                                   STATE OF VERMONT
                                ENVIRONMENTAL COURT
                                           }
In re JLD Properties – Wal-Mart St. Albans }    Docket No. 242-10-06 Vtec
    (4-Lot Subdivision)                    }
                                           }
******************************************************************************
                                           }
In re JLD Properties – Wal-Mart St. Albans }    Docket No. 92-5-07 Vtec
    (Site Plan & Conditional Use Approval) }
                                           }
******************************************************************************
                                           }
In re JLD Properties – Wal-Mart St. Albans }    Docket No. 116-6-08 Vtec
    (Act 250 Land Use Permit)              }
                                           }

                                Decision on Multiple Motions
       This matter arises out of efforts by Applicant-Appellee JLD Properties of St. Albans,
LLC (“JLD Properties” or “Applicant”), to gain the permit approvals necessary to build a new
Wal-Mart retail store at 424 Swanton Road in the Town of St. Albans (“Town”). In particular,
Docket Number 242-10-06 Vtec concerns an appeal brought by Vermont Natural Resources
Council (“VNRC”) (representing Marie Frey, Richard Hudak, and 30 members of the Town or
adjoining municipalities) of a September 22, 2006 determination by the Town Development
Review Board (“DRB”), granting approval of the final plat for a 4-lot subdivision; Docket
Number 92-5-07 Vtec concerns an appeal by Commons Associates (“Commons”), and a cross-
appeal by VNRC (representing Marie Frey, Richard Hudak, and 46 members of the Town or
adjoining municipalities), of two April 26, 2007 determinations by the DRB, one granting site
plan approval and the other granting conditional use approval, with both decisions also granting
approval for a Planned Unit Development (“PUD”); and Docket Number 116-6-08 Vtec
concerns an appeal by VNRC (representing Marie Frey, Richard Hudak, the Northwest Citizens
for Responsible Growth, and VNRC), and cross-appeals by Commons, the City of St. Albans
(“City”), and the Agency of Natural Resources (“ANR”), of a May 16, 2008 determination by
the District #6 Environmental Commission (“District Commission”), approving an Act 250 Land
Use Permit for the proposed project.
       Applicant-Appellee JLD Properties is represented by Stewart H. McConaughy, Esq., and
Robert F. O’Neill, Esq.; the Town (an Interested Party) is represented by David A. Barra, Esq.;

                                               1
Appellant and Cross-Appellant VNRC and those it represents are represented by Jon Groveman,
Esq.; Appellant and Cross-Appellant Commons and Interested Party R.L. Vallee, Inc., are both
represented by Jon T. Anderson, Esq.; the City (a Cross-Appellant) is represented by Brian S.
Dunkiel, Esq.; Cross-Appellant ANR is represented by Judith L. Dillon, Esq.; Interested Party
Vermont Natural Resources Board (“NRB”) Land Use Panel is represented by John H. Hasen,
Esq.; Interested Party NRB Water Resources Panel is represented by Mark L. Lucas; and
Interested Party Vermont Agency of Transportation is represented by John K. Dunleavy, Esq.,
and Trevor R. Lewis, Esq.
        This Decision addresses four motions that are currently pending before this Court. In
Docket Number 116-6-08 Vtec (the Act 250 land use permit appeal), VNRC has filed a motion
to dismiss, which is opposed by JLD Properties and the Town. At the suggestion of JLD, we
have treated VNRC’s motion to dismiss as a motion for summary judgment, and JLD Properties
has asked for partial summary judgment in its favor on this issue. Also in Docket Number 116-
6-08 Vtec, VNRC has filed a motion for reconsideration of this Court’s October 10, 2008 Entry
Order (“Entry Order”), and the NRB Land Use Panel has responded. In Docket Number 92-5-07
Vtec (the site plan and conditional use approval appeal), VNRC has filed a motion for summary
judgment, and JLD Properties and the Town have responded in opposition and asked for partial
summary judgment in their favor to dismiss Questions 1, 2, 3, and 4 of VNRC’s Statement of
Questions. Finally, also in Docket Number 92-5-07 Vtec, as well as in Docket Number 242-10-
06 Vtec (the 4-lot subdivision appeal), VNRC has filed a motion for summary judgment, which
is opposed by JLD Properties and the Town.

                                            Factual Background
        For the sole purpose of putting the pending motions in context, we recite the following
facts, which we understand to be undisputed unless otherwise noted:

Facts Related to Whether the Project Is an Improper Successive Application:1
1.      Sometime before December 21, 1993, St. Albans Group (JLD Properties’ predecessor-in-
interest to its land) and Wal-Mart Stores, Inc., applied for an Act 250 land use permit to build a


1
   Many of the facts listed in this section are derived from the Environmental Board’s 1995 determination on a
previous application for a Wal-Mart discount store in the same proposed location. See In re St. Albans Group &
Wal*Mart Stores, Inc., No. 6F0471-EB, Findings of Fact, Conclusions of Law, & Order (Altered) (Vt. Envtl. Bd.
June 27, 1995), available at http://www.nrb.state.vt.us/lup/decisions/1995/6f0471-eb-fco-alt.pdf. Additional facts
are derived from the Vermont Supreme Court’s 1997 decision upholding the Environmental Board’s determination.
See In re Wal*Mart Stores, Inc. & St. Albans Group, 167 Vt. 75 (1997).

