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More Vermont Properties to be Subject to Stormwater Regulation: State to Issue First Letters for Three-Acre Sites

The Vermont Agency of Natural Resources, Department of Environmental Conservation is gearing up for the issuance of a new stormwater general permit (General Permit 3-9050) that will affect owners of “three-acre sites,” meaning properties containing three or more acres of total impervious surface, including adjacent properties that were previously authorized to discharge stormwater under a common permit, and adjacent properties that are part of a related operation such as resorts, campuses, or hospitals.  Impervious “three-acre sites” that will be subject to the permit include those historically not subject to stormwater regulation because development occurred prior to modern stormwater regulation.  The new rules will apply to publicly and privately-owned properties, and are likely to affect many municipalities, school districts, and business owners.

The Agency’s stormwater regulations define impervious surface to include any manmade surface from which rain or snow or other precipitation will run off, such as driveways, walkways, parking areas, paved and unpaved roads, and roofs.  Common three-acre sites include schools, large stores and shopping malls, hospitals, and even some large residential developments.  The Legislature approved requiring a permit for three-acre sites in 2015 as part of Act 64, which aims to address pollution in Lake Champlain, Lake Memphremagog and other stormwater impaired waterways in the State, and to meet Vermont’s Total Maximum Daily Load (TMDL) Plan for Phosphorus in these impaired waters, as required by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. 

While the three-acre General Permit will apply statewide, the Agency is focusing first on sites located within the Lake Champlain and Lake Memphremagog watersheds.  The Agency has posted a list of properties in these two watersheds that will receive the first round of notice letters to inform property owners of the upcoming permitting obligations.  Under the new regulations, all owners of property that contain three or more acres of impervious surface will be required to obtain “coverage” under General Permit 3-9050, regardless of whether the land was developed prior to current stormwater regulations and was therefore not previously required to get a stormwater permit.  In addition, previously-permitted sites will need to apply under the three-acre General Permit if the existing permit did not incorporate the requirements of the Agency’s 2002 Stormwater Management Manual (or any subsequent update of the Manual).  For property owners with multiple three-acre sites, a permit will need to be obtained for each individual site.

The Agency’s stormwater rules were revised earlier this year to address the new three-acre permitting requirements.  Under the revised rules, the process for obtaining coverage under General Permit 3-9050 will require three-acre sites to identify and install new stormwater “improvements” (infrastructure) to offset the runoff from the existing impervious surface.  As the first step in this process, an applicant will need to conduct an Engineering Feasibility Analysis (EFA) in order to determine what stormwater improvements are necessary or possible for a particular site.  The EFA will assess the various treatment practices from ANR’s 2017 Stormwater Management Manual and determine what is feasible to implement on the subject property. The specific stormwater standards that the site will need to meet will vary depending on which lake or other body of water the stormwater runoff from the site discharges into, and whether that water body has a TMDL.  As a result, property owners subject to the new permit will likely need to wait for the results of their EFA in order to know what the scope and cost of required improvements will be for their particular property.  Properties in some locations may be required to pay impact fees instead of implementing new stormwater measures if an EFA determines that sufficient stormwater improvements cannot be implemented on-site; conversely, if greater stormwater measures are implemented at a site than are required, some property owners could receive impact fees back from the Agency.  The Agency has stated that it anticipates some level of grant funding and subsidized loans will be available for applicants to cover costs associated with the permit, and that it will release a funding plan later this year before any permit applications are due.

Although ANR has begun the process of identifying affected properties in the Champlain and Memphremagog regions, a draft of the actual General Permit 3-9050 has not yet been issued.  Until the draft is released, it is not entirely clear when the new permitting requirements will go into effect.   According to the §22-901(c)(1) of the stormwater regulations, which anticipated the draft permit being released at the end of June, sites in the Lake Champlain and Lake Memphremagog watersheds would need to be permitted  under General Permit 3-9050 by October of 2023, whereas sites within all other watersheds in the state will need to be covered by October 2033.  However, the Agency’s website notes that the schedule for submitting a permit application will be included in the draft permit and that affected properties will receive notification from the Agency as to when their application is due.

SRH Law will continue to follow the progress of the new General Permit 3-9050.  In the meantime, if you have questions about the new stormwater permit or you have property that will be subject to the permit that you’d like to discuss, please contact any of the attorneys in our Environmental Practice, including Vic Westgate, Zoe Sajor, Brian Dunkiel, Andy Raubvogel, and Geoff Hand.

