Ten Residents v. Boston Redevelopment Authority

21 Mass. L. Rptr. 324
CourtMassachusetts Superior Court
DecidedAugust 2, 2006
DocketNo. 050109BLS2
StatusPublished

This text of 21 Mass. L. Rptr. 324 (Ten Residents v. Boston Redevelopment Authority) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ten Residents v. Boston Redevelopment Authority, 21 Mass. L. Rptr. 324 (Mass. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

Gants, Ralph D., J.

This action concerns the planned development by the defendant University Associates Limited Partnership (“University Associates”) of a project known as BioSquare Phase II (“the Project”) located in the existing BioSquare Research Park (“Research Park”) in the South End of Boston, near Boston Medical Center (“BMC”). The Project will consist of two buildings devoted to medical research and a large parking garage, specifically:

Building F, a seven-stoiy, 194,000-square-foot facility, that will contain the National Emerging Infectious Disease and Bio-Containment Laboratory (“the Biolab”), which will house biosafety laboratories studying various dangerous organisms that can cause infectious diseases in humans and other mammals. The Biolab will contain state-of-the-art Biosafety Level (“BSL”) 2, 3, and 4 laboratories, as well as space for associated research and administrative support;
Building G, an eleven-stoiy, 234,700-square-foot facility, that will be used for medical research, but will not house any BSL laboratories; and
an eight-level parking garage that will provide parking spaces for 1,400 vehicles.

What distinguishes this Project from various other projects that have built medical research facilities in a City renown for its medical research is the inclusion of a BSL-4 laboratory in the Biolab, where medical research will be conducted on the most dangerous disease-causing organisms and toxins known to mankind, including but not limited to the Ebola virus, smallpox, anthrax, and the Botulinum toxin. There is no higher level of security for a laboratory beyond BSL-4. Presently, there are only three BSL-4 laboratories in the United States: one operated by the Centers for Disease Control (“CDC”) in Atlanta, another operated by the U.S. Army Research Institute on Infectious Diseases at Fort Detrick in Frederick, Maryland, and a third operated by the Southwest Institute for Biomedical Research in San Antonio, Texas.

Background

To understand the allegations in the plaintffs’ Second Amended Complaint (“the Complaint”) and the four claims they have made, it is necessary first to understand the background that triggered this litigation.

In 1962, the Legislature enacted the so-called Roxbury Canal Statute, Stat. 1962, c. 762, which authorized the Massachusetts Department of Public Works to acquire through eminent domain whatever land it needed to improve the Roxbury Canal and other nearby waterways by providing for the discharge of storm water, surface drainage, and sewage overflow. When the waterway improvements were completed, this statute required the Commonwealth to convey to the Ciiy of Boston, without consideration, title to the land within the conduit system.

In 1965, the Boston Redevelopment Authority (“BRA”) adopted the South End Urban Renewal Plan. Under this Renewal Plan, future development of the site where the Research Park is now located was to focus on medical and institutional uses, rather than industrial uses. In 1966, the Legislature enlarged the amount of land within the scope of the Roxbuiy Canal Statute, directing the Commonwealth, upon completion of the conduit system, to convey to the City of Boston, without consideration, the area in the South End bounded by Massachusetts Avenue, Albany Street, Dover Street, and the John F. Fitzgerald Expressway (Interstate 93). The 1966 amendment further directed the City to then convey this land to the BRA for urban renewal in accordance with the Renewal Plan. Stat. 1966, c. 567.

In 1991, Boston University proposed, and the BRA approved, a Master Plan for the Planned Development of Area 41, which comprised BioSquare Phase I of the BioSquare Research Park, along with the associated changes in zoning. Phase I included the phased development of four research buildings, a 250-room hotel, and a parking lot located on roughly 8.5 acres of land on Albany Street. On December 12, 1991, after the BRA approved BioSquare Phase I, Boston University and the BRA entered into a Land Disposition Agreement. Under this Agreement, the BRA agreed to convey to Boston University the parcels of land that the BRA would obtain through the amended Roxbuiy Canal Statute. These parcels would comprise the site for the approved Phase I and the anticipated Phase II of the BioSquare Research Park.

On August 31, 1999, University Associates, the affiliate of Boston University that was developing the entire BioSquare Project, submitted to the Massachusetts Executive Office of Environmental Affairs (“EOEA”) its Environmental Notification Form (“ENF”), proposing to commence Phase II of the Research Park. At the time this ENF was submitted, Phase II did not include the Biolab. Rather, the Phase II described in the ENF contemplated two research buildings, one with 400,000 square feet of space and the other with 140,500 square feet, a parking garage, and a helipad.

On October 8, 1999, the Secretary of Environmental Affairs (“the Secretary”) issued a Certificate declaring that, under the Massachusetts Environmental Policy Act (“MEPA”), G.L.c. 30, §§61-62H, and Section 11.03 of the MEPA regulations (301 CMR 11.03), Phase II required the preparation of an Environmental Impact Report (“EIR”). As part of the Certificate, the Secretary defined the scope of the EIR, as required by 301 CMR 11.06 & 11.09. The Secretary directed Uni[326]*326versity Associates to explain the impact of the proposed Project on traffic, transit, parking, air quality, the historic resources of the nearby South End Landmark District, water use, and wastewater generation, and to summarize the measures University Associates would take to mitigate these foreseeable impacts. The Secretary also directed University Associates to analyze the “no-build alternative” to establish a baseline, and then analyze alternative site layouts to find a site layout that minimized the overall environmental impact.

In September 2003, before the Draft EIR had been submitted, the National Institutes of Health (“NIH”) accepted the grant proposal submitted jointly by Boston University and BMC to build and operate the Biolab. As a result, the Project was changed from two research buildings and a parking garage, to one research building, one Biolab, including a BSL-4 laboratory, and a parking garage. In view of this change in the nature of the Project, University Associates asked the Secretary whether she would require any changes in the scope of the EIR. The Assistant Secretary responded on June 30, 2003 that no change in scope was needed to consider the potential environmental risks posed by the proposed Biolab. The Assistant Secretary wrote:

I have reviewed the October 1999 scope in light of the subsequent evolution in project design. The scope remains relevant guidance for the analysis of environmental impacts from the revised project. No changes to the scope are necessary, and the proponent need not submit a Notice of Project Change prior to or concurrent with the filing the [sic] Draft EIR for the project. Of course, the Draft EIR should contain a complete description of the changes to the project since issuance of the scope, and a thorough analysis of potential environmental impacts from the currently proposed development, in accordance with Section 11.07 of the MEPA regulations as modified by the October 1999 scope.

EOEA Administrative Record (“AR”) at 34.1

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
21 Mass. L. Rptr. 324, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ten-residents-v-boston-redevelopment-authority-masssuperct-2006.