                                                        2
Wal-Mart discount retail store in the same location in St. Albans that is proposed for
development in the application that is currently before this Court.
2.     On December 21, 1993, the District Commission issued Act 250 Land Use Permit
#6F0471, authorizing the then-applicants St. Albans Group and Wal-Mart Stores, Inc., to build a
126,090 square foot discount retail store.
3.      In January 1994, several interested parties applied for party status and appealed the
District Commission’s determination to the Environmental Board. The then-applicants cross-
appealed the grant of party status. The Board granted party status with respect to certain criteria
listed in 10 V.S.A. § 6086, and the appeal proceeded relative to Criteria 1(A), 1(B), 1(E), 1(G),
4, 5, 6, 7, 9(A), 9(H), 9(K), and 10. The interested parties appealed the Board’s decision denying
them party status with respect to certain other criteria, but the Board did not alter its decision.
During the appeal, the then-applicants amended the size of the proposed store, reducing it to
100,000 square feet.
4.     On December 23, 1994, the Environmental Board overturned the District Commission’s
issuance of an Act 250 permit. After concluding that the then-applicants had failed to meet the
requirements of Criteria 6, 7, 9(A), and 9(H), the Environmental Board denied the permit
application.
5.     The then-applicants asked the Environmental Board to alter its determination. This
request was denied, and the Environmental Board issued a final determination on June 27, 1995.
See In re St. Albans Group & Wal*Mart Stores, Inc., No. 6F0471-EB, Findings of Fact,
Conclusions of Law, & Order (Altered) (Vt. Envtl. Bd. June 27, 1995), available at
http://www.nrb.state.vt.us/lup/decisions/1995/6f0471-eb-fco-alt.pdf.    This determination also
concluded that the then-applicants had failed to meet the requirements of Criteria 6, 7, 9(A), and
9(H). See id.
6.     The then-applicants appealed the Environmental Board’s 1995 determination to the
Vermont Supreme Court.
7.     In 1997, the Vermont Supreme Court upheld the Environmental Board’s 1995
determination. See In re Wal*Mart Stores, Inc. & St. Albans Group, 167 Vt. 75 (1997).
8.     On December 21, 2005, JLD Properties (the successor-in-interest to the St. Albans
Group) filed a new Act 250 permit application to build a roughly 147,000 square foot Wal-Mart
on the same site that had previously been denied an Act 250 permit in the 1995 Environmental
Board determination.

                                                 3
9.     On May 16, 2008, the District Commission made a determination that approved JLD
Properties’ application and issued Act 250 Land Use Permit #6F0583 (Altered), which is the
subject of this appeal.

Facts Related to the Possible Conflict of Interest in the District Commission Proceedings:
10.    On June 22, 2006, while JLD Properties’ Act 250 application was pending before the
District Commission, VNRC sent a letter requesting disclosures from Dan Luneau, the District
Commission Chair, regarding property that his family might own or control in the immediate
vicinity of the proposed Wal-Mart project.      VNRC specifically requested that Mr. Luneau
disclose the nature of any such property holdings, how such holdings might be affected by an
approval or denial of JLD Properties’ Act 250 application, and whether those holdings constitute
a conflict of interest for Mr. Luneau.
11.    On June 26, 2006, at the first District Commission hearing on the Wal-Mart application,
Mr. Luneau responded to VNRC’s letter by reading a prepared statement into the record, in
which Mr. Luneau made certain disclosures and assured VNRC that the application would be
subject to a fair and impartial hearing.
12.    After the District Commission ruled in favor of Wal-Mart’s application, VNRC appealed
to this Court and raised the issue of Mr. Luneau’s potential conflict of interest in Question 1 of
its Statement of Questions in Docket Number 116-6-08 Vtec.
13.    As part of the discovery process in this appeal, VNRC served Mr. Luneau with requests
for information.
14.    In response, Mr. Luneau—as represented by the NRB Land Use Panel—moved for a
Protective Order to shield Mr. Luneau from VNRC’s discovery requests and to dismiss VNRC’s
Question 1 from its Statement of Question.
15.    On October 10, 2008, this Court granted Mr. Luneau’s request for a Protective Order and
dismissed VNRC’s Question 1. See Entry Order at 2–3.

Facts Related to the Alleged Conflicts of Interest in the DRB Proceedings:
16.    The DRB has nine members.
17.    On January 4, 2007, the DRB held its first hearing to jointly consider JLD Properties’
conditional use permit, site plan, and PUD applications for the proposed Wal-Mart discount
retail store. These hearings resulted in a determination on April 26, 2007, granting site plan and
conditional use approval to JLD Properties’ proposed project.


                                                4
18.    Throughout these 2007 proceedings, Bob Johnson served as the chair of the DRB and
eventually voted to approve the project. VNRC alleges that Mr. Johnson had a conflict of
interest based upon previous statements he had made, and VNRC also alleges that this conflict of
interest tainted the DRB proceedings.
19.    Throughout these 2007 proceedings, DRB members Mr. Schofield, Mr. Wechsler, Mr.
Brigham, Mr. Sanders, and Mr. Guptill participated and eventually voted to approve the project.
VNRC alleges that these five members of the DRB had a conflict of interest based upon their
previous participation and approval of a similar application.       Specifically, these five DRB
members were also members of the DRB in 2005 and voted to grant site plan and conditional use
approval at that time to a previous application to build a Wal-Mart on this same site.
20.    During the 2004–2005 DRB review of the proposed Wal-Mart project, Mr. Johnson (a
Town Selectboard member at the time) made the following statement on behalf of the
Selectboard:
               The St. Albans Town Selectboard, as an interested party, would like to
       enter into the record our concerns and observations relative to the application of
       JLD Properties for a Wal-Mart store.
               ***
               The parties wishing to testify against Wal-Mart arrived here tonight with
       their thinly-veiled agendas, or axes to grind, if you will. . . . We have local
       business people from the retail and agricultural communities who believe this
       land to be the Garden of Eden rather than a failed farm that is underutilized,
       overtaxed and smack in the middle of our designated growth center.
                The most conspicuous of these ‘Interested Parties’ is the sister agency of
       the infamous Conservation Law Foundation [(“CLF”)]. This group, the Vermont
       Natural Resources Council, needs a map to find Northwestern Vermont as all of
       their board members, attorneys and staff work and reside far from the St. Albans
       area. Among other things, they take issue with one board member who had the
       nerve to wear a Wal-Mart hat to a DRB meeting. . . . Other entities have
       suggested they know better what would work for St. Albans Town . . . . One such
       idea, an ill-conceived and economically infeasible suggestion for a scaled-down
       Wal-Mart in the heart of the City is just short of comical. The one thing it shows
       is their total lack of understanding of the local area and why decisions need to be
       made by those who are informed, not by a bunch of elitists with nothing invested
       in the community.
(Minutes of the St. Albans Town DRB Hearing on the Wal-Mart Application (Dec. 16, 2004),
attached as Ex. 3 to VNRC’s Mot. for Summ. J. in Docket No. 92-5-07 Vtec.) As a member of
the Selectboard at the time, Mr. Johnson had signed the letter that he read into the record.



