STATE OF VERMONT
ENVIRONMENTAL COURT
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Appeal of Harrison } Docket No. 44‐2‐05 Vtec
(Harrison PRD) }
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Decision and Order
Appellants James and Janet Harrison appealed from a decision of the Development
Review Board (DRB) of the Town of Berkshire, denying their application for site plan
approval of a proposed Planned Residential Development (PRD). Appellants are
represented by Eric A. Poehlmann, Esq. and the Town is represented by Robert E. Farrar,
Esq. Certain issues were decided by summary judgment in this and a related case, Docket
No. 110‐6‐04 Vtec, after which an evidentiary hearing was held in this matter before
Merideth Wright, Environmental Judge. The parties were given the opportunity to submit
written memoranda and requests for findings. Upon consideration of the evidence and of
the written memoranda and requests for findings filed by the parties, the Court finds and
concludes as follows.
Appellants own an approximately 75‐acre parcel of land in the Rural Lands zoning
district of the Town of Berkshire, west of Vermont Route 108, with access to Route 108 by
a fifty‐foot‐wide private right‐of‐way known as Harrison Road. Appellants propose to
subdivide the parcel into seven lots. Lot 1 is a large L‐shaped lot containing approximately
49½ acres of retained land, with access by the fifty‐foot‐wide right‐of‐way extending
through the PRD lots. The remaining land of just over 25 acres in the south easterly corner
of the overall parcel is proposed for a six‐lot PRD, consisting of five development lots (Lots
2 through 6) ranging from 1.33‐acres to 3.33‐acres in size, plus a 13.135‐acre lot of common
land (Lot 7) for the use of those five lots, including the land lying under the development
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road and right‐of‐way. The project also requires Act 250 approval and approval of the
wastewater disposal systems under the state regulations, among other state permits.
The land is heavily wooded, with only a former logging road passing through the
property in the general vicinity of, but slightly to the east of, the right‐of‐way. Appellants
expect that the development lots will remain wooded, except for the building envelopes
for the houses and any clearing necessary for the septic systems and stormwater
management systems. They anticipate an Act 250 condition regulating clearing on the lots.
The common land is proposed to remain wooded and to be available as open space for the
use of the five development lots. All the development lots have access to the common land
by the right‐of‐way, which extends past the improved portion of the development road
onto the common land.
The proposed PRD slopes generally from the northwest to the southeast. The
development roadway is located in the flattest, most accessible location on the PRD
property; the slopes are steeper and the property is less accessible to the west. The
stormwater management system for the proposed PRD is located in the southeasterly
corner of the PRD, on Lot 2. The PRD plan also locates the primary septic disposal field for
Lot 5 on Lot 6, and locates the replacement septic disposal field for Lot 5 on Lot 4.
In connection with the PRD application, Appellants requested a so‐called waiver1
of the lot size requirements for Lots 2 through 6 in the PRD and a so‐called waiver of the
street frontage requirements for Lots 2, 3, and 4 in the PRD (and for Lot 5 if necessary, see
footnote 2). The DRB denied the PRD site plan application based on “concerns” that the
requested waivers of lot size and frontage “could cause problems with future development
applications;” and based on “concerns about the ability of the septic systems as designed
to function properly over time,” in particular regarding the distance of the replacement
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In fact requesting the modifications of otherwise‐applicable Bylaw standards, as
provided for PRDs in §245.
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system for lot 5 from the residence it would serve.
The parties stipulated that the sole issues for trial in determining whether the project
should be approved are:
1. Should Appellants’ proposed site plan be granted a waiver of the
minimum lot frontage requirement? The parties agree that the provisions of
the Town’s Bylaws relevant to this issue are §§110(g), 245, 300(c)(1), and
430(d)(4).
2. Is the septic system of Appellants’ proposed project suitable for the
project, thereby obviating any of the Town’s concerns over the system? The
parties agree that the provisions of the Town’s Bylaws relevant to this issue
are §§110(i), 240, and 320(a)(3).