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New Draft Rules for Vermont’s Hemp Program

The Vermont Agency of Agriculture, Food & Markets has recently published draft rules for the Vermont Hemp Program, which provides for the regulation of hemp and hemp products that are grown, cultivated, processed, or produced in Vermont.  The rules follow changes to federal law through the 2018 Farm Bill, which went into effect January 1, 2019 and changed the classification of hemp from a Schedule 1 drug to an allowable agricultural product. Hemp plants, which are distinguished from marijuana plants, are defined under the new federal law as the plant Cannabis sativa L. and any part of that plant (including cannabinoids) with a delta-9 tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) concentration of not more than 0.3 percent on a dry weight basis.  The 2018 Farm Bill allows for states to have primary regulatory authority (over the federal government) for hemp production, providing that they submit a plan for monitoring and regulating the production of hemp crops and products that meets certain guidelines and received approval from the Secretary of Agriculture.

As proposed, the Vermont Hemp Rules would apply to a broad array of hemp-related activities and businesses, including farmers who are growing or transporting hemp plants and processors that dry, handle or convert hemp crops into hemp products or aggregate hemp from multiple sources.  Manufacturers of hemp or hemp-infused products (including CBD products) are considered processors under the rules.

Among the proposed requirements for growers are to register with the state (including registering all of the areas where hemp plants will be grown, stored, dried or processed), maintain seed/plant purchase and sale records, test hemp crops for compliance with the acceptable potency level and contaminant standards, and file annual compliance reports.  Hemp processors would also be required to register with the state and to process hemp only at registered sites.  Other requirements for processors would include submitting a disposal plan to the state if they plan to extract THC or THC-A from crops, maintaining various harvest lot and formulation records, and ensuring products meet the potency and contaminant standards.  Processors would also be prohibited from using synthetic cannabinoids in hemp products under the rules.  Product sellers that are not also growers or processors would not be required to register with the Hemp Program to sell hemp or hemp-infused products in Vermont.

There are a few key take-aways in the proposed rules for producers of CBD and other hemp products with respect to required labeling information.  For consumable products, in addition to stating that products contain hemp and THC (if applicable), product labeling would also need to include the name and address of the manufacturer, an ingredient list of the contents (and a statement of the quantity of the content), manufacturing and expiration dates, a process lot number, and the “guaranteed amount” of any cannabinoids to within +/- 10% per serving size and traceable to a certificate of analysis.  For all products, the rules propose a grading system based on the CBD concentration level in the hemp crop used in the product, which ranges from Grades AA-C and “biomass.”  The rules would also define certain terms that products would need to comply with before the terms could be used on product labels or marketing.  These include the following:

  • Whole plant
  • Isolate
  • Distillate
  • Full-Spectrum
  • Broad-Spectrum

In addition, the rules propose to limit to the use of the phrase “Produced in Vermont” to products that are manufactured in their entirety within the state and to the standards established in the rules.  The labeling requirements and the grading scale will serve to create a baseline standard for the “Vermont Hemp” brand and to provide consumers with established standards of quality and sourcing for hemp products.  The proposed rules specify that these labeling and grading requirements wouldn’t go into effect until July 1, 2020, whereas other portions of the rules would go into effect upon adoption, presumably to give manufacturers a chance to update their labeling to be compliant with the requirements.

A full copy of the draft rules is available here. This draft has been submitted to the Interagency Committee on Administrative Rules (ICAR), and is on the tentative agenda set for today, May 13, 2019.  After that, the rulemaking process includes posting the draft rules on the Secretary of State’s website, which begins the notice and public comment period.  The final proposed rule then would then go through Legislative Committee on Administrative Rules (LCAR) review.  

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NEW ROUND OF FEDERAL AGENCY SCRUTINY OF CBD PRODUCTS

Federal agencies continue to pay attention to the marketing claims by cannabinoid (CBD) product marketers, as evidenced by warning letters sent last week by the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) and the U.S. Food & Drug Administration (FDA) to three CBD companies making health-related claims about their products.  The letters specifically target claims made on the companies’ websites and some social media pages that CBD products can treat or cure a range of human diseases and conditions, including cancer, Alzheimer’s, depression, and anxiety disorders, as well as a number of health conditions for dogs.  The letters state that these claims may violate both the Federal Food, Drug, & Cosmetics and Federal Trade Commission Acts and order the companies to respond with the specific actions they will take to address the agencies’ concerns.