                                                 5
21.    In January 2006, a Northwest Regional Planning Commission (“NRPC”) report
characterized the proposed Wal-Mart store as too large in scale to meet regional market needs
and problematic in its cumulative impacts. Mr. Johnson publicly responded by calling the report
“ridiculous” and “dangerously flawed,” characterizing the Director of NRPC as “definitely
against Wal-Mart,” and stating that it is “a sad day when NRPC now qualifies to be lumped
together with the VNRC and CLF as an organization devoted to their personal ideals rather than
to the realities of growth.” (St. Albans Town Messenger (Jan. 24, 2006), attached as Ex. 5 to
VNRC’s Mot. for Summ. J. in Docket No. 92-5-07 Vtec.)
22.    During his 2006 campaign to be a member of the Town Selectboard, Mr. Johnson
publicly stated the following about the proposed Wal-Mart: “I’m in favor of it. They have
jumped through enough hoops. They have satisfied the Town to the nth degree.” (St. Albans
Town Messenger (Mar. 25, 2006), attached as Ex. 6 to VNRC’s Mot. for Summ. J. in Docket
No. 92-5-07 Vtec.)
23.    At the January 4, 2007 meeting, DRB member David Schofield raised concerns about a
potential conflict of interest for Mr. Johnson related to his previous statements. Mr. Schofield
told Mr. Johnson that “I believe that you have a conflict of interest” and that there was no point
in proceeding when there was a potential for such a conflict. (Minutes of the St. Albans Town
DRB Hearing (Jan. 4, 2007), attached as Ex. 1 to VNRC’s Mot. for Summ. J. in Docket No. 92-
5-07 Vtec.)
24.    At that same hearing, DRB member Steve Wechsler also raised concerns resulting from
Mr. Johnson’s previous statements, and Mr. Wechsler noted that he did not wish to go forward
with the proceeding until this potential conflict of interest was resolved. (Id.) Cheryl Teague, an
audience member and the former Chair of the DRB during the previous review of the Wal-Mart
application, raised further concerns about Mr. Johnson’s potential conflict of interest. (Id.) She
said that “she could not see how this was not a conflict of interest.” (Id.)
25.    At that same hearing, VNRC stated that it believed that Mr. Johnson had a conflict of
interest. (Id.) VNRC also noted its view that all of the members of the DRB who had voted on
the earlier application were conflicted out of hearing the new application. (Id.)
26.    In response to the statements by Mr. Schofield, Mr. Wechsler, Ms. Teague, and VNRC,
Mr. Johnson noted that his statement at the December 16, 2004 DRB Hearing was on behalf of
the Selectboard, not a personal statement, and that “he believed in his own integrity” and his
ability to judge the case on its merits in an unbiased manner. (Id.)

                                                  6
27.     On February 21, 2007, VNRC notified the DRB by letter that it would no longer
participate in the DRB hearings unless Mr. Johnson and the five members of the DRB who had
approved the previous project were recused and replaced by new members who would not have
any conflicts of interest.
28.     None of the members of the DRB recused themselves.
29.     The DRB voted to approve Wal-Mart’s application on April 26, 2007.            All of the
members with alleged conflicts of interest (Mr. Johnson, Mr. Schofield, Mr. Wechsler, Mr.
Brigham, Mr. Sanders, and Mr. Guptill) voted in favor of granting site plan and conditional use
approval to JLD Properties’ proposed project. That DRB determination is the subject of the
appeal in Docket Number 92-5-07 Vtec.

Facts Related to the Alleged Defects in the DRB Proceedings:
30.     On June 14, 2005, the DRB granted site plan and conditional use approval to a previous
application by JLD Properties for development of the project site as a PUD.              In this
determination, the DRB required JLD Properties to apply for a 4-lot subdivision.              This
determination granting site plan and conditional use approval was appealed to the Vermont
Environmental Court, which issued a September 5, 2006 Decision that noted improper conflicts
of interest in the DRB panel that made the 2005 determination. In re JLD Properties – Wal Mart
St. Albans, No. 132-7-05 Vtec (Vt. Envtl. Ct. Sept. 5, 2006) (Wright, J.). Although this Court
did not remand the application at that time, the appeal was dismissed without prejudice less than
two months later in an Entry Order, ruling in favor of a request by the Town and JLD Properties
to allow JLD Properties to file a new application to be heard by an impartial DRB. In re JLD
Properties – Wal Mart St. Albans, No. 132-7-05 Vtec (Vt. Envtl. Ct. Nov. 1, 2006) (Wright, J.)
(unpublished mem.).          As expected, JLD Properties then reapplied for the site plan and
conditional use approvals that were the subject of this Court’s September 5, 2006 Decision.
31.     On March 13, 2006, JLD Properties filed its application for Sketch Plan Approval for a 4-
lot subdivision.
32.     According to JLD Properties, it was not until May 29, 2006, that certain amendments to
the Town’s Zoning Bylaws and Subdivision Regulations (“Bylaws”) became effective, including




                                                 7
§ 420, which is titled “Concurrent Review” and lists the order in which various reviews of a
project are to be conducted.2
33.     On September 14, 2006, the DRB voted to grant Final Plat Approval for the 4-lot
subdivision permit. (Minutes of the St. Albans Town DRB Meeting (Sept. 14, 2006), attached as
Ex. 1 to VNRC’s Mot. for Summ. J. in Docket Nos. 92-5-07 Vtec & 242-10-06 Vtec.)
34.     On September 22, 2006, the DRB issued a written decision granting the 4-lot subdivision
permit. This determination was appealed to the Environmental Court in Docket Number 242-10-
06 Vtec.
35.     As discussed earlier, it was several months later (beginning on January 4, 2007) that the
DRB held its first hearings to jointly consider the conditional use approval, site plan, and PUD
applications, and the DRB approved those applications on April 26, 2007.

                                                 Discussion
        VNRC has filed four motions that are currently pending before this Court, some of which
resulted in cross-motions. We address each issue in turn.

A.      Cross-Motions for Summary Judgment in Docket Number 116-6-08 Vtec (the Act
        250 Land Use Permit Appeal) Regarding Whether the Project Is an Improper
        Successive Application
        VNRC has filed a motion to dismiss Docket Number 116-6-08 Vtec (the Act 250 land
use permit appeal) based on the argument that JLD Properties has filed an improper successive
application for a project that was previously denied an Act 250 land use permit. JLD Properties
has treated VNRC’s motion to dismiss as a motion for summary judgment, and JLD Properties
has asked for partial summary judgment in its favor on this issue. We agree with JLD Properties
that VNRC’s motion is more properly viewed as a motion for summary judgment, since we find
that resolution of this motion requires the consideration of matters outside of the pleadings. See
V.R.C.P. 12(b)–(c). Although normally the Court should give notice of such a conversion, we
find here that JLD Properties’ explicit mention of this conversion in its opposition brief—and
before VNRC filed its reply brief—was sufficient to provide VNRC with a reasonable
opportunity to present material relevant to summary judgment proceedings. See id. This seems
particularly appropriate given that VNRC did not object to this conversion even after JLD



2
 We note that the effective date of May 29, 2006, is according to JLD Properties, but has not been challenged by
VNRC or any other party. Unfortunately, the Bylaws that were provided to the Court do not list an effective date.

