NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION This opinion shall not "constitute precedent or be binding upon any court ." Although it is posted on the internet, this opinion is binding only on the parties in the case and its use in other cases is limited. R. 1:36-3.
SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY APPELLATE DIVISION DOCKET NO. A-1639-22
IN THE MATTER OF FLOOD HAZARD AREA VERIFICATION AND FLOOD HAZARD AREA INDIVIDUAL PERMIT, 1113-22- 0002.1 LUP220002. _____________________________
Argued December 9, 2024 – Decided December 27, 2024
Before Judges Sabatino, Gummer and Berdote Byrne.
On appeal from the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection, Permit Nos. 1113-22-0002.1 LUP220002.
Daniel A. Greenhouse and Kaitlin Morrison argued the cause for appellant The Watershed Institute (Eastern Environmental Law Center, attorneys; Daniel A. Greenhouse and Kaitlin Morrison, on the briefs).
Jordan Viana, Deputy Attorney General, argued the cause for respondent New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection (Matthew J. Platkin, Attorney General, attorney; Sara M. Gregory, Assistant Attorney General, of counsel; Jordan Viana, on the brief).
John G. Valeri, Jr., argued the cause for respondent Bridge Point West Windsor LLC (Chiesa Shahinian & Giantomasi PC, attorneys; John G. Valeri, Jr., and Rafael Corbalan, on the brief).
PER CURIAM
Appellant The Watershed Institute ("TWI"), an environmental advocacy
organization, challenges project approvals that respondent the Department of
Environmental Protection (the "DEP") issued to co-respondent developer Bridge
Point West Windsor, LLC ("Bridge Point"). The project involves the
redevelopment of property in West Windsor, planned to be the site of a massive
warehouse facility. The approvals on appeal involve two facets: a Flood Hazard
Area Verification under N.J.A.C. 7:13-5 and a Flood Hazard Area Individual
Permit under N.J.A.C. 7:13-10.
TWI asserts multiple arguments in contesting the DEP's final agency
decisions. It argues the DEP: (1) failed to adequately ensure the project would
be consistent with a local areawide Water Quality Management Plan
("WQMP"), in violation of the Water Quality Planning Act ("WQPA"), N.J.S.A.
58:11A-1 to -16; (2) erroneously permitted the construction of a culvert, rather
than a bridge, at a proposed stream crossing, in violation of the Flood Hazard
Area Control Act ("FHACA"), N.J.S.A. 58:16A-50 to -103, and the Flood
Hazard Area Control Act Rules, N.J.A.C. 7:13-1 to -24; (3) failed to take into
account new data predicting increased levels of precipitation in New Jersey, in
A-1639-22 2 violation of the FHACA and other relevant law; and (4) failed to delineate
floodways on the site, also in violation of the FHACA.
Respondents, the DEP and Bridge Point, oppose these contentions.
Among other things, they argue that, except for the DEP's non-reliance upon
new precipitation data, TWI waived these arguments by failing to raise them
during the public comment period that preceded the permit approval.
Respondents further assert that TWI's arguments have no substantive merit.
For the reasons that follow, we affirm most of the DEP's final agency
decisions, with the exception of its approval of Bridge Point's plan to install a
culvert at the stream crossing without a reasoned explanation that a bridge at
that location would be infeasible. Because of that discrete shortcoming, we
vacate the permit and verification, without prejudice to the outcome of a remand,
and remand the matter to the DEP for further consideration of the issue on terms
we explain in this opinion.
I.
The parties are all familiar with the factual and procedural background of
this case, and we need not repeat it comprehensively here. The following
summary will suffice for our purposes.
A-1639-22 3 Development Background and Permit Application In March 2022, Bridge Point submitted an application, prepared by
Langan Engineering and Environmental Services, Inc. ("Langan") to the DEP
for Flood Hazard Area Verification and a Flood Hazard Area Individual Permit. 1
It filed the application for its proposed redevelopment of what it called "Bridge
Point 8 Industrial Park" in West Windsor Township. The project "consist[ed]
of[, among other things,] the demolition of existing improvements onsite , . . .
the construction of seven warehouses and accessory improvements[,] internal
access roads, [and] stormwater management."
According to TWI, the project would be "the largest warehouse
development in the State of New Jersey." The project would include 5.5 million
square feet of building footprint coverage, 2,435 car parking spaces, and 1,072
truck-trailer parking spaces. The construction would disturb over 400 acres of
property and cause an increase of over 241 acres of impervious coverage.
1 The original multi-permit application was also for Freshwater Wetland General Permits and a Transition Area Averaging Plan Waiver. After the DEP advised that pending State Historic Preservation Office review—required for those approvals but not the flood hazard approvals—would likely not be finished in time to meet deadlines for the flood hazard approvals, Bridge Point bifurcated its application. The authorizations on appeal address the flood hazard approvals but not the wetlands permits, which, according to counsel, remained pending at the time of the appellate oral argument. A-1639-22 4 The 645-acre site is bounded to the north by U.S. Route 1 and abuts
woodlands, farmlands, and a residential area. The northern portion contains
buildings and structures formerly occupied by the American Cyanamid firm,
which were vacated by 2004. The remaining site consists of woodlands and
agricultural fields with various outbuildings.
