Intеrvenor Marina View Trustee, LLC (“Marina View”) seeks to develop real property that is located in Southwest Washington, D.C. The Zoning Commission for the District of Columbia (“the Commission”) held a public hearing to consider Marina View’s proposal. Petitioners Paul Greenberg and Tiber Island Cooperative Homes, Inc. (“Tiber Island” and, collectively, “Petitioners”) sought to appear as parties at that hearing. The Commission denied Petitioners’ request. One reason the Commission gave for the denial was that Petitioners filed the request only one day before the date on which the hearing was scheduled to take place, even though the Commission’s regulations required the request to be filed at least fourteen days prior to thе scheduled date. Petitioners claim that the Commission erred because the hearing did not take place on the date originally set, but was postponed by thirteen days due to a snowstorm. We conclude that the Commission did not abuse its discretion by measuring the timeliness of Petitioners’ request to participate as a party by looking to the date on which the hearing was set, not the date on which the hearing was held. Therefore, we deny the petition for review.
I. Facts and Procedural History
This case concerns Marina View’s attempt to develop a parcel of real estate (“the Property”) located in the District’s Southwest Waterfront neighborhood. As the Commission found, the parcel at issue “is bounded by K Street, S.W. to the north; M Street, S.W. to the south; 6th Street, S.W. to the west; and the site formerly known as Waterside Mall to the east.... The Property consists of approximately 135,263 square feet of land and [at the time of the Commission’s May 14, 2007 order was] occupied by two resi
In November 2005, seeking to redevelop the Property, Marina View filed an application for consolidated review and approval of a planned unit development (“PUD”) and a related amendment to the District’s zoning map. In relevant part, Marina View told the Commission that it proposed to “preserve thе two existing Pei Towers” and to add two new buildings, both rising to a height of 112 feet, “at the north and south ends of the Property.” 1 Marina View’s application was received well by, among others, the Historic Preservation Office, the Historic Preservation Review Board, the Office of Planning, the Advisory Neighborhood Commission (“ANC”) for the affected region, and the District Department of Trаnsportation.
But not everyone was thrilled. One of the critics of Marina View’s application was Paul Greenberg, one of the petitioners in this case. Greenberg is a resident, shareholder, board member, and president of Tiber Island, a 389-unit housing cooperative located within 200 feet to the south of the Property. 2
Greenberg and Tiber Island complained that the proposed PUD threatened “the vistas and light, air and view of residents of the Tiber Island Coop.” Petitioners, therefore, argued for “a very different project from what [was] proposed” — specifi-eally, Petitioners suggested that the new structures that Marina View wished to be built “be limited to 30 feet in height,” about eighty feet shorter than the height ultimately approved by the Commission. As an alternative, Petitioners asked that the new buildings be set back at “a minimum [of] 22 feet from the curb.” Petitioners argued that such a “setback” not only would protect their own views, but also would be “consistent with the historic character of the New Southwest, a likely historic district in the near future.” According to Petitioners, the lack of a setback from the road was a flaw in the PUD application, for “[i]t makes no sense for the visual expanse of M street to narrow as it approaches the river; if anything, the setback of the buildings from the street should increase as M Street approaches the river.” 3
In order better to advance these arguments, Petitioners sought to participate as parties at a hearing on the PUD application. Party status was important tо Petitioners because parties at the Commission’s hearings, unlike ordinary witnesses, have the right to cross-examine witnesses. 11 DCMR § 3022.5. Yet, despite having notice of the hearing, Petitioners filed their request to participate as parties only one day before the date set for the hearing, not 14 days before that date, as 11 DCMR § 3022.3 requires.
The Commission denied Petitioners’ request for party status. Chairperson Mitten offered three reasons in support of the
Petitioners did not contest that their request was untimely. With respect to Mitten’s concern about Greenberg’s authority to represent Tiber Island, Petitioners (really, their attorney) argued that Greenberg, “a member of the Bar of the District of Columbia [and] an attorney in good standing,” was “also the long-time president of Tiber Island and he [could] satisfy that test ... under oath.” Further, Petitioners’ attorney offered, Green-berg “already [had] been sworn in that he is entitled to speak on behalf of the board and the association.” Rеgarding Petitioners’ unique interest in the PUD, Petitioners argued that the “specific light, air and view and amenities of the neighborhood that these people bought units, bought shares in the Tiber Island Cooperative are uniquely affected by this proposed project.” 4
After hearing Petitioners’ arguments, Chairperson Mitten moved to deny party status “for the reasons that [she] had stated.” Noting that he would have liked to have been “reassured” that Greenberg had authority to represent Tiber Island, and referring to the “timeliness issue,” Commissioner Turnbull seconded Mitten’s motion. Expressing “a little hesitation],” Vice Chairman Hood ultimately joined Mitten and Turnbull in voting to deny Petitioners party status.