                                                       8
Properties’ opposition brief put VNRC on notice of it. We therefore treat this issue as presenting
cross-motions for summary judgment.
        We may grant summary judgment only when “the pleadings, depositions, [and] answers
to interrogatories, . . . together with the affidavits, if any, show that there is no genuine issue as
to any material fact and that any party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” V.R.C.P.
56(c)(3).    Generally, the burden of proof is on the party requesting summary judgment.
Chapman v. Sparta, 167 Vt. 157, 159 (1997). When presented with cross-motions for summary
judgment, we must consider each motion in turn and afford all reasonable doubts and inferences
to the party opposing the particular motion under consideration. DeBartolo v. Underwriters at
Lloyd’s of London, 2007 VT 31, ¶ 8, 181 Vt. 609 (citing Toys, Inc. v. F.M. Burlington Co., 155
Vt. 44, 48 (1990)).
        The cross-motions for summary judgment on this issue focus upon the significance of a
previous denial of an Act 250 permit for a similar project. In 1993, the St. Alban’s Group (JLD
Properties’ predecessor-in-interest) & Wal-Mart applied for an Act 250 land use permit to build a
Wal-Mart discount retail store in the same location as the proposed Wal-Mart in this case. The
District Commission initially granted the permit, but the Environmental Board overturned that
decision and denied the permit. See In re St. Albans Group & Wal*Mart Stores, Inc., No.
6F0471-EB, Findings of Fact, Conclusions of Law, & Order (Altered) (Vt. Envtl. Bd. June 27,
1995), available at http://www.nrb.state.vt.us/lup/decisions/1995/6f0471-eb-fco-alt.pdf.                    The
Environmental Board held that the then-applicants had failed to meet the requirements of the
following four criteria: Criterion 6 (the impact on schools), Criterion 7 (the impact on local
government services), Criterion 9(A) (the impact of growth), and Criterion 9(H) (the costs of
scattered development). Id. (applying the criteria listed in 10 V.S.A. § 6086).3 The Vermont
Supreme Court upheld the Environmental Board’s denial. See In re Wal*Mart Stores, Inc. & St.
Albans Group, 167 Vt. 75 (1997).4
        VNRC argues that the doctrines of res judicata (now referred to as claim preclusion) and
collateral estoppel (now referred to as issue preclusion) bar JLD Properties from receiving
approval of its current application.          These doctrines aim to create finality by preventing

3
  Although a permit may not be denied based on a failure to meet Criteria 6 and 7 alone, see 10 V.S.A. § 6087(b),
Wal-Mart’s failure under Criteria 9(A) or 9(H) does require denial of the permit.
4
   More specifically, the Supreme Court affirmed the Environmental Board’s “denial of the permit based on
Wal*Mart’s failure to meet its burden under Criterion 9(A), [and did] not reach the issues raised under Criterion
9(H).” Id. at 79 n.2.


                                                       9
unnecessary relitigation of claims and issues that have already been decided. See, e.g., Trepanier
v. Getting Organized, Inc., 155 Vt. 259, 265–66 (1990) (“In short, . . . the party opposing
collateral estoppel must show the existence of circumstances that make it appropriate for an issue
to be relitigated.”). According to VNRC, there is no need to relitigate the current application,
given that the Environmental Board has already decided that placing a Wal-Mart in the proposed
location would violate Criteria 6, 7, 9(A), and 9(H) and therefore cannot receive approval for an
Act 250 permit.
         The Environmental Board has developed procedures to allow applicants to apply for
reconsideration of a permit denial. See Environmental Board Rule (“E.B.R.”) 31(B), available at
http://www.nrb.state.vt.us/lup/rules.htm.5 This Rule implements 10 V.S.A. § 6087(c). These
procedures require, among other things, that an applicant file for reconsideration within six
months of the permit denial and include in the application an affidavit certifying that the
applicant has addressed all of the deficiencies that led to the permit denial. See E.B.R. 31(B)(1).
Certain benefits accrue to those applicants who meet these requirements—for instance, if the
original proceeding concluded with positive findings for the applicant on certain criteria, the
applicant would ordinarily not need to relitigate those issues in the reconsideration process. See
E.B.R. 31(B)(2).
         In this case, the original applicants chose not to pursue a motion for reconsideration.6 We
therefore find that Rule 31(B) is inapplicable to the appeals that are now before this Court. The
preclusion of reconsideration of the 1993 application, however, does not necessarily prevent a
future applicant from submitting a new application for a similar development project, as JLD
Properties did here. New applications can be filed even after the six-month deadline imposed by
Rule 31(B). Some might argue that Rule 31(B) is without teeth if applicants can avoid its

5
  As we have noted in other decisions, the former Environmental Board Rules are now called the Act 250 Rules and
have been updated by the NRB. See, e.g., Dover Valley Trail, No. 88-4-06 Vtec, slip op. at 2 n.3 (Vt. Envtl. Ct. Jan.
16, 2007) (Durkin, J.). The new Act 250 Rules took effect on May 1, 2006, and amendments to these Rules are
currently under consideration. Id. That said, we are directed to “apply[] the substantive standards that were
applicable before the tribunal appealed from,” 10 V.S.A. § 8504(h), which in this case requires us to apply the
Environmental Board Rules in effect at the time that JLD filed the pending application.
6
   Instead of filing a motion for reconsideration under E.B.R. 31(B), the applicant filed a motion to alter the
Environmental Board’s determination under E.B.R. 31(A). The Environmental Board denied the motion to alter and
issued a final order with minor changes. See In re St. Albans Group, No. 6F0471-EB. Among other requirements,
the Environmental Board’s final order stipulated that in order to take advantage of the reconsideration process, the
applicant would need to submit further evidence—such as studies of the impact of secondary growth on the St.
Albans community—to meet certain Act 250 criteria. See id. at 58–60. It is this determination—the finalization of
the Environmental Board’s permit denial—that the then-applicants appealed to the Supreme Court, which upheld the
permit denial. In re Wal*Mart, 167 Vt. 75.


