Stop Dump Coalition v. Yamhill County

391 P.3d 932, 284 Or. App. 470, 2017 WL 1075174, 2017 Ore. App. LEXIS 396
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedMarch 22, 2017
Docket2016026; A162746
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 391 P.3d 932 (Stop Dump Coalition v. Yamhill 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
Stop Dump Coalition v. Yamhill County, 391 P.3d 932, 284 Or. App. 470, 2017 WL 1075174, 2017 Ore. App. LEXIS 396 (Or. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

SERCOMBE, P. J.

Petitioners Stop the Dump Coalition, Willamette Valley Wineries Association, Ramsey McPhillips, and Friends of Yamhill County seek judicial review and respondents Yamhill County and Riverbend Landfill Co. (Riverbend) cross-petition for review of an order of the Land Use Board of Appeals (LUBA) that remands to the county its site design review and floodplain permit approvals for an expansion of the Riverbend Landfill. That landfill is a solid waste disposal facility that is located on a larger area of land zoned for exclusive farm uses (EFU); petitioners and respondents assign error to LUBA’s determinations of the legal and evidentiary sufficiency of the county’s application of ORS 215.296, which sets standards for approval of, among other things, solid waste disposal facilities, in an EFU zone.1 On review, we evaluate whether LUBA’s determinations are “unlawful in substance,” ORS 197.850 (9) (a), and affirm on the petition and the cross-petition.

BACKGROUND

Riverbend, which owns and operates the Riverbend Landfill, applied to the county for permission to expand that operation. LUBA set out the history of the applications in an earlier order in the case:

“Riverbend * * * filed applications for site design review and a floodplain development permit to authorize the proposed expansion. Riverbend proposed to add a new Module 10 north of the existing landfill site, and a new Module 11 southwest of the site. The proposed expansions would occupy land that qualifies as high-value farmland. Riverbend also proposed to increase the height of existing berms and add additional fill to five existing modules. The proposed expansions would add 15 years of capacity to the [473]*473landfill operation, which would otherwise reach full capacity in 2017.
“The surrounding area consists largely of EFU-zoned lands in various agricultural uses * *

Stop the Dump Coalition v. Yamhill County, 72 Or LUBA 341, 347 (2015) (SDC-1). The additional modules or areas of disposal created a new “working face,” that is, a new area where waste is removed from containers and placed in an open area prior to being covered. The change of location of the working face, in turn, created additional farm impacts for the landfill operations.

As part of the site design review, Riverbend was obliged to show that the enhanced solid waste disposal facility complied with the standards in ORS 215.296(1) applicable to conditional nonfarm uses.2 The county approved the site design review and floodplain development permit applications, concluding that the expanded landfill did not force a significant change in accepted farm practices or significantly increase the cost of those practices. Id. at 358. Petitioners appealed to LUBA, which remanded the decisions back to the county for additional findings. Id. at 377. In the order under review in this case, LUBA described the earlier remand:

“The present decision is on remand from LUBA. Stop the Dump Coalition v. Yamhill County, 72 Or LUBA 341 (2015) (SDC-1). In that decision, LUBA sustained two assignments of error in part concerning ORS 215.296(1), which requires a finding that the proposed use in an exclusive farm use zone will not force a significant change in accepted farm practices, or significantly increase the cost of such practices, on surrounding lands. The ORS 215.296(1) test is sometimes referred to as the Farm Impacts test or the significant change/cost standard.
“In SDC-1, LUBA identified several analytical errors and remanded the county’s decision to reevaluate the evidence in the record free of those analytical errors, and to determine whether Riverbend has demonstrated that the [474]*474cumulative impacts of the proposed use will not force a significant change in, or significantly increase the costs of, accepted farm practices on surrounding lands. In particular, LUBA directed the county to reconsider the evidence with respect to several types of landfill expansion impacts on farm practices, including: (1) impacts of litter on the adjacent McPhillips farm, (2) impacts of nuisance birds on nearby farms, (3) impacts on pheasant-raising operations on the McPhillips farm, and (4) impacts on farm stands and direct farm sales on nearby farms.
“On remand, the county commissioners re-opened the evidentiary record to accept new evidence with respect to some of the remand issues, conducted a public hearing on February 4, 2016, and allowed the parties to file written rebuttal of new evidence until February 11, 2016. On February 18, 2016, the commissioners deliberated and re-approved the proposed use, adopting findings in support on February 25, 2016. This appeal followed.”

(Footnote omitted.)

In their second appeal to LUBA, petitioners challenged the county’s modified findings on the effects of the expanded landfill on the accepted farm practices of surrounding farmland, specifically the findings on the effects of windblown litter on hay farming; “nuisance birds” on grass-seed farming, fruit, berry and nut cultivation, poultry operations and the raising of livestock; landfill odor on direct farm sales and farm stands; the general operation of the landfill on vineyards and wineries; and the cumulative impacts of the landfill on accepted farm practices. LUBA determined that the county’s findings under ORS 215.296(1) were supported by substantial evidence, except for the cumulative impacts findings. Accordingly, LUBA remanded the decision to the county for a determination of “whether multiple insignificant impacts to each particular farm operation, considered together, reach the threshold of significance for that particular farming operation.”

On review, petitioners contend that LUBA erred in (1) upholding conditions of approval under ORS 215.296(2) that required Riverbend to pay for some of the increased costs of accepted farm practices caused by the expanded landfill in order to satisfy the significant cost increase standard; [475]*475(2) approving conditions that, in petitioners’ view, did not satisfy ORS 215.296(2) because the record lacked eviden-tiary support that the operation of the conditions would satisfy the approval standards and because the conditions were not clear and objective; (3) concluding that a decline in wine grape prices at a nearby vineyard where the grapes were sold was not a significant change to, or an increased cost of, an accepted farm practice; and (4) failing to require the county to analyze the overall cumulative impacts on all of the surrounding farmland, considered as a whole.

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Related

Riverbend Landfill Co. v. Yamhill County
497 P.3d 1288 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2021)
Waste Not of Yamhill County v. Yamhill County
471 P.3d 769 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2020)
Stop the Dump Coal. v. Yamhill Cnty.
435 P.3d 698 (Oregon Supreme Court, 2019)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
391 P.3d 932, 284 Or. App. 470, 2017 WL 1075174, 2017 Ore. App. LEXIS 396, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stop-dump-coalition-v-yamhill-county-orctapp-2017.