As designed, the right‐of‐way passes in a roughly easterly to westerly direction
through the proposed PRD. The development road is built on this right‐of‐way to the
interior of the PRD, where it ends in a cul‐de‐sac or turnaround extending southerly from
the right‐of‐way. Individual driveways with access directly onto the development road
serve the house sites on Lots 2 and 6; Lots 3, 4, and 5 have driveways with access onto the
cul‐de‐sac portion of the development road. Lots 5 and 6 have additional frontage on the
undeveloped right‐of‐way extending beyond the cul‐de‐sac. Due to the geometry of the
cul‐de‐sac, Lots 2, 3, and 42 have less than the 200 feet of frontage required in the Rural
Lands district. Zoning Bylaws, §430 (d)(4). Lot 2 has 158 feet of frontage, Lot 3 has 161 feet
of frontage, and Lot 4 has 194 feet of frontage.
The cul‐de‐sac enables vehicles to turn around without having to use the residence
driveways for that purpose. The development roadway, cul‐de‐sac and clustered lots are
placed so as to avoid areas containing steep slopes and poorly drained soils, in compliance
with §240(a)(1)(C), and to avoid the increased infrastructure costs that would result if the
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If frontage on the undeveloped portion of the right‐of‐way is not counted as
“street” frontage, Lot 5 also lacks the required frontage.
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25‐acre PRD were split into five five‐acre lots. §245(b), §245(d)(4). Clustering the lots
enables the preservation of Lot 7 as common open space for the development. §245(b).
Although the lots are clustered, the house sites are sufficiently separated in distance and
in elevation, and by the forest vegetation, to preserve privacy and create attractive and
healthful building sites. §240(a)(1)(C). Accordingly, a modification of the frontage
requirements, as depicted on the site plan for the proposed PRD, is approved pursuant to
§430(d)(4). As designed, the development roadway and the fifty‐foot right‐of‐way provide
adequate access for each of the lots to Route 108, and are approved as required by
§300(c)(1). Moreover, to the extent that it has any regulatory effect, the proposed PRD
meets the purpose statement of the Zoning Bylaws to provide safe housing for the
population. §110(g).
The septic systems proposed for the PRD lots are pressurized mound systems. Each
development lot will have a primary wastewater disposal area and a replacement
wastewater area, as required by state wastewater disposal rules. In connection with
designing the wastewater disposal systems for the development lots in the proposed PRD,
Appellants’ consultant evaluated the capacity of the soils in the proposed PRD with respect
to their capacity for on‐site disposal of household wastewater. The soils have also been
reviewed in conjunction with the state review and permitting process for the sewage
disposal systems, although the state permit applications will not be filed until the
municipal permit process is concluded. Adequate areas of adequate soils were located
within the development lots of the proposed PRD to provide wastewater disposal for at
least five residences. The proposed primary and replacement areas were located
accordingly, and the systems were designed to meet the state standards. The lots are
clustered in the southeasterly area of the overall property so as to avoid areas with steep
slopes and poorly drained soils, and to provide adequate isolation distances between the
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houses, the septic systems, and the water supplies.
The proposed type of wastewater disposal system is commonly used in Vermont.
Appellants’ consultant has designed and overseen the installation of hundreds of similar
systems, none of which have failed. Distances between the disposal fields and the houses
served by the disposal fields are well within the distances that function properly in other
such systems in Vermont. No contrary evidence was presented to suggest that the type of
sewage disposal systems proposed for this PRD, or the actual design or locations of the
particular sewage disposal systems proposed for this PRD were in any way inadequate or
likely to fail.
Accordingly, the septic systems meet the requirements of §320(a)(3) and §240 in that
they comply with all town and state regulations and in that they will not cause sewage or
other harmful waste to be discharged into any water course or into any disposal facility
beyond its proper capacity. Moreover, to the extent that it has any regulatory effect, the
proposed PRD meets the purpose statement of the Zoning Bylaws to protect the public and
individual landowners against harm or loss from failed septic systems. §110(i).
Based on the foregoing, it is hereby ORDERED and ADJUDGED that site plan
approval for the proposed PRD is hereby GRANTED. This approval is conditioned on the
establishment of an open space or conservation easement or similar instrument for Lot 7
as required by §245(d)(8).
Dated at Berlin, Vermont, this 21st day of November, 2006.
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Merideth Wright
Environmental Judge
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