                                        STATE OF VERMONT

                                     ENVIRONMENTAL COURT

             In re: Appeals of David Garen and       }
             June Garen                              }
                                                         Docket Nos. 42-3-01 and 218-
                                                     }
                                                         9-00 Vtec
                                                     }
                                                     }

                Decision and Order on Appellants= Motion for Summary Judgment

Appellants David Garen and June Garen appealed from two decisions of the Development
Review Board (DRB) of the City of Burlington granting preliminary plat approval (Docket No. 218-
9-00 Vtec) and the final plat approval (Docket No. 42-3-01 Vtec) to Appellee-Applicants Green
Mountain Habitat for Humanity, Inc. and Burlington Housing Authority. The two appeals have
been consolidated, and Appellants recognize that the preliminary plat appeal is essentially moot
and that the matter will proceed as an appeal of the final plat approval. The hearing on the merits
is scheduled for September 17 and 18, 2001.

Appellants are represented by W. Owen Jenkins, Esq.; Appellee-Applicants are represented by
Neil H. Mickenberg, Esq.; the City is represented by Joseph E. McNeil, Esq. and Kimberlee J.
Sturtevant, Esq.; Interested Persons Katherine W. Gluck, and John E. Desautels are represented
by Michael J. Straub, Esq. Interested persons Jeffrey Landa and Lorraine K. Pruss Gorton
entered their appearances and represent themselves, but have not appeared at pretrial
conferences and have not participated in the briefing of the present motion.

Appellants have moved for summary judgment that final plat approval should be denied as a
matter of law, arguing that the proposed project fails to satisfy ' 11.1.1(c) and ' ' 6.1.10(c) and (i)
of the Zoning Ordinance, and ' ' 28-7(a)(1)(G) and (I) of the Subdivision Ordinance.

The following facts are undisputed unless otherwise noted.

The Burlington Housing Authority owns or owned approximately 16.2 acres of land, with frontage
on North Avenue, frontage on the end of Sunset Drive, and frontage on the end of Venus Avenue,
in the residential-low density zoning district. The North Avenue end of this property is developed
with a housing development known as Franklin Square, which occupies 3.2 acres, plus a 2.5-acre
road right-of-way conveyed or proposed to be conveyed to the City of Burlington. The remainder
is undeveloped; it contains a natural area known as the Mt. Calvary Red Maple Swamp (the A Mt.
                                                                       1
Calvary Area@ ). The Mt. Calvary Area includes a Class II wetland and three rare species of
plants: the large whorled pogonia (a type of orchid: Icetray verticillata, protected by the state
endangered species statute), the black gum or tupelo tree (Nyssa sylvatica, rare in Vermont), and
the yellow bartonia (Bartonia virginica, also rare in Vermont).

In the present project, Appellee-Applicants propose to develop eight units of affordable housing in
a Planned Residential Development (PRD), consisting of two duplexes and four single family
residences grouped around a cul-de-sac to be extended from the current end of Venus Avenue,
on a 2.3-acre parcel, of which 1.8 acres is proposed as the project site and 0.5 acres is proposed
as the extension of the Venus Avenue right-of-way to be deeded to the City. A Class II wetland
has been located on the property. The project site is in the so-called A upland area@ beyond the
buffer required by the Vermont Wetland Rules. In connection with the project, a deeded
conservation easement on a 0.6-acre portion of the 1.8-acre PRD project site, together with a
deeded conservation easement on 6.6-acres of the 7.5-acre remaining central area of the
property, is proposed to be protected as a Conservation Area, together with a contiguous parcel
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already owned by the Department of Parks and Recreation . The combined conservation lands
are proposed to be managed pursuant to a management plan.

Appellants argue in the present motion that the project fails to A preserve the natural and scenic
qualities of open space@ as required by ' 11.1.1(c) of the Zoning Ordinance; fails sufficiently to A
provide open space@ as required by ' 6.1.10(c) of the Zoning Ordinance; fails to A protect
Burlington= s heritage,@ as required by ' 6.1.10(i) of the Zoning Ordinance; will have an A undue
adverse effect on a rare or irreplaceable natural area,@ in violation of ' 28-7(a)(1)(G) of the
Subdivision Ordinance; and is not in A substantial conformance with the city= s municipal
development plan,@ as required by ' 28-7-(a)(1)(I) of the Subdivision Ordinance.

Material facts are disputed as to each of the elements of each of these criteria. Appellants rely on
three documents in particular: the A Burlington Open Space Protection Plan@ and two reports
prepared for the City: Jeffrey Parsons, et al., The Identification and Characterization of Burlington,
Vermont= s Wetlands and Significant Natural Areas, with Recommendations for Management
(1988) and Continuum Associates, Mount Calvary Red Maple Swamp: A Conservation Plan
(1992). Material facts are disputed as to whether or to what extent any of these documents was
adopted or incorporated into the City= s municipal development plan. Indeed, material facts are
disputed even as to which edition of the City= s municipal development plan applies to this
application.

Material facts are disputed as to whether the project plan preserves the natural and scenic
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qualities of A open space ,@ and, if it does, whether it does so in a way A not detrimental to the
city= s interests@ (' 11.1.5(i)). Material facts are also in dispute as to how to characterize the A
city= s interests@ under that section in connection with a project for affordable housing, or how to
address what may be competing interests of the city.

Material facts are disputed as to whether the existing use of the PRD site, or of the site slated for
conservation protection is a A historic, traditional or significant use@ subject to ' 6.1.10(i), and, if
so, whether the proposal has minimized its disruption A to the extent practicable.@

Material facts are disputed as to whether or which portion of the Mt. Calvary Area qualifies as a A
rare or irreplaceable natural area,@ as well as whether the proposed project will have any
adverse effect upon such an area, or whether any adverse effect will be A undue.@ Material facts
are disputed as to the relationship in location, distance and effect, of the PRD site compared to
the Class II wetland, its buffer area, and the rare plant species.

Accordingly, based on the foregoing, it is hereby ORDERED and ADJUDGED that Appellants=
Motion for Summary Judgment is DENIED, as material facts are in dispute as to each of the
questions raised by the motion. The hearing on the merits of this application remains scheduled
for September 17 and 18, 2001.

                                th
Done at Barre, Vermont, this 6 day of September, 2001.
___________________
Merideth Wright
Environmental Judge




                                             Footnotes

1.    We note that the overlay maps included in the 1992 Continuum Associates report have
been photocopies in reverse in the document included as Exhibit 8 to Appellants’ Motion. If the
parties plan to use this document at trial, it may be helpful to acquire actual mylar overlays, or at
least to obtain corrected photocopies of them.

2.    Another contiguous parcel already owned by the Burlington Housing Authority is shown on
the recorded final plat but does not show an acreage amount. It may also be included in the
conservation proposal and may explain why the parties’ memoranda refer to the total
conservation area as approximately 13 acres in size. We presume the parties will address this
issue at the hearing on the merits.

3.   The parties should be prepared at trial or in their post-trial memoranda to address the
meaning of this section in the PRD context, as any PRD by definition concentrates allowed
development on a portion of a parcel to increase the open space on the remainder of the parcel.