In addition to a main watercourse known as Duck Pond Run, the site
includes three unnamed tributaries to Duck Pond Run in the northern portion of
the site and an unnamed tributary to Shipetaukin Creek in the southern portion.
Duck Pond Run eventually discharges directly into the Delaware and Raritan
Canal.
Flood Hazard Area Verification
In its application, Bridge Point requested Flood Hazard Area verification
for each of the four on-site surface waters. Langan expected the riparian zones
for all onsite waters to be fifty feet wide because "[n]o category one waters or
trout maintenance/trout production waters [we]re located in the same HUC-14
watersheds as the site [and n]o threatened or endangered species that [we]re
critically dependent on waters for survival [we]re located within one mile
downstream of the site."
A-1639-22 5 Flood Hazard Area Individual Permit
The project also included "work within regulated waters and/or associated
riparian zones and flood hazard areas" including "widening the existing public
roadway Clarksville Road, grading work, . . . the construction of four stormwater
outfalls,[2] a sanitary sewer line, a [new] access road to Route 1 and [new]
internal access roads." According to the permit application, outfall construction
around one of the unnamed Duck Pond Run tributaries and one of the unnamed
Shipetauken Creek tributaries was "necessary . . . to manage stormwater onsite,
in compliance with the Stormwater Management Rules[, N.J.A.C. 7:8-5.1 to -
5.9]." Construction of a new access road crossing one of the unnamed Duck
Pond Run tributaries would "include installation of a 24-inch culvert" and was
allegedly "necessary for safe ingress/egress" to and from Route 1. The
Clarksville Road widening would "provide safe and consistent vehicular,
pedestrian and bicycle mobility infrastructure." The proposed access road and
Clarksville Road widening would, however, exceed maximum allowable
disturbance designations.
2 Three of the four stormwater proposed outfalls were located within riparian zones. A-1639-22 6 In its original application, Bridge Point assured compliance with the
FHACA rules. "The nature of stormwater outfalls" meant disturbance to the
nearby tributaries was inevitable, but Bridge Point promised to
"minimize[disturbances] to the extent practicable." In its application, Bridge
Point asserted that "all areas of encroachment w[ere to] be finished at or below
the pre-existing grade to avoid creating an impediment to surface water flow"
and construction of the stormwater outfalls was to "occur outside from the
channel[s] such that no additional or temporary impact w[ould] occur beyond
what [wa]s necessary."
The Route 1 access road would cross one of the unnamed Duck Pond Run
tributaries perpendicularly and at a narrow point to reduce disturbance. The
culvert created for that crossing was "based on the width and character" of the
tributary, which "appear[ed] to be a historically man-made drainage ditch"
containing "a bed of less than 5 feet wide . . . dominated by dense vegetation
that offers little or no value to aquatic species."
The application also included assurances of compliance with FHACA
rules for regulated activity within riparian zones. Bridge Point listed the
aforementioned "work within channels of regulated waters," along with
construction of two internal access roads, as work "within riparian zones." In
A-1639-22 7 the application, Bridge Point asserted generally that "[r]iparian zone disturbance
ha[d] been reduced to the maximum extent practicable" for each activity.
Regarding the culvert, Bridge Point claimed "[d]ue to the prevalence of surface
waters throughout the northern portion of the site, there [we]re no other
opportunities onsite that [would] avoid[] a stream crossing."
The Cornell Studies and the Anticipated Inland Flood Protection Rule
At the same time Bridge Point's application was pending, studies were
released that predicted higher rainfall levels in New Jersey beyond earlier
estimates. Specifically, on November 18, 2021, the DEP released two studies
(the "Cornell Studies") authored by Dr. Arthur DeGaetano, director of the
Northeast Regional Climate Center—a National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration ("NOAA") partner—and Professor of Earth and Atmospheric
Sciences at Cornell University. Those studies, which the DEP peer-reviewed,
showed that precipitation amounts in New Jersey are "2.5% to 10% higher" than
in 1999 and are "likely to increase by more than 20% from th[at] 1999 baseline
by 2100." The studies also described that the "projected [precipitation] changes
will be greater in the northern part of the state than in the southern and coastal
areas."
A-1639-22 8 On May 27, 2022, Senior Project Scientist Robert March of Langan
emailed DEP Environmental Specialist Ariana Tsiattalos to schedule further
discussion on "information needed to get th[e] application deemed
administratively complete" in light of "the anticipated [DEP] Emergency
Rule[,]" the Inland Flood Protection Rule ("IFPR"). The IFPR was proposed on
December 5, 2022, 54 N.J.R. 2169(a), and made effective July 17, 2023, 55
N.J.R. 1385(b). The IFPR amended the Stormwater Management Rules and
FHACA rules "to account for current and future increased precipitation
conditions in New Jersey." 55 N.J.R. 1385(b). The IFPR incorporated the
findings from the Cornell Studies. Ibid.; see also 54 N.J.R. 2169(a).
