STATE OF VERMONT
ENVIRONMENTAL COURT
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Re: Bethel Mills, Inc. } Docket No. 243‐11‐05 Vtec
Jurisdictional Opinion #3‐97 }
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Decision on Appellant’s Motion for Summary Judgment
This matter concerns an appeal by Bethel Mills, Inc. (Appellant) from a
Jurisdictional Opinion (JO) of the District 3 Environmental Coordinator, dated October
20, 2005. The Coordinator concluded that an abutting 0.61‐acre parcel of land acquired
by Appellant in 1998, which adjoins Appellant’s 2.93‐acre tract of land containing its
lumber yard operations, is “involved land” to which Act 250 jurisdiction is attached.
Bethel Mills is represented by C. Daniel Hershenson, Esq. No other party has appeared
in this proceeding. Appellant has filed an unopposed motion for summary judgment.
Factual Background
The following facts are undisputed unless otherwise noted.
1. Appellant owns a 2.93‐acre parcel of land located on North Main Street in
the Industrial zoning district of the Town of Bethel (Town).
2. Appellant operated a sawmill on the 2.93‐acre parcel from 1781 until the
mid‐1970’s.
3. In the mid‐1970’s to mid‐1980’s, Appellant ceased operating a sawmill and
made environmental and aesthetic improvements on the 2.93‐acre parcel.
4. From the early 1990’s until the present Appellant has used the 2.93‐acre
parcel for the operation of a lumber yard and retail hardware commercial use.
5. The 2.93‐acre parcel is wholly located in the Industrial zoning district.
6. Sometime in the 1980s, Appellant constructed improvements on the 2.93‐
acre parcel, including a 19,000‐square‐foot warehouse, wood storage racks and sheds,
site paving and related infrastructure. Appellant did not seek or receive an Act 250
permit for these improvements prior to construction.
7. At some time thereafter (a specific date is not revealed by the record in
this appeal), a determination was made that the improvements Appellant previously
constructed constituted a “substantial change” to the development on the 2.93‐acre
parcel. Thus, even though the former sawmill pre‐dated the implementation of Act 250,
Appellant was required to obtain an Act 250 permit for the previously constructed
improvements. As a result of that determination, the following were issued by the
District Commission and the former Environmental Board:
a. Land Use Permit #3W0898, issued by the District Commission on
March 3, 2004;
b. Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, also issued by the District
Commission on March 3, 2004, to accompany the above referenced
Permit;
c. Memorandum of Decision issued by the District Commission on
May 21, 2004, in which the Commission granted in part and denied
in part Appellant’s motion to alter the previously issued Permit,
Findings and Conclusions. On that same day, the Commission also
issued its altered Permit, Findings and Conclusions.
d. Findings of Fact, Conclusions of Law and Order issued by the
former Environmental Board on August 4, 2005.
8. At some point prior to 1998, Appellant purchased a half‐acre of land from
an adjacent residential property owner, Richard Mills, to settle a boundary line issue.
9. In 1998, Appellant purchased the remaining 0.61‐acre parcel of land
owned by Richard Mills (the “Mills Parcel”). The Mills Parcel is improved with a
residential structure and outbuilding. The total area of Appellant’s contiguous land
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holdings is 4.04 acres, including the lumber yard, the Mills Parcel, and the half‐acre
previously purchased from Richard Mills.
10. The Mills Parcel is located entirely within the Village Residential zoning
district. It appears that the common boundary between the Mills Parcel and
Appellant’s remaining land may also form the boundary line between this residential
zoning district and the Industrial zoning district.
11. On November 28, 2000, the Town Development Review Board denied
Appellant’s request to utilize the Mills Parcel for industrial use, on the ground that such
use is not allowed in the Village Residential zoning district.
Procedural Background
The issue of whether Act 250 jurisdiction attaches to the Mills Parcel has been
addressed several times by others, including the District 3 Environmental Commission,
the Environmental Board, and the District 3 Environmental Coordinator, whose opinion
is the subject of this appeal.
On March 3, 2004, the District Commission issued Land Use Permit (LUP)
#3W0898, together with Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, for the previously
completed removal of the sawmill and construction of a storage building, wood storage
racks and sheds, site paving, and related infrastructure. LUP #3W0898 states (in bold
type) that “[j]urisdiction shall attach to the entire 4.04‐acre tract of land, including the
residential lot.”
