6 July 12, 2023 No. 358
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE
STATE OF OREGON
Ted M. COOPMAN,
Paul T. Conte, and Gary Nance,
Petitioners,
v.
CITY OF EUGENE,
Al Johnson, Home Builders Association of Lane County,
Eliza Kashinsky, Joshua Kashinsky, Anne Brown,
Patty Hine, Isaac Judd, Angie R. Marzano, Sigh O’Nara,
Babe O’Sullivan, Bill Randell, Carleen Reilly,
Seth Sadofsky, Kevin Shanley, Heather Sielicki,
Sue Wolling, 1000 Friends of Oregon,
Better Housing Together, and DEVNW,
Respondents,
and
Christopher DEEL,
Respondent below.
Land Use Board of Appeals
2022056; A180682
Argued and submitted April 12, 2023.
Charles W. Woodward, IV argued the cause and filed the
brief for petitioners.
Lauren A. Sommers argued the cause and filed the brief
for respondent City of Eugene.
Bill Kloos and Law Office of Bill Kloos PC filed the brief
for respondent Home Builders Association of Lane County.
No appearance for respondents Al Johnson, Eliza
Kashinsky, Joshua Kashinsky, Anne Brown, Patty
Hine, Isaac Judd, Angie R. Marzano, Sigh O’Nara, Babe
O’Sullivan, Bill Randell, Carleen Reilly, Seth Sadofsky,
Kevin Shanley, Heather Sielicki, Sue Wolling, 1000 Friends
of Oregon, Better Housing Together, and DEVNW.
Before Shorr, Presiding Judge, and Mooney, Judge, and
Pagán, Judge.
Cite as 327 Or App 6 (2023) 7
SHORR, P. J.
Reversed in part and remanded; otherwise affirmed.
8 Coopman v. City of Eugene
SHORR, P. J.
Petitioners seek review of a final order of the Land
Use Board of Appeals (LUBA) that rejected their challenge
to respondent City of Eugene’s adoption of Ordinance No.
20667 (“the ordinance”). The city adopted the ordinance in
response to a directive from the legislature to allow more
“middle housing”—duplexes, triplexes, quadplexes, cottage
clusters, and townhomes—in cities. Specifically, the leg-
islature enacted a middle housing statute, the majority of
which is codified as ORS 197.758,1 to require cities to permit
those housing options in areas previously zoned exclusively
for single-family dwellings. The legislature set deadlines
by which the cities had to update their local ordinances or
amend their comprehensive plans or, alternatively, be forced
to apply a model ordinance until they adopted their own. Or
Laws 2019, ch 639, § 3. The city timely adopted its own ordi-
nance, Ordinance No. 20667, that amended the Eugene Code
and the Eugene-Springfield Metropolitan Area General
Plan (Metro Plan).
Petitioners challenged the city’s adoption of the
ordinance before LUBA and LUBA affirmed the city’s deci-
sion. Petitioners now seek review, raising three assignments
of error. In their first assignment, petitioners contend that
LUBA erred in affirming the city’s determination that its
comprehensive plan and code amendments complied with
Goal 11 of the Statewide Land-Use Planning Goals, OAR
660-015-0000(11). As we explain below, we agree with peti-
tioners that LUBA erred in that regard and that the city
did not adequately address Goal 11 in its findings. We reject
petitioners’ second assignment of error, which contends
that LUBA erred in affirming the city’s construction of law
and the city’s findings that the ordinance did not implicate
Goal 15 (relating to development on the Willamette River
Greenway), OAR 660-015-0005, and therefore did not violate
that goal. We summarily reject petitioners’ third assignment
of error, which contends that LUBA erred in upholding the
ordinance because, according to petitioners, the ordinance’s
1
The legislature recently passed House Bill (HB) 3395 (2023), which
amended ORS 197.758. Those amendments do not affect our analysis, however,
and we cite to the current version of the statute throughout this opinion.
Cite as 327 Or App 6 (2023) 9
terms “dwelling unit size” and “income-qualified middle
housing” did not provide clear and objective standards, in
violation of ORS 197.307(4). As a result, we affirm LUBA’s
decision in part, reverse in part, and remand for further
proceedings.
