The dispositive issue in this case is whether a facility, proposed to be operated by the North Central Massachusetts Mental Health Association, Inc. (Association), on premises owned by the Fitchburg Housing Authority (Housing Authority), is a public educational use which the Fitch-burg zoning ordinance may not forbid. The Association proposes to operate a residential facility in which formerly
On May 8, 1978, the Housing Authority applied for a permit to convert a residential building on Prospect Street for use as a community residence. The superintendent of buildings ruled that a community residence was not permitted in the Residence B zoning district in which the premises lay. On May 10, 1978, the Association and the Housing Authority appealed to the city’s board of zoning appeals seeking “authorization to operate a residential educational and rehabilitation facility for adults with histories of psychiatric difficulties.” The appeal was not founded on a claim that a variance should be granted from the provisions of the zoning ordinance but rather on the theory that the proposed use was permitted as a matter of law. The appeal relied on (1) the language of the zoning ordinance that permitted “Private and Public Schools” in a Residence B zoning district and (2) the provisions of § 2 of The Zoning Enabling Act.
The board of zoning appeals heard the matter on June 5, 1978, and rendered a decision denying the application on
The issues for decision in the Superior Court were questions of law on the facts found by the judge. No deference to the judgment or discretion of the local zoning board was required. Opinions relied on by the zoning board, defining the role of a Superior Court judge on an appeal from the granting of a variance or a special permit, are inapplicable.
We summarize the basic facts found by the judge. The proposed facility would be located in a single-family house, formerly occupied by a physician, and would be operated to work with chronically disturbed people who have been in mental institutions. These people would require medical treatment
5
and would participate in a “training program
The judge concluded that the proposed facility would not be a school “but a medical facility.”* **** 6 He acknowledged the claim that the use was an exempt educational use but did not discuss the question in determining that the facility would not be a school. Judgment was entered that no modification of the decision of the board of zoning appeals was required. We transferred here on our own motion the appeal of the Association and the Housing Authority.
The central issue in this case is one of law, not of fact. The judge’s findings are based on the Association’s representations at trial concerning its planned use of the premises.
The fact that the residents will be adults does not deprive the use of its educational character. See
Cummington School of the Arts, Inc.
v.
Assessors of Cummington,
There is respectable authority that a residential facility for the education of emotionally disturbed children is an educational use. Our Appeals Court so held in
Harbor Schools, Inc.
v.
Board of Appeals of Haverhill, supra,
dealing with § 2 of The Zoning Enabling Act. In that case, the educational program offered by the facility involved indoctrination in traditional academic subjects and fulfilled the public policy expressed in c. 766 of the Acts of 1972 concerning the education of children with special needs.
Id.
at 606. State certification of its teachers apparently was not required.
Id.
at 603. A residential facility approved by a State Department of Education for the education of children with mild emotional disturbances, offering a curriculum comparable to that afforded in the public schools, has been held to be a “school” within the meaning of the word in the local zoning regulations.
Armstrong
v.
Zoning Bd. of Appeals of Washington,
The present case concerns the issue of what is an educational use in circumstances not as closely related to the fulfilment of traditional educational goals as were the circumstances in the
Harbor Schools
case. This court, however, has long recognized “education” as “a broad and comprehensive term.”
Mount Hermon Boys’ School
v.
Gill,
145
The proposed facility would fulfil a significant educational goal in preparing its residents to live by themselves outside the institutional setting. Instruction in the activities of daily living is neither trivial nor unnecessary to these persons. On the contrary, for the prospective residents of the proposed facility to learn or relearn such skills is an important step toward developing their powers and capabilities as human beings. Inculcating a basic understanding of how to cope with everyday problems and to maintain oneself in society is incontestably an educational process. That is the dominant purpose of the proposed facility.
Similar reasoning guided the court in School Lane Hills, Inc. v. East Hempfield Township Zoning Hearing Bd., 18 Pa. Commw. Ct. 519, 525 (1975), where a center for the training of retarded youth to assume a positive role in society by providing them with industrial skills was held to be “educational in nature” under a local zoning ordinance. The court said that “ [w]hile such skills may appear simplistic to a ‘normal’ person, their assimilation nonetheless represents a great improvement in the normal human condition of the trainees. The nature of the Child Development Center is no less educational than that of the most demanding university.” Id. at 524. Past and continuing emotional or psychiatric problems may determine the character of the training furnished to residents of the proposed facility, but they do not mark the facility as “medical” or render it any less educational.
The judgment is reversed. Judgment shall be entered declaring that the proposed use is a public educational use that may not be barred under the Fitchburg zoning ordinance and that a permit to use the premises may not be denied to the Association and the Housing Authority on the ground that the proposed use is not permitted as a matter of law.
So ordered.
Notes
This language appears in The Zoning Enabling Act which has been superseded by The Zoning Act, a revised zoning regulatory statute adopted in 1975. St. 1975, c. 808, § 3. All parties have treated the issue in the court below and here as governed by the quoted language of § 2 of The Zoning Enabling Act and not by similar language now appearing in § 3 of The Zoning Act. It appears that, at the time of the filing of the application for authority to use the premises, § 2 of The Zoning Enabling Act was the controlling statute.
General Laws c. 40A, § 15, as appearing in St. 1975, c. 808, § 3, provides in part that “ [t]he decision of the board shall be made within seventy-five days after the date of the . . . application . . . [with an exception not relevant here]. Failure by the board to act within said seventy-five days shall be deemed to be the grant of the . . . application . . . sought” subject to judicial appeal. This automatic approval provision changed prior law. See
Casasanta
v.
Zoning Bd. of Appeals of Milford,
The only evidence of a need for medical treatment was testimony that 95 % of the residents would be taking prescription medicine largely under their own control, although the staff might control and distribute the
The question whether the proposed use would be a school and hence a permissible use under the Fitchburg zoning ordinance was not raised in the complaint filed in the Superior Court and, by language in the complaint, was inferentially abandoned as a ground for the appeal. The judge discussed the point. The appellants argue it here. In any event, we need not decide the point because it is made irrelevant by our decision that the proposed use is an educational use.
There is no claim that, if the use is an educational use, it is not a
public
educational use. The facility will be available to all people in north central Massachusetts, and, therefore, its character as a public use cannot reasonably be, and is not, questioned. See
Worcester
v.
New England Inst. & New England School of Accounting, Inc.,
On the contrary, the Association will not accept as residents persons whose primary diagnoses suggest the potential for dangerous or antisocial behavior. See note 5, supra.