In that first application, Appellant requested that the District Commission limit
jurisdiction, so that the Mills Parcel would not be encumbered by the LUP. Appellant’s
request was apparently based on the Environmental Board’s 2001 decision in Re:
Stonybrook Condominium Owners Assoc., Declaratory Ruling #385 (Vt. Envtl. Bd., May
18, 2001) (“Stonybrook”), in which the Environmental Board ruled that under certain
circumstances the scope of the permitted project should be restricted to “something less
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than the entire tract,” Stonybrook at 18. The District Commission denied Appellant’s
request to limit jurisdiction, concluding that “the buildings on the residential lot [i.e.:
the Mills Parcel] serve to buffer the noise and the light produced on the lumber storage
lot,” District Commission Findings and Conclusions dated March 3, 2004, at 13, and that
“the ‘aura’ of the lumber storage lot spills onto the residential lot.” The Commission
used this rationale to deny the Applicant’s request to limit jurisdiction. Id.
On March 18, 2004, Appellant filed with the District Commission a motion to
alter LUP #3W0898 by, inter alia, adding a condition stating that the “property
purchased by Bethel Mills from Richard Mills in 1998 . . . is hereby removed from the
jurisdiction of this permit in accordance with [Stonybrook].” District Commission
Memorandum of Decision dated May 21, 2004, at 5. The Commission denied
Appellant’s request to add such a condition, stating that:
It is the permittee’s burden to produce evidence convincing the
Commission there is no “nexus” between the two tracts of land regarding
the residential and commercial lot. There is a “nexus,” a functional
relationship, between the two tracts of land, relating directly to the
production of noise and lighting on the industrial lot. The residential lot
clearly provides a buffer for the residential neighborhood to the north.
The permittee may not have purchased the residential lot with this in
mind, but the “nexus” exists.
Id. at 3.
The District Commission’s May 21, 2004 Memorandum of Decision was
accompanied by LUP #3W0898(Altered), together with amended Findings and
Conclusions. The altered Permit retained jurisdiction over the entire 4.04‐acre tract of
land, with the Commission stating in the introduction to its Findings that the “tract of
land consists of 4.04 acres with 4.04 acres involved in the project area.” Id. at 1. The
altered Findings repeated the Commission’s earlier finding as to the residential lot, and
the Commission again denied Appellant’s request that it limit jurisdiction so as to
exclude the Mills Parcel from the Permit’s jurisdiction.
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On June 21, 2004, Appellant appealed the altered Permit and amended Findings
to the former Environmental Board (Board), alleging that the Commission had erred by
declining to exclude the Mills Parcel from the permitted project. The Board denied
Appellant’s request to limit the scope of the permitted project, stating that “[n]oise and
light from the Project do affect the residential land, and the house, outbuildings and
vegetation on the Mills Parcel provide some screening—both visual and aural—of the
Project. Accordingly, the Board cannot grant Bethel Mills’ request to reduce the scope
of the permitted project under Stonybrook.” Envtl. Bd.’s Findings, Conclusions, and
Order in LUP #3W0898(Altered)‐EB, at 16 (Vt. Envtl. Bd., Aug. 4, 2005).
The Board did not stop there, however, but went on to say that “[a]lthough it is
beyond the scope of this permit appeal, the Board notes that the question of whether the
Mills Parcel is involved land has not been addressed in any jurisdictional opinion . . . .
Whether the Mills Parcel constitutes involved land under EBR 2(F), or whether it
formerly did but no longer does, could be addressed by the appropriate district
environmental coordinator upon request by Bethel Mills.” Id.
Appellant subsequently requested a jurisdictional opinion (JO) from the District
3 Environmental Coordinator. On October 20, 2005, the Coordinator issued the
requested JO, concluding that “because the Mills parcel is contiguous to the lumber
yard, was purchased prior to the issuance of the Land Use Permit and serves a purpose
for blocking light, noise and screening from the nearby residential homes, it is involved
land and Act 250 jurisdiction attaches.” Jurisdictional Opinion #3‐97 Bethel Mills, Inc.,
at 4 (District 3 Envtl. Coordinator, Oct. 20, 2005). This appealed followed.1
1 Between the time Appellant appealed the District Commission’s March 18, 2004, Decision to the former
Environmental Board and the District Coordinator issued her JO, jurisdiction over such appeals was
transferred to this Court. 10 V.S.A. § 8504(a).