In an email Tsiattalos sent to March in June 2022 after a call with him,
she advised him that "FHA-Verifications cannot be grandfathered under the old
rule and will be subject to the emergency rule."
Deficiency Letters, Further Communications, and Comments
The DEP sent Bridge Point multiple deficiency letters between April 2022
and November 2022. In those letters, the DEP demanded additional information
and justification to enable its review of the project. The letters addressed several
issues raised on this appeal, including the flood hazard area assessment and
A-1639-22 9 floodway delineation, proposed culvert construction and its impact in riparian
zones, and water quality assessments.
In a series of response letters between June 2022 and November 2022,
Bridge Point provided the documentation and justification that the DEP had
requested and modified several aspects of its project plans. Among other things,
Bridge Point modified its Clarksville Road improvement plans and relocated a
stream crossing. Those modifications avoided direct impacts to the adjacent
drainage ditch and reduced the proposed disturbance of the riparian zone
vegetation opposite the ditch from 37,287 square feet to approximately 8,133
square feet.
Bridge Point further assured the DEP that the proposed Route 1 access
road "ha[d] been revised to avoid" wetlands and "[a] retaining wall ha[d] . . .
been added to reduce . . . disturbance." It revised the access road plans so that
the road crossed the unnamed Duck Pond Run tributary at a perpendicular angle
to reduce disturbance.
In a letter to the DEP in July 2022, TWI expressed general concern
regarding flooding and stormwater management on the site. Without directly
citing the Cornell Studies, the letter referenced the same predicted precipitation
increases listed in the studies and warned of the "[e]mergency rule[] . . .
A-1639-22 10 currently being considered by the . . . DEP that would raise design flood
elevations by two feet."
In August 2022, Bridge Point's permit application was deemed
administratively complete. Then, in September 2022, the DEP conferred with
TWI in a remote meeting and heard TWI's concerns regarding the project.
The timing of the DEP review process is significant. Under the FHACA,
if the DEP fails to act on a construction permit application within ninety days,
that application "shall be deemed to have been approved." N.J.S.A. 13:1D -32.
This period may be extended at the mutual consent of the applicant and the DEP
by thirty days. N.J.S.A. 13:1D-31. On October 14, 2022, at Bridge Point's
request, the DEP extended the permit application deadline by thirty days to
December 1, 2022.
A few days later, TWI sent the DEP an email expressing concerns
regarding the project's stormwater Best Management Plans ("BMPs") and
flooding. In that letter, TWI cited the Cornell Studies and the forthcoming IFPR.
On November 30, 2022, a representative of the DEP sent an email to
March stating: "Unfortunately I just noticed that you have a floodway line on
your Riparian Zone plans. Since we are not verifying any floodways, this line
cannot be on there to be approvable. Is it possible for you to remove the
A-1639-22 11 floodway line from the applicable plans?" Later that day, a Langan senior
project manager sent an email to the DEP indicating Langan had removed the
floodway from its FHA and Riparian Zone plans and uploaded a revised version.
In a letter dated December 1, TWI expressed concerns about the effects
the project's planned stormwater BMPs may have on nearby wetlands, incorrect
flood hazard data, and parts of the proposed site development that would exceed
maximum allowable disturbances.
Additional Reports
With the December 1 extended deadline looming, Langan prepared a
Stormwater Management Report for the project and submitted it on November
22, 2022. The report assured the project would comply with the Stormwater
Management Rules, described stormwater analyses Langan had reviewed or
conducted, and detailed stormwater management and flood mitigation measures
including "constructed wetlands, bioretention basins, porous pavement,
underground infiltration systems, and landscaped areas."
A day before the December 1 deadline, the DEP issued an Engineering
Report concerning the site. That report acknowledged that "several public
comments [had been] received concerning flooding," including "an
objection . . . that the flooding data is from 1999," but "the applicant . . . used
A-1639-22 12 this data to perform independent analyses to determine the flood hazard area
elevation" and "properly addressed [flooding] concerns." According to the
report, the project satisfied the requirements of the WQPA, FHACA, and
Stormwater Management Rules. The report assured that "[n]o activities w[ould]
take place in any floodway" and "the floodway was not delineated for any of the
watercourses on site because by inspection, it [wa]s clear that the floodway
w[ould] not be impacted by the . . . [one] stormwater outfall structure proposed
in the flood hazard area."
The DEP issued a separate Environmental Report on December 1. The
report included a WQMP rules consistency assessment, which concluded that
"[a]ll proposed activities [we]re located within the limits of the mapped sewer
service area . . . [t]herefore, the project [wa]s consistent with the [WQMP]
adopted under the [WQPA]." Regarding the widening of the Clarksville Road
and the new Route 1 access road, the report declared "[a]ll impacts ha[d] been
minimized to the greatest extent possible."
The Issuance of the Individual Permit and the Flood Hazard Verification
On December 1, 2022—the last day of the extended deadline—the DEP
issued to Bridge Point its approvals of the Flood Hazard Area Verification and
Flood Hazard Area Individual Permit for the project. The permit instructed
A-1639-22 13 Bridge Point to obtain the bifurcated freshwater wetlands permits "prior to the
start of any activity authorized by this permit." The approvals constitute the
DEP's final agency decisions for purposes of appellate review. R. 2:2-3(a)(2).
