In re: The Application of Living Word Bible Camp for a Conditional Use Permit and Planned Unit Development Permit In Re: The Final Planned Unit Development Application of Living Word Bible Camp.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Minnesota
DecidedApril 6, 2015
DocketA14-464
StatusUnpublished

This text of In re: The Application of Living Word Bible Camp for a Conditional Use Permit and Planned Unit Development Permit In Re: The Final Planned Unit Development Application of Living Word Bible Camp. (In re: The Application of Living Word Bible Camp for a Conditional Use Permit and Planned Unit Development Permit In Re: The Final Planned Unit Development Application of Living Word Bible Camp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re: The Application of Living Word Bible Camp for a Conditional Use Permit and Planned Unit Development Permit In Re: The Final Planned Unit Development Application of Living Word Bible Camp., (Mich. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

This opinion will be unpublished and may not be cited except as provided by Minn. Stat. § 480A.08, subd. 3 (2014).

STATE OF MINNESOTA IN COURT OF APPEALS A14-0464 A14-0481 A14-1224 A14-1225

In re: The Application of Living Word Bible Camp for a Conditional Use Permit and Planned Unit Development Permit In Re: The Final Planned Unit Development Application of Living Word Bible Camp

Filed April 6, 2015 Affirmed Peterson, Judge

Itasca County Planning Commission

James P. Peters, Law Offices of James P. Peters, PLLC, Glenwood, Minnesota (for relators)

John H. Erickson, Brainerd, Minnesota (for relator Holly Newton)

G. Craig Howse, Jeffrey C. Thompson, Jacob R. Grassel, Howse & Thompson, P.A., Plymouth, Minnesota (for respondent Living Word Bible Camp)

John J. Muhar, Itasca County Attorney, Grand Rapids, Minnesota; and

Paul D. Reuvers, Andrea B. Smith, Iverson Reuvers, Bloomington, Minnesota (for respondent Itasca County Planning Commission)

Considered and decided by Peterson, Presiding Judge; Schellhas, Judge; and

Smith, Judge. UNPUBLISHED OPINION

PETERSON, Judge

In these consolidated appeals, two groups of relators who oppose respondent

landowner’s plan to build a youth bible camp challenge respondent county planning

commission’s decisions to approve a conditional-use permit, planned-unit-development

permit, and final planned-unit-development permit for construction of the camp. We

affirm.

FACTS1

Respondent Living Word Bible Camp (LWBC) purchased approximately 283

acres of property on Deer Lake in Itasca County in 2000. LWBC intends to build a youth

bible camp in a “cluster” development that encompasses fewer than six acres of the

property, and the project is envisioned to include a lodge; five cabins; a storm shelter; a

gazebo; activity, office, and storage buildings; parking; trails; and an additional dock. At

full capacity, the camp is designed to accommodate 150 overnight guests.

Approximately 84 acres of the property are subject to a conservation easement owned by

the Minnesota Land Trust. The conservation easement generally prohibits development

but specifically permits construction of trails for “firebreaks, walking, horseback riding,

[and] cross-country skiing.”

Some area residents oppose LWBC’s plan to construct the camp, and, during the

fourteen years since LWBC purchased the property, they have unsuccessfully challenged

1 The underlying facts are set forth in prior opinions, and we recount them only to the extent necessary.

2 the rezoning for the project, the project’s environmental efficacy, and LWBC’s status as a

tax-exempt entity.

LWBC applied for a conditional-use permit (CUP) and a planned-unit-

development permit (PUD) in 2006, but the applications were suspended for the duration

of an environmental review conducted by Itasca County (county).2 LWBC renewed its

CUP/PUD applications on October 30, 2013, and submitted to respondent Itasca County

Planning Commission (commission) materials that included a property description, site

and floor plans, maps, a base density analysis, the environmental-assessment worksheet

(including a sanitary-sewer concept-design report), and materials from the 2006

CUP/PUD proceedings.

The commission held a public hearing on December 11 and 12, 2013, and January

8 and 29, 2014. The commission made the following finding on the intended use of the

LWBC project:

The capacity of the “Camp’s” project is 150 overnight guests. The project is a Bible camp, retreat, and learning center primarily for children and ancillary for adults. Children- related uses include a summer Bible camp for third to eighth graders eight weeks during the summer, and occasional programs for home-schooled children. Uses also include staff

2 Some area residents initiated an environmental review regarding their concerns about how LWBC’s planned use of the property would affect the naturally occurring and environmentally sensitive muskellunge spawning area offshore, as well as Deer Lake’s water quality. Ultimately, the county issued a negative declaration on the need for further environmental review, and this court affirmed, ruling that the county had properly conducted the environmental review and that there was substantial evidence to support its decision that no further environmental review was necessary. In Re Declaring a Negative Need for an Envt’l Impact Statement for the Proposed Living Word Bible Camp Project, Nos. A13-1153, A13-1157, 2014 WL 3557954 (Minn. App. July 21, 2014), review denied (Minn. Oct. 14, 2014).

3 development, marriage retreats and parenting seminars for adults. The majority of uses will take place in the summer months, but weekend retreats and off-season camps will also occur. The uses supported by the project facility are uses that are currently occurring on the lake and include: shelter, accommodations for visitors, swimming, learning, playing, studying, sports, boating, fishing, sailing, cross country skiing, campfires and other recreational activities typical to those about the lake. The “Camp” will be closed for a portion of winter months.

The commission made numerous findings that reference restrictions on LWBC’s use of

the property, including use of “clustering” development to build on fewer than six acres

of the property with approximately 240 acres to remain in a natural state, visual and noise

buffering, general construction setbacks of 200 feet from the shoreline, location of roads

and parking, consideration of traffic patterns, limitations on the size and location of the

beach, restrictions on the number and types of boats (no jet skis or ski boats, limit of two

fishing boats and two pontoon boats and 20 kayak-type boats), restrictions on docks

(three) and boat slips, an oversized sanitation system, mitigation of phosphorus and other

pollutants through implementation of a stormwater-management system that complies

with state and national restrictions as well as a stormwater-pollution prevention plan, a

plan to minimize environmental disturbances to area wildlife through use restrictions, use

of open-space covenants to preserve at least 50% of the property, vegetation clearing

limits, and implementation of specific erosion-control measures during and after

construction.

In its January 30, 2014 decision, the commission concluded that the CUP and

PUD should issue because LWBC had complied with the relevant county ordinances.

4 The commissioners’ decision includes a “resolution and orders” section that makes

approval of the CUP and PUD subject to 32 conditions that protect the environmental and

other use objectives expressed in the decision.

On February 24, 2014, LWBC submitted a final site plan, which began the review

process to determine whether the commission should grant approval of the final planned-

unit-development permit (FPUD). The commission received numerous documents,

including an updated open-space covenant and map and final plan, and held a public

meeting on March 12, April 9, and May 14, 2014. The commission implemented a

checklist “to determine if the criteria for final approval under the Ordinance have been

met.” With reference to the pertinent ordinances, the commission considered whether the

“nature, location, and physical features of the project” would comply with CUP

requirements, as well as requirements and objectives related to open-space covenants and

vegetation preservation, shore recreation facilities, stormwater management and erosion

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In re: The Application of Living Word Bible Camp for a Conditional Use Permit and Planned Unit Development Permit In Re: The Final Planned Unit Development Application of Living Word Bible Camp., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-application-of-living-word-bible-camp-for-a-conditional-use-minnctapp-2015.