Neighbors for Livability v. City of Beaverton

4 P.3d 765, 168 Or. App. 501, 2000 Ore. App. LEXIS 1098
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedJune 28, 2000
DocketLUBA 99-036; CA A108953
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 4 P.3d 765 (Neighbors for Livability v. City of Beaverton) 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
Neighbors for Livability v. City of Beaverton, 4 P.3d 765, 168 Or. App. 501, 2000 Ore. App. LEXIS 1098 (Or. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

*504 DEITS, C. J.

Petitioners seek review of LUBA’s decision affirming comprehensive plan map amendments by which the City of Beaverton changed the designation of a 10-acre area in the vicinity of Beard Road and Murray Boulevard (Murray site) from residential to commercial and changed the designation of a 10-acre area at the nearby intersection of Beard and 155th Avenue (155th site) from commercial to residential. We affirm in part and reverse in part.

Although respondent Sorrento Construction’s (Sorrento) application and the city’s decision directly sought and granted only the plan amendments, and did not include related zoning changes or specific developmental permits, the ultimate objective of both Sorrento and the city is to develop a supermarket complex at the Murray site. The city council’s order recites the intent that the site “be developed in a manner which is consistent with representations made by the applicants’ representatives.” The order further provides that, unless there is “substantial progress” toward that development, the Murray and the 155th sites shall “automatically revert to their previous * * * Plan Map designations.” Finally, the council’s order explains, inter alia:

“[T]he applicant shall demonstrate substantial progress * * * within two years from and after the conclusion of any appeal of this Council decision to [LUBA], For purposes of this section ‘substantial progress’ shall mean:
“1. For the [residential designated 155th site] filing a complete zone change application.
* X 'X X
“3. For the [commercial designated Murray site] filing applications for a zone change and design review approval, or a zone change and conditional use permit.”

Petitioners appealed unsuccessfully to LUBA, and they now make four assignments of error to us challenging various adverse rulings by LUBA. Petitioners argue in their first assignment that LUBA erred in rejecting their contention that the city acted improperly by refusing to allow petitioners to present testimony about the merits of Sorrento’s *505 planned eventual development of the Murray site, although the city conditioned the present plan amendments on the subsequent presentation of a development proposal for the site by Sorrento. LUBA explained its rejection of the argument as follows:

“The planning commission’s requirement that arguments be directed at the requested plan map amendment criteria rather than a specific proposal simply reflected the fact that approval for a specific proposal was not being considered with the plan map amendments. The fact did not change during the city council’s deliberations in this matter. Petitioners provide no reason for us to believe that petitioners will not be given an opportunity to comment on the specific proposal for commercial development of the Beard/ Murray site when zoning map changes and development permits are requested. Petitioners do not explain why the city council’s decision to limit testimony concerning the plan map amendments it granted prevented petitioners from addressing the relevant plan map amendment criteria.”

We agree with LUBA’s analysis and, therefore, we reject petitioners’ first assignment of error.

In their second assignment, petitioners contend that the city and, in turn, LUBA erred in that the city has no current zoning classification applicable to the Murray site that would allow for its development in accordance with the commercial plan designation that the city adopted in the challenged decision. Petitioners rely, inter alia, on the language in Goal 2:

“The [comprehensive] plans shall be the basis for specific implementation measures. These measures shall be consistent with and adequate to carry out the plans.”

See also ORS 197.175(2).

Petitioners understand the quoted and related language in the goal and statutes to mean that zoning and other implementing legislation must exist at the time or be adopted contemporaneously with the comprehensive plan provisions that they are to implement. We said in Marracci v. City of Scappoose, 26 Or App 131, 134, 552 P2d 552, rev den (1976), in rejecting a similar argument:

*506 “[A] comprehensive plan only establishes a long-range maximum limit on the possible intensity of land use; a plan does not simultaneously establish an immediate minimum limit on the possible intensity of land use. The present use of land may, by zoning ordinance, continue to be more limited than the future use contemplated by the comprehensive plan.”

There is no requirement, in Goal 2 or elsewhere, that “implementation” and “planning” must be simultaneous.

For reasons of analytical clarity, we address petitioners’ fourth assignment of error before their third. In their fourth assignment, petitioners rely on the provision of the city’s land use regulations that requires an applicant for a plan amendment to establish:

“Demonstrated public need to be satisfied by the amendment as compared with other available properties.”

Petitioners contend that the city failed to make the requisite comparisons of the sites with “other available properties.” We disagree. The city council’s finding 4 sets forth an extensive discussion that includes any necessary comparative analysis. We reject petitioners’ fourth assignment of error. 1

In their remaining assignment, petitioners challenge the provision in the city’s decision that, unless there is “substantial progress” toward rezoning and development within a two-year period, the two sites will “automatically revert” to their previous plan designations. We agree with petitioners that the provision is unlawful. As petitioners maintain, the putative “reversion” of the sites to their former designations would be — in substance if not in name — a comprehensive plan amendment. Accordingly, it must comply with the procedural and substantive requirements of state and local law for the promulgation of plan amendments. See, e.g., ORS 197.610 et seq.

Our discussion of the fourth assignment demonstrates that our disposition of the third is not an empty formality. Among the grounds for the city’s “alternative sites” finding was a “comparative analysis of the Murray/Beard *507

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Related

State v. Casaus
New Mexico Court of Appeals, 2018
Neighbors for Livability v. City of Beaverton
35 P.3d 1122 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2001)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
4 P.3d 765, 168 Or. App. 501, 2000 Ore. App. LEXIS 1098, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/neighbors-for-livability-v-city-of-beaverton-orctapp-2000.