New York Chapter of Appalachian Mountain Club, Inc. v. Flacke

109 Misc. 2d 514
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 4, 1981
StatusPublished

This text of 109 Misc. 2d 514 (New York Chapter of Appalachian Mountain Club, Inc. v. Flacke) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
New York Chapter of Appalachian Mountain Club, Inc. v. Flacke, 109 Misc. 2d 514 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1981).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Bentley Kassal, J.

ISSUE

The Commissioner of Environmental Conservation has promulgated very arcane and esoteric regulations regarding environmental controls. The issue presented here is whether he has fully complied with these very rules in his approval of one phase of Westway (the proposed New York City Westside Highway Project). The answer to this question requires an excursion into the complex maze of two different repositories of environmental laws and regulations: the New York State Tidal Wetlands Act (TWA) and the State Environmental Quality Review Act (SEQRA).

[515]*515FACTS

The petitioners are four environmental and conservation organizations, a Greenwich Village community group and several individual residents of the western part of Greenwich Village, who commenced this CPLR article 78 proceeding to vacate and annul a March 24, 1980 determination of the respondent Commissioner of Environmental Conservation of the State of New York (the Commissioner). This ruling had the effect of removing about 200 acres of the proposed Westway construction area on the eastern shoreline of the Hudson River from all regulatory controls under TWA.

The Department of Transportation of the State of New York (DOT), which is responsible for overseeing the construction of Westway, has intervened in support of the Commissioner’s position and, by stipulation, the petition has been reduced to two causes of action, alleging different grounds for vacating the Commissioner’s order.

In 1973, TWA and article 25 of the Environmental Conservation Law was enacted “to preserve and protect tidal wetlands, and to prevent their despoliation and destruction” (ECL 25-0102). Pursuant to ECL 25-0201, the Commissioner, as part of the State-wide environmental plan, was required to develop and maintain an inventory of all tidal wetlands and wetlands boundary maps and, pursuant to ECL 25-0302, to establish land use regulations, governing such wetlands. Among the maps thereafter produced were five covering the west shore of Manhattan from Harrison Street to West 36th Street, designating approximately 200 acres of the Hudson River as littoral zone (LZ), i.e., area covered by less than six feet of water at mean low tide.

In furtherance of the objectives of the TWA, the Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC) promulgated an extensive set of regulations, entitled Tidal Wetlands — Land Use Regulations, 6 NYCRR part 661, which designate draining, dredging, filling, disposal of dredged material, construction and other new activities in LZ areas, as regulated activities and “presumptively incompatible uses” (6 NYCRR 661.5, 661.4 [ee]). Since the construction of Westway on landfill in the Hudson River would [516]*516clearly entail almost all of these activities, the DOT, as Westway’s sponsor, had two choices: (1) obtain a development permit under 6 NYCRR 661.9-661.25; or (2) seek “demapping”, i.e., an amendment of the existing maps to remove the LZ designation under 6 NYCRR 661.26-661.27. The DOT chose the latter course, petitioning the DEC to de-map the 200 acres for the proposed Westway construction.

After investigations and public hearings on the petition to de-map, the Commissioner reached these findings and conclusions, inter alia, in his order of March 24, 1980:

(1) Approximately 150 of these 200 acres are more than six feet below the mean low water level and, accordingly, were improperly designated LZ (a finding not now disputed);

(2) The remaining 50 acres are within six feet below the mean low water level or are situated under piers or otherwise impractical to survey;

(3) The same 50 acres of potential LZ area have been so affected by numerous forms of construction and pollution that they no longer function biologically as a typical LZ wetland commmunity, although they still support some “surviving” forms of plant and animal life.

Based upon these findings, the Commissioner decided to amend the tidal wetlands maps to de-map these 200 acres of the Westway construction area.

CONTENTIONS OF THE PARTIES

Petitioners challenge the Commissioner’s action on two bases: (1) Failure to consider all relevant tidal wetland values in reaching his determination; and (2) Failure to comply with the requirements of the SEQRA, ECL article 8.

In opposition, the Commissioner argues: (1) The single tidal wetland value which he considered and relied upon — biological productivity or marine food production — is the only factor relevant to a de-mapping determination under the ECL or 6 NYCRR 661.26; and (2) SEQRA does not apply because: a. Westway is exempted from SEQRA by “grandfathering” provisions of that act; and b. de-mapping is merely a ministerial act.

[517]*517FINDINGS

(1). Tidal Wetlands Values

[Initially, it should be noted that all parties agree that this aspect of the Commissioner’s order is being challenged herein solely upon claims that it was affected by an error of law and was arbitrary and capricious (CPLR 7803, subd 3). There is no claim that it was not supported by substantial evidence (CPLR 7803, subd 4).]

As stated earlier, the Commissioner’s order was based upon his conclusion that these 50 acres, which are within the mean low water definition of LZ areas, did not function biologically as a tidal wetland. This determination was based upon the following interpretation of the regulations by the Commissioner (March 24, 1980 order, p 9): “Section 661.26 was written to provide that such areas with limited primary and benthic [relating to the water bottom] productivity would not be regulated under the Tidal Wetlands Act. This provision addresses biological productivity only”.

Petitioners argue that this is too narrow a reading of the TWA and regulations, citing the following language from other sections of the regulations, inter alia: “It is the public policy of the State *** to preserve and protect tidal wetlands *** by establishing regulations that allow only those uses * * * compatible with the preservation, protection and enhancement of the present and potential values of tidal wetlands (including but not limited to their value for marine food production, wildlife habitat, flood and hurricane and storm control, recreation, cleansing ecosystems, absorption of silt and organic material, education and research, and open space and aesthetic appreciation)” (6 NYCRR 661.1).

“Tidal wetlands *** have many values. These values include, but are not limited to, marine food production, wildlife habitat, flood and storm and hurricane control, recreation, cleansing ecosystems, sedimentation control, education and research, and open space and aesthetic appreciation” (6 NYCRR 661.2 [a]).

“[L]ittoral zones include areas of extreme variability in their contributions to marine food production and other tidal wetland values * * * Even in * * * relatively unpro[518]

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109 Misc. 2d 514, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/new-york-chapter-of-appalachian-mountain-club-inc-v-flacke-nysupct-1981.