McCullough Crusing, Inc. Act 250

CourtVermont Superior Court
DecidedJune 24, 2016
Docket3-1-10 Vtec
StatusPublished

This text of McCullough Crusing, Inc. Act 250 (McCullough Crusing, Inc. Act 250) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Vermont Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McCullough Crusing, Inc. Act 250, (Vt. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

STATE OF VERMONT SUPERIOR COURT ENVIRONMENTAL DIVISION

McCullough Crushing Inc. Amended CU Docket No. 179-10-10 Vtec

McCullough Crushing Inc. Act 250 Exp. Docket No. 3-1-10 Vtec

Decision on the Merits

In the pending coordinated matters, Applicant McCullough Crushing, Inc. (MCI or Applicant) seeks an Act 250 land use permit and municipal conditional use approval to expand its existing 45-acre gravel pit in Calais, Vermont both northerly into a wooded area and westerly into what is currently a large open agricultural field. These matters are longstanding. MCI first applied for a conditional use permit in 2007. The Town of Calais Development Review Board (DRB) denied the application “without prejudice,” citing inadequate supporting information, and MCI appealed. Certain neighbors—Alexander Meiklejohn, Douglas Meiklejohn, D. Stuart Meiklejohn,1 Peter Brough, Jan Brough, and Flo Hartman (Neighbors)—cross-appealed this denial. The parties then stipulated to a remand to the Town of the appeal while MCI sought an Act 250 permit. MCI applied for an Act 250 permit in March 2008, and the District #5 Environmental Commission (District Commission) granted the permit in December 2009, subject to a condition that MCI submit a plan to protect a “poor fen” (a type of wetland) on the site. MCI appealed that permit, challenging the fen-protection requirement and other conditions in the permit. The Neighbors cross-appealed the permit, seeking review under Act 250 Criteria 8, 8(A), 9(E), and 10. While the Act 250 appeal was pending before the Court, the DRB considered the remanded application in 2010. The DRB again denied the application, citing concerns about the proposed destruction of the poor fen (MCI had not yet developed a fen protection plan, since it was appealing the Act 250 permit conditions), noise at neighboring properties (including a residential lot MCI had purchased from Lance and Bonnie Boardman), dust, and visibility of the

1 Stuart Meiklejohn conveyed his property before trial, and withdrew as an Appellant. 1 pit. MCI appealed the Town’s decision, seeking general review under the applicable standards, and also arguing that the DRB was not allowed to consider the Boardman parcel as part of its decision. The Neighbors cross-appealed, pressing the same points. James and Rebecca Davin appeared as interested parties in the conditional use appeal (they are not parties in the Act 250 appeal). The parties jointly requested considerable time to resolve the several issues in the two appeals. The Town pursued purchasing the gravel pit, but was unsuccessful. The parties also completed mediation without resolving the disputes. In October 2013, the Agency of Natural Resources (ANR) reclassified the poor fen on MCI’s tract as a Class II wetland, which entitles the wetland to buffer-zone protection. MCI reached an agreement with ANR for a revised proposal that leaves the poor fen and buffer zone intact (developing the land surrounding the poor fen in two separate spurs). Finally, after considerable efforts, the parties were prepared for trial. The trial was originally scheduled for winter of 2014. The Court conducted a site visit on October 22, 2014 in advance of trial to avoid any concerns of adverse weather and to allow the Court to view the gravel pit without snow cover. The parties then requested an additional continuance, which the Court granted. The Court held a four-day merits hearing from June 16 to 19, 2015 at the Vermont Superior Court, Civil Division, Washington County courthouse in Montpelier, Vermont. Appearing at the site visit were McCullough Crushing, Inc., represented by Attorney Christopher D. Roy; Neighbors, represented by Attorney David Grayck; James and Rebecca Davin, represented by Attorney L. Brooke Dingledine; and the Town, represented by Joseph S. McLean, Esq.2 Based upon the evidence presented at trial, which was put into context by the site visit, the Court renders the following findings of fact and conclusions of law.

FINDINGS OF FACT

I. Proposed Project 1. MCI currently operates a 45-acre gravel pit in Calais, Vermont (the existing operation).

2 ANR, represented by Attorneys Jon Groveman and Elizabeth Lord, participated in pre-trial activities, but it did not participate in trial as the issues regarding the poor fen were resolved. Self-represented litigants Scott Gregory Grzankowski and Kevin Wells did not attend or participate in trial. 2 2. The existing operation is located on two parcels, together 53.9 acres. The southern parcel is a parcel MCI leases from William and Muriel Hudson. The northern parcel is owned by MCI. The southern area of the pit is generally referred to as the “Hudson pit” and the northern area the “McCullough pit.” 3. Route 14 runs in a north-south direction to the east of the existing operation. Balentine Road is a town road that begins at Route 14 just to the south of the existing operation and runs in a westerly direction to the south of Hudson Pit area before turning to the northwest. 4. The existing operation is subject to two active Act 250 land use permits: Permit #5W0738 (for the Hudson pit) and Permit #520842 (for the McCullough pit). The existing operation also has two active Town permits, one for the Hudson pit and one for the McCullough pit. 5. The historic extraction rate for the existing operation is 110,000 cubic yards of sand and gravel per year. 6. MCI proposes an 11-acre expansion of the existing operation (the Project) into a 4- acre area that is part of the existing operation and into 7 acres of an adjoining 35.5-acre parcel (the Expansion Parcel). 7. The Expansion Parcel is located westerly of the existing operation and was formerly known as the Rathburn parcel. MCI currently owns the Expansion Parcel. 8. The Expansion Parcel currently has a hayfield, barn, house, and other small structures on it. 9. The Expansion Parcel is bordered by Balentine Road to the southwest and other parcels (not owned by MCI) to the west that are forested with some open fields and sparse residences. 10. Batten Road extends southwesterly from Balentine Road in the area of the hayfield on the Expansion Parcel. 11. A portion of the Expansion Parcel had previously been used for gravel extraction. This extraction took place 30 to 40 years ago in an area south of the poor fen. This area is now naturally reclaimed and has steep slopes. 12. A stream and wetlands are located along the western edge of the Expansion Parcel. 13. At least a 60-foot vegetative buffer will be maintained between pit operations and the limits of the stream and wetlands.

3 14. There is an isolated “poor fen” (a type of wetland) in the center of the Expansion Parcel. Through an agreement reached with the Agency of Natural Resources, MCI will maintain a fen-buffer that is adequate to protect the poor fen. 15. The northwest corner of the existing operation is a wooded area which has been designated as a deer wintering habitat by the Vermont Department of Fish and Wildlife. 16. MCI’s Project, as proposed, will expand the existing operation in two distinct sections of the Expansion Parcel. One section will create a kind of prong or spur extending westward from the existing pit, south of the isolated poor fen into the hayfield (the Western Expansion area). The other section will expand the northwestern edge of the northern part of the pit (the Northwestern Expansion area). 17. The expansion has been designed to protect the isolated poor fen on the Expansion Parcel. The expansion activities will respect wetland buffers and the fen-buffer. 18. The existing gravel pit operations and the proposed Expansion Parcel are located in the rural residential zoning district as defined by the Land Use & Development Regulations for the Town of Calais (Regulations) (submitted as MCI’s Ex. 9). 19. Material to be excavated is high quality gravel. 20.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
McCullough Crusing, Inc. Act 250, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccullough-crusing-inc-act-250-vtsuperct-2016.