Feil v. Eastern Washington Growth Management Hearings Board

172 Wash. 2d 367
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 18, 2011
DocketNo. 84369-4
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 172 Wash. 2d 367 (Feil v. Eastern Washington Growth Management Hearings Board) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Feil v. Eastern Washington Growth Management Hearings Board, 172 Wash. 2d 367 (Wash. 2011).

Opinion

Alexander, J.

¶1 We granted review of a decision of the Court of Appeals affirming the Douglas County Superior Court’s dismissal of a challenge by individual orchardists and a farm association to the issuance of development permits to the Washington State Parks and Recreation Commission for construction of a pedestrian and bike trail. We affirm the Court of Appeals.

I

A. Factual History

¶2 In 1997, a planning and permitting process began for the proposed Rocky Reach Trail project in the Baker Flats area of East Wenatchee. Eventually, the Washington State Parks and Recreation Commission (Parks) sought and obtained approval from Douglas County (County) to develop the trail, which will generally follow the north-south oriented eastern shore of the Columbia River, starting at the Odabashian Bridge in East Wenatchee and continuing north 5.1 miles to Lincoln Rock State Park. The proposed 10-foot-wide asphalt trail with approximately 100-foot buffers on both sides will link to an existing bicycle and pedestrian path.

¶3 Rocky Reach Trail will be developed entirely on property that is owned by Public Utility District No. 1 of Chelan County (PUD), on which Washington State Department of Transportation (WSDOT) has a right-of-way. The trail will traverse zoning districts designated as “Tourist Recreational Commercial (C-TR), Residential Low (R-L), [372]*372Commercial Agriculture 5 acres (AC-5), and Commercial Agriculturfe] 10 acres (AC-10).” Clerk’s Papers, Feil v. Douglas County, No. 08-2-00151-0 (Douglas County Super. Ct., Wash.) (CP) at 1-6626.

¶4 Orchardists Jack and Delaphine Feil and John and Wanda Tontz, and members of the Right to Farm Association of Baker Flats (collectively the Orchardists) own property abutting the proposed trail location. Although the Orchardists do not own any of the land on which the trail will be located, they do lease a portion of that land from WSDOT.1 If the trail is developed as proposed, some mature fruit trees may have to be removed from WSDOT’s right-of-way. How many trees may have to be removed is in dispute.

B. Procedural History

¶5 In 2001, Parks, together with WSDOT and the United States Department of Transportation Federal Highway Administration, submitted to the County a “National Environmental Policy Act... Finding Of No Significant Impact” and a “State Environmental Policy Act (SEPA) Determination of Nonsignificance (DNS) and Notice of Adoption.” CP at 0-605. Parks, citing RCW 43.21C.030(2)(c), opted to adopt the DNS in place of an independent SEPA assessment. Two years later, Parks submitted to the County a permit application to develop the trail as a transportation facility. In 2004, a county hearing examiner approved the permit.

¶6 Shortly thereafter, C.F. and Betty McNeal,2 together with the parties designated herein as the Orchardists, filed a petition under the Growth Management Act (GMA), [373]*373chapter 36.70A RCW, with the Washington State Shorelines Hearings Board, seeking review of the issuance of the substantial development permit under the Shoreline Management Act of 1971, chapter 90.58 RCW, and the adequacy of the SEPA review process. In March 2005, the shorelines hearings board concluded that it was without jurisdiction to decide whether the proposed project complied with the County’s GMA plans and regulations and, accordingly, it affirmed the County’s decision to issue the substantial development permit. That decision was appealed to Douglas County Superior Court, which entered an order affirming the shorelines hearings board. Although the Orchardists sought review of that decision in the Court of Appeals, they appear to have abandoned the appeal. Thus, the shorelines hearings board’s decision is final.

¶7 At about the same time the McNeals filed the 2004 GMA petition, they filed a petition pursuant to the Land Use Petition Act (LUPA), chapter 36.70C RCW, challenging the hearing examiner’s decision to approve the permit. In September 2005, the Douglas County Superior Court reversed the hearing examiner’s decision and remanded to Douglas County in order to enable Parks “to apply for and obtain permits as may be required by the Douglas County Code.” CP at 0-6437. The court’s ruling was based on its conclusion that Parks was required to apply for a recreational overlay (R-O) district permit because the Rocky Reach Trail project included both transportation and recreational uses. Parks then filed a consolidated application with the County to establish an R-0 district and to obtain a site development permit for Rocky Reach Trail.

¶8 In November 2006, a county hearing examiner issued a decision approving the application to develop the trail as an R-0 district subject to a number of mitigation conditions on the project. Specifically, the hearing examiner required Parks to (1) enter into an agreement with local beekeepers to mitigate contact between trail users and bees; (2) implement a trail design that will minimize “frost pockets” [374]*374affecting the abutting orchards; and (3) take additional steps to ensure that trail users are protected from agricultural activities, such as pesticide application, and that orchards are protected from trail users. Id. at 0-6451, 0-6452.

¶9 After the hearing examiner issued that decision, the Orchardists sought review of the decision in three separate actions. The Orchardists first requested that the Douglas County Board of County Commissioners refer the hearing examiner’s decision to the Douglas County Regional Planning Commission. The Board of County Commissioners declined to do so, concluding it did not have jurisdiction to review the hearing examiner’s decision.

¶10 The Orchardists then filed a petition for review with the Eastern Washington Growth Management Hearings Board (EWGMHB), asserting that the county hearing examiner’s decision to approve the trail permit violated the GMA. In February 2007, the EWGMHB concluded that it lacked jurisdiction to review the permit because Rocky Reach Trail is a site-specific project and, in any event, the challenge was untimely filed. Accordingly, the EWGMHB dismissed the Orchardists’ GMA petition. The Orchardists appealed that decision to the Douglas County Superior Court, which in July 2007 affirmed the EWGMHB’s dismissal of the GMA petition.

¶11 The Orchardists petitioned under LUPA, to the Douglas County Superior Court, challenging the hearing examiner’s authority to issue the R-0 district permit on the basis that issuing the permit amounted to a rezone of the land from AC-5 and AC-10 to a recreational purpose. The superior court remanded the case to the Board of County Commissioners for further proceedings, determining that there were possible conflicts between agriculture and recreation purposes under the GMA and that the question of whether the R-0 district amounted to a rezone should be decided by “the County legislative authority.” Id. at 0-6465. In denying Parks’ motion for reconsideration, the superior [375]*375court clarified that it “found the [R-O] to be a rezone” and that it should be processed as such by the Board of County Commissioners. Id. at 0-6467.

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Bluebook (online)
172 Wash. 2d 367, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/feil-v-eastern-washington-growth-management-hearings-board-wash-2011.