The agencies’ action sends an important signal to marketers after the recent declassification of Hemp as a Class 1 illegal drug in the 2018 Farm Bill.  Companies marketing CBD should expect that the FDA and FTC along with state consumer protection divisions to assert their jurisdiction to protect consumers and review of product marketing claims – even claims only occurring on websites and social media platforms.

In the press release announcing the letters, the FTC notes that the letters are part of its “ongoing efforts to ensure that dietary supplements and other health-related products are advertised truthfully, and that efficacy claims made for such products are supported by competent and reliable scientific evidence.”  The FTC’s standard for “competent and reliable scientific evidence” for CBD products making health related claims should be expected to be a relatively high bar.  FTC’s definition calls for “tests, analyses, research, studies, or other evidence based upon the expertise of professionals in the relevant area, that has been conducted and evaluated in an objective manner by persons qualified to do so, using procedures generally accepted in the profession to yield accurate and reliable results.”  Anecdotal evidence from CBD users or newspaper and magazine articles fall short.

The FDA has also released a statement noting its continuing concern over the number of drug claims made about CBD products that have not been approved by the FDA or are being marketed as dietary supplements, and its intention to “advance new steps to better define our public health obligations in this area” and “to closely scrutinize products that could pose risks to consumers.”  As evidenced by these most recent letters, CBD companies should note that regulators are looking beyond on-label product claims, and are focusing on company websites and social media sites like Facebook and Twitter.  Companies should therefore carefully consider the various channels they use to reach consumers and pay close attention to the messages consumers are receiving about their products.

The regulatory landscape for CBD products is still catching up with the rapid market expansion, and there are ongoing opportunities for companies to participate in discussions with regulatory agencies about how to approach oversight of the sale and marketing of CBD products. The FDA is holding a public hearing on May 31, 2019 that will be webcast, and will open a docket for public comments to be filed online.  Vermont CBD companies should also be aware the Vermont Agency of Agriculture Food & Markets is currently working on draft rules that will likely regulate many of the terms commonly associated with CBD and hemp products, which may affect how these terms can be used in product marketing. The draft rules have not yet been officially posted for public comment, but a copy of the current draft is available here.

While the regulatory waters may seem a bit murky at present, CBD marketers should not be completely discouraged.  With carefully curated and substantiated marketing claims used on labels, websites, and social media platforms brands are establishing themselves today.  Indeed CVS Pharmacy recently announced it would place CBD products on its shelves in selected states, including California, Colorado, Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, Maryland and Tennessee.  For more information about CBD product marketing regulation, contact Brian Dunkiel or Vic Westgate.

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Vermont Supreme Court Rejects Argument for Visual Nuisance of Solar Project

Last Friday, the Vermont Supreme Court issued a decision in Myrick v. Peck Elec. Co. et al., 2017 VT 4, affirming the longstanding rule in Vermont, which dates back to a case in 1896, that aesthetic harm alone cannot form the basis of a private nuisance claim.

In Myrick, neighbors to property leased to two solar companies in New Haven filed suit against the solar companies, alleging that the solar arrays installed on the property constitute a private nuisance because they interfere with the aesthetics of the rural area and cause lowered property values.

The Court rejected neighbors’ argument to overturn the 120-year old rule, holding that the reasons visual impacts alone do not constitute a private nuisance are still applicable today, despite neighbors’ contention that other states are moving towards allowing visual nuisance suits.  Applying a common sense approach, the Court highlighted the subjective nature of aesthetic preferences and the flood of lawsuits that would result from allowing neighbors to sue each other solely because they deem some construction unattractive, noting that “[t]he judicial branch is ill-suited to be an arbiter of style or taste.” 

More specifically, the Court rejected the notion that visual interference of the solar project was either “unreasonable” or “substantial,” both of which are required to pursue a private nuisance claim.  Drawing a line between actual interference with the use of one’s land, and “emotional distress” resulting from finding something visually displeasing, the Court held that “[a]n unattractive sight—without more—is not a substantial interference as a matter of law because the mere appearance of the property of another does not affect a citizen’s ability to use and enjoy his or her neighboring land.” The Court was equally unpersuaded that the aesthetic impacts of a solar project could be deemed “unreasonable,” observing that “[t]he appellants find the solar panels unsightly, but other equally reasonable people may find them attractive.”

