Home Builders Ass'n v. City of Springfield

129 P.3d 713, 204 Or. App. 270, 2006 Ore. App. LEXIS 208
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedFebruary 15, 2006
Docket2004-090, 2004-105, 2004-114; A129928
StatusPublished

This text of 129 P.3d 713 (Home Builders Ass'n v. City of Springfield) 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
Home Builders Ass'n v. City of Springfield, 129 P.3d 713, 204 Or. App. 270, 2006 Ore. App. LEXIS 208 (Or. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

BREWER, C. J.

Petitioners Home Builders Association of Lane County and Home Builders Construction Company seek review of a Land Use Board of Appeals (LUBA) order that dismissed for lack of jurisdiction their challenge to respondents’ adoption of a public wastewater treatment facility plan (the “public facilities plan” or “the plan”). We affirm.

The public facilities plan was prepared by respondent Metropolitan Wastewater Management Commission (“MWMC” or “the commission”). By intergovernmental agreement, the other respondents, the cities of Eugene and Springfield and Lane County, created the commission. The plan, adopted in 2004, lists proposed improvements to the regional wastewater treatment system that serves the Eugene-Springfield urban area. LUBA described the MWMC and the genesis of the plan as follows:

“The MWMC is an intergovernmental entity created in 1977 by an intergovernmental agreement among Springfield, Eugene and Lane County. MWMC owns and operates the Eugene-Springfield regional wastewater treatment facility designed to serve those areas within the urban growth boundary. At the time of its inception, MWMC’s facilities planning document was the ‘208 Plan.’ The 208 Plan established the original projections, requirements and projects needed to serve the Eugene-Springfield community through 2005. The [public facilities plan] is driven by: the conditions contained in MWMC’s NPDES[1] wastewater discharge permit; [The Department of Environmental Quality’s] May 2002 reissuance of the NPDES permit and new regulations or changes in regulatory policy that affect overall treatment capacity rating, treatment strategy, or effluent requirements; current constraints; future capacity and performance requirements; new treatment technologies; and existing operational issues.
“Following the opening of MWMC’s Water Pollution Control Facility (WPCF) in 1984, and prior to 1997, no comprehensive evaluation of the wastewater treatment facility [273]*273was performed. Beginning in the mid-1990s, MWMC initiated several studies and projects to develop a master plan. In early 2003, MWMC began a planning process intended to produce a long range facility planning document and project list and a methodology for financing the projects. The [public facilities plan], which is the result of that study and analysis, is intended to identify facility enhancements and expansions that are needed to serve the community’s regional wastewater needs through 2025. The planning criteria include regulatory requirements, existing MWMC policies, adopted citizen advisory committee recommendations and direct Commission guidance. MWMC adopted [the plan] and 20-year project list * * * on May 6, 2004.”

Home Builders Assoc. of Lane Co. v. City of Springfield, 50 Or LUBA 109, 113-14 (footnote, citations, and internal quotation marks omitted). Respondents each separately adopted the plan.

This case involves a challenge to various improvements listed in the plan and their attendant cost. The improvements listed in the plan will cost approximately $144 million, and some of that cost will be paid by system development charges (SDCs).2 Before LUBA, petitioners opposed improvement projects that are included in the plan that will expand treatment capacity at the MWMC regional waste-water treatment facility. Petitioners expressed a preference for different improvement projects that would reduce the amount of effluent that must be treated by reducing collection system inflow and infiltration. In addition, petitioners objected to the plan on the ground that the improvements proposed in the plan will require the collection of more revenue through SDCs than the improvements favored by petitioners. Petitioners also objected to the methodology used by respondents to assess and collect SDCs.

[274]*274Respondents asked LUBA to dismiss this case on the ground that the elements of the plan to which petitioners object do not involve land use decisions subject to LUBA’s review under ORS 197.825. LUBA observed that the plan appeared to include the elements required by Statewide Land Use Planning Goal 11, the Public Facilities and Services goal, and to constitute a public facilities plan envisioned by Goal 11 and its implementing rules.3 LUBA characterized the question before it as whether the adoption of the elements of the plan that petitioners challenge constituted a land use decision that had to be adopted in accordance with land use decision-making procedures and in compliance with Goal 11 and its implementing rules.

LUBA granted respondents’ motion and dismissed the case for lack of jurisdiction. LUBA stated that execution of the public facilities plan necessarily will trigger the application of Goal 11 and its implementing rules. LUBA also noted that the comprehensive plan amendments required to carry out the plan are land use decisions under ORS 197.015(10)(a)(A). However, LUBA ultimately concluded that the adoption of the particular elements of the plan that [275]*275petitioners were challenging did not involve a land use decision.4

Respondents initially assert that petitioners lack constitutional standing to challenge LUBA’s decision on review because the record does not demonstrate that the decision has had or will have a practical effect on petitioners’ interests. See Utsey v. Coos County, 176 Or App 524, 543, 32 P3d 933 (2001), rev dismissed as moot, 335 Or 217 (2003) (the party invoking the jurisdiction of the court, rather than the one responding to a petition for judicial review, must establish that a decision will have a practical effect on him or her). In support of their claim of standing, petitioners submitted an affidavit in which they assert that the challenged decisions will have a practical effect on them as homebuilders, because the SDCs contemplated by the plan will trigger higher costs for home construction.

Respondents argue that the practical effects on which petitioners rely are not the subject of this case. Respondents observe that the only issue presented on review is whether their adoption of the challenged elements of the plan constituted a land use decision that is reviewable by LUBA. The validity of the SDC methodology and charges, respondents note, are the subject of yet another appeal before this court, in which petitioners appeal a trial court judgment that denied a writ of review whereby petitioners challenged the SDC methodology adopted in the plan. See Home Builders Assoc. of Lane Co. v. City of Springfield (A129475; A129476; appeals from Lane County Circuit Court Case No. 14-04-15534). According to respondents, the practical effect on which petitioners rely in this case will arise only from the disposition of the appeal from the trial court judgment in the writ of review case. We disagree.

[276]*276If petitioners were to prevail on review in this case, LUBA would have to determine on remand whether respondents’ adoption of the SDC methodology and the other challenged elements of the plan are consistent with the legal requirements of a land use decision.

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Bluebook (online)
129 P.3d 713, 204 Or. App. 270, 2006 Ore. App. LEXIS 208, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/home-builders-assn-v-city-of-springfield-orctapp-2006.