Mushroom Hill, LLC v. Swatara Twp. Bd. of Commissioners ( 2022 )


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  •            IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
    Mushroom Hill, LLC                          :
    :
    v.                            :
    :
    Swatara Township Board                      :
    of Commissioners,                           :    No. 178 C.D. 2021
    Appellant                 :    Argued: December 16, 2021
    BEFORE:       HONORABLE MARY HANNAH LEAVITT, Judge1
    HONORABLE ANNE E. COVEY, Judge
    HONORABLE CHRISTINE FIZZANO CANNON, Judge
    OPINION NOT REPORTED
    MEMORANDUM OPINION
    BY JUDGE FIZZANO CANNON                          FILED: March 8, 2022
    Appellant, the Swatara Township Board of Commissioners (Board)
    appeals from the January 27, 2021, decision and order of the Court of Common Pleas
    of Dauphin County (trial court). The trial court reversed the Board’s February 27,
    2020, decision and order denying the application of Appellee, Mushroom Hill, LLC
    (Mushroom Hill) for a conditional use permit to build warehouses in the C-G
    General Commercial Zoning District (C-G District) of Swatara Township
    (Township). Upon review, we reverse the trial court’s order.
    1
    This matter was assigned to the panel before January 3, 2022, when President Judge
    Emerita Leavitt became a senior judge on the Court.
    I. Facts & Procedural Background
    Mushroom Hill is the equitable owner of a 165-acre tract of land in
    Swatara Township. Trial Ct. Op., 1/27/21, at 1; Bd. Op., 2/27/20, at 2. The property
    is bounded by Penhar Drive to the west, Mushroom Hill Road to the east, Chambers
    Hill Road to the south, and Route 322 to the north. Trial Ct. Op. at 1. The property
    is located mostly within the C-G Commercial Zoning District with smaller portions
    located within the M-L Light Manufacturing District and the R-S Single Family
    Residential Zoning District. Trial Ct. Op. at 2. This appeal concerns Mushroom
    Hill’s plans for the portion located in the C-G District. Bd. Op. at 2.
    On September 6, 2019, Mushroom Hill submitted an application to the
    Board seeking permission to construct four warehouses on the property. Trial Ct.
    Op. at 2. One building would be in the M-L District, where warehouses are
    permitted by right, and three would be in the C-G District, in which warehouses are
    permitted by conditional use pursuant to the Township’s Zoning Ordinance2
    (Ordinance). Trial Ct. Op. at 6. The three proposed warehouse buildings within the
    C-G District are the subject of this appeal.
    Included in the application was a three-page “Narrative Attachment”
    setting forth Mushroom Hill’s proposed compliance with Section 295-94.1(b) of the
    Ordinance, which requires that conditional use applications for warehouses in the C-
    G District provide a “detailed description of the proposed use” with regard to eight
    enumerated topics: the types of materials to be stored, the general scale of the
    operation, environmental impacts, site planning, effect on surrounding residential
    neighborhoods, public health and safety, potential disturbance of slopes and other
    2
    Swatara Twp., Pa., Zoning Ordinance (Ordinance) No. 2010-1 (July 27, 2010).
    2
    natural features of the land, and hours of operation. Ordinance § 295-94.1(b), added
    by Ordinance No. 2017-7 (June 14, 2017).
    At a hearing before the Board, Frank Petkunas (Petkunas) testified on
    behalf of Mushroom Hill. Petkunas oversees investment, implementation, and
    development of properties in the northeastern United States (U.S.) for CRG
    Integrated Real Estate Solutions (CRG), a national real estate company. Reproduced
    Record (R.R.) at 64a. He stated that Mushroom Hill is wholly owned by CRG as a
    single purpose entity to develop the property. R.R. at 67a & 72a. Access would be
    from Penhar Drive and Chambers Hill Road with another access point solely for
    emergency vehicles. Id. at 72a-73a. The three warehouses in the C-G District would
    range from 319,000 to 350,000 square feet each, and the site would have parking for
    100 employees per building. Id. at 73a. Petkunas acknowledged that a “full civil
    design” has not yet been completed, but averred that “we’re far enough along in our
    calculations[] and our research to know” that the plan complies with the Township’s
    setback and density regulations and any requirements or standards for stormwater
    and grading. Id. at 74a. Petkunas stated that at this point in the process, the proposal
    is flexible and added: “We did this in a very prudent manner, and within expectations
    of what I think would be reasonable development.” Id. at 80a-81a. Petkunas also
    answered questions from counsel and community residents.