The hearing then progressed to the merits. In order to accommodаte Petitioners, the Commission agreed to give Petitioners fifteen minutes to present their case, instead of the five minutes typically granted to non-party witnesses. Using this added time, Greenberg read into the record the entire testimony that he proposed to give had he been granted party status. After Greenberg had finished, the Commission gave him time to respond to quеstions from the Commission and from the attorney for Marina View. Ultimately, about two and one-half months after the hearing, the Commission approved the PUD application by a vote of 4-0-1, one commissioner not voting.
Petitioners then sought this court’s review. As we alluded to earlier, although Petitioners plainly do not like the approved PUD, Petitioners’ briefs in this court do nоt argue that the Zoning Commission erred in approving the PUD. Rather, Petitioners’ reply brief concludes with two requests for relief. First, Petitioners ask that this court “[d]etermine that petitioners had the requisite standing to be full parties both before the Zoning
II. Discussion
A. Standard of Review
Our review of the decisions of the Zoning Commission “is circumscribed. We may set aside an agency action if it is arbitrary, capricious, an abuse of discretion, or otherwise unsupported by substantial evidence in the record.”
Cathedral Park Condo. Comm. v. District of Columbia Zoning Comm’n,
B. Denial of Party Status
The Commission denied Petitioners’ party status application because: (1) the application was untimely; (2) the application failed to demonstrate that Green-berg was authorized to represent Tiber Island; and (3) Petitioners failed to show that they were more uniquely affected by the proposed development than the general public. Because we hold that the Commission did not abuse its discretion in deeming the application untimely, we do not reach the Commission’s remaining justifications. 5
Petitioners do not dispute that they were obligated to file their written request for party status “not less than fourteen (14) days prior tо the date set for the hearing,” 11 DCMR § 3022.3. Yet, Petitioners did not submit their request for party status until February 14, 2007, only one day before the date for which the hearing was set. Nonetheless, Petitioners argue that their request was timely be
First, technically speaking, the hearing set for February 15th
was
held on that date, albeit solely in order to continue the hearing to February 28th. Even assuming that the only hearing held was on February 28th, however, we cannot say that the Commission erred. The plain text of the regulation requires requests for party status to be filеd fourteen days “prior to the date
set
for the hearing,” not fourteen days prior to the date on which the hearing is held. 11 DCMR § 8022.3 (emphasis added). Although Petitioners’ reading arguably is consistent with the spirit — if not the letter — of the rule, that is not enough to show that the Commission’s interpretation requires reversal.
See 1330 Connecticut Ave.,
Of course, the Commission cannot apply its rules in an arbitrary or capricious way.
Concerned Citizens of Brentwood v. District of Columbia Bd. of Zoning Adjustment,
III. Conclusion
Greenberg’s and Tiber Island’s petition for review of the Commission’s denial of their request for party status is
Denied.
Notes
. Because the merits of the architectural design are not before us and are irrelevant to our disposition of this case, we shall not describe in further detail the proposed PUD’s many other features.
. Although this is a matter of some dispute, see infra, because it doesn’t make a difference to the resolution of this case, we assume that Greenberg in fact had authority to speak for Tiber Island.
.Again, because the substance of the development is not before us, there is no need to clutter the opinion with the details of Petitioners' remaining concerns with the PUD.
. Petitioners also claimed that "an additional reward ... that flows from party status ... is the right to appeal.” Chairperson Mitten advised Petitioners that "the Court of Appeals does not use [the Commission’s] granting рarty status to individuals to determine whether or not they are [aggrieved] for
purposes of
appeal.” Mitten was right. "The fact that [someone] was not a party in the proceedings ... that led to the issuance of” an order issued by the Commission "does not bar [that party] from petitioning this court for review of that order.”
York Apartments Tenants Ass'n v. District of Columbia Zoning Comm’n,
. Marina View arguеs that Petitioners lack standing to “pursue this appeal.” We disagree. Under the District of Columbia Administrative Procedures Act, "[a]ny person suffering a legal wrong, or adversely affected or aggrieved by an order or decision of ... an agency in a contested case, is entitled to judicial review thereof." D.C.Code § 2-510(a) (2001). Petitioners were “aggrieved” by the denial of party status: they wished to participate as parties, but were denied that opportunity. There is no question that the denial of party status came in a “contested case.” D.C.Code § 2-502(8). Therefore, Petitioners have standing to challenge the denial of party status.
York Apartments Tenants Ass’n v. District of Columbia Zoning Comm’n,
. Because we conclude that the Commission did not err in concluding that Petitioners failed timely to file their request for party status, we do not reach the question whether Petitioners otherwise had standing to appear before the Commission. We do note, though, that our case law recognizes that neighbors whose everyday views would be affected by a proposed development are precisely the sort of people who have a sufficiently concrete and particularized interest in a zoning project to have standing to challenge that project in this court.
Cathedral Park Condo. Comm. v. District of Columbia Zoning Comm’n,