The “facts” before LUBA are simply a recitation of
the enactment of the laws relating to middle housing that
preceded this dispute. As a result, the parties do not con-
test them. We use the same background facts provided by
LUBA:
“This appeal concerns the city’s adoption of [the ordi-
nance amending the Eugene Code and Metro Plan] imple-
menting House Bill 2001 (2019), a portion of which is cod-
ified at ORS 197.758 and which we refer to as the Middle
Housing Statute. Or Laws 2019, ch 639, § 2.
“The Middle Housing Statute requires large cities,
including Eugene, to allow duplexes, triplexes, quadplexes,
townhouses, and cottage clusters on properties zoned for
residential use that allow for the development of detached
single-family dwellings. The Middle Housing Statute
required the city to amend its comprehensive plan [or]
adopt land use regulations not later than June 30, 2022.
Or Laws 2019, ch 639, § 3(1)(b). Had the city failed to
implement the Middle Housing Statute within that time,
then the city would have been required to directly apply
a model ordinance adopted by the Land Conservation and
Development Commission (LCDC). Id. § 3(2), (3). LCDC
adopted administrative rules implementing the Middle
Housing Statute at OAR chapter 660, division 46. LCDC
also adopted a model code for large cities, which is Exhibit
B to OAR 660-046-0010.
“The Middle Housing Statute does not prohibit local
governments from permitting single-family dwellings in
areas zoned to allow for single-family dwellings or from
allowing middle housing in areas not required under the
statute. ORS 197.758(6). The [ordinance] do[es] not require
or trigger the development of middle housing. The choice to
construct middle housing is left to the developer or prop-
erty owner.
“Rather than adopting LCDC’s model code, the city
adopted the [ordinance] to allow for the development of
middle housing types on residentially zoned properties
10 Coopman v. City of Eugene
where the development of detached single-family dwellings
is allowed. In some respects, the [ordinance] exceed[s] the
minimum requirements of ORS 197.758 and OAR chapter
660, division 46, based on the city’s policy choice to encour-
age and, in some cases, incentivize the development of mid-
dle housing.”
(Footnote omitted.) In its opinion, LUBA further referred
to the factual findings that the city made when enacting
the ordinance. We quote those findings at length within our
discussion of petitioners’ assignments of error, because peti-
tioners’ legal arguments are partially driven by its conten-
tion that LUBA erred in affirming the city’s findings.
We turn to the applicable standard of review before
addressing petitioners’ assignments of error. Petitioners
challenge LUBA’s order as “unlawful in substance” under
ORS 197.850(9)(a). Petitioners’ challenge therefore asks us
to review whether LUBA correctly applied the law. Within
that challenge, petitioners contend both that LUBA misin-
terpreted the law and that LUBA erred in affirming the
city’s legislative findings of fact in support of the ordinance.
We review LUBA’s interpretation of the law for legal error.
See Mountain West Investment Corp. v. City of Silverton,
175 Or App 556, 559, 30 P3d 420 (2001) (LUBA decision is
“unlawful in substance * * * if it represent[s] a mistaken
interpretation of the applicable law”). As to the facts, our
review of LUBA’s decision affirming the city’s factual find-
ings is different from our ordinary factual standard of
review in other agency cases:
“We review LUBA’s determination of the substantiality
of the evidence for a local government finding on whether
the LUBA opinion is unlawful in substance under ORS
197.850(9)(a). Our task is not to assess whether the local
government erred in making a finding, but to determine
whether LUBA properly exercised its review authority.
Thus, we do not substitute our judgment for LUBA’s on
whether a reasonable person could make a finding of fact
based upon the entire local government record. Instead,
we evaluate whether LUBA properly stated and applied its
own standard of review. If LUBA does not err in the articu-
lation of its substantial evidence standard of review under
ORS 197.835(9)(a)(C), we would reverse LUBA’s decision
Cite as 327 Or App 6 (2023) 11
only when there is no evidence to support the finding or
if the evidence in the case is so at odds with LUBA’s eval-
uation that a reviewing court could infer that LUBA had
misunderstood or misapplied its scope of review.”
Citizens for Responsibility v. Lane County, 218 Or App 339,
345, 180 P3d 35 (2008) (internal quotation marks omit-
ted). In other words, we review “LUBA’s application of the
substantial evidence rule for legal correctness and do[ ]
not review the evidence independently for substantiality.”
