676 A.2d 769 | Vt. | 1996
Defendants Earth Construction, Inc. and Rodney Jordan appeal two orders of the Environmental Law Division (ELD) imposing penalties for the renovation, expansion and use of an access road and portions of their gravel pit in East Montpelier in violation of Act 250 and the Vermont Wetland Rules. We affirm.
In March 1992, the District 5 Environmental Coordinator asked defendants to submit information that would enable the Board to determine whether the activities on the site were preexisting and therefore exempt from Act 250 jurisdiction. Defendants responded, but did not provide enough information for the Board to make the determination. On April 17, 1992, the District Coordinator issued an advisory opinion that, because a substantial change had taken place on the property, an Act 250 permit was required for the entire site. Later, after inspecting the site, the Agency of Natural Resources (ANR) Enforcement Division served a Notice of Alleged Violation on defendants advising them to obtain Act 250 approval before continuing any aspect of the gravel pit operation. In May 1992, defendants sought an advisory opinion from the Executive Officer of the Environmental Board as to whether there was Act 250 jurisdiction over the project, and continued to operate.
While the Board deliberated the jurisdiction question, the Secretary of ANR, on June 3, 1992, served defendants with an Administrative Order citing violations of Act 250 and the Vermont Wetland
On October 1, 1992, on behalf of the Executive Officer of the Environmental Board, Board counsel issued an advisory opinion, concluding that Act 250 jurisdiction did extend over the disputed site. On November 9,1992, defendants petitioned the Board for a declaratory ruling on the opinion, but the Board dismissed the petition as untimely on March 16, 1993.
At the close of the ELD hearings, defendants moved to dismiss, claiming the State had not presented sufficient evidence to support either a wetland or an Act 250 violation. In its order of February 9, 1993, the ELD denied the motion, determined that defendants had violated the Vermont Wetland Rules, and imposed a penalty of $3,500. On July 6, 1993, after receiving notice of the Board’s March 16 dismissal of defendants’ petition, the ELD reviewed the jurisdictional issue, and determined that defendants’ activities had brought them under Act 250 jurisdiction. It held that defendants had violated Act 250, and imposed a penalty of $36,497.
We give deference to the Environmental Board’s interpretations of Act 250 and its own rules, Vermont Agency of Natural Resources v. Duranleau, 159 Vt. 233, 237, 617 A.2d 143, 146 (1992), and to the Board’s specialized knowledge in the environmental field. In re Sherman Hollow, Inc., 160 Vt. 627, 628, 641 A.2d 753, 755 (1993) (mem.). We also defer to the conclusions of the ELD, in recognition of the ELD’s “expertise in environmental enforcement,” Secretary v. Handy Family Enters., 163 Vt. 476, 482, 660 A.2d 309, 313 (1995), and will affirm the ELD if the record supports its findings and the findings support its conclusions. Id. at 484, 660 A.2d at 314.
A.
With respect to the Act 250 violation, defendants argue that their project is exempt from Act 250 under the so-called “grandfather” provisions of 10 V.S.A. § 6081(b).
Defendants argue that there was insufficient evidence to support the ELD’s finding that, since 1970, there had been substantial change at the site. Inasmuch as the ELD assessed an Act 250 penalty only for defendants’ expansion of the Route 2 access road, we need decide only whether the record contains evidence that this portion of defendants’ project resulted in a substantial change to the preexisting development. The evidence shows that the clearing of trees and excavation of the turnaround, the application of gravel to 115 feet of the road, the paving of a larger portion of the road, the paving of an apron on the access road, and a direct rather than oblique access down into the pit had the potential to cause significant impacts. The possible impacts include air and noise pollution from the changed routing of truck traffic (§ 6086(a)(1)), soil erosion where the access road entered the pit and at the perimeter of the site (§ 6086(a)(4)), reduced highway safety due to a more direct truck entrance onto Route 2 (§ 6086(a)(5)), and degradation of the aesthetics of the surrounding area (§ 6086(a)(8)). The evidence supports the ELD’s findings; consequently, defendants’ project comes within Act 250 jurisdiction.
B.
Defendants further contend that the fine imposed by the ELD for the Act 250 violations was excessive under 10 V.S.A § 8010(b). They argue that the ELD did not calculate accurately the economic benefits gained from any infraction or, in the alternative, did not give sufficient weight to the violators’ alleged lack of knowledge of the violation. In reviewing penalties under 10 V.S.A. § 8012(b)(4), the ELD must apply the statutory criteria set forth at 10 V.S.A. § 8010(b)(l)-(8). The record shows that the ELD reduced the $49,420 fine imposed in the Administrative Order after considering all of the statutory criteria.
Defendants contend that the ELD should have based its evaluation of defendants’ economic benefit from the Act 250 violation strictly on the cost of the raw material extracted from the gravel pit. The ELD noted, however, in its conclusion that defendants also realized a profit from the sale of the extracted materials, and properly included this factor in its calculations. In addition, the ELD, in its discretion, added an amount for deterrent effect.
Earth Construction received notice of its violation in the advisory opinion of April 17, 1992, two months before receipt of the June 17,1992 Emergency Order. Act 250 authorizes the imposition of a $25,000 fine for each violation and additional fines of up to $10,000
II.
With respect to the wetland violation, defendants argue that their project is an allowed use under Vermont Wetland Rules (V.WR.) §§ 1.1, 6.2(1) and 6.2(m). We disagree. Section 1.1(3) provides an exception for projects that are not subject to state permitting requirements regulating land use or the protection of wetlands. Because defendants were required to obtain an Act 250 permit for the substantial changes they made to the Route 2 access road, their project does not fall within the exception.
Defendants claim that they merely reconstructed, routinely repaired or added to structures and facilities that were in existence on February 23, 1990, when they began making improvements to the site. Such activities would be exempt from the Vermont Wetland Rules under § 6.2(1), which provides an exception for “the maintenance, reconstruction or routine repair of structures and facilities ... in existence as of February 23, 1990 or additions to such structures or facilities which does not involve substantial expansion or modification.” The ELD found, however, that the clay berm that slid into the wetland was not a “structure” or a “facility.” We agree. See Handy Family Enters., 163 Vt. at 482, 660 A.2d at 313 (Court defers to ELD’s expertise in environmental enforcement matters).
Defendants also contend that they were engaged in the routine maintenance of manmade sedimentation ponds and were therefore exempt under Vermont Wetland Rule § 6.2(m). Section 6.2(m) provides an exception for “routine maintenance and upkeep, including the removal of vegetation or maintenance dredging, from manmade ponds less than two acres in size.” Here again, we defer to the expertise of the ELD and will affirm its conclusions if they are supported by the record. Id. at 484, 660 A.2d at 314. The ELD found that defendants had not maintained an active sedimentation pond on the site, but instead had engaged in filling, excavating and grading activities within fifty feet of the Class Two wetland without obtaining conditional use approval for those activities under V.WR. § 6.3 or reclassification of the wetland under V.WR. § 7. Further, defendants did not take action to prevent the landslide of 200 cubic yards of clay
Finally, defendants claim that questions of fact and law were presumed against them in prior proceedings, violating their right to due process. We will find bias only where it is clearly established by the record. Sherman Hollow, 160 Vt. at 629, 641 A.2d at 756. The mere fact that a decision was rendered contrary to the wishes of a party does not denote bias. Id. Defendants have failed to point to anything in the record to support their claim of bias and rely instead on a presumption of bias below. We find no merit in these allegations.
Affirmed.
Although defendants waived their statutory right to dispute jurisdiction by filing an untimely petition with the Board for a declaratory ruling, the ELD chose to rule on the issue so we will review its determination.