Tillman Infrastructure LLC v. Stearns County

CourtDistrict Court, D. Minnesota
DecidedMarch 31, 2026
Docket0:25-cv-03634
StatusUnknown

This text of Tillman Infrastructure LLC v. Stearns County (Tillman Infrastructure LLC v. Stearns County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tillman Infrastructure LLC v. Stearns County, (mnd 2026).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT DISTRICT OF MINNESOTA

Tillman Infrastructure LLC, File No. 25-cv-3634 (ECT/LIB)

Plaintiff,

v. OPINION AND ORDER

Stearns County,

Defendant.

Joseph S. Diedrich, Husch Blackwell LLP, Milwaukee, WI, and Jeffer Ali, Husch Blackwell LLP, Minneapolis, MN, for Plaintiff Tillman Infrastructure LLC. Michael J. Ervin, Squires, Waldspurger & Mace, P.A., for Defendant Stearns County.

Tillman Infrastructure contracted with Verizon to build a new telecommunications tower in rural Stearns County. Verizon was providing services on a nearby tower, but it was paying high rents and sought to use the new tower as a more cost-effective alternative. Tillman applied for a conditional use permit, and Stearns County denied that application for failure to conform to goals in the County’s comprehensive plan. Tillman sued on federal and state law grounds, seeking an order reversing the denial and instructing the County to grant the application. Both parties moved for summary judgment on the administrative record. The County’s motion will be granted, and Tillman’s motion will be denied. The County’s decision had some problems. It listed four grounds for denial, but contradicted itself on two them, concluding that the proposal both did and did not conform to certain goals or requirements. But applying the deferential review in federal and state law, the County did enough to explain why it denied the application, and the non-contradictory

reasons for denial are supported by substantial record evidence. I In September 2024, Plaintiff Tillman Infrastructure LLC applied for a conditional use permit to build a telecommunications tower (“Tillman Tower”) for Verizon Wireless in Stearns County, Minnesota. ECF No. 23-8 at 8.1 The Tillman Tower would be located on 103rd Avenue in Maine Prairie Township—an area zoned as an agricultural district—

and it would be 325 feet high. Id. at 4, 11; see ECF No. 23-19 (map of proposed location). On July 24, 2025, the Stearns County Planning Commission met to consider Tillman’s conditional use permit request “according to Sections 4.8, 7.28, and 9.2.5 of Stearns County Land Use & Zoning Ordinance Number 439.” ECF No. 23-17 at 1–2. Under that ordinance, the Planning Commission is tasked with conducting public hearings

for conditional use permits, and the Commission’s recommendation of approval or denial is taken up by the County Board of Commissioners. Stearns County, Minn., Land Use and Zoning Ordinance #439 § 4.4 (2025) (ECF No. 23-21 at 51–52). The cited zoning provisions govern the requirements and procedures for telecommunications conditional use permit requests. Section 4.8 governs conditional use

permits in general. ECF No. 23-21 at 52–58. On an application for a conditional use permit, “the Planning Commission and Board shall consider” several criteria, including

1 Page citations are to CM/ECF page numbers in the top right-hand corner, not the document’s original pagination. “the effect of the proposed use on the Comprehensive Plan”; “the ability of the use to be compatible or separated by distance or screening from adjacent land”; “the effect of the

proposed use on groundwater, surface water and air quality”; “the effect of the proposed use on property values and scenic views in the surrounding area”; “whether the proposed use is allowed with a conditional use permit in the applicable zoning district in which the property is located”; “the effect that the proposed use will have on existing parks, schools, roads and other public facilities”; “the general health, safety and welfare of the residents; and “[f]inancial assurance mechanisms to guarantee reclamation or cleanup.” Id. at 54

(citation modified) (Section 4.8.2). The Planning Commission and Board must also consider “the ability of the proposed use to meet the standards of this Ordinance or any applicable ordinance, rule or statute.” Id. (citation modified). They must hold a public hearing and “shall make a written finding of fact on each application.” Id. at 56 (Section 4.8.4). Section 9.2.5 provides that antennae “may be allowed as conditional uses following

the procedures set forth in Section 4.8 of this Ordinance and further subject to the performance and general development standards contained in Sections 6 and 7 of this Ordinance.” Id. at 228 (citation modified). Lastly, Section 7.28 governs telecommunication towers. Id. at 207–12. A conditional use permit application for a telecommunication tower must provide additional technical information specific to those

structures. Id. at 211–12. The Planning Commission also considered whether Tillman’s proposal was consistent with the Stearns County “Living Goals” and “Connectivity Goals” set forth in the Stearns County 2040 Comprehensive Plan. See ECF No. 23-8 at 5; ECF No. 23-17 at 37; ECF No. 23-20 (Comprehensive Plan). Three of those goals are relevant here. Living Goal 2 reads, “[m]anage the impacts of growth and development on the County’s rural

character and natural resources.” ECF No. 23-20 at 55. Connectivity Goal 2 seeks to “[c]oordinate infrastructure and service needs with development, and encourage development where the infrastructure and services are adequate to serve that growth.” Id. at 111. Connectivity Goal 4 is to “[d]eploy fast and reliable internet technologies that are equitable, affordable, and take advantage of existing infrastructure assets.” Id. At the July 24 meeting, the Planning Commission heard public debate and

considered Tillman’s conditional use permit request. See ECF No. 23-17 (hearing transcript). Five of the Planning Committee members were present: David Bentrud, Tara Ostendorf, Jason Weinerman (the Chair), Rich Blenkush, and Dave Knafla. ECF No. 23-9 at 1.2 A representative from Tillman’s business partner, Buell Consulting, spoke in favor of the application. ECF No. 23-17 at 4–6. He explained that Verizon had been operating

from another tower 0.6 miles away from the proposed site (the “American Tower”), and was paying high rents. Id. With the Tillman Tower, Verizon’s rent payments would drop to below a third of its current costs, and AT&T—also operating from the American Tower—wanted to move to the Tillman Tower for the same reason. Id. Members of the public spoke (or submitted letters) in opposition to Tillman’s application and cited a few

common reasons: The Tillman Tower did not fit within the agricultural and rural character of the area, id. at 8–10, 13, 20, 22, it would disrupt the wildlife, id. at 10, 12–13, 19, 22,

2 Two Commission members were absent, Jason Kron and Jacob Holck. Id. there were already two nearby towers providing adequate cellular service, id. at 11, 14–15, 24, and the tower would cause property values to fall, id. at 18.3 See ECF No. 23-10 at 6–

15 (letters in opposition to the proposal making similar points). An attorney representing Tillman rebutted those concerns, explaining that there would be a National Environmental Policy Act study as part of the process, that Tillman considered the characteristics of the region, and that an expert report showed the tower would not adversely affect property values. ECF No. 23-17 at 28–31. The attorney was asked if Verizon would stop providing services if the Tillman Tower weren’t built, but the attorney did not know the answer to

that question. Id. at 36. The Planning Commission then closed the public hearing and orally stated its findings of fact. Id. at 37–43. Ms. Ostendorf concluded that Tillman’s proposal was “consistent with Land Use & Zoning Ordinance 439 Section 4.8, 7.28 and 9.2.” Id. at 37. Mr. Knafla determined that the proposal did not conform to Living Goal 2 or Connectivity

Goal 2 because of “ambiguity about conversations or not having conversations or considering alternatives to using the existing tower.” Id. at 37–38. Ms.

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