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

273 P.3d 267, 248 Or. App. 301, 2012 WL 758901, 2012 Ore. App. LEXIS 160
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedFebruary 23, 2012
DocketA146584
StatusPublished

This text of 273 P.3d 267 (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, 273 P.3d 267, 248 Or. App. 301, 2012 WL 758901, 2012 Ore. App. LEXIS 160 (Or. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

*303 SERCOMBE, J.

Petitioner Friends of the Columbia Gorge, Inc., seeks judicial review of the Columbia River Gorge Commission’s (commission) revision of its management plan, arguing that various changes made to the plan violate the Columbia River Gorge National Scenic Area Act (Scenic Area Act or the Act), 16 USC §§ 544 - 544p. The commission approved those changes in response to a decision of the Supreme Court, which held that several aspects of an earlier revision of the management plan violated the Act. Friends of Columbia Gorge v. Columbia River (S055722), 346 Or 366, 213 P3d 1164 (2009). The court remanded the case to the commission to remove erroneous provisions or to promulgate new provisions that satisfy the Act’s requirements. Id. at 413. Here, petitioner challenges three of the revisions adopted by the commission on remand. We affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand for reconsideration.

We begin with a brief overview of the legal context and the facts leading to this review. 1 Congress created the Columbia River Gorge National Scenic Area Act in 1986 with the purposes of (1) “establishing] a national scenic area to protect and provide for the enhancement of the scenic, cultural, recreational, and natural resources of the Columbia River Gorge” and (2) “protecting] and supporting] the economy of the Columbia River Gorge area by encouraging growth to occur in existing urban areas and by allowing future economic development in a manner that is consistent with” the first purpose. 16 USC § 544a. The Act designated certain land along the Columbia River as the Columbia River Gorge National Scenic Area (the scenic area), 16 USC § 544b, and authorized Oregon and Washington to enter into an interstate compact to form a regional agency — the commission —which, in tandem with the Secretary of Agriculture of the United States, would manage the scenic area. 2 16 USC § 544c. As part of its management scheme, the Act

*304 “divides the land in the scenic area into three categories: (1) ‘Special Management Areas’ (SMAs), over which the Secretary of Agriculture is to have primary responsibility; (2) ‘Urban Areas,’ which the Act largely exempts from the commission’s control; and (3) all remaining areas, which would come to be known as the ‘General Management Area’ (GMA). 16 USC §§ 544(b), (e).”

Friends of Columbia Gorge, 346 Or at 370. The Act directs the commission to conduct a resource inventory of all land within the scenic area, develop land use designations for the use of scenic area lands, and adopt a management plan that incorporates those land use designations and is consistent with certain enumerated standards. 16 USC § 544d(a) - (d). All counties within the scenic area must adopt land use ordinances that are consistent with the management plan. 16 USC § 544e.

The enumerated standards in the Act mandate that the management plan include certain protective provisions. Among other things,

“[t]he management plan * * * shall include provisions to—
* * * *
“(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
“(9) require that the exploration, development and production of mineral resources, and the reclamation of lands thereafter, take place without adversely affecting the scenic, cultural, recreation and natural resources of the scenic area.”

16 USC § 544d(d). In turn, the Act defines “adversely affecting” as

“a reasonable likelihood of more than moderate adverse consequences for the scenic, cultural, recreation or natural *305 resources of the scenic area, the determination of which is based on—
“(1) the context of a proposed action;
“(2) the intensity of a proposed action, including the magnitude and duration of an impact and the likelihood of its occurrence;
“(3) the relationship between a proposed action and other similar actions which are individually insignificant but which may have cumulatively significant impacts; and
“(4) proven mitigation measures which the proponent of an action will implement as part of the proposal to reduce otherwise significant affects to an insignificant level[.]”

16 USC § 544(a) (emphasis added).

Pursuant to the Act’s directives, the commission adopted a management plan in 1991. As part of its periodic review, see 16 USC § 544d(g) (requiring review of the management plan at least every 10 years and authorizing the commission to make revisions), the commission adopted revisions to the plan in 2004. Petitioner, among others, then sought judicial review of the revised management plan, arguing that various aspects of the plan violated the Act. As relevant to this review, the petitioners argued that (1) the management plan failed to comply with the Scenic Area Act’s requirement that it include provisions protecting natural resources because the plan contained no protective guidelines for geologic resources, and geologic resources were “natural resources” within the meaning of the Act; and (2) the management plan failed to comply with the Scenic Area Act’s requirement that it protect (a) scenic resources, (b) natural resources, and (c) cultural resources from “cumulative adverse effects.”

Ultimately, the Supreme Court granted review and rendered a decision remanding the case to the commission to make further changes to the plan consistently with its decision. Friends of Columbia Gorge, 346 Or 366. The subject of this review, as framed by the parties’ arguments, is whether the commission complied with the Supreme Court’s directives on remand. Consequently, we recount parts of the court’s decision in some detail.

*306 In addressing the petitioners’ argument that the plan failed to protect geologic — and therefore natural— resources in violation of the Scenic Area Act, the court agreed that the Act did, in fact, require protection of “natural resources,” whatever that term may mean:

“The Act provides that the management plan must include provisions requiring that commercial, residential, and mineral resource development take place without adversely affecting the scenic area’s natural resources. 16 USC §§ 544d(d)(7), (8), and (9). If geological resources are natural resources within the meaning of the Act, then the management plan must include provisions that will preclude adverse effects to those resources — whether or not those provisions specifically

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
273 P.3d 267, 248 Or. App. 301, 2012 WL 758901, 2012 Ore. App. LEXIS 160, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/friends-of-the-columbia-gorge-inc-v-columbia-river-gorge-commission-orctapp-2012.