WaterWatch of Oregon v. Water Resources Dept.

324 Or. App. 362
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedMarch 1, 2023
DocketA169652
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 324 Or. App. 362 (WaterWatch of Oregon v. Water Resources Dept.) 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
WaterWatch of Oregon v. Water Resources Dept., 324 Or. App. 362 (Or. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

Argued and submitted January 8, 2021, affirmed March 1, 2023

WATERWATCH OF OREGON, INC., an Oregon nonprofit corporation, Petitioner, v. WATER RESOURCES DEPARTMENT, a state agency; Water Resources Commission, a state agency; South Fork Water Board, an Oregon municipal corporation; City of Tigard, an Oregon municipal corporation; North Clackamas County Water Commission, an Oregon municipal corporation; Sunrise Water Authority, an Oregon municipal corporation; and City of Lake Oswego, an Oregon municipal corporation, Respondents. Oregon Water Resources Department S3778, S9982, S22581; A169652 (Control) WATERWATCH OF OREGON, INC., an Oregon nonprofit corporation, Petitioner, v. WATER RESOURCES DEPARTMENT, a state agency; Water Resources Commission, a state agency; North Clackamas County Water Commission, an Oregon municipal corporation; Sunrise Water Authority, an Oregon municipal corporation; City of Tigard, an Oregon municipal corporation; City of Lake Oswego, Cite as 324 Or App 362 (2023) 363

an Oregon municipal corporation; and South Fork Water Board, an Oregon municipal corporation, Respondents. Oregon Water Resources Department S46120, S35297, S43170; A169651 WATERWATCH OF OREGON, INC., an Oregon nonprofit corporation, Petitioner, v. WATER RESOURCES DEPARTMENT, a state agency; Water Resources Commission, a state agency; City of Lake Oswego, an Oregon municipal corporation; City of Tigard, an Oregon municipal corporation; North Clackamas County Water Commission, an Oregon municipal corporation; Sunrise Water Authority, an Oregon municipal corporation; and South Fork Water Board, an Oregon municipal corporation, Respondents. Oregon Water Resources Department S32410, S37839; A169650 527 P3d 1

Petitioner challenges a final order of the Oregon Water Resources Department (the department) that grants extensions of time to perfect municipal water right permits with diversions in the lower 3.1 miles of the Clackamas River. The key issue is whether the department could determine that the “undeveloped por- tion[s]” of the permits were conditioned to maintain the persistence of listed fish species in the lower 3.1 miles of the river, as required by ORS 537.230(3)(d). In a prior judicial review, the Court of Appeals had determined that the department’s fish-persistence determination lacked both substantial evidence and substantial reason and remanded the case to the department. On remand, the department developed additional evidence and again granted the extensions. In this judicial review of that final order after the remand, petitioner argues that the depart- ment’s decision is contrary to ORS 537.230(3)(d), is not supported by substantial 364 WaterWatch of Oregon v. Water Resources Dept.

evidence or reason, and fails to contain concise findings and to apply the law to the facts. Held: The department’s construction of ORS 537.230(3)(d), which included consideration of forecasted water use under fully developed permits to make its fish-persistence determination, is consistent with the legislative policy expressed in that statute; the department’s order is supported by substantial evidence and substantial reason; and the department’s statement of facts in the order is sufficiently concise and the department applied the law to the facts. Affirmed.

Lisa A. Brown argued the cause and filed the briefs for petitioner. Phillip M. Bender argued the cause for respondents City of Lake Oswego, City of Tigard, North Clackamas County Water Commission, and Sunrise Water Authority. Also on the brief were Jeffery W. Ring, Mark P. Strandberg, and Ring Bender LLP. Inge D. Wells argued the cause for respondents Oregon Water Resources Department and Oregon Water Resources Commission. Also on the brief were Ellen F. Rosenblum, Attorney General, and Benjamin Gutman, Solicitor General. Christopher D. Crean argued the cause and filed the brief for respondent South Fork Water Board. Also on the brief was Beery, Elsner & Hammond, LLP. Before Ortega, Presiding Judge, and Shorr, Judge, and Powers, Judge. ORTEGA, P. J. Affirmed. Cite as 324 Or App 362 (2023) 365

ORTEGA, P. J. This water rights case is before us a second time after our remand to the Oregon Water Resources Department (OWRD or the department) in WaterWatch of Oregon v. Water Resources Dept., 268 Or App 187, 342 P3d 712 (2014) (WaterWatch I). In WaterWatch I, we reviewed three final orders of the department which granted to the City of Lake Oswego,1 the North Clackamas County Water Commission,2 and the South Fork Water Board (collectively, the munici- pal parties) extensions of time to perfect water rights under their respective water permits for the diversion of water from the lower reach of the Clackamas River for munici- pal use (the 2011 orders). The key issue in WaterWatch I was whether the department could determine, as it had, that the “undeveloped portion” of the municipal parties’ permits were conditioned “to maintain, in the portions of waterways affected by water use under the permit, the per- sistence of fish species listed as sensitive, threatened or endangered under state or federal law,” as required by ORS 537.230(3)(d).3 We reversed and remanded the 2011 orders, concluding that the department’s fish-persistence determi- nation lacked both substantial evidence and substantial reason. On remand, the department reopened the hear- ing, took additional evidence, and issued a final order after remand (the 2018 order) which supplemented the 2011 orders. The department again determined that the permits as conditioned will maintain the persistence of the listed fish species and placed conditions on the permits that are substantially similar to the conditions placed on the per- mits in the 2011 orders. WaterWatch seeks judicial review of the 2018 order, arguing that the decision is contrary to

1 Respondent the City of Tigard is not a holder of one of the water permits at issue. However, Tigard was granted party status because it has an interest in Lake Oswego’s permits through an intergovernmental agreement. 2 Respondent Sunrise Water Authority is a co-permittee with North Clackamas County Water Commission on one permit. 3 At the time of the first appeal and the hearing on remand, the statutory subsection at issue appeared in ORS 537.230(2)(c), which the legislature renum- bered to ORS 537.230(3)(d) in 2017. Or Laws 2017, ch 704, § 1. Because the text of the provision was not amended, we use the current numbering. 366 WaterWatch of Oregon v. Water Resources Dept.

ORS 537.230(3)(d), is not supported by substantial evidence or reason, and violates ORS 183.470(2), by failing to contain concise findings and to apply the law to the facts. We conclude that the department did not err in its construction and application of ORS 537.230(3)(d).

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Bluebook (online)
324 Or. App. 362, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/waterwatch-of-oregon-v-water-resources-dept-orctapp-2023.