In Re Green Crow Corp.

2007 VT 137, 944 A.2d 244, 183 Vt. 33, 2007 Vt. LEXIS 268
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedDecember 14, 2007
Docket2006-411
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 2007 VT 137 (In Re Green Crow Corp.) 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 Green Crow Corp., 2007 VT 137, 944 A.2d 244, 183 Vt. 33, 2007 Vt. LEXIS 268 (Vt. 2007).

Opinion

Reiber, C.J.

¶ 1. This appeal arises after our reversal and remand in In re Green Crow Corp., 2006 VT 14, 179 Vt. 616, 895 A.2d 189 (mem.) (Green Crow I). For the reasons set out below, we again reverse and remand.

¶ 2. Green Crow’s permit-application odyssey began in October 2003, when it applied to the District #3 Environmental Commission for an Act 250 permit to log land above 2,500 feet in Granville. Green Crow I, ¶ 2. The commission issued a permit authorizing Green Crow to log 184 acres above 2,500 feet, but the permit also imposed conditions on approximately 1,000 additional acres below 2,500 feet. The commission explicitly found that it had jurisdiction to impose permit conditions on “all access roads, skid trails, accesses and log landings related to the logging above 2,500 *35 feet, even if the roads, trails, and landings are below 2,500 feet.” Green Crow appealed to the Environmental Board in March 2004. 1

¶ 3. The Board determined, in that appeal, that it lacked jurisdiction to determine whether Act 250 applies to logging activity on lands below 2,500 feet. Id. ¶ 4. Green Crow appealed. In Green Crow I, we reversed and remanded for the Board to determine whether it had jurisdiction over plaintiffs logging-related activities on the lower-elevation land. Id. ¶¶ 7-8. On remand, the Board — in two separate orders — concluded that it did have jurisdiction over those activities, and that it could therefore impose reasonable permit conditions on the land and activities below 2,500 feet.

¶4. In the first order, issued in June 2006, the Board denied Green Crow’s motion for summary decision, which sought a ruling that permit conditions for the development could not apply to the lands below 2,500 feet. 2 Green Crow moved, in July 2006, for reconsideration of the denial, and the Agency of Natural Resources filed a brief in support of Green Crow’s motion. The Board, in an August 2006 memorandum, denied the motion and elaborated on its earlier ruling. Although the Board’s June order was unanimous, the August order included a dissent by four of the nine Board members.

¶ 5. The Board concluded in the June decision that “[o]nce Act 250 jurisdiction is triggered as it has been here, it attaches to the entire tract or tracts of involved land.” This conclusion was premised on the Board’s distinction between “original Act 250 jurisdiction” and the application of permit conditions to “land and activities below 2,500' in elevation, when jurisdiction has been triggered by development above 2,500'.” The former, the Board concluded, was established by the fact that some logging would occur on land above 2,500 feet. That jurisdiction, according to the June decision, gave the Board authority to impose permit conditions on all “involved land” that is part of the project tract. Those permit conditions, the Board noted, must be reasonable and “within the limits of its police power to ensure that [the project *36 complies] with the statutory criteria.” The Board further noted that “[r]oads and other infrastructure built to serve the development, for instance, clearly constitute part of that development, even though they may be at lower elevations.” The Board went on to overrule its 1984 decision in In re Vermont Department of Forests, Parks & Recreation, No. 1R0488-EB (Jan. 11, 1984), in which the Board held that it could regulate only that portion of a logging site that was above 2,500 feet. The Board explained its decision to overrule the 1984 decision thus:

This case is not about regulating logging at elevations below 2,500'. The Board acknowledges the exemption from jurisdiction for logging below 2,500', but it does not apply here. Instead, this case addresses the simple question of whether appropriate permit conditions can be imposed on involved land below 2,500' to address the impacts of the Project. The fact that otherwise exempt activities may be occurring at those elevations is irrelevant, and serves only to confuse the analysis. The purpose of any reasonable permit condition would not be to regulate logging below 2,500', but to address impacts of the development.

¶ 6. Following the June decision, Green Crow filed a motion to alter, contending that the Board’s reliance on the concept of “involved land” in the context of a logging permit was improper. Green Crow further argued that the Board’s declaration that it had jurisdiction over logging-related activities below 2,500 feet would deter high-altitude logging, which almost always requires construction of improvements below 2,500 feet for access to the higher-altitude land. Green Crow requested that the Board follow its decision in Vermont Department and rule that permit conditions could not be applied to the land below 2,500 feet.

¶ 7. The Board denied the motion to alter in August 2006, and issued a new decision. The Board disavowed any reliance on the concept of “involved land” and stated that “[i]t is not the concept of involved land that is crucial here; rather, it is the fact that components and impacts of the development (logging above 2,500') necessarily extend to parts of the Project tract below 2,500'.” The Board again drew a distinction between jurisdictional triggers — in this case, logging above 2,500 feet — and the authority to attach permit conditions once jurisdiction over a project is estab *37 lished. The Board noted that “[t]he purpose of permit conditions is to address a project’s impacts under the criteria. The various jurisdictional thresholds, on the other hand, reflect the Legislature’s determination of what types of projects should be subject to Act 250 review in the first instance.”

¶ 8. In this appeal, Green Crow asserts essentially two grounds for reversal. First, it contends that the Board’s use of the concept of “involved land” was erroneous. Second, Green Crow avers that the Board erred in overruling Vermont Department, which Green Crow contends remains a viable precedent. We agree with Green Crow on both points.

¶ 9. As to the first, the Board itself abandoned its earlier reliance on the notion of “involved lands” in its August decision. Therefore, although Green Crow continues to press the point, we do not read the Board’s decision as necessarily relying on an “involved lands” analysis. Accordingly, we move on to Green Crow’s second point.

¶ 10. We begin with the language of Act 250. The Act, by its terms, prohibits “development” without a permit. 10 V.S.A. § 6081(a). Construction of improvements for industrial or commercial activity, including logging, above 2,500 feet is “development.” Id. § 6001(3)(A)(vi). However, “[t]he construction of improvements for . . . logging . . . purposes below the elevation of 2,500 feet” is explicitly excluded from the term “development.” Id. § 6001(3)(D)(i). Permit applications are required to contain a “plan of the proposed development,” id. § 6083(a)(2), and “[b]efore granting a permit, the district commission shall find that the . . . development” meets several enumerated criteria. Id. § 6086(a).

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2007 VT 137, 944 A.2d 244, 183 Vt. 33, 2007 Vt. LEXIS 268, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-green-crow-corp-vt-2007.