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Discussion
We note at the outset that the Commission’s introductory statement in the May
21, 2004 Permit that the “tract of land consists of 4.04 acres with 4.04 acres involved in
the project area” is not determinative of the question of whether the Mills Parcel is
“involved land” under Environmental Board Rule 2(F)(1). EBR (2)(F)(1) states in its
entirety:
(F) “Involved Land” includes: (1) The entire tract or tracts of land, within a
radius of five miles, upon which the construction of improvements for
commercial or industrial purposes will occur, and any other tract, within a
radius of five miles, to be used as part of the project or where there is a
relationship to the tract or tracts upon which the construction of
improvements will occur such that there is a demonstrable likelihood that
the impact on the values sought to be protected by Act 250 will be
substantially affected by reason of that relationship. In the event that a
commercial or industrial project is to be completed in stages according to
a plan, or is part of a larger undertaking, all land involved in the entire
project shall be included for the purpose of determining jurisdiction.
There is no evidence that the permitted lumber yard is part of a staged plan or
larger undertaking, which could involve the Mills Parcel under the somewhat circular
definition in the final clause of EBR (2)(F)(1) (“all land involved” shall be included as
involved land). In fact, the current undisputed facts reveal an absence of a “staged
plan.” There now can be no commercial or industrial uses on the Mills Parcel, because
it is located entirely within the Village Residential zoning district, where such uses are
not allowed. See the November 28, 2000 DRB denial of Appellant’s request to utilize the
Mills Parcel for industrial use, on the ground that such use is not allowed in the Village
Residential zoning district.
However, prior precedent suggests that the Mills Parcel, being a contiguous
parcel under common ownership, is part of the “entire tract or tracts of land” on a
portion of which commercial improvements have been constructed, even though no
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construction has occurred on the Mills Parcel itself. See Costello Garage, 158 Vt. 655,
656 (1992) (Mem.) (“the Board was reasonable in determining that two contiguous
parcels were a ’tract’”); Stokes Communications, 164 Vt. 30, 37 (1995) (stating that the
“Board has construed a ‘tract of land’ for jurisdictional purposes to include all
contiguous land in common ownership, regardless of the functional relationship
between the parcels;” and citing Costello for the proposition that “contiguous parcels
held in common ownership are involved land under Rule 2(F)(1).”).
The Costello and Stokes Communications precedent could lead to a conclusion
that the Mills Parcel is involved land, simply because it is part of the “entire tract or
tracts of land, within a radius of five miles, upon which the construction of
improvements for commercial or industrial purposes will occur,” without reaching the
“any other tract” clause of the definition. This would amount to a very broad rule
providing that “if it is contiguous, it is involved,” whereas the “any other tract” clause
requires use as part of the project or a relationship to the improved tract.2 We decline to
subscribe to so broad a rule in this opinion. However, we conclude that the Mills Parcel
fits the more narrow “involved land” rule relating to “any other tract” because it bears a
relationship to the lumber yard that has been demonstrated in the proceedings below,
and that relationship is likely to substantially affect the aesthetic values sought to be
protected by Act 250.
The Mills Parcel is involved land, because it qualifies as “any other tract, within a
radius of five miles, to be used as part of the project or where there is a relationship to
the tract or tracts upon which the construction of improvements will occur such that
there is a demonstrable likelihood that the impact on the values sought to be protected
by Act 250 will be substantially affected by reason of that relationship.” EBR (2)(F)(1).
2 But see Costello, 158 Vt. 655, 656 (1992) (“Board Rule 2(F)(1), defining ‘involved land,’ omits the
criterion of a functional relationship between contiguous parcels of land.”).
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One of the values sought to be protected by Act 250 is aesthetics, see 10 V.S.A.
§ 6086(a)(8) (Act 250 Criterion 8) (“Before granting a permit, the district commission
shall find that the subdivision or development: . . . [w]ill not have an undue adverse
effect on the scenic or natural beauty of the area, aesthetics, historic sites or rare and
irreplaceable natural areas.”).
