¶ 1. Gеorge and Carole Trickett appeal from a decision of the Vermont Environmental Board that their neighbors’ apple growing operation, Crescent Orchards, was a farm and thus exempt from Act 250 review. The Trieketts claim that the apple production company operated by their neighbors, Peter and Carla Ochs, is a commercial enterprise, with attendant off:site production involvement, and it does not qualify for the farming exemption. We affirm.
¶ 2. This Court has experience with the facts in this dispute. We held in Trickett v. Ochs that Vermont’s right-to-farm law did not apply in the circumstances of the ease.
¶ 3. The Ochses filed a Petition for Declaratory Ruling with the Environmental Board appealing the JO. Id. § 6007(e). They contended that their apple growing operation met the farming exemption, and therefore, it did not require an Act 250 permit. The Board admitted the Trieketts as parties, explaining that persons directly affected by a project are proper parties in declaratory rulings. See Env. Bd. R. 14(A)(5). The Boаrd reversed the JO. The Environmental Board determined that the Ochses’ farm is exempt from Act 250 jurisdiction. The Trieketts appealed.
¶ 4. The facts are not in dispute. Peter and Carla Ochs own approximately 300 acres of land in Orwell, Vermont. Under the name “Crescent Orchards,” the Ochses operate an apple orchard on about 150 acres of their 300-acre parcel. Over the years, there have been various changes to the facilities at Crescent Orchards. The Ochses have built a рacking house, a loading dock, and a mechanical line upon which the apples are moved and loaded into trucks for transport. They have partly constructed a cold storage unit. In these facilities, Crescent Orchards’ employеes store, wash, wax, wrap, and pack apples to ship, market and sell. Since 1996, all of the apples picked at Crescent Orchards have been packed at their Crescent Orchards packing plant.
¶ 5. The Ochses and their employеes do all of the orchard work and packing at Crescent Orchards. They use tractor-trailers equipped with refrigeration units to store their apples for future shipment to market throughout the year. Independent truckers transport many of the apples off the Crescent Orchards site.
¶ 6. Before 1998, the Ochses harvested apples only from their Crescent Orchards lands. Beginning in 1998, in order to obtain other varieties of apples (Empires and Paula Reds), and to have some insurance against the vagaries of weather . and growing conditions, the Ochses started leasing apple orchards from other landowners. Since 1998, the only apples that the Ochses have processed, stored or packed at Crescent Orchards have come frоm Crescent Orchards lands or from the orchards that they have cultivated on lands that they have leased.
¶ 7. Most of the leases that the Ochses have entered into with the landowners of other orchards are year-to-year leases.
¶ 8. This Court’s review of an Environmental Board ruling is limitеd. “We accord deference to the Environmental
¶ 9. Act 250 requires that a land use рermit be obtained prior to the commencement of construction on a development or prior to commencement of development. 10 V.S.A. § 6081(a). “Development” is defined in relevant part as “[t]he construction of improvements fоr commercial or industrial purposes” on more than one acre if the municipality has not adopted permanent zoning and subdivision bylaws, or on more than ten acres if the municipality where the construction occurs has adopted permanent zoning and subdivision bylaws. Id. § 6001(3)(A)(i), (ii).
¶ 10. There is no dispute that the relevant acreage at Crescent Orchards is greater than ten acres, and therefore, whether the town of Orwell has adopted zoning and subdivision bylaws makes no difference here. The Board also found that the construction of improvements for a commercial purpose had occurred. Because the operation meets the definition of a “development” under both 10 V.S.A. § 6001(3)(A)(i) and (ii), it is subject to the permitting requirements of Act 250, unless it is otherwise exempt. Id. § 6081(a).
¶ 11. Certain developments are exempt from Act 250, including “[t]he construction of improvements for farming ... purposes below the elevation of 2,500 / feet.” 10 V.S.A. § 6001(3)(D)(i). Crescent Orchards is located below the elevation of 2,500 feet. To qualify for thе farming exemption, Crescent Orchards must meet the definition of “farming,” defined in relevant part, as follows:
(A) the cultivation or other use of land for growing food, fiber, Christmas trees, maple sap, or horticultural and orchard crops; or
(E) the on-site storagе, preparation and sale of agricultural products principally produced on the farm;____
Id. § 6001(22)(A), (E).
¶ 12. The Ochses bear the burden of proving that the operation fits within the farming exemption. See Our Lady of Ephesus House of Prayer, Inc. v. Town of Jamaicа,
¶ 13. The Board found that the cultivation of the apple trees at Crescent Orchards met the definition of farming and wаs clearly exempt pursuant to 10 V.S.A. § 6001(22)(A). We agree. The Board went on to evaluate whether storing, washing, waxing, wrapping, and packing apples for shipping, marketing and sale changed the equation and turned the operation into a commercial enterprise, rather than a farm, under § 6001(22)(E) (“the on-site storage, preparation and sale of agricul
¶ 14. Next we turn, as did the Board, to the phrase “principally produced on the farm.” Id. Here, the Tricketts contend that, since the Ochses lease several different orchards, the apples are not principally produced at Crescent Orchards. The provisions of the leases make it apparent that the Ochses control farming operations on the leased land. See In re Eastland, Inc.,
• The lessors exercise no control over the Ochses’ оperations.
¶ 15. For purposes of an Act 250 analysis, the Board found that ownership of the land is less important than the use to which the land is put. See Vt. Baptist Convention v. Burlington Zoning Bd.,
¶ 16. The Board went on to analyze whether apples processed at the orchard were “principally produced” from the Crescent Orchаrds’ apple trees. Id. The Tricketts do not dispute that section of the Board’s decision. Rather, they question “whether being partly a farm means everything it does is exempt, even when that looks and smells and sounds more like a commercial facility than a farm.”
¶ 17. The operations at Crescent Orchards, as established by the uncontested facts, may resemble a commercial warehouse, processing, and distribution center, but this is not a situation where other growers avoid Act 250 jurisdiction by utilizing a central prоcessing and packaging center to prepare and sell their agricultural products. As long as the Ochses exercise sufficient control over
Affirmed.
Notes
Many orchards and farms in Vermont lease or rent lands as part of their operations. About 42,500 acres of a total of 193,376 acres (about 20%) of farmland in Addison County is rented. Statewide figures are comparable; 233,596 acres of a total of 1,244,909 acres of Vermont’s farmland is rented or leased.
The Tricketts’ claim that the exemption violates the common benefits clause of •the Vermont Constitution, Article 7, is inadequately briefed and was not raised below. As such we decline to address it. In re Handy,