    Fred Ferraro (Ferraro), who oversees design and construction for
    CRG’s northeastern U.S. properties, also testified on behalf of Mushroom Hill. He
    testified as to the site layout and also answered questions from counsel and
    community residents. Additionally, Jarred Neal (Neal), a traffic project engineer
    and manager with Traffic Planning and Design in Harrisburg, testified on behalf of
    Mushroom Hill. Neal devised a transportation impact study for the project, as
    3
    required by the Pennsylvania Department of Transportation (PennDOT). R.R. at
    99a. Like Petkunas and Ferraro, Neal answered questions concerning the impact of
    the project on the area, particularly the adjoining residential neighborhood to the
    south.
    Robert Ihlein (Ihlein) testified as the Township’s Zoning Officer and
    Director of Planning and Zoning. R.R. at 222a. Ihlein reported that the Township’s
    Planning Commission had recommended limitations to site access from Chambers
    Hill Road and more extensive tree buffering between the warehouse buildings and
    the residential area than required by the Ordinance. Id. at 229a. Ihlein also stated
    that from the Commission’s perspective, Mushroom Hill had not initially provided
    sufficient information and by the time of the third hearing, several months later,
    “from what I see so far . . . [Mushroom Hill] still has not met all of the tests in the
    conditions required by the Zoning Ordinance.” Id. at 230a.
    Numerous community residents also asked questions and raised
    concerns in opposition to various aspects of the project.3 Residents’ opposition
    arose from the information provided by Mushroom Hill’s witnesses, but also from
    the community residents’ view that Mushroom Hill had failed to provide sufficient
    information about nearly all aspects of the proposal. R.R. at 326a-49a & 352a-54a.
    Concurrent with the final hearing on January 15, 2020, Mushroom Hill submitted a
    two-page document with ten proposed conditions it would agree to meet in order to
    facilitate conditional use approval. R.R. at 453a-54a.
    3
    All residents quoted here were sworn in and characterized by the Board as “resident
    parties.” Bd. Op. at 3.
    4
    The Board issued its decision and order denying Mushroom Hill’s
    application on February 27, 2020. The Board’s Findings of Fact summarized the
    testimonies of Petkunas, Ferraro, and Neal on behalf of Mushroom Hill and the
    comments of the various community residents. Bd. Op. at 5-16. Ultimately, the
    Board concluded that Mushroom Hill failed to meet its burden to show that the
    project would meet any of the Ordinance’s conditional use standards for a
    warehouse. According to the Board, Mushroom Hill’s written application, plus its
    witnesses’ testimony, did not provide sufficiently detailed information as to the type
    of products to be stored and distributed (including the possibility of toxic or
    hazardous materials), the potential environmental impact of the project, the proposed
    hours of operation, the impact on the adjacent residential neighborhood and
    elementary school, the impact on traffic patterns and volume, buffering of the
    adjacent residential neighborhood, the health and safety of nearby residents, and site
    suitability in terms of slopes, geology, woodlands, and wildlife. Id. at 18-25.
    On Mushroom Hill’s appeal, the trial court reversed.           The court
    concluded that the Board’s recitations of the Mushroom Hill witnesses’ testimony
    in the “Findings of Fact” portion of its decision were actually “facts found by the
    Board” and that sufficient evidence therefore existed to approve Mushroom Hill’s
    application. Trial Ct. Op. at 4-5. The trial court also concluded that the Board’s
    determination had improperly imposed requirements on Mushroom Hill that
    exceeded the limited scope of conditional use proceedings. Id. at 6. Finally, the trial
    court concluded that the Board mistakenly relied on and elevated the community
    residents’ comments, which the trial court characterized as speculation, bald
    5
    assertions, perceptions, and personal opinions, to the level of competent evidence.
    Id. at 7-8. The Board appeals to this Court.4
    II. Parties’ Arguments
    The Board argues that the trial court erred in reversing its determination
    that Mushroom Hill failed to meet its burden as to all of the criteria for warehouses
    as a conditional use in the C-G Zoning District. Bd.’s Br. at 16. The Board asserts,
    for example, that Mushroom Hill failed to comply with the Ordinance’s requirement
    that an applicant must provide “a detailed description of the proposed use” in each
    of the eight enumerated factors in the subsections of Section 295-94.1(B). Id. at 16.