The Court also briefly addressed the idea that lowered property values alone could constitute a nuisance. Distinguishing previous case law specific to perceived chemical contamination, the Court clarified that “a decrease in property value does not mean there has been an interference with that property’s use, a requisite for a nuisance claim,” and recognized the many factors that can affect property values beyond activities on a neighbor’s land, not to mention the likely increase in “neighborly discord in the form of claims for damages” that could result from adopting such a rule.

With this pragmatic approach, the Court ultimately reaffirmed that Vermont law does not encompass private nuisance claims solely on the basis of visual aesthetic impacts.  

This is the first case to be decided of three cases involving solar projects heard by the Court last October.  For summaries of these cases and other recent renewable energy and environmental decisions from the Vermont Supreme Court, see our 2016 Vermont Supreme Court Review: Energy & Environmental Decisions.

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SRH Law 2016 Vermont Supreme Court Review: Energy & Environmental Decisions

The following six energy and environmental cases were decided by the Vermont Supreme Court this year, each involving an appeal of an issued Act 250 or Section 248 permit. We provide a summary of each case and the Court’s holding below, as well as links to the full decision. 

Authors: Vic Westgate, Alex “Sash” Lewis and Jon Rose

  1. In re Treetop Development Company Act 250 Development, 2016 VT 20

    In Treetop, the Supreme Court addressed the authority of a District Commission to retain jurisdiction over an Act 250 project.

    In 2013, District Commission No. 2 issued a Stratton Corporation affiliate an Act 250 permit for a project known as Treetop at Stratton, involving construction of twenty-five townhouses near the Stratton Mountain ski resort.  The condominium association that administered the common facilities at Treetop sued Stratton over construction defects in the project’s stormwater system, among other defects.  As part of a settlement, Stratton obtained an amended Act 250 permit from the District Commission, authorizing repairs and modifications to the stormwater system.  In the permit, the District Commission reserved the right to review Treetop’s stormwater system, and “to evaluate and impose additional conditions as needed.”

    Approximately one year later, the association sought to invoke this continuing jurisdiction to impose additional conditions with regard to Stratton’s stormwater management.  When the District Commission declined, the association appealed to the Superior Court’s Environmental Division. The Environmental Division found that the District Commission lacked the authority to enforce compliance with its own permit; that was rather the role of Natural Resources Board and Agency of Natural Resources.

    The Supreme Court affirmed the Environmental Division.  It held that the NRB and ANR have exclusive power to enforce compliance with Act 250 permits, whereas the District Commission’s authority is limited to considering permit applications and amending permits in accordance with In re Stowe Club Highlands, 166 Vt. 33 (1996).  By reserving the right to impose additional conditions, the District Commission effectively created a mechanism to continuously amend the permit, which both exceeded its authority and undermined the finality of the permit.

  2. In re Waterfront Park Act 250 Amendment, 2016 VT 39

    In this case, handled by Brian Dunkiel and Karen Tyler of Dunkiel Saunders on behalf of the City of Burlington, the Supreme Court addressed the application of Act 250 Rule 34(E), also known as Stowe Club Highlands analysis, governing the review of applications for Act 250 permit amendments.

    It arose from a 1994 Act 250 permit amendment authorizing the City of Burlington to host festivals and public events at its Waterfront Park, subject to conditions limiting the time of year, number, and maximum sound levels of events at the Park.  Over the ensuing years, significant commercial and residential development occurred around Waterfront Park, and events held there became an important element of the City’s cultural and economic life.  In 2012, the City obtained a permit amendment to lift the time of year and numerical restrictions on events at the Park, and to modify the sound limits.  A neighboring landowner, who relied on the original permit in purchasing a condominium adjacent to the Park in 2008, appealed the 2012 amendments to the Superior Court’s Environmental Division.  The Environmental Division ruled in the City’s favor.

    On appeal, the neighbor argued that the City was not entitled to amend its Act 250 permit, because it was merely relitigating the existing permit conditions, and because the Stowe Club Highlands flexibility vs. finality analysis weighed against the amendments.  The Supreme Court affirmed, rejecting both of the neighbor’s arguments.  First, the Court held that since the Park had undergone a significant transformation since 1994, the City’s amendment application was not merely an effort to relitigate the 1994 permit.  Second, the Court held that the Stowe Club Highlands factors weighed in favor of flexibility: the dramatic changes in and around the Park were beyond the City’s control; the amended sound limits incorporated guidelines unavailable in 1994; and the amendment would further the goals of the City’s 2013 municipal plan.  While the neighbor’s reliance on the 1994 permit in purchasing her condominium weighed in favor of finality, on balance, that was outweighed by the other factors.  The Court ruled that the City was entitled to seek an amendment of the Waterfront Park Act 250 permit to address the substantial changes that occurred there over time.

