In re Petition of VTel Wireless Inc., for a Certificate of Public Good, Pursuant to 30 V.S.A. § 248a, for the Installation of Telecommunications Equipment in Bennington, Vermont (Susan Beal and David Pearson, Appellants)
No. 2015-067
Supreme Court of Vermont
December 4, 2015
2015 VT 135
On Appeal from Public Service Board. June Term, 2015. James Volz, Chair. PRESENT: Reiber, C.J., Dooley, Skoglund, Robinson and Eaton, JJ.
Jon T. Anderson of Burak Anderson & Melloni, PLC, Burlington, for Appellants.
William J. Dodge and Elizabeth Kohler of Downs Rachlin Martin PLLC, Burlington, for Appellee.
¶ 1. SKOGLUND, J. Appellants Susan Beal and David Pearson appeal from a decision of the Public Service Board granting a certificate or public good (CPG) for the installation of a telecommunications facility by VTel Wireless, Inc. in the Town of Bennington. Appellants contend the Board erred in finding that they hаd failed to demonstrate: (1) a “substantial interest” to intervene in the proceeding; and (2) a “significant issue” to warrant a hearing. We affirm.
¶ 2. In late May 2014, VTel provided notice of its intent to seek a CPG for a planned telecommunication project, as required by statute.
¶ 3. A series of zoning drawings, viewshed maps, and simulated photographs showing the planned tower from various locations were appended to the notice to demonstrate the project‘s anticipated aesthetic impacts. According to VTel, these showed that the project would be situated away from ridgelines in an existing clearing bounded by forest on all sides, that its visibility impact was expected to be minimal, and that it was not expected to diminish the scenic qualities of the area. An analysis and summary of the project‘s compliance with the zoning requirements and goals of the Bennington town and regional plans was also included, as well as documentation showing the project‘s compliance with radio-frequency emission guidelines promulgated by the Federal Communications Commission.
¶ 4. The notice also outlined the statutory review process, explaining that the Board would be required to evaluate the projeсt to determine its consistency with town and regional plans, and that VTel accordingly would be seeking recommendations for approval of the project from the Town and the Bennington Regional Commission prior to submission of a formal CPG application. The notice further indicated that the project qualified as a telecommunication fаcility “of limited size and scope” under
¶ 5. About two months later, in late July 2014, VTel filed its formal CPG application with the Board. The application included prefiled testimony, numerous exhibits—including all of those submitted with the prefiling notice—and a “project narrative” outlining the nature and scope of the project and its compliance with the relevant statutory criteria fоr projects of limited size and scope under
¶ 6. Concurrent with the CPG application, VTel provided notice to adjoining landowners, explaining that a copy of the application was available for inspection at Town offices; that anyone wishing to submit comments, request a hearing, or move to intervene was required by statute to file a submission by August 12, 2014; and that any person requesting a hearing would be required to show that the application “raises a significant issue regarding one or more of the substantive criteria applicable to the proposed project.”
¶ 7. Appellants, through counsel, filed a timely motion to intervene as of right, stating that the project was adjacent to an area of their property knоwn as the Beal Development Site, a conservation subdivision on which they hoped to construct five houses. Appellants asserted that their efforts to preserve the balance of the property as farmland was financially dependent on the future construction; that the proposed telecommunications tower would be visible from thе development site; and that potential buyers would be dissuaded if the project were approved. Appended to the motion were letters from the potential developer and buyers. Appellants also filed a request for a hearing, asserting that the project would have an adverse aesthetic impact on their propеrty that could be avoided “simply by locating the tower at least 1,200 feet away from the area [appellants] propose[] to develop.” Appended to the request were a number of letters from appellants’ neighbors and tenants attesting to the tower‘s anticipated adverse aesthetic impact on appellants’ property.
¶ 8. The Public Service Department subsequently wrote the Board expressing its view that the project qualified as a telecommunications facility “of limited size and scope” under the statute, and did “not raise a significant issue with respect to any substantive applicable § 248a(c) criteria that are under the Department‘s review,” but reserved its final recommendation on
¶ 9. The Board issuеd a written ruling in early January 2015. The Board found that the project qualified as one “of limited size and scope” under the statute,
¶ 10. In reviewing the Board‘s issuance of a CPG we have “emphasize[d] the limited nature of our review.” In re UPC Vermont Wind, LLC, 2009 VT 19, ¶ 2, 185 Vt. 296, 969 A.2d 144. “When the Board evaluates a petition for a CPG under
¶ 11. Appellants contend the Board erred in two respects, first in concluding that they lacked а substantial interest entitling them to intervene, and second in determining that they failed to raise a significant issue under any of the relevant § 248a criteria entitling them to a hearing on the merits. As explained below, we find no basis to disturb the Board‘s ruling on the second point, and therefore need not address the first.5
¶ 12. As outlined earlier, the record shows that appellants were afforded ample notice of the statutory requirement that they submit material sufficient to “raise a significant issue with respect to the substantive criteria” applicable to the project.
¶ 13. The record discloses, as well, that the Board gave due consideration to the project‘s aesthetic impacts under the Quechee standard. See
¶ 14. Appellants maintain, nevertheless, that the Board failed to give their position due consideration by dismissing as irrelevant a project‘s aesthetic impact on private parties. Although the Board cited this Court‘s decision in In re New Cingular Wireless PCS, LLC for the
¶ 15. The Board went on to specifically acknowledgе appellants’ “expressed . . . desire that the [p]roject be located in an area that is not near their property,” but found that they had “not shown that the [p]roject in its current location raises a significant issue.” Regardless of the legal relevance of a project‘s aesthetic impact on private parties under § 248a, therefore, it appears that the Board considered appellants’ argument but found that it lacked sufficient weight to raise a “significant issue” requiring a hearing on the merits. See The American Heritage College Dictionary 721, 1268 (3d ed. 1993) (defining “significant” as “[h]aving or likely to have a major effect; important,” and “issue” as a point in “debate, or dispute“). This was a decision well within the scope of the Board‘s expertise and discretionary authority, and appellants have not shown on the record presented that its discretion was abused or exercised on clearly untenable grounds. In re Petition of Cross Pollination, 2012 VT 29, ¶ 8, 191 Vt. 631, 47 A.3d 1285 (mem.) (“The Board‘s consideration of a petition or a certificate of public good is a legislative, policy-making process and is thus accorded great deference.“); In re UPC Vermont Wind, LLC, 2009 VT 19, ¶ 2 (noting that Board “must exercise its discretion ‘to weigh
Affirmed.
FOR THE COURT:
Associate Justice