    For example, the Board notes that subsection 1 requires a “detailed description” of,
    inter alia, “the types of materials” to be stored in a proposed warehouse, but
    Mushroom Hill’s application states only that the proposed warehouses will process
    “consumer retail products,” which the Board contends is insufficient. Id. at 16-17.
    The Board also avers that the trial court erred in viewing the Board’s
    recitation of the Mushroom Hill witnesses’ testimony as actual facts found by the
    Board. The Board points to the latter part of the decision, which expresses only that
    the Board found the community residents’ statements and comments credible. Id. at
    34-37.
    4
    In a land use appeal, where the trial court does not take additional evidence, this Court’s
    scope of review is limited to determining whether the local governing body committed an error of
    law or an abuse of discretion. In re Thompson, 
    896 A.2d 659
     (Pa. Cmwlth. 2006). An abuse of
    discretion will be found only where the findings of the governing body are not supported by
    substantial evidence. 
    Id.
     Substantial evidence is “such relevant evidence as a reasonable mind
    might accept as adequate to support a conclusion.” Valley View Civic Ass’n v. Zoning Bd. of
    Adjustment, 
    462 A.2d 637
    , 640 (Pa. 1983). Our review of whether the governing body committed
    an error of law is conducted de novo and we are not bound by the legal conclusions of the governing
    body or the trial court. EQT Prod. Co. v. Borough of Jefferson Hills, 
    208 A.3d 1010
    , 1025 (Pa.
    2019).
    6
    Mushroom Hill responds that it did provide sufficiently detailed
    descriptions of the various topics set forth for warehouses as a conditional use.
    Mushroom Hill’s Br. at 13. Mushroom Hill points out that Section 295.94-1(B) does
    not specify a requisite level of detail and argues that the Board created unwritten
    standards and effectively modified the terms of the provision in order to reach a
    desired conclusion of denying the application. 
    Id.
     Moreover, Mushroom Hill avers
    that the record evidence fully supports its application. For example, Mushroom Hill
    notes that it provided a detailed description of the proposed processing of the
    consumer products that the warehouse would be accepting and that the Ordinance
    does not require a more specific description than “consumer products,” which are a
    “type of material” as indicated in Section 295-94.1. Id. at 15.
    Mushroom Hill also maintains that the trial court correctly construed
    the Board’s description in its opinion of the Mushroom Hill witnesses’ testimony as
    fact because the recitation of that testimony appears within the decision’s “Findings
    of Fact” section. Mushroom Hill’s Br. at 5. Mushroom Hill avers that the trial court
    was not at liberty to determine which of the Board’s “Findings of Fact” were actually
    facts and which were not. Id. at 5-9. Mushroom Hill disagrees that because the
    Board expressly found the community residents’ comments credible, it implicitly
    discredited or rejected the Mushroom Hill witnesses’ testimony that it had already
    included in its “Findings of Fact.” Id. at 9-10. Moreover, Mushroom Hill argues
    that the trial court correctly distinguished between the credibility of the community
    residents’ purported testimony and whether it was competent, relevant, probative, or
    merely based on speculation or lay opinion. Id. at 10-11.
    7
    III. Discussion
    “[A] conditional use is one specifically recognized by the legislature as
    consistent with the zoning plan.” Aldridge v. Jackson Township, 
    983 A.2d 247
    , 253
    (Pa. Cmwlth. 2009). “As such, it is presumed the particular type of use does not, of
    itself, adversely affect public interest.” 
    Id.
     However, the “paramount duty” of the
    elected officials of a locality is to protect residents from harm to their persons and
    property, and conditional uses present the possibility that the property rights of
    neighboring landowners will be affected. See Luke v. Cataldi, 
    932 A.2d 45
    , 54 (Pa.
    2007). Conditional use appeals are analyzed on a case-by-case basis, each turning
    on the use requested and the language of the particular ordinance at issue. In re
    Richboro CD Partners, L.P., 
    89 A.3d 742
    , 749 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2014). A local
    authority is empowered to set specific conditions as a basis for approving a
    conditional use application. Coal Gas Recovery, L.P. v. Franklin Twp. Zoning
    Hearing Bd., 
    944 A.2d 832
    , 839 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2008). To do so, the locality must
    support those additional conditions with record evidence; however, the imposition
    of this requirement presupposes that the record, including the developer’s
    application and evidence, contains sufficient information to guide the locality in its
    task. See 
    id.