Reinert v. Clackamas County, 286 Or App 431, 446, 398 P3d
989 (2017).
We start with the law that informs this dispute.
Under existing statewide planning laws, local governments
must adopt comprehensive plans that are consistent with
the Statewide Land Use Planning Goals. ORS 197.175(2)(a)
(“Pursuant to ORS chapters 195, 196 and 197, each city
and county in this state shall * * * [p]repare, adopt, amend
and revise comprehensive plans in compliance with goals
approved by [LCDC].”). Comprehensive plans must be “pre-
pared to assure that all public actions are consistent and
coordinated with the policies expressed through the compre-
hensive plans.” ORS 197.010(1)(d); see also ORS 197.175(2)(b),
(d) (requiring each city and county to “[e]nact land use reg-
ulations to implement their comprehensive plans,” and, “[i]f
[the city or county’s] comprehensive plan and land use regu-
lations have been acknowledged by [LCDC], make land use
decisions and limited land use decisions in compliance with
the acknowledged plan and land use regulations”).
To implement that framework, Eugene has its own
laws relating to planning. Eugene Code (EC) 9.8065(1) pro-
vides that the city may adopt an amendment to its land use
code that “[i]s consistent with applicable statewide plan-
ning goals adopted by [LCDC].” EC 9.8065(2) provides that
amendments must also be “consistent with applicable pro-
visions of the [city’s] comprehensive plan and applicable
adopted refinement plans.” EC 9.7735 further provides that
the city council apply certain criteria in approving or deny-
ing a Metro Plan amendment application, including that
“[t]he proposed amendment is consistent with the relevant
Statewide Planning Goals.” EC 9.7735(1).
12 Coopman v. City of Eugene
We turn to the relevant statewide planning goals.
Goal 2 provides in relevant part that “[c]ity * * * plans and
actions related to land use shall be consistent with the com-
prehensive plans of cities” adopted under law. OAR 660-015-
0000(2). Goal 11 provides that local governments are “[t]o
plan and develop a timely, orderly and efficient arrangement
of public facilities and services to serve as a framework for
urban and rural development.” OAR 660-015-0000(11). The
goal requires cities like Eugene to “develop and adopt a pub-
lic facility plan for areas within an urban growth bound-
ary.” Id. The goal defines key terms and phrases such as
“a timely, orderly, and efficient arrangement” and a “public
facility plan”:
“A Timely, Orderly and Efficient Arrangement—
refers to a system or plan that coordinates the type, loca-
tions and delivery of public facilities and services in a man-
ner that best supports the existing and proposed land uses.
“* * * * *
“Public Facilities Plan—A public facility plan is a
support document or documents to a comprehensive plan.
The facility plan describes the water, sewer and transporta-
tion facilities which are to support the land uses designated
in the appropriate acknowledged comprehensive plan * * *.”
Id. (boldface in original). Goal 11 also provides guidelines,
some of which apply to urban areas like Eugene. Planning
Guideline 3 provides: “Public facilities and services in urban
areas should be provided at levels necessary and suitable for
urban uses.” Id. Further, Implementation Guideline 3 pro-
vides: “The level of key facilities that can be provided should
be considered as a principal factor in planning for various
densities and types of urban and rural land uses.” Id.
Thus, under Oregon’s statutory land-use framework
and Eugene’s code, the amendments to the Metro Plan had
to be consistent with Goal 11, and the amendments to the
Eugene Code, in turn, had to be consistent with the Metro
Plan as well as Goal 11.
As noted, the legislature enacted the middle hous-
ing statute in 2019. Or Laws 2019, ch 639. That law requires
that Eugene, as a city “with a population of 25,000 [people]
or more,”
Cite as 327 Or App 6 (2023) 13
“allow the development of
“(a) All middle housing types in areas zoned for res-
idential use that allow for the development of detached
single-family dwellings; and
“(b) A duplex on each lot or parcel zoned for residen-
tial use that allows for the development of detached single-
family dwellings.”