  3. In re Petition of Rutland Renewable Energy, LLC for a Certificate of Public Good Pursuant to 30 V.S.A. § 248, et al., 2016 VT 50

    In this review of a Public Service Board order, the Section 248 Certificate of Public Good (CPG) issued for the 2.3 megawatt Cold River Solar Project was challenged by the Town of Rutland and five adjoining landowners on the basis of the Project’s compliance with Section 248 criteria for (1) orderly development of the region, (2) aesthetic impact, and (3) impact on historic sites. 

    Although a split Court (3-2) ultimately upheld the Board’s decision in favor of the project on each of the three criteria, the Justices were strongly divided on the issue of whether the Board gave “due consideration” to the recommendations by the Town of Rutland, as is required under 30 V.S.A. § 248(b)(1).  The Town’s recommendations were based on Solar Siting Standards adopted by the Selectboard and in the process of being added to the Town Plan.  The majority ultimately ducked the question on the basis that the lack of evidence for a regional impact from the Project was dispositive, emphasizing that “the statutory requirement relates to orderly development of the region, not to a particular municipality within the region.”  Justice Robinson concurred with the majority on all points except the due consideration issue, writing separately to argue that purely local impacts are not irrelevant, and that the statutory language requires consideration by the Board (but not deference). The dissent disagreed that the Board had given any real weight to the Town’s recommendations.

    The Court was also split on the Board’s aesthetic analysis of the Project.  The majority made two clarifications as to what is required under the Board’s application of the Quechee Test to determine whether a project will have an undue aesthetic impact.  First, the Court stated that in considering the sensibilities of the average person, the Board “can and should consider all vantage points, including from private property.” (Emphasis added). This is a change from the Board’s case law, which has generally held that the Quechee Test is focused on public vantage points.  Second, in response to the dissent’s suggestion that the Board should have considered whether there were alternative sites in the area available for the Project, the majority rejected this as an unprecedented and unreasonable burden, noting that even if such a burden existed it would be on opponents, not on the applicant.

    Note: Due to the date the Project petition was filed with the Board, the Court did not consider the decision under the current version of the statute.

  4. In re Costco Stormwater Discharge Permit, 2016 VT 86

    In the Costco case, the Environmental Court had affirmed an Act 250 permit and wetlands permit for the expansion of an existing retail store and addition of an adjacent, six-pump gasoline station in Colchester.  In doing so, the Court issued a variety of interesting legal and evidentiary rulings, including (1) a finding that under Act 250 criterion 5 (relating to unsafe highway conditions), an applicant need not take steps to alleviate already-existing congestion so long as the permit includes conditions to alleviate the incremental congestion caused by the project; (2) reaffirmation of a previous decision that the environmental court need not remand a permit appeal to ANR to consider “insubstantial” revisions that appear not to have been considered at the agency but do not “affect new parties not participating in the proceedings”; (3) upholding that the environmental court properly considered “cumulative impacts” analysis under the Vermont Wetlands Rules and determined that the project did not require “mitigation sequencing” under those rules where a State expert had testified that the state considered such cumulative impacts in its impacts analysis; (4) that the Environment Court properly excluded as unreliable an expert’s stormwater software model that used as inputs “average rather than specific measures accurately reflecting the variability of [an] existing filter strip … an underestimation of the efficiency of the new system, and . . . only one specific year of rainfall as a guide”; and (5) a ruling that a challenger to the applicant’s wetlands permit did not effectively rebut the presumption of compliance with water pollution and waste disposal criteria created by the project’s stormwater permit through cross examination establishing that ANR had relied on nationally-established stormwater design standards in approving the project rather than performance-testing the system itself. 

