OPINION
{1} The Bernalillo County Board of County Commissioners (the Board) and the Albuquerque City Council jointly adopted the Bernalillo County Groundwater Protection Policy and Action Plan (GPPAP) (pronounced gee-pap). The GPPAP prohibits the expansion of a landfill in a “crucial area” to protect underlying groundwater and thereby assure its quality for human consumption and economic uses. The GPPAP also states, “Crucial areas are defined in Attachment E and mapped in Attachment F.” (Emphasis added.) This case requires us to determine the relationship of “crucial areas” as they are “mapped” and “crucial areas” as they are “defined.” Specifically, we are asked to make the legal determination of whether a landfill that is located in a “crucial area” on the map attached to the GPPAP prohibits any further inquiry into whether the location of the landfill actually satisfies the “crucial area” definition that is separately set forth in the GPPAP.
{2} On appeal from a decision of the Board, which had concluded that the landfill at issue was not in a crucial area, the district court concluded that the map alone controls the crucial area determination. Alternatively, the district court ruled that the administrative record supports a conclusion that the landfill at issue is in a crucial area as defined in the GPPAP. We granted Southwest’s petition for a writ of certiorari to review the district court decision pursuant to Rule 12-505 NMRA.
{3} We conclude that while the map creates a generalized presumption that a landfill is located in a crucial area, it is not conclusive. If the specific landfill location does not meet the criteria set forth in the definitional section, it is exempt from the generalized presumption established by the map. We also conclude that the district court acted outside its capacity as an appellate court by engaging in fact-finding when it determined that the administrative record supports a conclusion that the landfill is in a crucial area as defined in the GPPAP. Finally, because the issue of whether the landfill fits within the GPPAP’s definition of “crucial area” is a mixed legal and factual inquiry, and the Board failed to make adequate findings, any meaningful appellate review is not possible. We remand to the district court with instructions to remand to the Board to make findings.
BACKGROUND
{4} Southwest Landfill, L.L.C., (Southwest) filed an application with Bernalillo County to amend its special use zoning permit to allow an expansion of a construction debris landfill that it operates southwest of Albuquerque. The matter was initially considered by the Bernalillo County Extraterritorial Land Use Commission (ELUC), which denied the application based on a number of grounds, including a determination that the application was inconsistent with the GPPAP’s prohibition against landfill expansion in crucial areas. The ELUC relied on the fact that the site is “clearly” within a crucial area zone as depicted by the GPPAP map entitled “Generalized Crucial Areas in Bernalillo County.”
{5} Southwest appealed to the Board, which overruled the ELUC and granted the amendment to the special use permit subject to a number of conditions. With respect to the dispute over the site’s designated status, the Board simply entered a finding stating that “[t]he landfill is not located in a crucial area as defined by the [GPPAP.]”
{6} Respondents, a coalition of neighboring citizens and community interest groups, appealed the Board’s decision to the district court. Acting in its appellate capacity pursuant to Rule 1-074 NMRA, the district court reversed the Board on two alternative grounds. First, the district court ruled as a matter of law that inclusion of the landfill in a crucial area zone as depicted by the Generalized Crucial Area Map conclusively resolves the issue of whether the landfill is in a crucial area. In coming to this conclusion, the district court rejected the view that the GPPAP permits determining whether land is in a crucial area on a pareel-by-parcel basis. Alternatively, if a parcel-by-parcel determination was permissible, the district court concluded that the Southwest landfill location satisfies a crucial area definition, citing certain portions of the administrative record in support of its decision.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
{7} We employ an administrative standard of review when determining whether a district court, sitting as an appellate court, erred in its review of an administrative decision. See Gallup Westside Den, LLC n City of Gallup,
{8} We initially consider the legal definition of “crucial area,” and then we review the Board’s decision in light of our discussion.
I. Crucial Area Definition
{9} The starting point for our analysis is a review of this Court’s decision in an earlier appeal involving this same landfill. In Atlixco Coalition v. County of Bernalillo,
{10} Resolution No. 116-86, provides in pertinent part that, “A proposed land use change shall not be in significant conflict with adopted elements of the Comprehensive Plan or other County Master Plans and amendments thereto including privately developed area plans which have been adopted by the County.” Id. Ordinance 96-22 explicitly requires compliance with the GPPAP before disposal of solid waste may occur. Atlixco Coal,
{11} As indicated, the GPPAP expressly prohibits new landfills or expansion of existing landfills in a crucial area. This achieves one of its stated policies, which is to “prohibit or control releases of substances having the potential to degrade the ground-water quality.” The GPPAP then lists nine “Protection Measures” in Section 3, with a stated rationale. The “Protection Measure” that is pertinent to this case and its stated rationale is described as follows:
[[Image here]]
The definition contained in Attachment E is the following:
Crucial areas. An area having one or more of the following characteristics: (1) a modified DRASTIC Index equal to or greater than 100; (2) areas used or likely to be used for public and private water supply; (3) a hydrogeologic setting, such as fractured bedrock, where conditions may allow the rapid movement of contaminants; or (4) within the 30-year capture zone of a public water-supply well.