ORS 197.758(2); Or Laws 2019, ch 639, § 2(2). The law pro-
vides that, “[n]otwithstanding ORS 197.646,” which provides
the ordinary procedures for amendments to comprehensive
plans to comply with new land use statutes or rules after
plans are acknowledged by LCDC, a city like Eugene “shall
adopt land use regulations or amend its comprehensive plan”
no later than June 30, 2022, or, if it fails to do so, “shall
directly apply” a model ordinance developed by LCDC.2 Or
Laws 2019, ch 639, § 3(1)(b), (3). Cities are permitted to reg-
ulate the siting and design of middle housing “provided that
the regulations do not, individually or cumulatively, dis-
courage * * * development * * * through unreasonable costs
or delay. Local governments may regulate middle housing to
comply with protective measures adopted pursuant to state-
wide land use planning goals.” ORS 197.758(5).
LCDC adopted regulations following the enactment
of the middle housing statute. As relevant to this dispute,
LCDC adopted OAR 660-046-0010, which elaborates on
the legislative directive that “[l]ocal governments may reg-
ulate middle housing to comply with protective measures
adopted pursuant to statewide land use planning goals.”
ORS 197.758(5). OAR 660-046-0010(3) provides, in part:
“A Medium or Large City may regulate Middle Housing
to comply with protective measures (including plans, pol-
icies, and regulations) adopted and acknowledged pursu-
ant to statewide land use planning goals. Where Medium
and Large Cities have adopted, or shall adopt, regulations
implementing the following statewide planning goals,
the following provisions provide direction as to how those
2
As well as enacting the model code required by the statute, LCDC has
enacted a variety of rules that guide cities and other covered local govern-
ments in implementing the middle housing statute, some of which we discuss
below. See OAR 660-046-000 - 660-046-0370 (providing regulations guiding
implementation).
14 Coopman v. City of Eugene
regulations shall be implemented in relation to Middle
Housing, as required by this rule.
“* * * * *
“(e) Goal 11: Public Facilities and Services—Pursuant
to OAR 660-011-0020(2), a public facility plan must iden-
tify significant public facility projects which are to support
the land uses designated in the acknowledged comprehen-
sive plan. This includes public facility projects to support
the development of Middle Housing in areas zoned for res-
idential use that allow for the development of detached
single-family dwellings. Following adoption of Middle
Housing allowances by a Large City, the Large City shall
work to ensure that infrastructure serving undeveloped or
underdeveloped areas, as defined in OAR 660-046-0320(8),
where Middle Housing is allowed is appropriately designed
and sized to serve Middle Housing.”
The legislature also permitted a city to seek an
extension of time to adopt regulations or amend its com-
prehensive plan for an area where it has identified cer-
tain infrastructure and transportation services “that are
either significantly deficient or are expected to be signifi-
cantly deficient before December 31, 2023,” and where it has
identified a plan that will remedy the deficiency. Or Laws
2019, ch 639, § 4(1), (2). Accordingly, the Department of
Land Conservation and Development (DLCD) implemented
a program for those extensions. See OAR 660-046-0300 -
660-046-0370. It is undisputed that the City of Eugene,
which is considered a large city under the middle housing
regulations,3 did not seek an extension.
The City of Eugene adopted its own ordinance,
Ordinance No. 20667, that amended portions of the Eugene
Code and portions of the Metro Plan. The city went further
in its ordinance than the requirements of the middle housing
statute by not just allowing middle housing but encouraging
and even incentivizing the development of middle housing in
the city.
As explained above, in the middle housing stat-
ute, the legislature required certain cities to allow middle
3
OAR 660-046-0020(8) defines a large city to include one with an “estimated
population of 25,000 or more.”
Cite as 327 Or App 6 (2023) 15
housing in certain areas by amending their comprehensive
plans and land use regulations to that effect. Or Laws 2019,
ch 639. That legislative act necessarily displaces some of the
ordinary statewide land-use planning framework. See, e.g.,
id. at § 3(1) (cities must amend their plans and regulations
“[n]otwithstanding ORS 197.646”). What is less clear is how
much of the framework it displaces. Here, as we will explain,
the question is whether, when it enacted the ordinance, the
city had to ensure that the Eugene Code and Metro Plan
amendments allowing middle housing were consistent with
Goal 11 by considering whether, and to what extent, the
amendments were compatible with its existing public facili-
ties and services. The city had amended its public facilities
and services plan in 2017 (approximately five years before
the adoption of the ordinance) and was already looking at
an upcoming update to that plan following a grant of money
from DLCD.
