STATE OF VERMONT
ENVIRONMENTAL COURT
}
In re: Unified Buddhist Church, Inc., }
Indirect Discharge Permit } Docket No. 253-10-06 Vtec
(Appeal of Lull’s Brook Watershed }
Association, et al.) }
Decision and Order on Motion to Alter or Amend
Appellants Lull’s Brook Watershed Association, John Zelig, Amy Zelig, Peter
Gordon, Sterling R. Monk, Marion Monk, and Heidi Luquer (Appellants) appealed from
a decision of the Agency of Natural Resources to grant renewal Indirect Discharge Permit
ID-9-0271 (2006) to Appellee-Applicant Unified Buddhist Church, Inc. (Unified Buddhist).
Appellants are represented by David Grayck, Esq.; Appellee-Applicant is represented by
Hans Huessy, Esq.; the Vermont Agency of Natural Resources (ANR) is represented by
Catherine Gjessing, Esq.; and movant Vermont Natural Resources Council (VNRC) is
represented by Jon Groveman, Esq.
VNRC has moved to alter or amend the Court’s May 11, 2007 decision and order in
which the Court conferred amicus curiae status on VNRC, but declined to grant it standing
as an intervenor. VNRC renews its request that the Court grant VNRC intervenor status
as a “person aggrieved” in this appeal pursuant to 10 V.S.A. § 8504(n)(4). VNRC’s motion
focuses on In re: CCCH Stormwater Discharge Permits, No. WQ-02-11 (Water Res. Bd.1
1
Prior decisions of the former Water Resources Board are to be given “the same
weight and consideration” as prior decisions of this Court. 10 V.S.A. 8504(m).
1
Order, Mar. 21, 2003), a decision addressing the requirements for standing to participate
in an appeal of a discharge permit.
However, In Re: CCCH Stormwater Discharge Permits was decided approximately
two years prior to the effective date of the statutory provision at issue in this appeal, 10
V.S.A. § 8504,2 which substantially amended the statutory requirements for appeals of this
type, including the provisions for standing. When CCCH was decided, the statutory
standing requirement (former 10 V.S.A. § 1269) provided that any “person or party
aggrieved” by a decision of the ANR could appeal, without a definition of that term. The
2004 amendments, codified at 10 V.S.A. § 8504(n) and 10 V.S.A. § 8502(7), made the
standard more specific and therefore more stringent, requiring a party seeking standing
as a “person aggrieved” to show “an injury to a particularized interest protected by the
provisions of law listed in section 8503 of this title, attributable to an act or decision by . .
. the secretary that can be redressed by the environmental court . . . .” 10 V.S.A. 8502(7).
To date there has been very little discussion in decisions of this Court, and none
from the Supreme Court, of the “person aggrieved” standard, as defined in 10 V.S.A. §
8502(7). This Court’s decision regarding party status in In re: Entergy Nuclear/Vermont
Yankee Thermal Discharge Permit Amendment, Docket No 89-4-06 Vtec, slip op. at 5-10
(Vt. Envtl. Ct., Jan. 9, 2007) (Entergy) examined the issue in the context of an appeal of a
direct discharge permit issued pursuant to the federally-delegated National Pollutant
Discharge Elimination System program. In Entergy, as here, the question was not whether
individual members of a group had standing as persons aggrieved, but rather, whether the
group itself had standing. Id.
To determine whether VNRC, the organization, is a person aggrieved, we must
2
This section of the so-called “permit reform” legislation was adopted by 2003 Adj.
Sess., No. 115, § 74 (approved May 13, 2004), and took effect on January 31, 2005.