  5. In re North East Materials Group LLC, 2016 VT 87

    In this procedurally-complex case, the Supreme Court addressed, for the second time, the issue of whether a rock-crushing operation on a much larger tract of land owned by Rock of Ages (ROA) in Barre was a “substantial change” to a “pre-existing development” such that the operation required Act 250 approval.  (“Pre-existing developments” are normally insulated from Act 250 review unless a “substantial change” has occurred.)  ROA argued that the rock-crushing operation was not a “substantial change” because such operations were conducted on various other portions of the tract for many years prior to Act 250’s adoption.  Thus, the issue was essentially whether the movement of rock-crushing operations from one part of the tract to another over the years constituted a “substantial change.”

    The trial court held that because rock crushing is, and has always been, a mobile operation, and that “the present relocation of ROA’s crushing to [the new site] is consistent with the intrinsically portable nature of rock crushing and with ROA’s historic pattern of mobile crushing operations.”  But the Supreme Court rejected that reasoning, noting that the “location of a particular activity or operation within a tract is often inextricably connected to its impact” and finding that the Environmental Court’s analysis would impermissibly short circuit the substantial change analysis, which requires both an examination into whether a change is “cognizable” and an analysis of the actual potential impacts of a proposed change on the Act 250 criteria.  Conducting this analysis, the Supreme Court found that a substantial change was likely, given the increased noise, traffic and dust conditions that would affect the neighbors in the area of the relocated operations.  Thus, the Supreme Court ordered the operator to seek Act 250 review before the new operations could begin.

  6. In re B&M Realty, Inc., 2016 VT 114

    This Act 250 case involved a large proposed multi-phase development for office, retail, restaurant and residential uses off Exit 1 of I-89 in Hartford, with the first phase alone encompassing more than 15 acres of construction.  Although the District Commission denied the project an Act 250 permit, the Environment Court disagreed on appeal and found that the Project complied with the Act 250 criteria.  Reversing the Environmental Court, the Supreme Court held on cross-appeal that the Project did not comply with the 2007 version of the Two-Rivers Ottauquechee Regional Plan, which it deemed applicable to the Project due to Vermont’s rule vesting rights in regulations as they exist at the time a complete permit application is filed.

    In particular, the Court felt that the Environmental Court misinterpreted the phrase “principal retail establishments,” which the Regional Plan required be located in town centers, designated downtowns, or designated growth centers.  The Environmental Court viewed the proposed development as a single “establishment,” and concluded that it was not a principal retail establishment because it did not designate more space specifically for retail use than the other uses.  Reviewing de novo, the Supreme Court interpreted “principal retail establishments” to include projects such as the proposed development, which would contain a restaurant and nearly 35,000 square feet of retail space.  Similarly, the Supreme Court disagreed with the Environmental Court on a Regional Plan provision limiting the location of “major growth or investments” and reserving land near highway interchanges for transportation related services.  Where the Environmental Court concluded that these terms either did not apply or were unenforceable, as undefined or merely aspirational policy statements, the Supreme Court found that the Regional Plan’s provisions “reinforce each other in establishing a clear and mandatory framework for development.”  In considering the provisions not just independently, but in the “broader context of the regional plan,” the Court concluded that the Plan’s provisions were such that “a reasonable person can discern what is prohibited,” and were therefore clear and enforceable.  

    Having determined that these provisions of the Regional Plan applied, and that they prohibited such development as the proposed Project in the area off Exit 1, the Supreme Court concluded the Project does not comply with Criterion 10 of Act 250 and reversed the Environmental Court’s decision.

CASES TO WATCH FOR IN 2017:

A slate of Public Service Board cases involving solar projects and at least one Act 250 case are set to be decided in 2017 after the Court heard oral arguments for all four cases on the same day in October 2016.  You can listen to the oral arguments here.

  • In re Petition of New Haven GLC Solar, LLC, Docket No. 2016-125 – The Town of New Haven appealed a Certificate of Public Good issued by the Public Service Board for a 500 kW net metered solar project, arguing there were material changes to the Project after the application was submitted.
  • In re Petition of GMPSolar-Richmond, LLC , Docket Nos. 2016-034/2016-148 – A consolidated appeal of a denied intervention motion and the Certificate of Public Good for a 2 MW solar project, filed by Allco Renewable Energy Limited, regarding its asserted interests under the Public Utility Regulatory Policies Act (PURPA).  Geoff Hand and Vic Westgate of SRH Law are representing appellee GMPSolar-Richmond, LLC.
  • In re North East Materials Group LLC Amended Permit, Docket No. 2016-170 – An appeal by neighbors of an asphalt plant regarding Act 250 permit conditions imposed by the Environmental Court.  Neighbors argue the conditions are insufficient to ensure compliance with Act 250 criteria.
  • Nancy Myrick v. Peck Electric Co. et al., Docket Nos. 2016-167/2016-169 – A case of first impression involving neighbors to a solar project asking the Court to expand Vermont common law to hold that visual aesthetic impacts can constitute a recoverable nuisance.

