Conservation Law Foundation, Inc. v. Department of Environmental Protection

2003 ME 62, 823 A.2d 551, 2003 Me. LEXIS 68
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedApril 29, 2003
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 2003 ME 62 (Conservation Law Foundation, Inc. v. Department of Environmental Protection) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Conservation Law Foundation, Inc. v. Department of Environmental Protection, 2003 ME 62, 823 A.2d 551, 2003 Me. LEXIS 68 (Me. 2003).

Opinion

CALKINS, J.

[¶ 1] Edward C. Johnson IV appeals from a judgment of the Superior Court (Kennebec County, Atwood, J.) invalidating a permit issued by the Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) 1 that allowed Johnson to build a dock on waterfront property in the Town of Mount Desert. Acting on petitions brought by the Conservation Law Foundation (CLF) and abutters Charles Gagnebin III and Constance Gagnebin, the court also declared invalid the Board of Environmental Protection (BEP) regulation under which Johnson’s permit was issued, 06-096 CODE ME. R. ch. 305, § 13 (1995). We conclude that the challenged rule and Johnson’s permit are valid, and we vacate the judgment.

*555 1. STATUTORY AND REGULATORY BACKGROUND

A. NRPA

[¶ 2] The Natural Resources Protection Act (NRPA), 38 M.R.S.A. §§ 480-A to 480-Z (2001 & Supp,2002), is a statutory scheme whose purpose is the protection of Maine’s rivers, ponds, wetlands, mountains, wildlife habitats, and coastal sand dunes. Id. § 480-A (2001). It is administered by the DEP. NRPA prohibits certain activities, including the construction of permanent structures in protected areas, unless a permit has been issued by the DEP. Id. § 480-C(2)(D). NRPA contains various standards that an applicant for a permit must meet in order to obtain a permit from the DEP. One is the requirement that the proposed activity “will not unreasonably interfere with existing scenic, aesthetic, recreational or navigational uses.” Id. § 480-DG).

[118] The usual means of . obtaining a permit from the DEP for the construction of a structure is to file an application which the DEP processes. Id. § 344. Processing includes notice to the public and the solicitation of comments from the public. Id. § 344(1). The DEP then makes a decision to approve the permit, sometimes with conditions, deny it, or refer it to the BEP for a decision. Id. § 344(2-A).

B. Permit by Rule

[¶ 4] The BEP has the statutory authority to allow permitting for certain activities to bypass the individual application route; this is known as permit by rule. The statute granting permit by rule authority to the BEP is found at 38 M.R.S.A. § 344(7):

The Board of Environmental Protection may permit, by rule, any class of activities that would otherwise require the individual issuance of a permit or approval by the board, if the board determines that activities within the class will have no significant impact upon the environment. Any such rule must describe with specificity the class of activities covered by the rule and may establish standards of design, construction or use as may be considered necessary to avoid adverse environmental impacts.

The BEP first promulgated regulations pursuant to this statute in 1989.

C.Rule 13

[¶ 5] The regulation at issue in this case, 06-096 CODE ME. R. ch. 305, § 13 (1995), referred to as Rule 13, was promulgated pursuant to section 344(7). It is found within chapter 305 of the DEP rules, which is the chapter containing the permit by rule regulations for various activities regulated by the DEP that require NRPA permits. Rule 1 of chapter 305 is a general rule applying to all of the activities contained in the chapter.

[¶ 6] Rule 13 was first adopted in 1992 after the BEP held hearings and received public comments. Minor amendments were made to Rule 13 in 1995, following a rule-making proceeding in which other amendments to chapter 305 were made, including amendments to Rule 1. The 1995 version of Rule 13 is at issue in this case. 2

[¶ 7] By its terms Rule 13 “applies to the construction or expansion of pile supported piers and wharves and installation of pilings in coastal wetlands.” 06-096 CODE ME. R. ch. 305, § 13(A)(1). These are activities that require a permit pursuant to NRPA. 38 M.R.S.A. § 480-C (2001 & *556 Supp.2002). “Coastal wetlands” are defined as all tidal and subtidal lands including other contiguous land subject to tidal action. Id. § 480-B(2) (2001).

[¶8] The practical effect of the permit by rule process and Rule 13 is that the builder of a pier or wharf that meets the standards and requirements of the rule may be granted a permit to construct it without going through an individual application process. 3 The applicant files a notice of the structure on a form provided by the DEP. 06-096 CODE ME. R. ch. 306, § 1(B) (1995). Unless the DEP notifies the applicant within fourteen days after the filing of the notice that it has denied the permit or otherwise contacts the applicant, the applicant may commence the activity. 4 Id. § 1(C)(1). The process of obtaining a permit by rule is easier and speedier than the individual application process.

[¶ 9] Rule 13 sets forth several standards for piers and wharves including size and materials. Noncommercial private piers and wharves are limited to a width of six feet and to the minimum size necessary for their purpose. Id. § 13(B)(8). With the exception of attached temporary ramps and floats, the piers and wharves cannot extend beyond the low water line. Id. Also, they cannot extend across more than twenty-five percent of any channel at mean low water or into a designated federal channel. Id. § 13(B)(9). There are minimum setback requirements, and use of treated wood and uncured concrete is limited. Id. § 13(B)(10)-(13). Rule 13 contains construction limitations over marsh vegetation, and piers and wharves are not allowed in identified wildlife habitats. Id. § 13(B)(5), (6). The applicant must submit photographs of the area with the notice and must send photographs of the finished project after completion of the construction. Id. § 13(B)(1), (2). The applicant must also obtain any required permits from the Bureau of Public Lands and the United States Army Corps of Engineers. Id. § 13(B)(3), (4).

[¶ 10] As noted above, Rule 13 was first promulgated in 1992. The rule-making record for Rule 13, as well as 1992 amendments to regulations governing other activities, contains the transcript of the public hearing; written comments from various individuals, entities and governmental agencies; and the DEP’s response to comments and testimony. At the public hearing there was a general recognition, by both proponents and opponents, of the pressure placed on the DEP to streamline the permitting process and to add more activities to the list of those that could be permitted by rule.

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2003 ME 62, 823 A.2d 551, 2003 Me. LEXIS 68, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/conservation-law-foundation-inc-v-department-of-environmental-protection-me-2003.