Recognizing that recent history and upcoming plan-
ning process, the city made certain findings when adopting
the ordinance:
“The Middle Housing Code Amendments[4] do not make
changes to the City’s provision of public facilities and ser-
vices or to the currently adopted Eugene/Springfield Public
Facilities and Services Plan (PFSP). Consistent with the
PFSP, the City will continue to plan and develop public
facilities to support the land uses designated in the City’s
acknowledged comprehensive plan, including public facility
projects that support the development of middle housing.
Therefore, the amendments are consistent with Statewide
Planning Goal 11.
“The City of Eugene updated the PFSP during the adop-
tion of Eugene Urban Growth Boundary in 2017 to ensure
that all residential lands could be served. More recently, the
City of Eugene and City of Springfield received a grant from
[DLCD] on October 6, 2021 to update the PFSP, including
4
We understand the City and LUBA’s references to the “Middle Housing
Code Amendments” or sometimes abbreviated by LUBA as “MHA” to refer to the
entire ordinance, which both amended the Eugene Code’s land use provisions and
amended the Metro Plan to account for the legislature’s requirement to allow
middle housing. Throughout this opinion, we use “the ordinance” to refer to the
entirety of Ordinance No. 20667 and, whenever possible, adjust quoted material
from the LUBA record to be consistent with our use of that term.
16 Coopman v. City of Eugene
updates specifically focused on supporting housing devel-
opment. Consistent with [OAR 660-046-0010(3)(e)], follow-
ing adoption of the Middle Housing Code Amendments, the
City will work to ensure that infrastructure serving areas
where middle housing is allowed, including any undevel-
oped or underdeveloped areas as defined in OAR 660-046-
0320(8), is appropriately designed and sized to serve the
land uses allowed by the City’s comprehensive plan and
land use regulations, including middle housing uses.”
With that legal and factual background, we turn to
petitioners’ argument. Before LUBA, petitioners contended
that, contrary to the city’s statement that the amendments
“do not make changes to the City’s provision of public facili-
ties and services,” the amendments would result in changes
in the city’s provision of public facilities and services because
they allowed an increase in density in residential zones
throughout the city. Petitioners asserted that the city’s find-
ings “represent, at best, a non-binding promise that the
City will eventually address Goal 11 compliance when the
PFSP is amended.” Petitioners contend that, consequently,
the findings did not demonstrate that the amendments cur-
rently complied with the statewide land use planning goals.
Petitioners relied on Friends of Yamhill County v. Yamhill
County, 47 Or LUBA 160 (2004), for the proposition that
compliance issues with statewide planning goals raised by
post-acknowledgment plan amendments must be addressed
and resolved at the time the plan amendment is adopted.
Petitioners maintained that the city could have brought the
amendments into current compliance with Goal 11 in any
of several ways: It could have updated its public facilities
and services plan; “enacted the DLCD Model Code (which
includes a restriction on development if there is insufficient
infrastructure)”; or simply undertaken a study “to predict
the increased impacts on the Goal 11 facilities.” (Footnote
omitted.)
LUBA rejected that argument. First, it stated that
the 2017 public service facilities plan contemplated the
impacts of increased development through in-fill and rede-
velopment. It then noted that it was “unclear whether and to
what extent the [ordinance] will result in increased density.”
Regardless, it concluded,
Cite as 327 Or App 6 (2023) 17
“even if the city had determined that the [ordinance] will
result in increased density that exceeds existing infrastruc-
ture or planned infrastructure improvements, Goal 11 does
not require that the city amend the PFSP to evaluate the
adequacy of its infrastructure prior to or concurrently with
adopting the [ordinance].”
We understand LUBA to have concluded that, although Goal
11 applied to the city’s amendments to the Metro Plan and
the Eugene Code, Goal 11 does not mandate that the city
consider whether the amendments would allow development
without compliance with Goal 11 or amend its public facili-
ties and services plan contemporaneously with adopting the
amendments. LUBA later (when analyzing the ordinance’s
compliance with a local planning policy with similar text)
noted that the dictionary definition of the term “coordinate”
includes “to bring into a common action, movement, or con-
dition,” which, LUBA said, did not require contemporaneous
action.
