Friends of the Columbia Gorge, Inc. v. Columbia River Gorge Commission

171 P.3d 942, 215 Or. App. 557, 2007 Ore. App. LEXIS 1536
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedOctober 31, 2007
DocketA125031
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 171 P.3d 942 (Friends of the Columbia Gorge, Inc. v. Columbia River Gorge Commission) 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
Friends of the Columbia Gorge, Inc. v. Columbia River Gorge Commission, 171 P.3d 942, 215 Or. App. 557, 2007 Ore. App. LEXIS 1536 (Or. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

*559 LANDAU, P. J.

The Columbia River Gorge Commission revised its management plan for the Columbia River Gorge National Scenic Area. Petitioners seek judicial review of those revisions, arguing that the revisions violate federal law in some two dozen different ways. In particular, petitioners contend that the revised management plan is fatally incomplete and that the plan’s revisions are contrary to the requirements of the law. In brief, we conclude that the revised management plan is not unlawfully incomplete, but that in one aspect the revised management plan does violate that law. We therefore remand for reconsideration.

I. BACKGROUND

We begin with an overview of the governing legal framework and the facts leading to this review, leaving to our analysis of particular assignments of error any additional facts that are relevant to those assignments.

A. The National Scenic Act

Congress passed the Columbia River Gorge National Scenic Act in 1986. The Act creates the Columbia River Gorge National Scenic Area, which stretches for more than 80 miles along the Columbia River and encompasses nearly 300,000 acres, including parts of six different counties in two different states: Clark, Klickitat, and Skamania counties in Washington; and Hood River, Multnomah, and Wasco counties in Oregon. 16 USC §§ 544(d), 544b. Congress’s stated goals in passing the Act are “to protect and provide for the enhancement of the scenic, cultural, recreational, and natural resources” in the gorge and “to protect and support the economy” of the area “by encouraging growth to occur in existing urban areas” and by allowing future economic development in a manner consistent with the goal of protecting the gorge’s resources. 16 USC § 544a.

To accomplish those goals, the Act establishes a framework within which a land use management plan is to be developed, implemented, and administered. The Act authorizes Oregon and Washington to enter into an interstate compact and to create a regional commission, which, in *560 cooperation and consultation with the United States Secretary of Agriculture, would be charged with developing and implementing the land use management plan. 16 USC § 544c.

In laying the groundwork for the development of the management plan, the Act divides the gorge into three kinds of areas. First, the Act designates 13 “urban areas” in the gorge that are not subject to scenic area regulations in the management plan. 16 USC § 544b. Next, the Act expressly designates 115,000 acres of “special management areas” (SMAs), deemed to comprise the most sensitive parts of the scenic area. The SMAs are located primarily, though not exclusively, in the western half of the gorge. Id. Finally, the remaining land comprises what the commission has designated as the gorge’s “general management areas” (GMAs) and covers approximately 149,000 acres, the majority of which are located in the eastern half of the scenic area. See id. (specifying boundaries of management areas).

The Act calls for the commission and the Secretary of Agriculture (who, in turn, delegated the statutory authority to the Forest Service) to develop a regional land use management plan for the GMAs and SMAs in three basic steps. First, the Act calls for the commission and the Secretary to conduct resource inventory, economic opportunity, and recreation assessment studies. 16 USC § 544d(a). Second, based on the results of those studies, the Act calls for the development of land use designations for the scenic area. 16 USC § 544d(b). Those designations, developed by the commission and the Secretary, result in a zoning map for the scenic area, designating allowed uses — e.g., agriculture, commercial, open space, forestry, residential — in different areas. Id. Third, the Act calls for the commission and the Secretary to develop a land use management plan for the scenic area, incorporating the land use designations and including specific land use guidelines. 16 USC § 544d(c). The commission is charged with developing designations and guidelines applicable to the GMAs, while the Secretary is charged with developing the designations and guidelines applicable to the SMAs. 16 USC §§ 544d(c), 544f(f).

*561 In developing the management plan, the commission and the Secretary are charged with consulting with federal, state, and local governments and Native American tribes having jurisdiction within the scenic area. 16 USC § 544d(e). They are also charged with conducting public hearings and soliciting public comment before adopting the final management plan. Id.

To implement the regional land use management plan, the Act requires that the six counties within the scenic area adopt land use ordinances that are consistent with the plan guidelines. 16 USC § 544e(b). If a county refuses to implement such ordinances, the commission is required to create and administer conforming land use ordinances for the county. 16 USC § 544e(c). Only those counties that enact land use ordinances that are consistent with the guidelines in the land use management plan become eligible for federal economic development grants. 16 USC § 544i(c)(4).

The Act establishes a broad set of standards for the management plan and county ordinances enacted pursuant to it:

“The management plan and all land use ordinances * * * adopted pursuant to this Act shall include provisions to—
“(1) protect and enhance agricultural lands for agricultural uses and to allow, but not require, conversion of agricultural lands to open space, recreation development or forest lands;
“(2) protect and enhance forest lands for forest uses and to allow, but not require, conversion of forest lands to agricultural lands, recreation development or open spaces;
“(3) protect and enhance open spaces;
“(4) protect and enhance public and private recreation resources and educational and interpretive facilities and opportunities, in accordance with the recreation assessment adopted pursuant to subsection (a) of this section;
“(5) prohibit major development actions in special management areas, except for partitions or short plats which the Secretary determines are desirable to facilitate land acquisitions pursuant to this Act;
*562 “(6) prohibit industrial development in the scenic area outside urban areas;
“(7) require that commercial development outside urban areas take place without adversely affecting the scenic, cultural, recreation, or natural resources of the scenic area;
“(8) require that residential development outside urban areas take place without adversely affecting the scenic, cultural, recreation, and natural resources of the scenic area; and

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
171 P.3d 942, 215 Or. App. 557, 2007 Ore. App. LEXIS 1536, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/friends-of-the-columbia-gorge-inc-v-columbia-river-gorge-commission-orctapp-2007.