'O Haleakalâ v. Board of Land & Natural Resources

382 P.3d 195, 138 Haw. 383
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 6, 2016
DocketSCWC-13-0003065
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 382 P.3d 195 ('O Haleakalâ v. Board of Land & Natural Resources) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hawaii Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
'O Haleakalâ v. Board of Land & Natural Resources, 382 P.3d 195, 138 Haw. 383 (haw 2016).

Opinions

OPINION OF THE COURT BY

RECKTENWALD, C.J.

This case concerns a conservation district use permit for construction of the Advanced Technology Solar Telescope (ATST) on the island of Maui, in an area at the summit of Haleakalá that was set aside for astronomical observatories in 1961. Haleakalá is a site of great cultural and spiritual importance to the Native Hawaiian community. It also bears scientific significance for astronomical studies, and is a popular visitor destination.

The Board of Land and Natural Resources (Board or BLNR) granted a permit for the University of Hawai'i (UH) to construct the ATST.2 Kilakila ‘O Haleakalá (Kilakila), an organization “dedicated to the protection of the sacredness of Haleakalá[,]” challenged BLNR’s approval of the permit to construct the ATST. Kilakila appealed to the Circuit Court of the First Circuit and the Intermediate Court of Appeals, and both courts affirmed BLNR’s decision.

This court granted certiorari review. We conclude that the permit approval process was not procedurally flawed by prejudgment because BLNR’s initial permit was voided. Nor was it flawed by impermissible ex parte communication because BLNR removed the original hearing officer after he communicated with a party, and the BLNR Chairperson’s meeting with non-parties did not address the merits of the permit approval process. We further conclude that BLNR validly determined that the ATST met the applicable permit criteria and was consistent with the purposes of the conservation district.

[387]*387Accordingly, we conclude that BLNR properly granted the permit and affirm the ICA’s judgment.

I. Background

A. Haleakalá, the Haleakalá High Altitude Observatory, and the Proposed Advanced Technology Solar Telescope

The summit of Haleakalá has important cultural significance to Native Hawaiians. Cultural assessments performed for the ATST determined that the Haleakalá summit is one of the most sacred sites on Maui, and the Haleakalá Crater is known as “where the gods live.” The summit was traditionally used by Native Hawaiians as a place for religious ceremonies, for prayer to the gods, to connect to ancestors, and to bury the dead. Native Hawaiians continue to engage in some of these practices at the summit.

The Haleakalá summit consists of three volcanic cones, and all are partially developed. One volcanic cone includes facilities belonging to the County of Maui, the State of Hawai'i, and the federal government. The second cone houses Haleakalá National Park’s popular visitor outlook. In 1961, Ha-wai'i Governor William Quinn set aside 18.166 acres on the third volcanic cone, Pu’u Kolekole, as the site of the Haleakalá High Altitude Observatory (HO). Since this designation by Governor Quinn, the site has been used for astronomical observatories and is the only site at Haleakalá used for these purposes. The HO currently consists of eight research facilities “for advanced studies of astronomy and atmospheric sciences” owned by UH and managed by the UH Institute of Astronomy (UHIfA).

The HO is located in a conservation district, as categorized by the State Land Use Commission. Land within a conservation district is divided into subzones. See HAR § 13-5-10 (1994). The HO is in a “general subzone,” which seeks to “designate open space where specific conservation uses may not be defined, but where urban use would be premature.” HAR § 13-5-14(a) (1994). Several types of land use are permitted in the general subzone, including astronomical facilities. See HAR § 13-5-24 (1994) (listing “[ajstronomy facilities under an approved management plan” as one of the allowable uses in a resource subzone); HAR § 13-5-25 (1994) (stating that “[i]n addition to the land uses identified [for general subzones], all identified land uses ... for the protective, limited, and resource subzones also apply to the general subzone, unless otherwise noted”).

Over the past two decades, the proposed ATST was developed through the work of the Association of Universities for Research in Astronomy, the National Solar Observatory, and the National Science Foundation. Astronomers and other scientists determined that there was a world-wide need for a telescope capable of taking high-resolution images of the sun to study its solar magnetic fields and its relation to solar energy, sunspots, and flares. No current or planned ground-based or space-based telescope in the world has this capability. The ATST would consist of an 142.7-feet tall telescope observatory structure, a support and operations building, a utility building, a parking lot, a wastewater treatment plant, and modifications to an existing observatory. In 2004, after studying 72 potential sites, Haleakalá was chosen as the best site for the ATST because it met or exceeded all requirements.

B. Application for Conservation District Use Permit

The ATST requires a conservation district use permit (CDUP) because the HO is located in a conservation district. On March 1, 2010, UHIfA submitted a conservation district use application (CDUA) to BLNR pursuant to HAR § 13-5-31(a)3 and HAR § 13-[388]*3885-39(a)4. The CDUA provided a range of detailed information about the ATST, including a final environmental impact statement (FEIS) and a management plan (MP).

1. Final environmental impact statement

The FEIS5 was completed in July 2009 and addressed the environmental impacts associated with the construction and operation of the proposed ATST Project.6 The impacts were “analyzed under three alternatives, two action alternatives located within HO: the Mees Alternative (the Preferred Alternative) and the Reber Circle Alternative, and a No-Action Alternative.”

The FEIS analyzed the environmental impacts from the ATST in the following categories: (1) land use and existing activities, (2) cultural, historic, and archeological resources, (3) biological resources, (4) topography, geology, and soils, (5) visual resources and view planes, (6) visitor use and experience, (7) water resources, (8) hazardous materials and solid waste, (9) infrastructure and utilities, (10) noise, (11) climatology and air quality, (12) socioeconomics and environmental justice, (13) public services and facilities, and (14) natural hazards.7

Most relevant to this appeal are the FEIS’s conclusions about the impacts on cultural and visual resources from the construction and operation of the ATST. Regarding the cultural resources category, the FEIS determined:

Construction and operation of the proposed ATST Project at either the Preferred Mees or Reber Circle sites would result in major, adverse, short- and long-term, direct impacts on the traditional cultural resources within the ROI [Region of Influence8]. No indirect impacts are expected. Mitigation measures would be implemented; however, those measures would not reduce the impact intensity: impacts would remain major, adverse, long-term and direct.

In addition, the FEIS found that “under the No-Action Alternative, there would continue to be major, adverse, long-term, direct impacts to traditional cultural resources.”

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Bluebook (online)
382 P.3d 195, 138 Haw. 383, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/o-haleakala-v-board-of-land-natural-resources-haw-2016.