On review, petitioners renew the basic argument
that they made before LUBA, contending that, when it
adopted the ordinance, the city was required, and failed,
to demonstrate that the plan and regulations as amended
complied with Goal 11 and, consequently, with the exist-
ing public facilities and services plan. They note that the
ordinance post-dated the existing 2017 public facilities and
services plan and so, necessarily, the plan did not contem-
plate the type of infill and increased density that will result
from the ordinance. Petitioners also take issue with LUBA’s
characterization of their argument as being that the city
had to amend the public facilities and services plan when
it adopted the ordinance, pointing out that they argued
that the city only had to consider and explain how the ordi-
nance was consistent with Goal 11, not that it necessarily
had to amend the plan. Noting LUBA’s focus on the term
“coordinate” from Goal 11, they also contend that, to accom-
plish Goal 11’s mandate that the city “coordinates the type,
locations and delivery of public facilities and services in a
manner that best supports the existing and proposed land
uses,” OAR 660-015-0000(11), when the city adopts provi-
sions allowing new land uses, the city has to consider the
18 Coopman v. City of Eugene
relationship between those new uses and its existing plan
for public facilities and services.
To satisfy ORS 197.175(2)(a), cities and counties
“shall * * * amend and revise” their comprehensive plans “in
compliance with” the statewide planning goals. Further, the
city’s own code provides that the council shall apply certain
criteria in approving or denying an application to amend
the Metro Plan, including that “[t]he proposed amendment
is consistent with the relevant Statewide Planning Goals.”
EC 9.7735(1). And, the city may amend its land use code
when the amendment “[i]s consistent with applicable state-
wide planning goals” and “with applicable provisions of
the comprehensive plan and applicable adopted refinement
plans.” EC 9.8065(1), (2); see also ORS 197.175(2)(b) (cities
and counties must enact land use regulations “to imple-
ment their comprehensive plans”). Those requirements are
stated in the present tense. They do not allow the city to
amend the plan and regulations based on an assertion, like
the one the city made here regarding Goal 11, that, at some
point in the future, the city will update its plans to account
for development allowed by the amendments in a way that
will comply with the goals. See Stop the Dump Coalition v.
Yamhill County, 364 Or 432, 449, 435 P3d 698 (2019) (“state
and local land use laws must be consistent with the state-
wide land use goals”); see also Friends of Yamhill County, 47
Or LUBA at 169 (“As a general principle, goal compliance
issues raised by a plan amendment must be addressed and
resolved at the time the plan amendment is adopted.”); 1000
Friends of Oregon v. Washington County, 17 Or LUBA 671,
683 (1989) (in adopting a post-acknowledgment plan amend-
ment, to the extent the plan amendment implicates state-
wide planning goal standards, findings addressing those
goal standards are required).
In its separately filed brief, respondent Home
Builders Association of Lane County argues that, in enact-
ing the middle housing statute, the legislature intended
to override the ordinary land-use framework altogether,
including the requirements of ORS 197.175 and provisions
like those in the Eugene Code, and exempt cities’ middle
housing amendments from application of the goals. As noted
Cite as 327 Or App 6 (2023) 19
above, the legislature did exempt the amendments from the
ordinary post-acknowledgment plan amendment statute,
ORS 197.646. However, neither the middle housing statute
nor LCDC’s rules implementing it reflect the intention to
override application of the goals as required by ORS 197.175.
Further, the middle housing law specifically exempts local
government’s amendments to their comprehensive plans and
land use regulations from LCDC’s Transportation Planning
Rule, which implements Goal 12. See Or Laws 2019, ch 639,
§ 3(5) (stating that, when a local government legislatively
amends its comprehensive plan or land use regulations to
allow middle housing, it “is not required to consider whether
the amendments significantly affect an existing or planned
transportation facility”). If the legislature had intended this
type of amendment to be exempt from all of the goals, that
specific exemption would be meaningless.
The legislature also authorized local governments
to seek extensions to update their local land use regula-
tions or amend their comprehensive plans for specific areas
“where the local government has identified water, sewer,
storm drainage or transportation services that” are “signifi-
cantly deficient or are expected to be significantly deficient
before December 31, 2023[.]” Or Laws 2019, ch 639, § 4(1),
(2). As noted, DLCD also implemented a program for seeking
those extensions. OAR 660-046-0300 - 660-046-0370. That
decision—to allow local governments additional time to
update their land use regulations and comprehensive plans
to consider their infrastructure needs in light of the new
middle housing law—supports an inference that the legis-
lature intended to continue to require local governments to
comply with statewide planning goals and rules related to
public facilities and services.