                                                         10
requirements by simply filing a new application. We disagree. In making the election not to
pursue a motion for reconsideration, applicants necessarily waive the benefits that they would
have otherwise received under Rule 31(B). Thus, in the application that is pending before this
Court, JLD Properties cannot rely on any findings that the Environmental Board made in favor of
the previous applicants; because JLD Properties’ predecessor-in-interest elected not to take
advantage of the reconsideration process embodied in Rule 31(B), we cannot give effect to the
findings made in favor of the then-applicants in the Environmental Board’s 1995 determination.
         Although JLD Properties (through its predecessor-in-interest) has waived any right to
take advantage of the findings and conclusions made in its favor in the Environmental Board’s
1995 determination, this does not necessarily mean that JLD Properties can escape from those
findings and conclusions that were made against its interests in the 1995 determination. The
issue that is now presented for our consideration is what legal effect, if any, to give to the
Environmental Board’s 1995 findings and conclusions when it denied an Act 250 permit for a
Wal-Mart store in the same location at issue in this case.
         The Vermont Supreme Court has held that the doctrines of claim and issue preclusion
apply to municipal planning commission proceedings:
         As a general rule, a zoning board or planning commission may not entertain a
         second application concerning the same property after a previous application has
         been denied, unless a substantial change of conditions has occurred or other
         considerations materially affecting the merits of the request have intervened
         between the first and second applications.
In re Carrier, 155 Vt. 152, 158 (1990).
         This general rule, known as the “successive-application doctrine,” embodies the
principles of claim and issue preclusion as applicable to zoning applications. See In re Armitage,
2006 VT 113, ¶ 4 n.1, 181 Vt. 281. The successive-application doctrine has been codified by a
statute that authorizes a municipal panel to “reject an appeal or request for reconsideration” if it
determines that the issues raised “have been decided in an earlier appeal or involve substantially
or materially the same facts.” 24 V.S.A. § 4470(a).7
         In the interests of finality, avoiding the relitigation of issues already decided, and
affording the proper weight and respect that is due to the thorough analysis that was provided by


7
 Interestingly, this statute notes that a municipal panel “may” reject a successive application, not that it shall do so,
implying that municipal panels can theoretically elect to grant a new hearing even to the exact same application.
This discretion seems to be in tension with the holding of in In re Carrier that municipal panels “may not entertain”
successive applications. In re Carrier, 155 Vt. at 158.

                                                          11
the Environmental Board’s 1995 determination, we conclude that JLD Properties must meet an
initial burden to “show the existence of circumstances that make it appropriate for an issue to be
relitigated.”   Trepanier, 155 Vt. at 266; cf. In re Rome Family Corp., No. 1R0410-3-EB,
Memorandum of Decision, slip op. at 4 (Vt. Envtl. Bd. May 2, 1989), available at
http://www.nrb.state.vt.us/lup/decisions/1989/1r0410-3-eb-mod-den-mtd.pdf (“[A]n application
for a previously-denied project that includes no changes from the denied application should not
be allowed.”). In light of this conclusion, we cannot avoid the issue that was left unaddressed in
a previous case of ours—namely, “the degree to which a successive Act 250 application must
differ from a previously denied one in order to be considered on its merits.” In re McLean
Enters. Quarry, Nos. 224-10-05 Vtec & 121-5-06 Vtec, slip op. at 5 (Dec. 22, 2006) (Wright, J.).
        In imposing some sort of threshold requirement to prevent Act 250 permit applicants
from resubmitting the same or similar application as one that has already been denied, we can
look to two potential sources for guidance. One option is the successive-application doctrine that
has developed in the context of municipal permit applications. Another option is the doctrine of
changed circumstances that has developed in the context of proposed amendments to conditions
imposed by Act 250 permits that have already been issued. Neither precedent is directly on
point. If this were a municipal proceeding, rather than an Act 250 proceeding, the successive-
application doctrine would apply. If this were an Act 250 permit amendment, rather than the
submittal of a new application after a previous application had been denied, then we would apply
the doctrine of changed circumstances. As it stands, both of these doctrines are analogous,
though not precisely on point, and we therefore must analyze which is the proper doctrine for the
circumstances here: the submission of a new Act 250 permit application, after a previous
application for the same or similar project has been denied.
        Although these two doctrines have developed in different contexts, they have enormous
overlap. As the Vermont Supreme Court has noted on numerous occasions, the “successive-
application doctrine is an attempt to balance the competing concerns of flexibility and finality in
zoning decisions.” In re Dunkin Donuts S.P. Approval, 2008 VT 139, ¶ 9 (mem.). In Dunkin
Donuts, the Court followed this observation with the following footnote: “The concerns of
‘flexibility and finality’ have been treated extensively in the context of Act 250 permitting.” Id.
at ¶ 9 n.2 (citing In re Nehemiah Assocs., 168 Vt. 288, 294 (1998); In re Stowe Club Highlands,
166 Vt. 33, 38 (1996)). Indeed, Act 250 Rule 34(E), which codifies the balancing test that was
developed in In re Stowe Club Highlands, has the words “balancing flexibility and finality” in its

                                                12
title. Thus, although “an independent set of rules, not the successive-application doctrine, [is]
applied to Act 250 permit amendment requests,” the tests are quite similar and have the same
purposes in mind. In re Dunkin Donuts, 2008 VT 139, ¶ 9 n.2.
          The changed circumstances doctrine, as its name implies, requires that an applicant show
some sort of change in the facts, applicable law, or technology, or provide some other
explanation for why a district commission should allow a previously issued permit condition to
be amended. See E.B.R. 34(E). Similarly, the Supreme Court has held that in order to satisfy
the successive-application doctrine, “the applicant must show that there has been a substantial
change in the application or the circumstances.” In re Armitage, 2006 VT 113, ¶ 8 (citing In re
Carrier, 155 Vt. at 158–59).
          Although an argument could be made for applying the related doctrine of changed
circumstances, we conclude that the successive-application doctrine is the more appropriate
vehicle for analyzing whether to permit review of an Act 250 permit application for a project that
has previously been denied a permit. Indeed, the Environmental Board has already incorporated
the successive-application doctrine in these types of situations by allowing a previously denied
applicant who failed to file for reconsideration under E.B.R. 31(B) to submit a new application
for the same project, so long as the “new application [is] substantially different from prior
applications.” In re Berlin Assocs., No. 5W0584-14-EB (Vt. Envtl. Bd. Jan. 10, 1992), slip op.
at   6,    available   at   http://www.nrb.state.vt.us/lup/decisions/1992/5w0584-14-eb-app42991-
mod.pdf.
          Further, the Vermont Supreme Court recently commented on the ability of the
successive-application doctrine to strike the proper balance between finality and flexibility that is
appropriate to zoning decisions:
                  On the one hand, zoning decisions must be responsive to changing
          circumstances. Schubach v. Silver, 336 A.2d 328, 333 (Pa. 1975) (need for
          flexibility in zoning decisions outweighs need for finality of judgments); Marks v.
          Zoning Bd. of Review of Providence, 203 A.2d 761, 763 (R.I. 1964) (zoning
          board must be able to reconsider applications in light of changed circumstances).
          On the other hand, property owners must enjoy some level of certainty in the
          zoning and use of nearby land. In re Crescent Beach Ass’n, 126 Vt. 140, 141
          (1966) (“[The successive-application doctrine] is not to be technically and
          narrowly imposed, but yet enforced to the extent that property interests may be
          settled and stable, and property owners protected from harassment.”).
                  This balance of flexibility and finality is incompatible with a strict
          application of claim preclusion, which “is intended to protect the courts and the
          parties from the burden of relitigation.” Russell v. Atkins, 165 Vt. 176, 179