The Mills Parcel, with its residential structure and outbuilding, sits between a
commercial lumber yard and several residential properties. The evidence presented
shows that the Mills Parcel marks the end of the Industrial zoning district and the
beginning of the Village Residential district. Thus, the Mills Parcel acts as a buffer,
which Appellant owns and controls, between its industrial development and the
adjoining residences in the Village Residential district.
Appellant owned the Mills Parcel when it applied for its Act 250 permit, and the
District Commission noted Appellant’s ownership of the Mills Parcel several times in its
March 3, 2004 Findings and Conclusions under Act 250 Criterion 8.3 Those Findings
included a discussion of noise monitoring that was conducted by Appellant on the
residential property abutting the Mills Parcel on the side furthest from the lumber yard.
The District Commission concluded that the noise levels on the residential property
abutting the Mills Parcel were mitigated by the interposing residential structure and
outbuilding on the Mills Parcel.
Appellant looks to the Supreme Court case of In re: Audet, 176 Vt. 617 (2004),
and the Environmental Board’s decision in Okemo Realty, Application #900033‐2‐EB
(May 2, 1996) to support its argument that the Mills Parcel is not involved land. In
Audet, the Court held that Act 250 jurisdiction did not attach to a parcel of land where
the owner had begun and then quickly abandoned a use on the parcel that would have
triggered Act 250 jurisdiction, had the use been continued. The parcel in question was
3 See District Commission Findings and Conclusions dated March 3, 2004, at 5, 6, and 8.
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separated by three‐tenths of a mile from two other parcels owned by the same party.
The two other parcels were contiguous, and were treated as one tract by the Court.
However, the contiguous parcels together occupied less than one acre. Thus, Act 250
jurisdiction would not attach unless the third non‐contiguous parcel was included as
involved land.
The Audet Court based its holding on a finding that the “village business [on the
contiguous parcels] occupies less than one acre, and has no connection with any other
parcel.” Audet, 176 Vt. at 621. Here, however, the Mills Parcel is connected to the
business use, both by sharing a common boundary and because the residential structure
and outbuilding screen the commercial lumber yard from the other residential
properties in the adjoining zoning district. In addition, the question in Audet was
whether Act 250 jurisdiction would attach at all to any of the parcels under common
ownership, whereas here Act 250 jurisdiction has already attached to the lumber mill
project area.
In Okemo Realty, the Board concluded that:
the Kondracki parcel does not constitute involved land [under 10 V.S.A.
§ 6001(3) and EBR 2(F)], based on all of the following circumstances: (a)
this is a renewal application; (b) the Applicant acquired the Kondracki
parcel almost two decades after the Original Permit was issued; (c) this
application concerns the Project, which is only a portion of the
Subdivision; and (d) the Applicant proposes no activity for the Kondracki
parcel.
Okemo Realty, Application #900033‐2‐EB (May 2, 1996) (emphasis added). Here,
however, Appellant purchased the Mills Parcel in 1998, and subsequently applied for
and received Land Use Permit #3W0898 in 2004 for the previously constructed
improvements. The Commission took Appellant’s ownership of the Mills Parcel into
account in issuing the March 3, 2004 Permit and May 21, 2004 Altered Permit.
Appellant’s ownership of the Mills Parcel thus provided Appellant with a buffer from
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the nearby residential properties which contributed to the Commission rendering
positive findings under Criterion 8.4
Although Appellant’s motion is unopposed, our procedural Rules provide that
“summary judgment when appropriate may be rendered against the moving party.”
V.R.C.P. 56(c)(3). We conclude that such a result is appropriate in this case. The Mills
Parcel constitutes involved land under EBR (2)(F)(1). It is therefore subject to Act 250
jurisdiction. The consequence of this determination is that the pending appeal is
DISMISSED.
Done at Berlin, Vermont, this 19th day of April, 2006.
__________________________________________
Thomas S. Durkin, Environmental Judge
4 Had Appellant not owned the Mills Parcel at the time it applied for its Act 250 approval of the
previously constructed improvements, we are left to wonder what adverse impacts the then Mills Parcel
owner could have asserted before the District Commission.
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