPC objected, and LUBA allowed briefing on the issue by the parties. LUBA issued an order on February 17,2011, concluding that the county could, pursuant to ORS 197.830(13)(b), withdraw its November 2010 decision in order to reconsider. LUBA also rejected OPC’s contention that the county requested the time extension for the purpose of allowing the newly elected commissioners to take office and vote to withdraw the approval for reconsideration. Based on OAR 661-010-0021, LUBA granted the county 90 days to issue its decision on reconsideration. LUBA suspended the appeal in LUBA No. 2010-109 pending the county’s decision on reconsideration.

The county set a public hearing for the board to reconsider the November 2010 decision. However, five days before the hearing, OPC filed a petition for writ of mandamus under ORS 215.429 with the Clatsop County Circuit Court, arguing that the county’s withdrawal decision led to a violation of ORS 215.427

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
341 P.3d 790, 267 Or. App. 578, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/columbia-riverkeeper-v-clatsop-county-orctapp-2014.