II.
This appeal by TWI followed, asserting the issues we identified in our
introduction. In assessing those issues, we are guided by familiar principles that
govern the scope of appellate review of decisions by State agencies.
"The scope of review of an administrative agency determination is
limited." Del. Riverkeeper Network v. N.J. Dep't of Env't Prot., 463 N.J. Super.
96, 112 (App. Div. 2020). On appeal, we "will not reverse the agency's decision
unless: (1) it was arbitrary, capricious, or unreasonable; (2) it violated express
or implied legislative policies; (3) it offended the State or Federal Constitution;
or (4) the findings on which it was based were not supported by substantial,
credible evidence in the record." N.J. Highlands Coal. v. N.J. Dep't of Env't
Prot., 456 N.J. Super. 590, 602–03 (App. Div. 2017), aff'd as modified, 236 N.J.
208 (2018).
"The party who challenges [the] DEP's decision to permit development of
a certain location has the 'burden of demonstrating, not that the agencies' action
was merely erroneous, but that it was arbitrary.'" Id. at 603 (quoting In re Stream
A-1639-22 14 Encroachment Permit No. 0200-04-0002.1 FHA, 402 N.J. Super. 587, 597 (App.
Div. 2008)). We accord "traditional deference to an agency's specialized
expertise[, which] is even stronger when the agency, like [the] DEP in regard to
wetlands, has been delegated discretion to determine the specialized and
technical procedures for its tasks." In re Thomas Orban/Square Props., LLC,
461 N.J. Super. 57, 72 (App. Div. 2019) (internal citations and quotation marks
omitted).
"Importantly, however, '[w]hile [courts] must defer to the agency's
expertise, [they] need not surrender to it.'" Ibid. (quoting N.J. Chapter of Nat'l
Ass'n of Indus. & Office Parks v. N.J. Dep't of Env't Prot., 241 N.J. Super. 145,
165 (App. Div. 1990)).
Also, we extend "substantial deference to an agency's interpretation of its
own regulations, reasoning that 'the agency that drafted and promulgated the
rule should know the meaning of that rule.'" Ibid. (quoting In re Freshwater
Wetlands Gen. Permit No. 16, 379 N.J. Super. 331, 341–42 (App. Div. 2005)).
"[B]ecause a permitting decision by the [DEP] is a quasi-judicial
determination," though, "reasoned fact-finding is essential." Ibid.
Our review of legal issues, meanwhile, is de novo. "Agencies . . . have no
superior ability to resolve purely legal questions, and . . . a court is not bound
A-1639-22 15 by an agency's determination of a legal issue . . . ." Stream Encroachment
Permit, 402 N.J. Super. at 597 (quoting Greenwood v. State Police Training Ctr.,
127 N.J. 500, 513 (1992)).
Furthermore, the "DEP's permitting process is 'best classified as a quasi-
judicial procedure possessing some, but not all, of the elements of a traditional
adjudicatory proceeding.'" Musconetcong Watershed Ass'n v. N.J. Dep't of
Env't Prot., 476 N.J. Super. 465, 487–88 (App. Div. 2023) (quoting In re
Issuance of a Permit by Dep't of Env't Prot. to Ciba-Geigy Corp., 120 N.J. 164,
172 (1990)). The process "must set forth basic findings of fact, supported by
the evidence and supporting the ultimate conclusions and final determination,
for the . . . purpose of informing the . . . parties and any reviewing tribunal . . .
so that it may be readily determined whether the result is sufficiently and
soundly grounded." Id. at 488 (quoting In re Application for Med. Marijuana
Alt. Treatment Ctr. for Pangaea Health & Wellness, LLC, 465 N.J. Super. 343,
375 (App. Div. 2020)). We apply these principles of review to the appeal before
us.
III.
The primary issue raised by appellant that warrants our most extensive
discussion concerns whether Bridge Point had an obligation to demonstrate to
A-1639-22 16 the DEP that, in compliance with N.J.A.C. 7:13-11.1(c)(2)(ii), it was not
"feasible" to construct a bridge, rather than a culvert, to modify the channel at
the tributary location in question, and, if so, whether it fulfilled that obligation.
The full text of N.J.A.C. 7:13-11.1(c), which contains this feasibility
provision and in which other feasibility language appears, is as follows:
(c) The [DEP] shall issue an individual permit for a channel modification only if the applicant demonstrates that, in addition to meeting the requirements of (b) above, the channel modification meets at least one of the following requirements:
1. The channel modification is necessary to improve the ecological health of the regulated water and its riparian zone, or to control existing flooding or erosion which poses an immediate threat to life, property or a lawfully existing structure; or
2. The channel modification is necessary for the construction of a bridge or culvert, and the following requirements are satisfied:
i. The disturbance to the channel is the minimum necessary to successfully implement the project;
ii. A bridge is constructed rather than a culvert, where feasible;
iii. The length of channel covered by a bridge or enclosed in a culvert is the minimum feasible; and
A-1639-22 17 iv. No more than 200 linear feet of channel (including the bridge or culvert) is disturbed unless the applicant demonstrates that disturbance to a longer segment of channel cannot feasibly be avoided.
