McPhillips Farm, Inc. v. Yamhill County

300 P.3d 299, 256 Or. App. 402, 2013 WL 1755878, 2013 Ore. App. LEXIS 477
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedApril 24, 2013
Docket2012027; A152964
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 300 P.3d 299 (McPhillips Farm, Inc. v. Yamhill County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McPhillips Farm, Inc. v. Yamhill County, 300 P.3d 299, 256 Or. App. 402, 2013 WL 1755878, 2013 Ore. App. LEXIS 477 (Or. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

SERCOMBE, J.

The Land Use Board of Appeals (LUBA) has exclusive review authority over “land use decision [s]” made by local governments, state agencies, and special districts. ORS 197.825(1). This case concerns whether LUBA properly dismissed its review of a land use compatibility statement (LUCS) issued by Yamhill County certifying that a proposed state agency permit to construct a landfill berm was compatible with county land use laws. Petitioners sought a determination from LUBA that the county erred in making the compatibility determination in that LUCS. However, LUBA concluded that it lacked jurisdiction to grant petitioners’ requested relief because the LUCS was not a “land use decision” as defined by ORS 197.015(10).

We review LUBA orders to determine, among other things, whether they are “unlawful in substance.” ORS 197.850(9)(a). On judicial review, petitioners claim that the LUBA dismissal order was unlawful in substance because the LUCS was a “land use decision” and LUBA therefore had review authority. We conclude that LUBA correctly decided that the LUCS was not a “land use decision” under ORS 197.015(10)(b)(H), which sets out exclusions from the definition of that term. Accordingly, we affirm LUBA’s opinion and order.

We take the facts from LUBA’s opinion and order and the local government record and begin with a description of the county’s LUCS certification and its historical context. Respondent Riverbend Landfill Company, Inc., owns property near the South Yamhill River in Yamhill County that is used as a solid waste disposal facility (“landfill”).1 In 1980, the county approved changes to its comprehensive plan and zoning map to designate and rezone that property as “Public Works Safety” (PWS). Those actions were necessary to allow the development of a “sanitary landfill” on the property, a permitted use in the PWS zoning district. The comprehensive plan amendment included an “exceptions statement” that [405]*405justified the failure to apply the requirements of statewide planning Goals 3 (agricultural lands) and 4 (forest lands) to the plan-change for the proposed landfill facility. See OAR 660-015-0000(3), (4).The exceptions statement justified a proposed nonresource use of the property for a landfill based on the need for, and lack of alternatives to, the proposed facility, as well as the consequences and compatibility of its operations.2 The proposed use was described as a “landfill” that “will include a berm to prevent leaching of the Yamhill River.” At the same time, the county issued a conditional use permit for the deposit of fill on the part of the property located in the river’s floodplain. That permit imposed conditions upon the engineering and construction of the proposed landfill. Respondent obtained a solid waste disposal permit for the facility from the Department of Environmental Quality (DEQ) in 1981 and, shortly afterward, constructed the berm and initial disposal cells of the landfill.

In December 1982, after the landfill began operations, the county adopted a new Yamhill County Zoning Ordinance (YCZO) that included site design review regulations (provisions for review and approval of preliminary and final site development plans). YCZO 1101.01 provided that the “site design review process is intended to guide future growth and development” and that the process applied“to all development in * * * [the] Public Facilities Districts,” including the PWS district.

[406]*406In 1990, respondent sought DEQ approval to renew the 1981 solid waste disposal permit. As part of the permit renewal, respondent proposed to expand the landfill area on the rezoned property to include new disposal cells and to construct a new leachate holding lagoon as part of the storm-water management of the landfill. DEQ asked the county for a LUCS — a determination of whether the uses and activities allowed by the proposed permit were compatible with the county’s comprehensive land use plan and regulations.3

In 1992, the county board of commissioners adopted an order authorizing a LUCS for the permit renewal. The order determined that the landfill use, including its expansion, was authorized by the earlier plan change and rezoning and did not need further land use approvals from the county. However, the order concluded that the leachate holding facility was an accessory use to the landfill and required site design review as a new facility. The order provided that

“[n]ew required accessory uses such as a new leachate storage lagoon or new holding tanks, would be permitted uses (as accessory to a sanitary landfill). However, because those uses would be facilities, establishment of the uses would be subject to site design review under the 1982 ordinance. The County draws a distinction between the primary landfill cell development which was contemplated in the original application and the development of modified [407]*407or new facilities proposed or required as accessory uses to landfill operations.
“The continued development of solid waste disposal cells contemplated in the original approval of the rezone and comprehensive plan amendment remains an outright permitted use. No land use approvals made by the County imposed restrictions on the lateral or vertical development of the Landfill within the PWS zone. Issues relative to the engineering or environmental safety or appropriateness of landfill design and operation were left to be addressed by DEQ in its review of the Landfill’s operating permit.”

Thus, the board concluded, and the LUCS provided, that the permit renewal was “compatible with Yamhill County’s comprehensive plan and land use regulations, subject to site design review requirements for new facilities” for the leachate lagoon.

In 2012, respondent applied to DEQ for a modification of that solid waste disposal permit to allow replacement of the earthen berm along the western boundary of the landfill with a “mechanically stabilized earthen” (MSE) berm, as well as construction or modification of new facilities (a recycling facility, scales, a maintenance facility, and leachate storage tanks). The proposed MSE berm is a reinforced berm that is approximately 40 feet in height and taller than the existing berm so that a greater amount of waste can be contained in the adjacent disposal cells.

DEQ, in turn, asked the county for a LUCS for those changes. The county issued a LUCS for the MSE berm, concluding in its findings that the “MSE berm is a technical change only to the manner in which [respondent] constructs the perimeter berm of the landfill” and that it “continues the same use that was authorized in 1980 ”4 Petitioners [408]*408disagreed with the county’s determination and appealed the order to LUBA.

Before LUBA, respondent moved to dismiss the appeal, contending that the LUCS decision fell within one or more of the exclusions from the definition of “land use decision” at ORS 197.015

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Related

Waste Not of Yamhill County v. Yamhill County
471 P.3d 769 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2020)
Diesel v. Jackson County
391 P.3d 973 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2017)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
300 P.3d 299, 256 Or. App. 402, 2013 WL 1755878, 2013 Ore. App. LEXIS 477, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcphillips-farm-inc-v-yamhill-county-orctapp-2013.