Quaker Valley S.D. v. Leet Twp. ZHB ~ Appeal of: W. Jasper & M. Antonelli

CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 26, 2024
Docket1474 C.D. 2022
StatusPublished

This text of Quaker Valley S.D. v. Leet Twp. ZHB ~ Appeal of: W. Jasper & M. Antonelli (Quaker Valley S.D. v. Leet Twp. ZHB ~ Appeal of: W. Jasper & M. Antonelli) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Quaker Valley S.D. v. Leet Twp. ZHB ~ Appeal of: W. Jasper & M. Antonelli, (Pa. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA

Quaker Valley School District : : v. : No. 1474 C.D. 2022 : ARGUED: October 10, 2023 Leet Township Zoning Hearing Board, : Leet Township, William Jasper, : Michelle Antonelli, and Leet Township : Municipal Authority : : Appeal of: William Jasper and : Michelle Antonelli :

BEFORE: HONORABLE MICHAEL H. WOJCIK, Judge HONORABLE ELLEN CEISLER, Judge HONORABLE BONNIE BRIGANCE LEADBETTER, Senior Judge

OPINION BY SENIOR JUDGE LEADBETTER FILED: January 26, 2024

Objectors, William Jasper and Michelle Antonelli, appeal from an order of the Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County which reversed a decision of the Leet Township Zoning Hearing Board (ZHB) that had denied Quaker Valley School District’s (QVSD) application for a special exception. Upon review, we affirm. I. Background The pertinent facts are as follows. QVSD owns approximately 108 acres of land located at 200-210 Camp Meeting Road within Leet Township’s AAA Residence Zoning District (AAA District). ZHB’s Findings of Fact (F.F.) 3; Reproduced Record (R.R.) at 10a. The property “is situated at the top of a steep hill consisting in part of landslide-prone Pittsburgh Red Bed clay that is common throughout Western Pennsylvania.” Id. Both Objectors own property and residences in close proximity to, and downhill from, QVSD’s property. A school is a use permitted by special exception in the AAA District pursuant to Section 27-301 of the Leet Township Zoning Ordinance. Leet Twp., Allegheny Cnty., Pa., Zoning Ordinance § 27-301 (1978). As such, QVSD filed an application for a special exception seeking to construct a new public high school on the property under Township Ordinance No. 2019-02.1 F.F. 1; R.R. at 10a. Approximately 650 students will attend the school and about 47 of the 108 acres will be cleared for the project. F.F. 2, 4; R.R. at 10a. While the school will be served by only one road – Camp Meeting Road – the preliminary plans call for two access driveways off that road and into the school. F.F. 7-8; R.R. at 11a. The ZHB held multiple hearings on the application between June 2021 and February 2022.2 The following witnesses testified on behalf of QVSD: licensed professional engineer and traffic expert Charles Wooster; engineer, program manager, and feasibility expert Jon Thomas; and licensed professional engineers Geoffrey Phillips and Joseph Boward. QVSD submitted into evidence, among other things, Mr. Wooster’s initial traffic impact study and rebuttal report, and Mr. Thomas’s expert report.

1 On March 11, 2019, the Leet Township Board of Commissioners passed Ordinance No. 2019-02, which provides the requirements for special exceptions within the Township. See R.R. at 35a. Ordinance No. 2019-02 repealed in its entirety and replaced former Chapter 27, Part 6 of the Leet Township Zoning Ordinance pertaining to special exceptions. Id.

2 It bears noting that at multiple times during the lengthy ZHB proceedings, QVSD’s counsel objected to the scope and subject matter of the testimony and evidence presented, arguing that it went beyond the issue of the property’s use and the parameters of the application for special exception, treading into development issues and details, consideration of which lies with the Planning Commission and Township Commissioners during the project’s land development phase. See R.R. at 28a.

2 Objectors, who were represented by counsel, presented testimony and evidence in opposition to the application, including the testimony and expert report of James French, a licensed engineer and traffic expert. Numerous residents testified throughout the hearings, some in support of the application and many in opposition. Those opposed to the application, including Objectors, cited such concerns as increased traffic, the steepness and poor sight lines of Camp Meeting Road, diminution of property values, and the enhanced risk of accidents due to the volume of teenage drivers on what Objectors characterized as an already problematic roadway. Objectors also voiced environmental concerns due to the proposed leveling of the hilltop site and clear cutting of woodlands, and the risk of landslides due to the topography and geography of the site and the blasting that would most likely be involved during construction of the school.3 The ZHB subsequently issued its decision denying the application for special exception, along with findings of fact, conclusions of law, and a statement of reasons for the decision. R.R. at 1a-34a.4 The ZHB stressed the concerns raised “that Camp Meeting Road was already congested during times of shift changes at nearby employers and that, with the addition of two-third[s] more student drivers and school buses [], first responders would be delayed in reaching the school” in the event of an emergency. R.R. at 21a. The ZHB determined that QVSD’s failure to

3 Leetsdale Borough initially objected to the application. As counsel for the Borough explained during the ZHB’s October 26, 2021 public hearing, the Borough engaged in discussions with QVSD given concerns regarding the impact the proposed school use could have on downhill neighbors. Following these discussions, QVSD and the Borough entered into a Mutual Cooperation Agreement (MCA) outlining various agreed-upon conditions. The Borough subsequently withdrew its objection to the application subject to the conditions approved through the MCA.

4 While not explicitly stated, it is apparent from the ZHB’s statement of reasons for decision that it found the testimony of QVSD’s experts to be credible. See R.R. at 30a-34a.

3 implement an emergency management plan that included an emergency only road (EOR) created substantial risks to public safety and welfare, and that such risks were abnormal for a school use. See R.R. at 23a-24a. Among the ZHB’s findings of fact were the following:

10. The current high school has two roads serving it – Ohio River Boulevard and Beaver Street – that are available to first responders. ....

12. First responder delays of minutes or seconds in reaching the school can cost students and faculty members their lives. ....

15. No first responders or emergency management experts testified. ....

25. Based on Mr. Wooster’s testimony, Mr. Thomas’s testimony, and the objectors’ testimony on the EOR issue, [the] ZHB determined [i]t is an abnormal risk for a school not to implement an emergency management plan that included an EOR if reasonably recommended by the first responders.

26. If a public high school’s emergency management plan does not include an EOR reasonably recommended by first responders, the risks to public safety and welfare will be substantial, serious, highly probable and virtually certain, and will be abnormal for a school.

27. On February 9, 2022, [the] ZHB made its public oral decision denying the application but giving QVSD [30] days to amend the application with regard to the EOR.

28. Also on February 9, 2022, [the] ZHB announced [that] if an EOR amendment were made to the application, then it would convert the denial into an approval subject to the condition that the EOR would be implemented if and as

4 reasonably recommended by first responders, and subject to several other conditions involving safety measures for landslides, water runoff, Camp Meeting Road, insurance, monitoring of conditions[,] and other matters unrelated to the EOR. ....

34. QVSD responded that it would commit to collaboration with first responders and to considering their recommendations in its plan. It stopped abruptly short of committing to implement the first responders’ reasonable recommendations concerning an EOR.

F.F. 10, 12, 15, 25-28, 34 (emphasis added); R.R. at 11a, 13a-14a. The ZHB also issued 13 conclusions of law, including:

2.

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Quaker Valley S.D. v. Leet Twp. ZHB ~ Appeal of: W. Jasper & M. Antonelli, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/quaker-valley-sd-v-leet-twp-zhb-appeal-of-w-jasper-m-antonelli-pacommwct-2024.