[(Emphasis added).]
The genesis of this regulatory language is instructive. The DEP proposed
the regulation in October 2006 as part of a comprehensive overhaul of the flood
hazard provisions. 38 N.J.R. 3950(a) (Oct. 2, 2006) (rule proposal). Among
other things, the DEP explained in its proposal (then numbered as "N.J.A.C.
7:13-10.1(c)2"), as follows:
Proposed N.J.A.C. 7:13-10.1(c)2 allows up to 200 feet of channel modification if necessary for the construction of a bridge or culvert, provided channel disturbance is minimized, a bridge is constructed rather than a culvert, where feasible, and the length of channel enclosed by the structure is the minimum feasible. The construction of a bridge or culvert often requires some amount of channel modification. The existing rules at N.J.A.C. 7:13-2.16(b)4 encourage minimizing the length of a channel modification, but set no specific length limit. It has been [the DEP's] experience that the construction of a bridge or culvert rarely justifies a channel modification of greater than 200 feet. Therefore, the proposed provision requires that the length of disturbed channel be minimized and requires that disturbance be limited to no greater than 200 feet. If a particular bridge or culvert proposed for construction requires a greater amount of channel disturbance, the project should be redesigned using a
A-1639-22 18 larger span or culvert size to reduce the length of transition in the channel.
[38 N.J.R. 3952(a), at 3993 (emphasis added).]
The DEP therefore included the "where feasible" language within the text of the
proposed new provision. Id. at 4075.
During the public comment period, some commenters raised concerns
about whether the provision was too onerous in various respects. Nevertheless,
the DEP declined to revise it and make it easier for applicants to justify the use
of a culvert instead of a bridge. In its final adoption of the rule in November
2007, the DEP explained in detail why the rule favored bridges instead of
culverts:
RESPONSE TO COMMENTS 730 AND 731: N.J.A.C. 7:13-10.1(c)2 provides that if channel modification is necessary for the construction of a bridge or culvert, the following requirements must be satisfied: the disturbance to the channel is minimized; a bridge is constructed rather than a culvert, where feasible; the length of the channel covered by a bridge or enclosed by a culvert is the minimum feasible; and no more than 200 linear feet of channel (including the bridge or culvert) is disturbed.
It is the [DEP's] experience that applicants often do not design projects with the minimum amount of disturbance to the stream channel. The adopted provisions, therefore, encourage bridges rather than culverts. Bridges usually span a channel and thus typically involve much less disturbance to a channel
A-1639-22 19 than the placement of a culvert. Additionally, bridges often require less permanent stabilization within the channel or surrounding riparian zone. The [DEP] believes limiting channel modifications for bridges and culverts to 200 linear feet will further the [DEP's] goal of limiting channel disturbance, since long reaches of such disturbance often result in adverse impacts to the ecological health of the channel.
The [DEP] believes that most bridge and culvert projects should be able to satisfy the limit without conflicting with the intent of the project or jeopardizing public safety. However, the [DEP] does acknowledge that some projects, such as large highway bridges, may require more than 200 linear feet of channel disturbance to construct. In such cases, applicants for these projects would be required to submit a request for a hardship exception under N.J.A.C. 7:13-9.8 with their individual permit application. The [DEP] believes that these situations are likely to be rare, however. Furthermore, if there is a clear need to exceed the limit to accommodate transportation and safety needs, which cannot be accomplished by other reasonable means, the applicant should be able to demonstrate that a hardship exception is warranted. Therefore, the [DEP] believes that it is appropriate to adopt a 200-linear-foot limitation for channel modifications under N.J.A.C. 7:13-10.1(c)2iv.
[39 N.J.R. 4373(a), at 4677 (Nov. 5, 2007) (rule adoption) (emphasis added).]
The regulation was relocated to N.J.A.C. 7:13-11.1(c)(2) when the flood hazard
rules were recodified in 2016, with no change in the above provision. 48 N.J.R.
1067(a), at 1242 (June 20, 2016) (rule adoption).
A-1639-22 20 The regulation does not define the word "feasible." We consult the
common meaning of the term, informed by the DEP's above-quoted explanation
of its policy reasons underlying the rule. Merriam-Webster's defines feasible:
as: (1) "capable of being done or carried out"; (2) "capable of being used or
dealt with successfully, SUITABLE"; and (3) "REASONABLE, LIKELY".
Merriam-Webster's Collegiate Dictionary 458 (11th ed. 2020). These dictionary
definitions comport with conventional notions of "feasible." They connote what
can be done, as contrasted with what one might prefer to be done.
As was confirmed at oral argument on the appeal, the parties all agree that
Bridge Point, as the applicant for the individual permit, had the burden to
demonstrate that a bridge was infeasible at the subject location, rather than the
DEP or objectors having the burden to show that a bridge was feasible. That
burden allocation is consistent with N.J.A.C. 7:13-18.2, -18.4, -18.7, and -18.8,
which require applicants to establish in their submissions all requirements for
obtaining a permit.
