Zimmerman v. Land Conservation & Development Commission

361 P.3d 619, 274 Or. App. 512, 2015 Ore. App. LEXIS 1279
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedOctober 28, 2015
Docket13UGB001829; A153856
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 361 P.3d 619 (Zimmerman v. Land Conservation & Development Commission) 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
Zimmerman v. Land Conservation & Development Commission, 361 P.3d 619, 274 Or. App. 512, 2015 Ore. App. LEXIS 1279 (Or. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

SERCOMBE, P. J.

Petitioner seeks review of a Land Conservation and Development Commission (LCDC or commission) order that upheld an approval by the Department of Land Conservation and Development (DLCD or department) director of a legislative amendment to the City of Scappoose’s urban growth boundary (UGB). Petitioner contends that certain portions of the LCDC order that overruled her objections to the approval are “[u]nlawful in substance” under ORS 197.651(10)(a). Petitioner argues that, in sustaining the approval, LCDC improperly interpreted and applied statewide planning goals, along with other administrative rules, that require determination of an employment forecast and employment land need as part of the justification of a UGB change to add industrial and commercial land. We conclude that LCDC’s interpretation of the rules is plausible, and that LCDC adequately explained both why the UGB amendment was justifiable under those rules and how it applied its own substantial evidence standard of review.1 Accordingly, we affirm the order under review.

I. THE LEGAL CONTEXT

This review proceeding arises in the following legal context. Under ORS 197.175(1), cities and counties must exercise their planning and zoning responsibilities in accordance with state land use statutes and special rules (goals) approved by LCDC. Those localities must also “[p]repare, adopt, amend and revise comprehensive plans in compliance with goals approved by [LCDC].” ORS 197.175(2)(a). One of those goals, Goal 14 (Urbanization), requires a city to adopt and maintain an urban growth boundary around its city limits “to provide land for urban development needs and to identify and separate urban and urbanizable land from rural land.” OAR 660-015-0000(14). Establishment and change of a UGB must be based on a number of factors, including a “[d]emonstrated need for *** employment opportunities.” Id. Under OAR 660-024-0040(5), in turn, the determination [515]*515of that need “must comply with the applicable requirements of Goal 9 and OAR chapter 660, division 9, and must include a determination of the need for a short-term supply of land for employment uses consistent with [OAR] 660-009-0025.”

Goal 9 (Economic Development) directs cities to “provide adequate opportunities throughout the state for a variety of economic activities.” OAR 660-015-0000(9). It further provides:

“Comprehensive plans for urban areas shall:
“1. Include an analysis of the community’s economic patterns, potentialities, strengths, and deficiencies as they relate to state and national trends;
“2. Contain policies concerning the economic development opportunities in the community;
“3. Provide for at least an adequate supply of sites of suitable sizes, types, locations, and service levels for a variety of industrial and commercial uses consistent with plan policies;
“4. Limit uses on or near sites zoned for specific industrial and commercial uses to those which are compatible with proposed uses.”

Id.; see also ORS 197.712(2) (codification of Goal 9 requirements for urban comprehensive plans). LCDC, in turn, has adopted rules, found at OAR chapter 660, division 9, to implement Goal 9 and ORS 197.712(2). One of those rules provides guidance on the content of an economic opportunities analysis (EOA). See OAR 660-009-0015.

Thus, in order to justify a UGB expansion to add employment land, a city must demonstrate under Goal 14 that the land is needed for economic opportunities, and, more specifically, must justify that need based on an EOA that is adopted under Goal 9 and its implementing rules.

Much of the dispute in this case concerns the interpretation and application of the EOA rule, OAR 660-009-0015. Under OAR 660-009-0015, as part of the justification for a comprehensive plan amendment, a city must compare the “demand for land for industrial and other employment uses to the existing supply of such land” through a “review [516]*516of national, state, regional, county, and local trends,” identification of “site characteristics typical of expected uses[,]” “[[Inventory of [[Industrial and [o]ther [e]mployment lands,” and “assessment of [the] community economic development potential.” A city has some flexibility in the development of an EOA:

“The effort necessary to comply with OAR 660-009-0015 through 660-009-0030 will vary depending upon the size of the jurisdiction, the detail of previous economic development planning efforts, and the extent of new information on national, state, regional, county, and local economic trends. A jurisdiction’s planning effort is adequate if it uses the best available or readily collectable information to respond to the requirements of this division.”

OAR 660-009-0010(5) (emphasis added).

The issues in this case pertain to whether DLCD and LCDC correctly applied the OAR chapter 660, division 9, rules — and, in particular, OAR 660-009-0010(5)’s requirement that a city use the “best available” information in developing an EOA — as well as related rules implementing Goals 2 and 14 in determining that the city’s comprehensive plan amendments and UGB change were consistent with the statewide planning goals.

II. PROCEDURAL HISTORY

In early 2011, following three years of study and hearings, the city enacted an ordinance to amend its comprehensive plan and zoning code to add (1) a medium-growth population forecast; (2) an EOA; (3) an additional 380 acres of designated industrial and commercial land to the UGB (primarily to accommodate planned industrial growth for airport-related employment in addition to planned commercial growth); (4) a redesignation of some property from industrial to airport employment use; and (5) textual changes to the plan policies on economic growth, public facilities and services, the urban growth boundary, and general land use.

The adopted 2011 EOA was drafted by a private consultant and was based, in part, on information gathered by the consultant at the time of its initial preparation in 2008. That initial information was supplemented by [517]*517(1) information obtained by a city advisory committee and the planning commission in 2010 in making their recommendations to the council on the EOA and (2) evidence obtained by the city council during the hearings on the plan amendment ordinance.

The EOA report set out the rate of job growth in the city between 2003 and 2007 (prior to the economic recession), assumed a modest decline in employment in the urban area between 2008 and 2010 (during the recession), and then extrapolated from that employment base a robust projection of likely new employment between 2010 and 2030 (the planning period). That projection of future employment was calculated using a high annual growth rate of employment.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
361 P.3d 619, 274 Or. App. 512, 2015 Ore. App. LEXIS 1279, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/zimmerman-v-land-conservation-development-commission-orctapp-2015.