Further, although the parties debate the meaning
of OAR 660-046-0010(3), we conclude that it supports our
understanding that adoption of the amendments mandated
by the middle housing statute must follow regularly applica-
ble procedures, albeit on a dramatically expedited timeline.
That provision states, in part, that
“a public facility plan must identify significant public facil-
ity projects which are to support the land uses designated
20 Coopman v. City of Eugene
in the acknowledged comprehensive plan. This includes
public facility projects to support the development of Middle
Housing in areas zoned for residential use that allow for the
development of detached single-family dwellings. Following
adoption of Middle Housing allowances by a Large City,
the Large City shall work to ensure that infrastructure
serving undeveloped or underdeveloped areas * * * where
Middle Housing is allowed is appropriately designed and
sized to serve Middle Housing.”
OAR 660-046-0010(3)(e) (emphasis added). As we under-
stand it, the italicized sentence demonstrates LCDC’s expec-
tation that, when cities adopt the amendments required by
the statute, they will engage in some version of the ordi-
narily required planning for public facilities and services.
Although updating the public facilities and services plan
likely was not feasible on the schedule that the legislature
imposed, as petitioners pointed out before LUBA, there were
other ways to achieve compliance with Goal 11, like adopt-
ing provisions similar to those in the model code that limit
middle housing on lots that lack sufficient infrastructure to
support it, at least until the public facilities and services
plan update was complete.
In sum, LUBA erred when it affirmed the city’s con-
clusion that it did not have to consider the impact of the
amendments to the Eugene Code and Metro Plan on its pro-
vision of public facilities and services at the time it adopted
them.5
We turn to petitioners’ second assignment of error,
which requires a different analysis. As we understand it,
petitioners contend that LUBA erred in affirming the city’s
construction of the applicable law and in applying its stan-
dard of review when it affirmed the city’s findings that the
ordinance was not out of compliance with Goal 15 (relating
to development on the Willamette River Greenway) because
it did not implicate that goal. As we discuss below, the city
essentially concluded that the ordinance did not make any
changes to either the city’s existing permitting program
5
Because we conclude that LUBA erred in applying state law and regula-
tions to the city’s decision to amend the Metro Plan and Eugene Code via the
ordinance, we do not address petitioners’ separate argument that LUBA erred
when applying Metro Plan Policy A.12 to the city’s decision.
Cite as 327 Or App 6 (2023) 21
governing development in the Willamette River Greenway
or provide for any specific development in the greenway. As
a result, the city concluded that the ordinance did not impli-
cate Goal 15. LUBA agreed with the city’s construction of
the controlling law. So do we.
The purpose of Goal 15 is “[t]o protect, conserve,
enhance and maintain the natural, scenic, historical, agri-
cultural, economic and recreational qualities of lands along
the Willamette River as the Willamette River Greenway.”
OAR 660-015-0005. Subparagraph C(3)(j) provides:
“Development away from river—Developments shall
be directed away from the river to the greatest possi-
ble degree; provided, however, lands committed to urban
uses within the Greenway shall be permitted to continue
as urban uses, including port, industrial, commercial and
residential uses, uses pertaining to navigational require-
ments, water and land access needs and related facilities[.]”
OAR 660-015-0005(C)(3)(j). In addition, paragraph (A)(1)
provides:
“The qualities of the Willamette River Greenway shall
be protected, conserved, enhanced and maintained con-
sistent with the lawful uses present on December 6, 1975.
Intensification of uses, changes in use or developments may
be permitted after this date only when they are consis-
tent with the Willamette Greenway Statute, this goal, the
interim goals in ORS 215.515(1) and the statewide plan-
ning goals[.]”
OAR 660-015-0005(A)(1) (emphasis added).
As before, many of the background “facts” quoted in
the LUBA opinion are largely a recitation of earlier enacted
laws and regulations that provide context for the current
dispute. As LUBA observed, the city had an existing regula-
tory framework for possible development in the Willamette
River Greenway:
“Pursuant to Goal 15, the city adopted a Greenway
overlay and criteria for development within the Greenway.