The expert report that Bridge Point submitted to the DEP did not explicitly
address the infeasibility of a bridge at the subject location. Instead, the report
simply stated, in conclusory fashion, that "construction of a culvert is a more
A-1639-22 21 practical application at this location." No explanation of this conclusion was
supplied. This falls short of the applicant's burden to demonstrate infeasibility .
The most pertinent definition of "practical" from Merriam-Webster's is
"capable of being put to use or account: useful." Merriam-Webster's Collegiate
Dictionary 974 (11th ed. 2020). The term practical may have been intended by
the applicant's expert as a synonym for "feasible." But declaring that a culvert
was the "more practical" alternative for the waterway crossing does not mean
that a bridge at that spot was not "feasible." The history of the regulation we
have cited above—which generically favors bridges over culverts—instructs
that it requires the applicant to demonstrate that a bridge is, on its own terms,
not feasible. A bridge hypothetically could be feasible or practical, but regarded
by the applicant as an inferior option. The regulation mandates, however, that
a bridge must be used unless proven to not be feasible at all.
Conceptually, it is possible that several options can be "feasible," even if
one of those options is regarded as "more practical" than others. Neither Bridge
Point nor the DEP may not rewrite the regulation to substitute the term "more
practical" for "feasible." The only mention of feasibility within Bridge Point’s
application is the following passage: "Due to the prevalence of regulated waters
throughout the northern portion of the site, no other feasible opportunities for
A-1639-22 22 access to Route 1 exist that would avoid crossing a stream." This passage
concerns the feasibility of the access location. It does not address the feasibility
or infeasibility of a bridge to cross at that recommended location. The
regulation's history, which we quoted from above, makes it clear the intent of
these provisions is to favor bridges, which tend in the DEP's experience to
produce less adverse environmental impacts than culverts.
The DEP's final agency decisions do not explain why it deemed Bridge
Point's application as satisfying the infeasibility requirement of N.J.A.C. 7:13-
11(c)(2)(ii). The brief filed by the Attorney General on behalf of the DEP
hypothesizes why a bridge would not be feasible at the location. But those
assertions in a brief do not cure the agency's omission. "An agency must engage
in fact-finding to the extent required by statute or regulation . . . [which] is a
matter of substance . . . [and] ensures that agencies act within the scope of their
delegated authority and also facilitates appellate review." Ciba-Geigy Corp.,
120 N.J. at 173 (internal citations and quotations omitted). "We cannot give
deference to an agency's factfinding unless we have 'confidence that there has
been a careful consideration of the facts in issue and appropriate findings
addressing the critical issues in dispute.'" In re Orban, 461 N.J. Super. at 77
(quoting Bailey v. Bd. of Rev., 339 N.J. Super. 29, 33 (App. Div. 2001)). Simply
A-1639-22 23 stated, "[a]n appellate brief is no place for an agency to try and rehabilitate its
actions." In re N.J.A.C. 7:1B-1.1 et seq., 431 N.J. Super. 100, 139 (App. Div.
2013).
We are unpersuaded by respondents' claim that separate provisions within
N.J.A.C.7:13-12.7 addressing various requirements for bridges and culverts
eliminate an applicant's obligation under N.J.A.C. 7:13-11(c)(2)(ii) to establish
that a bridge at a waterway crossing is not feasible. The subsection 12.7
provisions come into play for culverts only after first determining whether a
culvert is justified at all. We are obligated to give meaning to all of a code's
provisions. See State v. Harper, 229 N.J. 228, 237–38 (2017); see also Wilson
ex rel. Manzano v. City of Jersey City, 209 N.J. 558, 572 (2012). Respondents'
arguments concerning subsection 12.7 would improperly render the feasibility
requirement separately imposed by N.J.A.C. 7:13-11.1(c)(2)(ii) superfluous.
Properly construed, the regulatory scheme requires that applicants for an
individual FHACA permit satisfy both N.J.A.C. 7:13-11.1, which regulates area-
specific requirements for individual permits, such as channels requiring
modification, and N.J.A.C. 7:13-12.7, which governs activity-specific
requirements for individual permits, such as the construction of bridges and
culverts. Although separate, those regulations must be read and applied together
A-1639-22 24 insofar as they control different aspects of a proposed development. At the time
Bridge Point submitted its application to the DEP, N.J.A.C. 7:13-10.1 read:
(a) A person shall obtain an individual permit under this subchapter in order to undertake any activity that does not meet the requirements of a permit-by-rule pursuant to N.J.A.C. 7:13-7, an authorization under a general permit-by-certification pursuant to N.J.A.C. 7:13-8, an authorization under a general permit pursuant to N.J.A.C. 7:13-9, or a coastal permit under the circumstances set forth at N.J.A.C. 7:13-2.1(b)6.
(b) A regulated activity or project subject to an individual permit shall meet:
1. The applicable area-specific requirements at N.J.A.C. 7:13-11; and
2. The applicable activity-specific requirements at N.J.A.C. 7:13-12.
[48 N.J.R. 1067(a), at 1241 (June 20, 2016) (rule adoption) (emphasis added).]