{12} The map referred to as Attachment F is entitled, “Generalized Crucial Areas in Bernalillo County,” and it is, as suggested by its title, a very generalized map, depicting three large crucial areas that make up well over half of the surface area of Bernalillo County. No specific parcels of property are identified. The generalized crucial areas are identified as (1) a “Crucial area where groundwater occurs in the Albuquerque ground-water basin”; (2) a “Crucial area where ground water occurs in the Madera Limestone”; and (3) a “Crucial area where ground water occurs in low-flow fractured rocks.” The small scale of the map, the failure to identify specific parcels of property, and the broad designation of these categories indicates that they were not intended to conclusively determine whether any specific parcel of property is, in fact, crucial. Furthermore, the definition of “crucial area” in Attachment E is included on the generalized map itself. We therefore agree with Southwest that the definition would be surplusage if the map alone controls what constitutes a crucial area. See In re Rehabilitation of W. Investors Life Ins. Co.,
{13} Respondents attempt to counter this result by referring us to the following language found elsewhere in the GPPAP:
Within crucial areas and wellhead protection areas, certain activities will be prohibited or restricted as detailed in Section 3 of this policy. The regulations will define these areas, identify the restrictions and prohibitions, and appropriately amend the existing ordinances. Crucial areas in Bernalillo County have been defined (Attachment F [the Crucial Area map]), but this small-scale map and maps of wellhead protection areas need to be refined to parcel specificity and updated as new wells are added.
(Emphasis added.)
{14} Respondents contend that there are three keys to interpreting this provision. First, they argue that the reference to the small-scale map and the need for refinement contemplates a parcel-by-parcel review only to determine if a specific parcel is in fact in a crucial area and depicted on the generalized map when those properties are located near the edge of the boundaries. Again, we believe that Respondents are reading in language that is not there. The GPPAP could have simply stated that a parcel-by-pareel review may be necessary where the map is unclear. Second, Respondents argue that only the map can be changed to reflect “parcel specific” changes because the provision only refers to the map and not the definitions in Attachment E when referring to refining its provision to “parcel specificity.” We disagree. The definitions themselves are contained on the map of the crucial areas and thus it is inaccurate to refer to the map in isolation without consideration of the definitions that are repeated on the map. Finally, Respondents argue that when the provision states that crucial areas “have been defined” by referring only to the generalized map, this means that the inquiry has been completed, the crucial areas have been defined, and they are on the map. This, however, begs the question before us. In addition, it ignores the fact that the words “have been defined” were written in a document adopted in 1993-94, which contains a time line, indicating that wellhead protection areas and crucial areas would be “designate[d]” in 1997. It also ignores other indications that the special use permit process can be used to remove a specific property from being designated a crucial area. The fact that crucial areas have been broadly designated does not unalterably prevent further review for a specific parcel of property. To the contrary, the language quoted above supports the view that the GPPAP is an evolving document, with the development of wells being of particular concern.
{15} It would not serve the purpose of the GPPAP for an area to be designated as “crucial” when, by the GPPAP’s own definition, it is not. When words are defined in the statute, we must interpret the statute according to those definitions, because those definitions reflect what the legislative intent is. Sw. Land Inv., Inc. v. Hubbart,
II. The Board’s Decision
{16} The GPPAP defines four types of crucial areas in Attachment E. The only dispute in this ease is whether the Southwest landfill falls into the second category: “areas used or likely to be used for public and private water supply.” The administrative record in this case contains conflicting evidence on the issue, and it is unclear what “area” needs to be considered for making a determination of whether a property fits within this definition of a crucial area. The Board simply made a finding that “[t]he landfill is not located in a crucial area as defined by the [GPPAP].” The district court, after initially ruling that the map controlled, alternatively determined that the administrative record supports a finding that the landfill is in an area that is likely to be used for public and private wells. The district court referenced portions of the administrative record that it believed to support this determination.
{17} In particular, the district court relied on the predictions of city and county staff that they anticipated increased residential development on the southwest mesa and a consequent need for water for which the residents would rely on private wells. In addition, there was testimony by Respondents about a few existing wells in varying numbers of feet from the landfill and predictions about the likelihood of future wells. However, Southwest presented evidence to the Board of an expert hydrologist, whose opinion was that the water quality and depth in the area of the landfill would make the drilling of wells there expensive, underproductive, and uneconomic, and therefore unlikely.
{18} We agree with Southwest that the district court improperly engaged in fact finding, in effect substituting its judgment for that of the Board on the issue of whether the landfill is within a crucial area as defined by the GPPAP. See Paule v. Santa Fe Bd. of County Comm’rs,
CONCLUSION
{19} For the reasons discussed above, we reverse the district court with instructions to remand to the Board for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
{20} IT IS SO ORDERED.
