Save Oregon's Cape Kiwanda Organization v. Tillamook County

34 P.3d 745, 177 Or. App. 347, 2001 Ore. App. LEXIS 1640
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedOctober 31, 2001
Docket2001-021; A114954
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 34 P.3d 745 (Save Oregon's Cape Kiwanda Organization v. Tillamook County) 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
Save Oregon's Cape Kiwanda Organization v. Tillamook County, 34 P.3d 745, 177 Or. App. 347, 2001 Ore. App. LEXIS 1640 (Or. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

DEITS, C. J.

Petitioners seek review of a Land Use Board of Appeals (LUBA) decision affirming Tillamook County’s approval of a conditional use permit allowing the development of a hotel project near the unincorporated community of Pacific City on the Oregon coast. We affirm.

We take the facts from LUBA’s opinion. Respondent on review, and applicant before the county, Nestucca Ridge Development, Inc. (Nestucca Ridge) sought the modification of a conditional use permit from Tillamook County allowing it to build a hotel on a roughly crescent shaped property fronting the Pacific Ocean. The subject property is made up of tax lots 1500 and 1501. The western property boundary is the Oregon Coordinate Line (OCL), the boundary line between public and private ownership of Oregon beaches. This western boundary is straddled by a line of riprap paralleling the shore line. The riprap structure was placed on this site around 1970. The property slopes gently upward from the beach to a topographic bench. The bench is in the center of the property and is the site of the proposed hotel project. The eastern and northern boundaries of the property are framed by a steep slope.

In 1996, the county approved a conditional use permit for a hotel to be developed in two phases. Phase I of the project has been completed on property to the east of the subject parcel. Nestucca Ridge sought approval to modify the conditional use permit to allow it to reconfigure the Phase II site plan to construct the proposed hotel on tax lot 1501 as an additional phase of the project. As LUBA explained, the project required three approvals: (1) approval of the modified conditional use permit for the hotel; (2) a determination of the development’s oceanfront setback lines; and (3) review and approval of a geologic hazard report. Following internal appeals, the Tillamook County Board of Commissioners approved the proposal. Petitioners appealed the approval to LUBA, and LUBA affirmed the county’s decision.

In their first assignment of error to us, petitioners argue that LUBA’s decision is unlawful in substance. They assert that LUBA committed legal error in concluding that [350]*350the county had demonstrated compliance with Tillamook County Land Use Ordinance (LUO) 3.085(4)(A)(l)(a). Petitioners make a number of arguments in this assignment of error.

The critical land use ordinance here is LUO 3.085. That ordinance applies in this case because the property is in the county’s “Beach and Dune Overlay Zone.” LUO 3.085(4)(A)(1) provides that permitted uses within the overlay zone include commercial developments, such as hotels, but such developments are allowed

“only in areas classified as stabilized foredune or conditionally stable foredune not subject to ocean undercutting or wave overtopping, or in areas where an exception has been taken to the prohibitions contained in Goal 18 implementation requirement (2).” LUO 3.085(4)(A)(l)(a) (emphasis added).

The parties agree that the sand formation underlying the subject property is a foredune. LUBA opined, and the parties do not appear to disagree, that, while there is no definition of “foredune” in the statewide planning goals, the term refers to a dune located at the landward margin of a beach. The Department of Land Conservation and Development (DLCD) has defined a number of terms in materials it publishes with the Statewide Planning Goals. Although those definitions have not been adopted as OARs, we find them helpful. A “dune” is defined as a “hill or ridge of sand built up by the wind along sandy coasts.” Other relevant definitions specify different types of dunes:

“DUNE, ACTIVE. A dune that migrates, grows and diminishes from the effect of wind and supply of sand. Active dunes include all open sand dunes, active hummocks, and active foredunes.
“DUNE, CONDITIONALLY STABLE. A dune presently in a stable condition, but vulnerable to becoming active due to fragile vegetative cover.
“DUNE, OLDER STABILIZED. A dune that is stable from wind erosion, and that has significant soil development and that may include diverse forest cover. They include older foredunes.
[351]*351“DUNE, OPEN SAND. A collective term for active, unvegetated dune landforms.
“DUNE, RECENTLY STABILIZED. A dune with sufficient vegetation to be stabilized from wind erosion, but with little, if any, development of soil or cohesion of the sand under the vegetation. Recently stabilized dunes include conditionally stable foredunes, conditionally stable dunes, dune complexes, and younger stabilized dunes.
“DUNE, YOUNGER STABILIZED. A wind-stable dune with weakly developed soils and vegetation.
"* * * * *
“FOREDUNE, ACTIVE. An unstable barrier ridge of sand paralleling the beach and subject to wind erosion, water erosion, and growth from new sand deposits. Active foredunes may include areas with beach grass, and occur in sand spits and at river mouths as well as elsewhere.
“FOREDUNE, CONDITIONALLY STABLE. An active foredune that has ceased growing in height and that has become conditionally stable with regard to wind erosion.
“FOREDUNE, OLDER. A conditionally stable fore-dune that has become wind stabilized by diverse vegetation and soil development.”

LUBA agreed with the county that the site of the hotel project, the bench area 60 feet landward of the OCL, is composed of “younger stabilized dunes,[1] not subject to wave undercutting or overtopping,” 2 and, therefore, the approval of the conditional use permit was consistent with LUO 3.085(4)(A)(l)(a). Petitioners raise a number of different problems with this holding.

[352]*352 First, petitioners assert that LUO 3.085 requires that, in deciding if the property includes the type of dune on which commercial development may be permissible, the entire foredune must be evaluated, or at least the entire property — in this case, all of tax lot 1501. It is petitioners’ view that, if any part of the dune or the property is an active foredune, then no development may be permitted on the property. LUBA rejected this assertion. It explained:

“[Nestucca Ridge] is correct that the county limited its determination to the ‘site’ rather than the entire subject property. To the extent petitioners suggest that either LUO 3.085 or Goal 18 requires the county to evaluate the character of the entire subject property, or the entire foredune underlying the subject property and others, we reject the suggestion. LUO 3.085 requires that the county allow development ‘only in areas’ classified as stabilized or conditionally stable. The ‘area’ the county considered was the benched area on the subject property on which development is proposed. Petitioners have not demonstrated that either LUO 3.085 or Goal 18 requires a more expansive evaluation. As the evidence in this case illustrates, dune formations can encompass a wide geographic area and have multiple characteristics. Petitioners’ view of the pertinent scope of consideration would require that the county prohibit development on even older stabilized areas of a fore-dune, merely because another area of the foredune is in an active condition, or subject to ocean undercutting or wave overtopping.

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Bluebook (online)
34 P.3d 745, 177 Or. App. 347, 2001 Ore. App. LEXIS 1640, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/save-oregons-cape-kiwanda-organization-v-tillamook-county-orctapp-2001.