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S.260/Act 174: Expanded Role in Renewable Energy for Planning Commissions

As of July 1, 2016, regional and municipal planning commissions can have an expanded role in renewable energy siting under the recently passed “Energy Development Improvement Act,” or Act 174.

Act 174 (Act), which was passed on June 9, 2016, authorizes planning commissions to identify suitable and unsuitable areas for renewable energy projects and allows for greater involvement in the Certificate of Public Good (CPG) proceedings under 30 V.S.A. § 248. The Act also directs planning commissions to study all energy sectors, including transportation, heating, and electricity, and to address energy efficiency.

What does the Act require planning commissions to do?

The Act requires just one change for regional planning commissions: they must study and make recommendations about energy conservation and renewable energy resources. However, they may also be called upon by the Public Service Board to help make determinations in Section 248 proceedings. The Act makes no new requirements for municipal planning commissions.

But the Act allows regional and municipal planning commissions to create renewable energy plans, which may include identifying sites as suitable or unsuitable for renewable energy projects. And if those plans meet the Act’s standards for “energy compliance,” then the Act gives those plans significant authority: the Public Service Board must give energy compliant plans “substantial deference” in CPG proceedings.

What would make a plan “energy compliant”?

To be energy compliant, an energy plan must:

  1. Include an “energy element,” which may include the following: an analysis of energy needs & resources; a policy statement on energy use, development, and siting for renewable resources; and identification of areas that are suitable and unsuitable for siting renewable energy projects;
  2. Be consistent with Vermont’s greenhouse gas reduction, renewable energy, and building efficiency goals and state energy policy and plans;
  3. Allow for siting for all types of renewable energy projects (regional plans only); and
  4. Be consistent with the regional plan (municipal plans only).

What is the process for getting a plan approved as “energy compliant”?

The process for getting a plan approved as energy compliant is different for regional and municipal planning commissions—regional plans are approved by the State, and municipal plans are approved by the regional planning commissions.

A regional planning commission must submit its plan to the Commissioner of Public Service with a request for approval. The Commissioner’s review must include a public hearing, and the Commissioner must make a determination within 2 months of the request. The planning commission may appeal the decision to the Natural Resources Board within 30 days.

If a municipality is located in a region with an approved energy compliant plan, the municipal planning commission may submit its plan to its regional planning commission for approval. Until July 1, 2018, a municipality located in a region without an approved energy compliant plan may submit its current plan directly to the Commissioner of Public Service.

Once a plan is approved as energy compliant, the Public Service Board must then treat “the land conservation measures and specific policies” with “substantial deference” with respect to in-state electric generation facilities under Section 248.

How else does the Act expand the powers of planning commissions?

Regional and municipal planning commissions (as well as municipal legislative bodies) may now appear by right as parties in CPG proceedings for projects not only within their own region or municipality but also in adjacent areas where the municipal or regional border is 500 feet from the project’s nearest component or a distance of 10 times the height of the facility’s tallest part.

Planning commissions can also request information about electricity infrastructure, transmission, distribution, etc., for their area from the Department of Public Service.

Additionally, when creating the State Electrical Energy Plan, the Department of Public Service must consult with regional and municipal planning commissions.

Does the Act set any new requirements for the State?

Yes. The Act requires the State Electrical Energy Plan and the State Comprehensive Energy Plan to make recommendations for regional and municipal planners and set specific standards for what constitutes energy compliance. The standards should include identifying the suitability of certain areas for renewable energy projects. The Department of Public Service must publish these recommendations and standards by November 1, 2016, following a public notice and comment period.

The Act also requires the Agency of Agriculture, Food and Markets to be a party in CPG proceedings for projects sited on “primarily agricultural” soils that will generate more than 500 kW. The Agency may also be a party in any other CPG proceedings.

For other changes the Act made, see our recent blog post on new environmental & energy legislation here.

If you have questions about what Act 174 requires or how it may affect you, please contact one of the attorneys in one of our SRH Law’ renewable energy & clean technologies or environmental & natural resources practice areas.

Authored by Vic Westgate & Heather Devine

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