2
apply the organizational standing test set forth in Parker v. Town of Milton, 169 Vt. 74, 78
(1998). See id. As discussed in the Court’s May 11, 2007 Decision and Order in the present
case, the Court must examine whether 1) “its members have standing individually; 2) the
interests it asserts are germane to the organization’s purpose; and 3) the claim and relief
requested do not require the participation of individual members in the action.” Parker,
169 Vt. at 78.
As of the May 2007 decision on VNRC’s motion to intervene, VNRC had not
submitted any information about its individual members’ standing; the Court therefore
determined that the Parker test had not been satisfied. See In re Unified Buddhist Church,
Inc. Indirect Discharge Permit, Docket No. 253-10-06 Vtec, slip op. at 7 (Vt. Envtl. Ct., May
11, 2007). The Court instead allowed VNRC to participate as amicus curiae on the legal
issues in the motion regarding the scope of the proceeding.
By the present motion, VNRC has essentially renewed its motion to intervene and
has submitted additional information in support of that motion. It has submitted the
affidavits of two of its members, Judith Eve Zemel and Gail W. Holmes. Ms. Zemel’s
affidavit states that she is a resident of Hartland and is a member of VNRC, that she has
“used and enjoyed Lulls Brook because it is in [her] neighborhood.” Ms. Zemel’s affidavit
further states that she has cross-country skied and hiked along the banks of Lull’s Brook
and that she is concerned that the discharge proposed by the Unified Buddhist Dharma
Center will “pollute Lulls Brook and interfere with [her] use and enjoyment of the Brook.”
Ms. Holmes’ affidavit states that she is a resident of Hartland and also a member of VNRC.
Ms. Holmes states that she has “used and enjoyed Lulls Brook by enjoying its beauty, the
wild life [sic] viewing it provides, walking and biking by it, [and] sitting next to it for
relaxation.” Ms. Holmes further states that she is also concerned that the proposed
discharge at issue in this appeal will pollute the Brook and interfere with her “use and
enjoyment of the Brook.”
3
Based upon these affidavits, it appears that Ms. Zemel and Ms. Holmes would
qualify for individual standing, based on their personal use and enjoyment of Lull’s Brook
because the discharge that is the subject of this appeal could potentially injure those
interests, Parker, 169 Vt. at 77-78 (citing Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife, 504 U.S. 555, 560-
61 (1992); Hinesburg Sand & Gravel Co. v. State, 166 Vt. 337, 341 (1997)), and their claimed
injuries would be redressable by this Court in this proceeding. Entergy, slip op. at 7-8.
As for the remaining two elements of the Parker test, the interest VNRC asserts in
this appeal — preventing discharge from entering Lull’s Brook and adversely affecting it
— is germane to the organization’s purpose of protecting Vermont’s natural resources by
promoting preservation and conservation of the state’s natural resources.3 Finally, the
relief requested by VNRC — the denial of the renewal permit — does not “require the
participation of [the organization’s] individual members in the action.” Parker, 169 Vt. at
78. In fact, as noted in Entergy, slip op. at 8, from the standpoint of judicial efficiency it
may be helpful to the Court to have the “organization represent the interests of its
individual members, rather than having a potentially large number of those individuals all
participating individually. Compare 10 V.S.A. §§8502, 8504 with 24 V.S.A. §4465(4) (group
must designate one person to serve as representative).”
Based upon the new evidence submitted in support of VNRC’s motion to alter or
amend, considered together with the evidence previously submitted with its original
motion to intervene, VNRC has now demonstrated that it meets the organizational
standing test in Parker and that it qualifies as a “person aggrieved,” as defined in 10 V.S.A.
§ 8502(7).
3
As noted in the May 11, 2007 Decision and Order, at page 2, n. 1, these purpose
statements were taken from the descriptions of the bylaws in VNRC’s original
Memorandum in Support of its Motion to Intervene because the bylaws have not been
provided in full to the Court.
4
Accordingly, based on the foregoing, it is hereby ORDERED and ADJUDGED that
VNRC’s Motion to Alter or Amend is GRANTED and the Court’s May 11, 2007 Order is
altered to allow VNRC to intervene in this appeal as a “person aggrieved” pursuant to 10
V.S.A. § 8504(n)(4).
Done at Berlin, Vermont, this 15th day of August, 2007.
_________________________________________________
Merideth Wright
Environmental Judge
5