                                                  13
         (1996). Claim preclusion is a rigid doctrine that ends litigation without regard to
         equitable considerations. Faulkner v. Caledonia County Fair Ass’n, 2004 VT
         123, ¶ 10, 178 Vt. 51. Applying the strict requirements of claim preclusion to
         zoning decisions would prohibit responses to changing circumstances in Vermont
         communities. But allowing changes in zoning applications without according
         respect to prior denials would encourage erratic, unpredictable land use. The
         successive-application doctrine is a compromise, applying general preclusive
         principles while allowing for adaptation to changing circumstances.

In re Dunkin Donuts, 2008 VT 139, ¶¶ 9–10 (parallel citations omitted).
         We find this rationale to be just as applicable to successive applications in the Act 250
context as it is in the municipal context.8 Indeed, the Supreme Court’s most recent holding on
this matter seems to exhibit a preference for applying the successive-application doctrine even in
situations where the Court has previously upheld the application of the changed circumstances
doctrine.    Compare In re Dunkin Donuts, 2008 VT 139, ¶ 8 (noting that the successive-
application doctrine applies to “zoning proceedings” generally and requiring its application in
that case where a permit amendment—not a new application—was at issue) with In re
Hildebrand, 2007 VT 5, ¶¶ 12–13, 181 Vt. 568 (approving of the use of the changed
circumstances doctrine when evaluating municipal permit amendment requests). We view this
as providing further foundation for the application of the successive-application doctrine here.
         In applying the successive-application doctrine here, we begin with the premise that it is
the applicant’s burden to show “a substantial change in the application or the circumstances.” In
re Armitage, 2006 VT 113, ¶ 8 (citing In re Carrier, 155 Vt. at 158–59). We now find this to be
a threshold requirement before the District Commission—or this Court, standing in its place in
the case of a de novo appeal—can consider a revised application for a project that has already
been denied an Act 250 permit. If an applicant meets its burden of showing a substantial change,
then a new application for the same project can proceed to be heard on the merits.
         JLD Properties’ task before this Court is to present evidence that substantiates the claim
of a substantial change, either in the application or in the circumstances surrounding it. See id.
This Court has previously noted that a “substantial change in circumstances can occur when
there have been changes to the application itself, to address concerns that caused the previous
denial, a change in the physical surroundings of the property, or a change in the governing

8
  Our finding here does not conflict with the Supreme Court’s footnote in In re Dunkin Donuts, explaining that an
independent set of rules applies to Act 250 permit amendments. See id. at ¶ 9 n.2. As noted earlier, since the initial
application in this case was denied, we are not presented with a legal question for which In re Stowe Club
Highlands, In re Nehemiah Associates, or their progeny are directly controlling.


                                                         14
regulations.” In re R.L. Vallee PUD (Spillane’s) – 811 Williston Rd., No. 100-5-07 Vtec, slip
op. at 4 (Vt. Envtl. Ct. Aug. 17, 2007) (Wright, J.) (internal citations omitted). An applicant
cannot, however, “merely seek[] to introduce additional evidence . . . that could have been
presented in the earlier proceeding.” Id. (citing In re Armitage, 2006 VT 113, ¶ 9).
       To determine whether changes are substantial enough to meet the requirements of the
successive-application doctrine, it is often necessary to engage in a fact-specific analysis. Here,
JLD Properties alleges numerous ways in which the pending application differs from the one
submitted in 1993 and addresses the concerns that led to the previous permit denial. JLD
Properties also points to several changes that have occurred in recent years to the physical and
economic character of the proposed development area. VNRC, on the other hand, alleges that
any proposed changes are minor and do not meet the threshold requirement for allowing
relitigation of issues that have already been decided. VNRC makes the further claim that some
changes—such as the decision to build a roughly 147,000 square foot store—can only exacerbate
the problems that led the Environmental Board to deny an Act 250 permit for a proposed
100,000 square foot Wal-Mart.
       As mentioned earlier, when presented with cross-motions for summary judgment, as is
the case here, we must consider each motion in turn and afford all reasonable doubts and
inferences to the party opposing the particular motion under consideration. DeBartolo, 2007 VT
31, ¶ 8 (citing Toys, 155 Vt. at 48). With this standard in mind, it is clear that material facts are
still in dispute as to whether the current application represents an improper successive
application, and we are therefore unable to conclude that either side is “so clearly correct as to be
entitled to a judgment ‘as a matter of law.’” Berlin Dev. Assocs. v. Dep’t of Soc. Welfare, 142
Vt. 107, 110 (1982) (quoting V.R.C.P. 56(c)). Only a trial can resolve the difficult factual issues
involved in determining whether there are substantial changes in the application, the surrounding
circumstances, or the regulatory framework so as to address the concerns that led to the
Environmental Board’s 1995 Act 250 permit denial. Thus, summary judgment on this matter is
inappropriate at this time. We therefore DENY both motions.
       Given our conclusion that we cannot grant summary judgment to either party at this time,
we are left in a bit of a conundrum as to how to proceed in this matter. As mentioned throughout
our discussion of the successive-application doctrine, this doctrine presents a threshold question.
Thus, in the normal course of things, JLD Properties must meet its burden to show a substantial
change that justifies relitigating this matter, and only then can we litigate the issue at a merits

                                                 15
hearing. That said, given the enormous amount of overlap between the question of substantial
changes and the actual merits of the application, it would be a waste of judicial resources to
segregate these proceedings. We therefore conclude that the issue of whether the application
presents an improper successive application will be addressed at the merits hearing that is
already scheduled for this case. This is admittedly not a perfect solution, and we regret that
VNRC and other parties may be forced to relitigate issues that we might ultimately find
unworthy of relitigation. But we cannot justify holding two separate hearings on matters that are
as intimately related as they are in this case, particularly when one of the primary purposes of the
successive-application doctrine—and any other doctrine that aims in part at creating finality—is
to conserve judicial resources. We therefore plan to hold only one hearing to address all of the
legal and factual issues that must be addressed in these consolidated appeals.

