Spring Valley-Wesley Heights Citizens Ass'n v. District of Columbia Zoning Commission

88 A.3d 697, 2013 WL 818243, 2013 D.C. App. LEXIS 922
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 14, 2013
DocketNos. 12-AA-723, 12-AA-724
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 88 A.3d 697 (Spring Valley-Wesley Heights Citizens Ass'n v. District of Columbia Zoning Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District of Columbia Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Spring Valley-Wesley Heights Citizens Ass'n v. District of Columbia Zoning Commission, 88 A.3d 697, 2013 WL 818243, 2013 D.C. App. LEXIS 922 (D.C. 2013).

Opinion

GLICKMAN, Associate Judge:

Because its campuses are in residentially-zoned areas of the District of Columbia, American University (“AU”) is required by the District’s Zoning Regulations to submit its campus development plans to the District of Columbia Zoning Commission for special exception approval.2 The Zoning Commission also must approve AU’s applications for further processing of an approved campus plan to permit the construction and use of specific buildings on campus.3 Now before us for review are two orders of the Commission approving AU’s Campus Plan for the current decade [704]*704and further processing applications for campus development and dormitory construction. Petitioners, two neighborhood associations that participated in the proceedings before the Commission, claim that it erred in sanctioning AU’s plans. In Appeal No. 12-AA-723, we are persuaded that certain material determinations in the order in Zoning Commission Case No. 11-07 approving AU’s Campus Plan and certain further processing applications are inadequately explained. Accordingly, we grant the petition for review in No. 12-AA-72B and remand for the Commission to address these particular deficiencies. In Appeal No. 12-AA-724, however, we uphold the Commission’s order (Z.C. Case No. 11-07A) granting AU’s further processing application for the construction of a student residence building known as North Hall.

I. Background

AU has two campuses plus a law school in northwest Washington, D.C. The Main Campus is on a seventy-six acre plot of land at Ward Circle, where Nebraska and Massachusetts Avenues intersect. To the east, approximately a mile away, the eight-acre Tenley Campus is at Tenley Circle, where Nebraska Avenue intersects with Wisconsin Avenue. And the Washington College of Law (AU’s law school) is in a building on Massachusetts Avenue several blocks north of the Main Campus. In the 2011 Campus Plan that AU submitted to the Zoning Commission, AU sought approval of an increase in its student enrollment cap and a variety of changes and improvements, including three proposed developments related to the proposed increase in student enrollment that are central to the present appeal.

First, AU sought permission to relocate the Washington College of Law to the Tenley Campus in 2015. Second, AU asked the Commission to approve its plan to construct three new student residence halls and three academic buildings on what is now a University parking lot on Nebraska Avenue at the edge of the Main Campus, transforming it into what is to be called the East Campus. Third, AU also requested approval to construct a new dormitory building to be called North Hall at the northwest end of the Main Campus on Massachusetts Avenue. Petitioners’ objections before us in this appeal relate primarily to AU’s student enrollment and these three projects.

AU submitted its proposed Campus Plan to the Zoning Commission, together with further processing applications for the East Campus, North Hall, and other projects not involved in this appeal, in March 2011. The Commission held hearings on AU’s proposals from June to November 2011. It received written submissions and heard testimony from AU officials; Advisory Neighborhood Commissions (“ANCs”) 3D, 3E, and 3F;4 the D.C. Office of Planning and the District’s Department of Transportation;5 and several neighborhood groups and one individual that were granted party status, including petitioners Spring Valley-Wesley Heights Citizens Association (“SVWHCA”) and Westover Place Homes Corporation (“Westover Place”). During the pendency of the proceedings before the Commission, AU made numerous modifications to its proposals in response to the concerns and [705]*705objections of these other parties. Ultimately, after requesting and receiving further submissions, the Zoning Commission voted 4-0 to approve the 2011 Campus Plan and the North Hall further processing application, subject to various conditions, and it issued the orders that we now are asked to review.

II. Discussion

The Zoning Commission was charged in this case with evaluating AU’s Campus Plan as a whole and making a reasonable forecast as to whether its implementation will lead to conditions “objectionable to neighboring property because of noise, traffic, number of students,” or other factors.6 The appropriate test to employ, we have said, is “whether the proposed use would significantly increase objectionable qualities over their current levels in the area.”7 In approving a campus plan and its implementation, the Commission may impose reasonable restrictions to minimize any adverse impacts on the neighborhood, having “due regard for the [ujniversity’s needs and prerogatives.”8 Ultimately, the Commission’s task is to achieve a “reasonable accommodation ... between the University and the neighbors” — an accommodation that does not substantially “interfere with the legitimate interests of the latter.”9

Our review of the Commission’s orders is limited to determining whether the decisions are arbitrary, capricious, or otherwise not in accordance with law. “Absent a material procedural impropriety or error of law, the Commission’s decision stands so long as it rationally flows from findings of fact supported by substantial evidence in the record as a whole.”10 Consequently, the Commission must explain its decision by making supportive findings of fact on “all material contested issues.”11 Generally speaking, if we can discern “with reasonable clarity” the “reasons for the decision,” the agency has fulfilled its duty of explanation.12 However, because the Commission is obligated by statute to give “great weight” to the issues and concerns raised in the recommendations of Advisory Neighborhood Commissions13 and the Office of Planning,14 we must ensure that the Commission has specifically acknowledged and addressed the positions of those bodies and provided a reasonably precise explanation for any disagreements with them.15

[706]*706Petitioners argue that the Commission did not properly discharge its duties in various respects, to which we now turn.

A. Cap on Student Enrollment

When the Zoning Commission approved AU’s last campus plan (the “2000 Campus Plan”), it did so on the condition that on-campus enrollment would not exceed 10,600 students.16 AU’s law students were not counted in this figure because the law school was located off-campus. AU was in compliance with the cap when it submitted its proposed 2011 Campus Plan to the Commission; at that time, it had enrolled a total of 12,068 students for the 2011-12 academic year — 10,298 undergraduate and graduate students (who were subject to the cap) plus 1,770 law students (who were not subject to the cap). In the 2011 Campus Plan, AU proposed that total student enrollment be capped at 13,600 students. Petitioners and the Advisory Neighborhood Commissions expressed concerns about an increase in the enrollment cap and sought to limit it, but the Commission approved AU’s request, finding, inter alia, that the projected growth represented only a “relatively small,” 13% increase in the total student population— from 12,068 to 13,600.

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Bluebook (online)
88 A.3d 697, 2013 WL 818243, 2013 D.C. App. LEXIS 922, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/spring-valley-wesley-heights-citizens-assn-v-district-of-columbia-zoning-dc-2013.