Department of Land Conservation & Development v. Fargo Interchange Service District

879 P.2d 224, 129 Or. App. 447, 1994 Ore. App. LEXIS 1191
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedAugust 10, 1994
DocketLUBA 93-181, 93-182; CA A84101
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 879 P.2d 224 (Department of Land Conservation & Development v. Fargo Interchange Service District) 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
Department of Land Conservation & Development v. Fargo Interchange Service District, 879 P.2d 224, 129 Or. App. 447, 1994 Ore. App. LEXIS 1191 (Or. Ct. App. 1994).

Opinion

*449 DEITS, P. J.

Petitioners Fargo Interchange Service District (district), Marion County (county), Brent Leathers and Ed Mon-tecucco seek review of LUBA’s remands of the district’s decision defining the proposed public sewer system for the Fargo Road Interchange area, and of the county’s decision that the district’s proposal complies with the county comprehensive plan and land use regulations. 1 We reverse.

The area is located in Marion County on rural land, outside an urban growth boundary (UGB), but is designated as freeway interchange and for rural development by the county’s acknowledged comprehensive plan. The development of a public sewer system in the area has been the subject of a number of land use actions and decisions preceding those in question, and all of those earlier measures have been approved by LUBA or acknowledged. The earlier measures included the adoption of county comprehensive plan and regulatory provisions, and the taking of Goal 3 and 4 exceptions for the interchange area. The earlier measures culminated in the county’s 1992 decision to form the district to “provide sewage services to the interchange properties at the Fargo interchange.” The Department of Land Conservation and Development (DLCD) appealed the formation decision to LUBA, which rejected DLCD’s contentions and affirmed the decision. DLCD v. Marion County, 23 Or LUBA 619 (1992).

In 1993, the district made the decision giving rise to the present proceeding. The decision is captioned “facilities order for construction, operation and financing of sewer service facilities.” In general outline, under that decision, the district will own and operate the facilities for the collection and processing of sewage up to the stage of final treatment. That stage will occur at a facility operated by the City of Donald, to which the sewage will be transported through a pipeline system operated by the district. DLCD appealed to LUBA from the district’s decision and from the county’s decision finding that the system proposed by the district’s *450 decision complied with the county’s acknowledged land use legislation. 2

LUBA rejected DLCD’s contentions, with two exceptions that are the subjects of petitioners’ assignments of error to us. First, LUBA remanded the district’s decision. It reasoned that the district was required by ORS 195.020(1) to exercise its planning responsibilities and actions in accordance with the statewide planning goals. LUBA agreed with DLCD that the district was required to demonstrate compliance with Goals 11 and 14, which require, respectively, the “arrangement of public facilities and services to serve as a framework for urban and rural development,” and the use of the UGB and other mechanisms to “provide for an orderly and efficient transition from rural to urban land use.” LUBA then concluded that the district had not made sufficient findings to show compliance with the two goals. It noted that,

“to the extent the district relies upon the challenged county decision to make the required findings, for the reasons explained [in connection with LUBA’s disposition of the county’s decision, it] does not establish the proposal is consistent with Goals 11 and 14.” (Emphasis LUBA’s.)

LUBA then turned to the county decision. LÜBA agreed with the county that, because its comprehensive plan and land use regulations are acknowledged, it was not required to show that its decision complied directly with the goals or to take exceptions to the goals beyond those that it had taken in the past and that were acknowledged. Rather, the county had only to show that its decision complied with the acknowledged plan and regulations. See ORS 197.175-(2)(d); ORS 197.835(6); Foland v. Jackson County, 311 Or 167, 807 P2d 801 (1991). LUBA also rejected several challenges by DLCD to the county’s interpretations and application of various provisions of its plan. However, LUBA agreed with DLCD in one respect, and remanded the county’s decision on that basis.

*451 Urban Growth Policy 7 (policy 7) of the plan provides:

“Urban densities and urban services shall be established only within recognized urban growth boundaries.”

It is undisputed that the district and the area of the proposed system are not within a UGB. However, construing policy 7 together with other plan provisions, the county concluded that the district’s proposed system was permissible and consistent with the plan.

LUBA disagreed, concluding that the district’s proposed system violated policy 7. LUBA again noted that the statewide goals are not directly applicable to the county’s decision, but reasoned that, under ORS 197.829(4), the county’s interpretation of policy 7 may not be affirmed if it is “contrary to a state * * * land use goal * * * that the comprehensive plan provision * * * implements.” LUBA then concluded that “[i]tis clear that plan [policy 7] implements Goals 11 and 14,” and that the county’s interpretation of the policy was incorrect because the establishment of the proposed sewer system in the area would “extend sewer service to the Fargo interchange from the City of Donald” and, thereby, “extend an urban service outside of an urban growth boundary. ’ ’ Consequently, according to LUBA, the proposal violates Goals 11 and 14 and, in LUBA’s view, therefore also violates the county plan policy that implements those goals.

LUBA acknowledged:

“It maybe that there is nothing inherently urban about a central sewerage system. As noted earlier [in LUBA’s opinion], the Fargo interchange exception area was acknowledged with express authorization for such a central sewerage facility, even though it is not within a UGB.” (Footnote omitted.)

Moreover, in DLCD v. Marion County, supra, 23 Or LUBA at 625, LUBA had rejected DLCD’s argument that the construction of a “public sewerage system outside an urban growth boundary * * * ipso facto” violates policy 7, and it had agreed with the county that the challenged decision did not violate that policy when it was read together with “other plan provisions [that] clearly envision the location of sewerage *452 facilities outside urban growth boundaries in certain circumstances.”

In the present appeal, however, LUBA appeared to regard the proposed involvement of the City of Donald treatment facility as the dispositive factor. Rather than a self-contained public system operated in and for the interchange area, the district’s decision proposed the use of the city’s plant for final processing of sewage. Because the treatment facility also

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Related

Department of Land Conservation & Development v. City of Donald
879 P.2d 229 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 1994)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
879 P.2d 224, 129 Or. App. 447, 1994 Ore. App. LEXIS 1191, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/department-of-land-conservation-development-v-fargo-interchange-service-orctapp-1994.