Ure v. Bendick, 89-274 (1993)

CourtSuperior Court of Rhode Island
DecidedAugust 2, 1993
DocketC.A. WC 89-274
StatusUnpublished

This text of Ure v. Bendick, 89-274 (1993) (Ure v. Bendick, 89-274 (1993)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ure v. Bendick, 89-274 (1993), (R.I. Ct. App. 1993).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.]

DECISION
This case is before this Court on appeal from a Final Decision and Order issued by the Department of Environmental Management (DEM) denying Georgia J. Ure's (hereinafter "Plaintiff") application to install a hydroelectric facility at Rhode Island Dam No. 262 located in Hopkinton, Rhode Island. Jurisdiction is pursuant to G.L. 1956 (1988 Reenactment) §42-35-15.

FACTS/TRAVEL
Plaintiff, Georgia Ure is the owner of a non-functioning hydroelectric facility located at Dam No. 262 on Locustville Pond in Hopkinton, Rhode Island. Joint (Jt) Exhibit 22. Mrs. Ure's dam has been in existence for at least one hundred (100) years and had originally been used for water power. Transcript, May 25, 1988 (1 Tr.), at 71-72. This facility was converted to a hydroelectric generating facility some time in the early part of the twentieth (20th) century; however, the facility has been inoperable for quite some time. Id. Mrs. Ure now proposes to renovate the facility by installing a turbine that would give the facility the capability of producing fifty (50) kilowatts of electricity. 1 Tr. at 50. Mrs. Ure anticipates utilizing a portion of this electricity to run a mill complex located at the site and owned by Mrs. Ure. All excess electricity will be purchased by Narragansett Electric. 1 Tr. at 27.

In May 1985 Mrs. Ure began the application process to renovate the facility. 1 Tr. at 13. In May 1986 Mrs. Ure received a preliminary permit from the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission and then in October 1986 received a permit from the Dam Section of DEM to repair the gates to the dam. Jt. Exhibit 18; Jt. Exhibit 23. DEM's Fresh Water Wetland Section determined that Locustville Pond, the location of the dam, is a valuable wetland under Wetland Regulation 7.06(b)(1); therefore, Mrs. Ure applied to DEM for approval to alter a freshwater wetland pursuant to § 2-1-21(a) of the General Laws of R.I. 1956. Jt. Exhibit 2; Jt. Exhibit 1. DEM, however, relying in part on input from the Fresh Water Wetland Section and the Division of Fish and Wildlife, denied Plaintiff's application determining that the proposal would have a high probability of upsetting the Department's fish restoration program and thus would have a negative impact on the wetland. Jt. Exhibit 3. Subsequent to this denial, however, Mr. Gibson of DEM's Division of Fish and Wildlife wrote to Plaintiff acknowledging that when he initially evaluated Mrs. Ure's application he had incorrectly concluded that the sluiceway velocities (velocity leading into the turbine) would be too high for migrating fish species and would affect the fish passageway. Jt. Exhibit 5. DEM, however, did not revoke its denial of the permit. Rather, the Department determined that the proposal was inconsistent with the best public interest and public policy because hydropower projects are inconsistent with DEM's fish restoration project. Decision and Order, at 35.

Mrs. Ure filed a timely appeal to DEM's decision and an Administrative Hearing was held between May 25, 1988 and December 7, 1988. During the hearing it was revealed that DEM's Division of Fish and Wildlife administers an anadromous fish restoration program on the Wood-Pawcatuck River, the watershed that feeds Locustville Pond. Id. at 40-41. Anadromous fish are those that hatch from eggs laid in and developed in fresh water but then migrate and spend most of their adult lives in salt water before migrating back to the freshwater spawning grounds. At the present time there are a number of dams along the Wood-Pawcatuck River above and below Mrs. Ure's dam at Locustville Pond. Transcript, December 6, 1988 (4 Tr.), at 36. These dams currently prevent a full fish run from being established because only two (2) of the five (5) dams below Mrs. Ure's dam have fish ladders that enable the fish to migrate upstream. Id. at 35.

The makeup of Mrs. Ure's dam in its present condition gives the fish several options in their downstream travel. Presently, the fish may go down either a bypass spillway, the emergency spillway or down the turbine intake channel. Transcript, June 8, 1988 (2 Tr.), at 48-49. As depicted in the pictures entered into evidence, the spillways in their current condition are extremely rocky which raises the possibility of disorienting and descaling of the fish, as well as possible stranding. See, Applicant's Exhibit 1; Transcript, June 7, 1988 (2 Tr.), at 49.

According to Mrs. Ure's proposal the downstream passage of the fish will be altered in that the new facility will attract the fish in Locustville Pond to Spillway B because of the strong current caused by the water going through the turbine. 2 Tr. at 76-77. According to the proposal the fish will head down an intake channel toward the turbine but they will be prevented from going into the turbine by a screen. Id. As already noted it was conceded by DEM that the velocity leading into the turbine would not be strong enough to pull the fish into the screen. Jt. Exhibit 5. Mr. Charles Ritzi, a marine biologist, opined that because fish follow the flow of the current, the force of the water across the screen heading down a flume (an open-ended pipe connected to the side of the spillway) would attract the fish down the flume and into a plunge pool where they will continue their trip downstream. 2 Tr. at 77. Plaintiff's experts testified that although there may be a slight delay at the turbine, this delay would be minimal. Id. at 50. The experts felt that mortality rate caused by this new system would be too low to calculate and even opined that the mortality rate would decrease thus being an improvement over present conditions at the site. 1 Tr. at 92.

Contrariwise, DEM argued that the renovation would cause the fish to be more susceptible to predators. Mr. Mark R. Gibson, a marine biologist from DEM, testified that he felt that the delay resulting from the "decision-making" the fish would have to undergo at the face of the turbine, as well as once they reach the plunge pool (at the base of the flume), would leave the fish susceptible to predators thus impinging on the fish mortality rate and hampering the fish restoration program. Transcript, December 7, 1988 (5 Tr.) at 19-20.

At the conclusion of all the evidence, the Hearing Officer denied Mrs. Ure's application deciding, as a matter of law, that Mrs. Ure's proposal "is inconsistent with the State's Fish Restoration Program because of the delays in migration and the heightened risk of predation that [the] proposal poses."Decision and Order, p. 43. The Officer also concluded as a matter of law that because the State's energy policy on hydropower development is repugnant to the state's fish restoration program and the Department's policy of denying hydropower projects on the Wood-Pawcatuck River, DEM's policy "must override the state energy policy on hydropower." Id. at 44. Thereafter, on April 27, 1989, the Director adopted the Hearing Officer's Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law as a Final Decision and Order of the Director. Id. at 45.

On appeal, plaintiff argues that the record is devoid of competent evidence supporting the hearing officer's conclusion that the proposal would degrade the value of the wetland. Mrs. Ure also maintains that the hearing officer exceeded his statutory authority by finding that DEM's fish restoration policy must override the State's hydropower policy. In addition, plaintiff attacks the Division's "no hydropower" policy as being arbitrary and capricious and also argues that the fish restoration program is not in the public interest.

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