Protect the Adirondacks! Inc v. New York State Department of Environmental Conservation

CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 4, 2021
Docket21
StatusPublished

This text of Protect the Adirondacks! Inc v. New York State Department of Environmental Conservation (Protect the Adirondacks! Inc v. New York State Department of Environmental Conservation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Protect the Adirondacks! Inc v. New York State Department of Environmental Conservation, (N.Y. 2021).

Opinion

State of New York OPINION Court of Appeals This opinion is uncorrected and subject to revision before publication in the New York Reports.

No. 21 Protect the Adirondacks! Inc., Respondent-Appellant, v. New York State Department of Environmental Conservation et al., Appellants-Respondents.

Jennifer L. Clark, for appellants-respondents. John W. Caffry, for respondent-appellant. Sierra Club; Adirondack Association of Towns and Villages, Inc. et al.; Empire State Forest Products Association, Inc.; Open Space Institute, Inc. et al.; Adirondack Council, Inc. et al.; The Nature Conservancy, amici curiae.

RIVERA, J.:

On this appeal, we must determine whether the state’s plan for the construction of

approximately 27 miles of Class II community connector trails designed for snowmobile -1- -2- No. 21

use in the Forest Preserve is permissible under the New York Constitution. The plan

requires the cutting and removal of thousands of trees, grading and leveling, and the

removal of rocks and other natural components from the Forest Preserve to create

snowmobile paths that are nine to 12 feet in width. We conclude that construction of these

trails violates the “forever wild” provision of the New York State Constitution (art XIV, §

1) and therefore cannot be accomplished other than by constitutional amendment.

I

The Adirondack Park currently encompasses approximately six million acres of

public and private lands. The Forest Preserve encompasses 2.5 million acres of State-

owned land within the Park. Defendant New York State Department of Environmental

Conservation (DEC) was established in 1970, with a mandate to “[p]rovide for the care,

custody, and control of the forest preserve” (ECL 3-0301 [d], 3-0101; accord ECL 9-0105

[1] [granting DEC authority and duty to take “care, custody and control of the several

preserves, parks and other state lands described in this article”]). Defendant Adirondack

Park Agency (APA) is concerned with “developing long-range park policy” to advance

“optimum overall conservation, protection, preservation, development and use of the

unique scenic, aesthetic, wildlife, recreational, open space, historic, ecological and natural

resources of the Adirondack park” (Executive Law § 801). The DEC, in consultation with

APA, develops individual management plans for units of land classified in a master plan,

-2- -3- No. 21

which “shall guide the development and management of state lands in the Adirondack

park” (id. § 816 [1]).

In 2006, the Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC) and the New York

State Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation prepared a “conceptual

snowmobile plan” with the goal of creating a system of snowmobile trails between

communities in the Adirondack Park. In 2009, DEC developed a guidance document,

entitled “Management Guidance: Snowmobile Trail Siting, Construction and Maintenance

on Forest Preserve Land in the Adirondack Park,” to implement the concepts outlined in

the plan. Under the guidance, the “multi-use” snowmobile trails are meant to improve

community connections, but are also intended for more “passive recreational uses,”

including hiking, mountain biking and other “non-motorized recreational pursuits in the

spring, summer and fall.” Trails in the park that are open to snowmobiles are classified as

either Class I secondary snowmobile trails or Class II trails, the type at issue in this appeal.

Class II trails are “trail segments that serve to connect communities and provide the main

travel routes for snowmobiles.”

Protect the Adirondacks! Inc. commenced this combined declaratory judgment

action and article 78 proceeding, alleging, in relevant part, that construction of the Class II

trails violated article XIV, § 1, of the New York Constitution. Plaintiff alleged that the

construction of the trails is impermissible because it required cutting and destruction of a

substantial amount of timber, would create an “artificial man-made setting” in the Forest

Preserve and was inconsistent with the Preserve’s wild forest nature. After a bench trial

Supreme Court held that the construction was not unconstitutional.

-3- -4- No. 21

The Appellate Division reversed with one Justice dissenting (175 AD3d 24 [3d Dept

2019]). The majority adopted a bifurcated analysis of the constitutional provision and held

that construction in the Forest Preserve of the Class II trails did not violate the “forever

wild” clause because the qualities of the trails—“which have similar aspects to foot trails

and ski trails and have less impact than roads or parking lots”—do not “impair[]” the wild

forest nature of the Forest Preserve (id. at 29). Nevertheless, the Appellate Division held

that the trail construction constitutes an unconstitutional destruction of timber (id. at 29-

31). The dissent would have held that the construction of the Class II trails “effect a

reasoned balance between protecting the Forest Preserve and allowing year-round access”

(id. at 32 [Lynch, J., dissenting]).

Defendants appeal, and plaintiff cross-appeals, as of right (see CPLR 5601 [b]).1

We now affirm and hold that the planned construction of the Class II community connector

trails would violate the constitution.

II

The Forest Preserve is a publicly owned wilderness of incomparable beauty.

Located in two regions of the Adirondack and Catskill Mountains, the Forest Preserve—

with its trees, rivers, wetlands, mountain landscape, and rugged terrain—is a respite from

the demands of daily life and the encroachment of commercial development. It has been

this way for over a century because our State Constitution mandates:

“The lands of the state, now owned or hereafter acquired, constituting the forest preserve as now fixed by law, shall be

1 Following a jurisdictional inquiry, we retained both the appeal and cross appeal.

-4- -5- No. 21

forever kept as wild forest lands. They shall not be leased, sold or exchanged, or be taken by any corporation, public or private, nor shall the timber thereon be sold, removed or destroyed.”2

This unique “forever wild” provision was deemed necessary by its drafters and the people

of the State of New York to end the commercial destruction and despoliation of the soil

and trees that jeopardized the state’s forests and, perhaps most importantly, the state

watershed.3

In 1873, in response to widespread concern about the visible and potentially

irrevocable depredation of the Adirondacks, the state appointed a commission of “trained

forest experts” to “investigate and report a system of forest preservation” (Report of

Committee on Forest Preserves, New York Assembly Documents, No. 36, at 3, 39). The

commission’s final report urged the creation of a forest preserve to “be forever kept as wild

forest lands” (id.).

In 1885, the legislature passed a statute providing that “[a]ll the lands now owned

or which may hereafter be acquired by the State of New York” within certain counties,

“shall constitute and be known as the Forest Preserve” (L 1885, ch 283, § 7). In accordance

with the recommendations of the report, the statute further provided that “[t]he lands now

2 The provision was originally codified as article VII, § 7, and recodified as article XIV, § 1, in the Constitution of 1938. 3 A report to the legislature in 1873 cautioned that “within one hundred years the cold, healthful, living waters of the [Adirondack] wilderness . . .

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Related

Association for the Protection of the Adirondacks v. MacDonald
170 N.E. 902 (New York Court of Appeals, 1930)
People v. . Adirondack Railway Co.
54 N.E. 689 (New York Court of Appeals, 1899)
Association for Protection of Adirondacks v. Macdonald
228 A.D. 73 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1930)
Humphrey v. State
457 N.E.2d 767 (New York Court of Appeals, 1983)
Adirondack Council, Inc. v. Adirondack Park Agency
92 A.D.3d 188 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 2012)
Congel v. Malfitano
101 N.E.3d 341 (Court for the Trial of Impeachments and Correction of Errors, 2018)

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