B.      VNRC’s Motion for Reconsideration in Docket Number 116-6-08 Vtec (the Act 250
        Land Use Permit Appeal) Based on a Possible Conflict of Interest in the District
        Commission Proceedings Below
        VNRC’s other motion in Docket Number 116-6-08 Vtec (the Act 250 land use permit
appeal) is a motion for reconsideration of this Court’s October 10, 2008 Entry Order, where we
dismissed VNRC’s Question 1 of its Statement of Questions (dealing with the possibility of a
conflict of interest in the District Commission proceedings below). VNRC asks us to reconsider
our decision in that matter and allow VNRC to proceed with discovery requests that aim to ferret
out whether the District Commission proceedings were tainted with an improper conflict of
interest.
        This Court has recently summarized the high burden that falls upon any litigant who asks
the Court to reconsider a previous decision. See In re Stormwater NPDES Petition, No. 14-1-07
Vtec, slip op. at 3–4 (Vt. Envtl. Ct. Feb. 18, 2009) (Durkin, J.). In particular, we noted that these
arguments are analyzed “under a very restrictive standard of review.”            Id. at 3.   Further,
“[m]otions to reconsider should not be used to repeat arguments that have been raised and
rejected by the Court in the earlier decision.” Id. at 4 (citing In re Boutin PRD Amendment, No.
93-4-06 Vtec, slip op. at 1 (Vt. Envtl. Ct. May 18, 2007) (Wright, J.)). In general, “motions to
reconsider are rarely granted.” Id. (citing S. Vill. Cmtys., LLC, No. 74-4-05 Vtec, slip op. at 2
(Vt. Envtl. Ct. Sept. 14, 2006) (Durkin, J.)).
        In light of this strict standard of review, we note that VNRC has not provided this Court
with an adequate justification for reconsidering our October 10, 2008 Entry Order.               We


                                                 16
understand that VNRC expects that the members of a District Commission will be fair, unbiased,
and free of any conflicts of interest. This Court expects the same. That said, we stand by our
earlier decision that in our de novo review of those proceedings, this Court stands in the shoes of
the District Commission, and because our expectation and goal is to conduct a fair and impartial
de novo review, we find that in this particular case it is irrelevant that there may have been
conflicts of interest in the proceedings below. Thus, we cannot allow VNRC to make discovery
requests that pertain solely to trying to determine whether there was a conflict of interest in the
proceedings below.
        As we noted in our Entry Order, this case is different from the earlier municipal
proceeding that led to this Court’s September 5, 2006 Decision, because here the District
Commission proceedings below do not present us with “any overt acts that rose to the level of a
‘due process violation.’” Entry Order at 2 (citing In re JLD Properties, No. 132-7-05 Vtec, slip
op. at 7). VNRC believes that we should not reach such a conclusion before VNRC has had a
chance to conduct discovery to uncover whether the District Commission’s actions were
inappropriate. We disagree. This Court’s September 5, 2006 Decision represents the rare
situation where a municipal panel engages in overt acts that are so egregious that they call into
question the public’s view of the fundamental fairness and impartiality of these proceedings. See
In re JLD Properties, No. 132-7-05 Vtec, slip op. at 5. We emphasize the word “overt” here
because more subtle procedural errors—such as the ones that VNRC claims might have arisen in
the Act 250 proceedings below—do not shake the public’s confidence in the same way that overt
acts do.
        Although we expect District Commissions and other land use panels to proceed in the
most professional manner possible, it is not this Court’s duty to ensure that these proceedings are
pristine.   Indeed, even in the face of overt procedural violations, it is within this Court’s
discretion to determine whether a remand is appropriate. See id. at 8 (declining to remand the
appeal); see also Appeal of Janet Cote, No. 257-11-02 Vtec, slip op. at 2 (Vt. Envtl. Ct. Apr. 11,
2003) (Wright, J.) (noting that the Court “can” vacate and remand in these situations, not that it
must). But see In re Appeal of Gardner Stone, No. 193-12-97 Vtec (Vt. Envtl. Ct. June 24,
1998) (Wright, J.) (holding—without a discussion of de novo review—that in that case remand




                                                17
was the “only mechanism available” to cure overt procedural errors).9 Even in this Court’s
September 5, 2006 Decision, we noted that “procedural defects in reaching a DRB decision are
generally disregarded in a de novo appeal, because the court must make its own determination as
to the questions of law or fact raised in the appeal, and must ‘apply the substantive standards that
were applicable before the tribunal appealed from.’” Id. at 4 (citing V.R.E.C.P. 5(g)). That
Decision went on to discuss an exception to this general rule when members of a municipal panel
engage in overt acts that violate due process. See id. at 5–8; accord In re Appeal of Gardner
Stone, No. 193-12-97 Vtec (remanding a case when a board member voted on a project even
though her husband attended the proceeding as an interested party). But because the exception
should not swallow the rule, we conclude here that any procedural defects below will not impact
our de novo review. For these reasons, we DENY VNRC’s motion for reconsideration.

C.      Cross-Motions for Summary Judgment in Docket Number 92-5-07 Vtec (the Site
        Plan and Conditional Use Approval Appeal) Regarding Alleged Conflicts of Interest
        in the DRB Proceedings Below
        In Docket Number 92-5-07 Vtec (the site plan and conditional use approval appeal),
VNRC has filed a motion for summary judgment, alleging that this case should be remanded
based on improper conflicts of interest in the DRB proceedings below. JLD Properties and the
Town have responded in opposition and asked for partial summary judgment in their favor to
dismiss Questions 1, 2, 3, and 4 (dealing with alleged conflicts of interest) of VNRC’s Statement
of Questions.
        This issue is closely related to VNRC’s motion for reconsideration, and we hold that our
discussion above also applies to our analysis here. Granted, the alleged conflicts of interest
before the municipal proceeding present us with a closer call than what we have dealt with in our
rulings regarding the District Commission proceedings. As is detailed above in our Factual
Background, where we recount some of the past statements made by DRB Chair Bob Johnson,
VNRC has good reasons to be concerned that the DRB Chair did not review the Wal-Mart
application objectively. As this Court has previously noted, municipal panels have a duty to
avoid even the appearance of bias. In re JLD Properties, No. 132-7-05 Vtec, slip op. at 5–6. We
understand why VNRC believes that the DRB Chair should have recused himself from these
proceedings.