That regulation, N.J.A.C. 7:13-10.1, was amended in 2023 to add an extra
requirement, now in (b)(3), for applicable design and construction standards. 55
N.J.R. 1385(b), at 1464 (July 17, 2023) (rule adoption).
We reject respondents' contention that the 2016 amendments to N.J.A.C.
7:13-12.7(g) repealed an applicant's obligation under N.J.A.C. 7:13-11.1(c)(2)
to demonstrate that a bridge is infeasible, or relieved the DEP of making a
feasibility determination. Subsection 12.7(g) illustrates various reasons why a
A-1639-22 25 bridge might be infeasible. Notably, the 2016 revision reiterates the DEP's
overall preference for spanning the channel with a bridge or other three -sided
structure "because it preserves the natural channel with minimal disturbance."
See N.J.A.C. 7:13-12.7(g); 47 N.J.R. 1041, at 1096. The 2015 rule proposal for
revising subsection 12.7(g) acknowledges that in some situations "the width of
the stream [may be] so small that the natural channel must be fully disturbed
during construction to create the footings necessary to span the regulated water
[such that] spanning a channel with a bridge, arch culvert, or three-sided culvert
does not provide a significant environmental benefit over constructing a
circular, elliptical or box culvert that, where possible, incorporates a natural
substrate within the bottom of the structure." Ibid. Even so, Bridge Point's
application did not say this, nor did the DEP's final agency decisions. And, as
we noted above, after receiving comments about the proposed amendment, th e
DEP chose to mandate compliance with both the separate requirements of
N.J.A.C. 7:13-11.1 concerning "area-specific" conditions and N.J.A.C. 7:13-12-
7 concerning "activity-specific" conditions. See 48 N.J.R. 1067, at 1241 (June
20, 2016) (rule adoption).
We accordingly reject the assertion that projects meeting the criteria for
culverts under N.J.A.C. 7:13-12.7 inherently or automatically qualify under the
A-1639-22 26 feasibility analysis mandated by N.J.A.C. 7:13-11.1(c)(2)(ii). They are two
distinct requirements.
"An agency cannot issue a permit absent satisfaction of the applicable
statutory and regulatory criteria." Ciba-Geigy Corp., 120 N.J. at 180; see In re
Authorization for Freshwater Wetlands Gen. Permits, 372 N.J. Super. 578, 596
n.8 (App. Div. 2004); see also Del. Riverkeeper Network, 463 N.J. Super. at
113. Given that well-established principle, we reject respondents' contention
that appellant waived its right to appeal the DEP's issuance of the permit because
it did not present objections to the agency about the bridge feasibility issue
before the permit was approved. We recognize TWI commented on other facets
of the project during the permit review process, but it was not certain that the
DEP would approve of the applicant's decision to forego a bridge until the permit
was issued on December 1, 2022. To be sure, it would have been preferable for
TWI to have voiced this concern sooner, but TWI did not relinquish its right, as
a matter of law, to appeal the final agency decisions once they were made.
We are also cognizant that, as Bridge Point emphasizes, the tributary in
question does not, at present, apparently contain fish or continuous waterflow.
But that overlooks the flood hazard preventative function and potential
environmental impacts involved. If heavy precipitation produces a high amount
A-1639-22 27 of stormwater runoff, the drainage system must be prepared to accommodate it
and avoid flooding. We take judicial notice in this regard of the proximity to
the site of U.S. Route 1 and the surrounding businesses, dwellings, and
ecosystems that could be damaged by local flooding. See 39 N.J.R. 4373(a), at
4677 (Nov. 5, 2007) (rule adoption).
To conclude, in light of this material omission in Bridge Point's
application and in the DEP's final agency decisions, we must vacate the
individual permit and verification, without prejudice to the outcome of a
remand, to enable the agency to reconsider an amplified application by Bridge
Point that explicitly addresses the bridge infeasibility requirement of N.J.A.C.
7:13-11(c)(2)(ii). In the meantime, no activity on the site that requires such a
permit and verification shall proceed.
IV.
The remaining issues raised by appellant lack merit. We briefly discuss
them here.
A.
First, we are satisfied the DEP properly conducted its WQMP consistency
assessment under the WQPA. The plain language of the WQMP provision
creates a rebuttable presumption that projects within sewer areas comply with
A-1639-22 28 areawide plans. N.J.A.C. 7:15-3.2(b). This project, which is located within a
sewer area, qualifies. The WQMP rules impose additional requirements, along
with areawide plan consistency assessments, but the DEP had satisfied those
ahead of its approval of the project. TWI is required to, but did not, effectively
rebut the presumption that the project complies with the areawide plan. The
DEP's handling of this subject was neither arbitrary nor capricious.
B.
Second, the DEP properly carried out its flood hazard area delineation
responsibility, despite the additional rainfall projections that were cited in the
Cornell Studies. The new precipitation data had not yet been incorporated into
the IFPR at the time the DEP issued the permit to Bridge Point on December 1,
2022. See N.J.S.A. 58:16A-52(a) (establishing a process for the DEP in
delineating flood hazard areas every fifteen years).