EC 9.8800 - 9.8825. Greenway permits are required for
‘intensification of use, changes in uses, or developments.’
EC 9.8805. The permit standards are designed to direct
22 Coopman v. City of Eugene
development away from the river, maintain access to the
river, and preserve habitat and vegetation near the river.”
In adopting the ordinance, the city expressly found that Goal
15 did not apply, because the ordinance had no effect on the
city’s existing regulations on development in the Willamette
River Greenway:
“The [ordinance] do[es] not contain any substantive changes
to the City’s Willamette River Greenway regulations; there-
fore, Statewide Planning Goal 15 does not apply. The only
change to the Willamette Greenway regulations is a new
citation to a renumbered code section.”
Before LUBA, petitioners made the following argu-
ments, which were then rejected by LUBA:
“First, [petitioners Conte and Nance] argue that the city’s
Goal 15 findings are inadequate because they do not
address whether the [ordinance] will result in an intensi-
fication of uses within and that is incompatible with the
Greenway. Second, [they] argue that the [ordinance] fail[s]
to comply with Goal 15 because [it] allow[s] a significant
intensification of housing development in the Greenway
without required review of the potential impacts. * * *
“The city responds that [petitioners Conte and Nance]
misapprehend the requirements of Goal 15. We agree. Goal
15 requires the city to adopt standards to review proposed
development activity within the Greenway, which the city
has done and which are unaffected by the [ordinance].
Goal 15, Implementation Measure 3, sets out the require-
ments for Greenway compatibility review, which applies
to applications for specific development. A Greenway per-
mit is required for intensification, change in use, or devel-
opment of a specific property. Goal 15 does not require
Greenway review for comprehensive plan and code changes
that may allow increased residential density with the
Greenway. Instead, Goal 15 is implemented through the
city’s Greenway permit program. We agree with the city
that it was not required to comply with Goal 15 in adopting
the [ordinance] because the [ordinance] do[es] not amend
the city’s Greenway permit program or allow any specific
development within the Greenway. Based on that conclu-
sion, [petitioners Conte’s and Nance’s] argument that the
[ordinance] fail[s] to comply with Goal 15 provides no basis
for remand. We conclude that the city’s Goal 15 findings
Cite as 327 Or App 6 (2023) 23
are adequate to establish that the city considered the issue
of the applicability of Goal 15.”
(Footnote omitted.) Before us, petitioners contend that LUBA
erred because it avoided petitioners’ argument that the ordi-
nance effectively allowed middle housing in zones subject
to the Willamette River Greenway and Goal 15. It contends
that the city also avoided consideration of the fact that the
ordinance requires intensification of use in the greenway.
But LUBA did not avoid that argument. It concluded that
Goal 15 did not require greenway review “for comprehensive
plan and code changes that may allow increased residen-
tial development within the Greenway.” The ordinance did
not make any changes to the greenway permitting program,
and the city will have to apply that program if there is a
request for development in the greenway, applying the exist-
ing permitting standards.
For similar reasons, we reject without significant
discussion petitioners’ argument that the ordinance does
not apply clear and objective standards to housing develop-
ment in the Willamette River Greenway, in violation of OAR
660-046-0010(3)(f) and ORS 197.307(4). As LUBA noted, the
ordinance did not adopt or amend any standards for devel-
opment in the greenway. That development will be judged by
the existing standards in the greenway permitting program
and not by reference to the ordinance. We reject petitioners’
second assignment of error in full.
Finally, we reject petitioners’ third assignment of
error, which contends that LUBA also erred in upholding
the ordinance because certain text in the ordinance, which
defines terms such as “dwelling unit size” and “income-
qualified middle housing,” does not provide clear and objec-
tive standards, in violation of ORS 197.307(4). Following our
review of the ordinance, we agree with LUBA that the defi-
nition of those terms in the ordinance is clear and objective.
In sum, as to petitioners’ first assignment of error,
we reverse LUBA’s conclusion that the city did not have to
consider updates to its public facilities and services plan
when amending its code and Metro Plan to allow for middle
housing. We therefore remand to LUBA for further proceed-
ings. We reject petitioners’ second and third assignments of
24 Coopman v. City of Eugene
error and affirm the parts of LUBA’s opinion challenged by
those assignments.
Reversed in part and remanded; otherwise affirmed.