9
  To the extent that In re Appeal of Gardner Stone (a 1998 decision) is inconsistent with our 2002 holding in Appeal
of Janet Cote and our September 5, 2006 ruling in In re JLD Properties, we note that we agree with the conclusion of
the more recent decisions, which find remand to be discretionary—not mandatory—in these types of situations.

                                                        18
        That said, as discussed in detail above, when we are reviewing a case de novo, we are not
charged with the duty of assessing the propriety of the proceedings below or assuring that they
are pristine; rather, we need only remand a case when an overt and egregious act violates due
process and the public’s expectation of a fair proceeding. Here, in light of the DRB Chair’s pre-
hearing advocacy statements in favor of the project and challenges to the motivations of party
opponents (VNRC in particular), we find it difficult to share his professed ability to act
impartially in this matter. However, as egregious as the DRB Chair’s statements were, we
conclude that the more proper course is to continue towards and complete this Court’s de novo
review of the pending applications. We also find no merit in VNRC’s argument that five other
DRB members were necessarily biased simply because they previously voted in favor of an
earlier application to build a Wal-Mart on this same site. See, e.g., Stone v. Baum, 409 F. Supp.
2d 1164, 1175 n.5 (D. Ariz. 2005) (“A judges’ prior ruling in a case is absolutely not a basis for
recusal.” (emphasis removed)). For these reasons, we DENY VNRC’s motion for summary
judgment on this issue. In light of our holding that the alleged procedural errors below do not
warrant remand, we GRANT JLD Properties’ and the Town’s motions for partial summary
judgment in their favor, and we therefore DISMISS Questions 1, 2, 3, and 4 (dealing with
alleged conflicts of interest) of VNRC’s Statement of Questions in Docket Number 92-5-07
Vtec.

D.      VNRC’s Motion for Summary Judgment in Docket Numbers 92-5-07 Vtec (the Site
        Plan and Conditional Use Approval Appeal) and 242-10-06 Vtec (the 4-Lot
        Subdivision Appeal) Based on Alleged Defects in the DRB Proceedings Below
        The final motion we address in today’s Decision is VNRC’s motion for summary
judgment in Docket Numbers 92-5-07 Vtec (the site plan and conditional use approval appeal)
and 242-10-06 Vtec (the 4-lot subdivision appeal). Here, VNRC argues that there were defects
in the DRB proceedings below that require this Court to remand this case to the DRB.
Specifically, VNRC alleges two defects: (1) that the DRB violated Bylaws § 420, and (2) that the
DRB violated the parties’ due process rights when the DRB issued a decision without first
informing the parties of which version of the Bylaws applied to the project.
        Bylaws § 420 is titled “Concurrent Review” and lists the order in which various reviews
of a project are to be conducted: “If more than one type of review is required for a project, the
sequence for review and issuance of a decision shall be as follows: Conditional Use, Sketch and
Final Plat, Planned Unit Development (if applicable), Variance and Site Plan.” Regardless of


                                               19
whether § 420 applies to this project, and regardless of whether the DRB failed to follow it
correctly, we find this to be precisely the type of procedural defect that is “generally disregarded
in a de novo appeal.” In re JLD Properties, No. 132-7-05 Vtec, slip op. at 4. Now that we have
granted de novo review of these consolidated appeals, VNRC will get the concurrent review that
it asks for, and the issue of whether such review was provided below is therefore moot.
         As for the DRB’s failure to inform the parties of whether § 420 of the Bylaws applied to
this project, we find this failure to be regrettable, but it does not rise to the point of being a due
process violation. The DRB noted that its determination would be the same regardless of which
bylaws it was applying. Courts make similar rulings all the time—for instance, when a court
finds that it need not determine what standard of review applies because the outcome is the same
under any standard. It is not a due process violation just because these types of rulings do not
address every issue that the parties have raised. Although municipal bodies should always aim to
provide the parties with as much information as possible regarding how hearings will proceed,
we know that this unfortunately will not always be the case. As with the question of the order of
review, we find the procedural defect here to be the type that is “generally disregarded in a de
novo appeal.” Id. For these reasons, we DENY VNRC’s motion for summary judgment on this
issue.

                                            Conclusion
         For all the reasons more fully discussed above, we DENY both motions for summary
judgment in Docket Number 116-6-08 Vtec (the Act 250 land use permit appeal) regarding
whether JLD Properties has filed an improper successive application for a project that was
previously denied an Act 250 land use permit. We conclude that the issue of whether the
application presents an improper successive application requires a hearing and that we can
address this issue as part of the merits hearing that is already scheduled for this case. We also
DENY VNRC’s motion for reconsideration of our previous Entry Order in that same Docket
Number. In addition, we DENY VNRC’s motion for summary judgment based on alleged
conflicts of interest in Docket Number 92-5-07 Vtec (the site plan and conditional use approval
appeal), and we GRANT JLD Properties’ and the Town’s motions for partial summary judgment
and DISMISS Questions 1, 2, 3, and 4 (dealing with alleged conflicts of interest) from VNRC’s
Statement of Questions in Docket Number 92-5-07 Vtec. Finally, we DENY VNRC’s motion
for summary judgment based on alleged defects in the DRB proceedings below in Docket



                                                 20
Numbers 92-5-07 Vtec (the site plan and conditional use approval appeal) and 242-10-06 Vtec
(the 4-lot subdivision appeal).
       We also note that this case is currently scheduled for a four-day merits hearing beginning
on April 1, 2009, and continuing on April 2, 3, and 8, with April 9 and 10 reserved as well in
case additional days are needed. VNRC recently filed a motion to grant a continuance of the
trial. We will address this motion soon by a separate Entry Order.

       Done at Berlin, Vermont this 16th day of March 2009.



                                            ___________________________________
                                             Thomas S. Durkin, Environmental Judge




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