We agree with respondents that the DEP would not be in compliance with
the Administrative Procedure Act ("APA"), N.J.S.A. 52:14B-1 to -31, if it
prematurely began enforcing the new precipitation levels in the IFPR without
an appropriate rulemaking and notice-and-comment period. See Metromedia,
Inc. v. Dir., Div. of Tax'n, 97 N.J. 313, 328 (1984); In re Authorization For
Freshwater Wetlands Statewide Gen. Permit 6, Special Activity Transition Area
A-1639-22 29 Waiver For Stormwater Mgmt., Water Quality Certification, 433 N.J. Super.
385, 414 (App. Div. 2013) (applying the Metromedia standards for when agency
rulemaking is necessary). We further note the DEP's assertion that aspects of
the Cornell Studies that were eventually incorporated into the IFPR "provide[d]
only the adjustment factors for storms for certain specific weather stations" and
did "not include the raw precipitation data from 1950 to 2019 that was used to
develop the adjustment and change factors."
Although the Cornell Studies indicated that precipitation levels in New
Jersey had been and would likely continue to rise at significant rates,
implementing regulatory changes based on them would require formal
rulemaking. Indeed, the DEP now applies the findings of those studies,
articulated further through the IFPR, to all new flood hazard area verifications.
Although the Cornell Studies existed before the DEP approved Bridge Point's
permit on December 1, 2022, the IFPR—which made them legally effective—
was not proposed until four days later on December 5, 2022. 54 N.J.R. 2169(a).
The sweeping changes of the rule, intended to apply proactively, required formal
rulemaking. The DEP properly approved the permit in this case without
incorporating the yet-to-be-applicable Cornell Studies' findings.
A-1639-22 30 We also decline TWI's urging that we read the definition of "flood hazard
area design flood" within N.J.A.C. 7:13-1.2 to require the DEP to have taken
into account the Cornell Studies rainfall data when it approved the permit on
December 1, 2022. The cited definition refers to a flood that equals the 100-
year flood level, plus "possible future increases in flows." That definitional
language cannot override the APA statute and the Metromedia doctrine. A
regulation cannot nullify a contrary statute and case law.
C.
Lastly, we reject TWI's contention that the DEP erroneously decided not
to delineate floodways on the site. The argument fails because an exception
relieves the DEP from making such a floodway designation.
"The inner portion of the flood hazard area is called the floodway."
N.J.A.C. 7:13-1.2. The FHACA's rules generally require a floodway
verification before, or contemporary with, an authorization of an individual
permit. N.J.A.C. 7:13-5.2(b); N.J.A.C. 7:13-5.5. This requirement is subject,
however, to two exceptions in N.J.A.C. 7:13-5.5(a).
Relevant here, no floodway verification is required under N.J.A.C. 7:13-
5.5(c)(1)-(2) if the DEP
A-1639-22 31 determines, based on a visual inspection of submitted site plans and without review of calculations, that the following requirements are satisfied:
1. No fill or aboveground structure is proposed within a floodway; and
2. Compliance with the flood storage displacement requirements of N.J.A.C. 7:13-11.4 does not require knowledge of the floodway.
According to Bridge Point's permit application and the DEP's permit
approval, no fill or aboveground structure was proposed within a floodway on
the site. The only work proposed within a floodway would be the widening of
Clarksville Road, and "proposed conditions w[ould] generally be constructed at
grade to avoid the placement of fill in the floodway." Based on a site inspection,
the DEP concluded that the one stormwater outfall Bridge Point had proposed
constructing in a flood hazard area would not impact a floodway. The DEP also
determined, without delineating the floodway but after reviewing flood storage
calculations, that the project complied with the flood storage displacement
requirements of N.J.A.C. 7:13-11.4.
Hence, the DEP satisfied both criteria for the exception under N.J.A.C.
7:13-5.5(c).
A-1639-22 32 D.
To the extent we have not discussed them expressly, all of TWI's
remaining arguments lack sufficient merit to warrant discussion. R. 2:11-
3(e)(1)(E).
V.
In sum, we affirm the DEP's final agency decision as to all issues raised
on appeal, with the exception of the insufficiency of the DEP's findings
concerning the bridge infeasibility requirement of N.J.A.C. 7:11.1(c)(2)(ii). As
noted above, we vacate the individual permit and verification, without prejudice
to the outcome of a remand, and remand the subject to the DEP for expeditious
further consideration of the matter. The DEP will have the discretion (1) to
require a new complete permit application, or (2) to request an amplified or
clarified submission from Bridge Point on the feasibility topic and, if so, the
agency shall provide TWI and any other interested parties a fair opportunity to
comment. We do not require a new complete permit application to be submitted,
and the DEP may continue to deem the application, subject to its potential cure,
as preceding the July 17, 2023 applicability of the IFPR rainfall guidelines.
N.J.A.C. 7:8-1.6; N.J.A.C. 7:13-21.1(e).
A-1639-22 33 We stay our opinion, sua sponte, for twenty days to enable any of the
parties to pursue emergent Supreme Court review; if an application is filed with
the Court within that twenty-day period, the interim stay will remain in effect
subject to the Court's direction.
Affirmed in part and vacated in part. We do not retain jurisdiction.
A-1639-22 34