In re Confluence Behavioral Health, LLC Conditional Use to Operate a Therapeutic Community Residence Program (Jason Albert, Appellants)

2017 VT 112, 180 A.3d 867
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedDecember 8, 2017
Docket2017-071
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 2017 VT 112 (In re Confluence Behavioral Health, LLC Conditional Use to Operate a Therapeutic Community Residence Program (Jason Albert, Appellants)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Confluence Behavioral Health, LLC Conditional Use to Operate a Therapeutic Community Residence Program (Jason Albert, Appellants), 2017 VT 112, 180 A.3d 867 (Vt. 2017).

Opinion

EATON, J.

¶ 1. The Environmental Division approved the issuance of a conditional-use permit for Confluence Behavioral Health, LLC's proposed community therapeutic residence in Thetford. A group of neighbors appeal the decision. Neighbors contend that the Environmental Division improperly concluded that Confluence's therapeutic community residence (the Project) was a health care facility, and thus was an allowed conditional use under the Thetford zoning ordinance. Neighbors also assert that the Project's residential use requires separate permitting and that it impermissibly establishes a nonconforming use. We affirm.

¶ 2. On January 19, 2016, Confluence Behavioral Health, LLC received conditional-use and site-plan approval from the Thetford Development Review Board (DRB) to operate a therapeutic community residence on Gove Hill Road in Thetford, Vermont. The property is approximately 125 acres, largely consisting of open, wooded areas, and is located in Thetford's Rural Residential zoning district. Under Article II, § 2.01 of the Thetford Zoning Bylaws, the Rural Residential district is intended to "maintain an area of low average density that is compatible with clusters of high-density, remaining primarily a district of open space, farms, residences, and woodlands, with scattered commercial uses that are either home-based or dependent on natural resources." Under the Bylaws, health care facilities are allowed as conditional uses in Thetford's Rural Residential areas. However, the term "health care facility" is not defined in the zoning ordinance, setting the stage for the issue at hand.

¶ 3. The Gove Hill Road property includes several existing structures, all of which were used by the property's former owners, the American Baptist Churches of Vermont and New Hampshire. The Church used the property year-round (between 250 and 275 days per year) to host therapeutic retreats, conferences, and events for various church-related and secular groups, recovery programs and mental-health retreats, older teen camping trips, horseback riding camps, and summer camps for inner city youth. Retreats hosted up to sixty participants plus operational staff.

¶ 4. Confluence plans to house its new Project on the Gove Hill Road property.

*870 The Project, licensed by the Vermont Department of Disabilities, Aging and Independent Living (DAIL), is a short-term wilderness therapy program designed to treat young adult males (ages eighteen to twenty-eight years old). The program combines clinical therapeutic services with adventure-based wilderness therapy and agrarian living to help clients address mental-health diagnoses, as well as emotional, behavioral, and relational challenges. The treatment is interdisciplinary and supported by a team of professional providers. A Vermont licensed mental-health therapist oversees the therapeutic program and acts as the bridge between the experiential components and deeper clinical work. Individual, group, family, and experiential therapy sessions are interspersed throughout each week.

¶ 5. The Project involves an inpatient treatment component that takes place on-site. All therapy sessions with licensed practitioners will occur on the property; patients will live in together in groups and participate in the responsibilities of communal, agrarian living; and, while treatment will occur both on and off the property site, patients will reside on the property under Confluence's care for an average of nine to twelve weeks. The minimum stay in the program will be eight weeks. Confluence anticipates hosting up to forty-eight patients and thirty-seven staff to stay on the property at any one time to participate in the program. Based on the Project description and facts surrounding property use outlined above, the Development Review Board (DRB) issued the conditional-use and site-plan approval in dispute here.

¶ 6. In its Conditional Use Review Findings and Decision, the DRB approved Confluence's Project as a "health care facility" pursuant to Table 2.1 of the Zoning Bylaws. The DRB explained: "Under 6.06 of the Zoning Bylaws, all Conditional Use applications ... are subject to Site Plan review procedures, criteria, and standards and are automatically incorporated here, in a single conditional use review." In its review, the DRB evaluated the Project for compliance with multiple sections of the Thetford Zoning Bylaws-vehicular circulation and parking; landscaping, building design, and lighting; noise, odors, smoke, dust, noxious gases, and air pollution; fire and public safety; waste and underground utilities; and compliance with Thetford's Rural Residential district standards and the "character of the area." The DRB found that the "intensity of the proposed use is consistent with, and possibly less intensive than, the intensity of the previous use of the property as a center for therapeutic retreats," and that the "[P]roject complies with all Town ordinances, bylaws and regulations currently in effect." Regarding the Rural Residential district restrictions, the DRB determined: "The [P]roject is in compliance with standards addressing the impact of the use on the community at large, adjacent properties, and the neighborhood and zoning district ... the proposed [P]roject will maintain the existing low-density development of the property consistent with the historic use of the property and the character of the area ... the proposed use will not have an undue adverse effect on the character of the area." Subject to several conditions-such as prohibiting Confluence from accepting applicants with violent or sexual criminal histories, restricting the use of electronic amplification and outdoor fires, and limiting project modifications and expansions-the DRB approved the Project.

¶ 7. A group of Project neighbors appealed the DRB's decision to the Environmental Division. Neighbors and Confluence filed cross-motions for summary judgment, primarily disputing whether the Project was properly permitted as a *871 "health care facility" for the purposes of the Bylaws, or whether the Project is a residential facility that should not be allowed in Thetford's Rural Residential district. Neighbors also claimed that the Project impermissibly reestablished the Church's abandoned nonconforming use of the property for events and retreats. In July 2016, the parties stipulated that the Church's nonconforming use had been abandoned and that Confluence could not receive a permit on the basis that it may continue a nonconforming use.

¶ 8. On January 23, 2017, the Environmental Division issued its decision that the Project was a "health care facility." In doing so, the Environmental Division relied on its interpretation of the Zoning Bylaws, permitting of the project by DAIL, and extrinsic sources defining and applying "health care facility" in various contexts. The Environmental Division also determined that any ambiguity should be resolved in favor of allowing the Project. Neighbors appealed.

¶ 9. On appeal, neighbors contend that the proposed use is not a "health care facility" and that it is more akin to a community residence or group living facility-residential uses not allowed in Thetford's Rural Residential district. Additionally, neighbors argue: (1) even if the Project is a "health care facility," its additional use as a residential facility is precluded under the Bylaws; and (2) the Project is a reestablished, nonconforming use and must be prohibited.

¶ 10.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2017 VT 112, 180 A.3d 867, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-confluence-behavioral-health-llc-conditional-use-to-operate-a-vt-2017.