    “In addressing an application for a conditional use, a local governing
    body must employ a shifting burden of persuasion.” Aldridge, 
    983 A.2d at 253
    (footnote omitted). “First, the applicant must persuade the local governing body
    [that] the proposed use complies with the requirements in the ordinance for such a
    conditional use” at the time of submission. 
    Id.
     An applicant is not required to
    present every detail of the design of the proposed development at the conditional use
    stage, but merely expressing an intention or promise to comply with all zoning
    8
    requirements is insufficient to show entitlement to a conditional use. 
    Id.
     (collecting
    cases). If applicants were automatically entitled to conditional use approval based
    solely on a promise of future compliance, “it would make the approval process
    meaningless.” In re Thompson, 
    896 A.2d 659
    , 680 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2006). Moreover,
    compliance at the time of submission is required even though the conditional use
    inquiry involves only “the use of the land, as opposed to the particular design details
    of the development.” Joseph v. N. Whitehall Twp. Bd. of Supervisors, 
    16 A.3d 1209
    ,
    1215 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2011).
    Once the applicant satisfies its initial burden, “a presumption arises
    [that] the proposed use is consistent with the general welfare.” Aldridge, 
    983 A.2d at 253
    . “The burden then shifts to objectors to rebut the presumption by proving, to
    a high degree of probability, [that] the proposed use will adversely affect the public
    welfare in a way not normally expected from the type of use.” 
    Id.
    We are mindful that “ordinances are to be construed expansively,
    affording the landowner the broadest possible use and enjoyment of its land.”
    Aldridge, 
    983 A.2d at 253
    .       However, “a board of supervisors is entitled to
    considerable deference in interpreting its zoning ordinance.” 
    Id. at 254
    . These
    interpretations “become of controlling weight unless they are plainly erroneous or
    inconsistent” with the ordinance. Turchi v. Phila. Bd. of License & Inspection Rev.,
    
    20 A.3d 586
    , 594 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2011) (internal punctuation omitted).
    Local agencies are not bound by technical rules of evidence when
    conducting hearings. 2 Pa.C.S. § 554. Rather, they are empowered to consider “all
    relevant evidence of reasonably probative value.” Id. The need for such flexibility
    in matters of evidentiary admissibility is heightened in conditional use hearings
    conducted by localities, which, as noted above, have the “paramount duty” to protect
    9
    their residents from harm to their persons and property because conditional uses
    present the possibility that the property rights of neighboring landowners will be
    affected. Luke, 932 A.2d at 54.
    A. The Board’s Factual Recitation
    The parties dispute the proper characterization of the Board’s recitation
    of witness testimony in the “Findings of Fact” portion of its decision, particularly
    that of the Mushroom Hill witnesses. A review of this section reveals that the
    Board’s decision indicates that the recitation was merely a distillation of the various
    witnesses’ testimony. Bd. Op. at 5. The Board’s decision did not state or suggest at
    any time that the substance of the Mushroom Hill witnesses’ testimony was actually
    accepted as fact. For example, when Petkunas was asked during the hearing whether
    he anticipated that the proposal would cause negative environmental impacts on the
    area, he answered “No.” R.R. at 81a. In its decision, the Board stated that
    Mushroom Hill’s “witnesses provided the following testimony” and characterized
    Petkunas’s response as follows: “No adverse environmental impacts are
    anticipated.” Bd. Op. at 7. Subsequently in its “Conclusions of Law,” the Board
    stated: “The Application did not provide adequate information regarding
    environmental impacts that are likely to be generated . . . beyond the general
    statement that ‘No adverse environmental impacts are anticipated.’” Id. at 19. The
    Board did not specifically make a credibility determination with regard to
    Mushroom Hill’s witnesses.
    The Board’s decision could easily have expressed or addressed the
    distinction between its recitation of testimony and its credibility determinations and
    findings of fact, and local zoning entities are well advised to do so in order to avoid
    10
    the situation that has arisen in this matter. However, the Board’s import is clear
    enough that appellate review is not hindered, and the structure of the decision, albeit
    imperfect, does not indicate that the Board negated its findings of fact in its
    conclusions of law. Rather, as illustrated by the above example, to the extent the
    recitation of Petkunas’s testimony in the first part of the Board’s decision amounts
    to a finding of fact, that finding is limited to Petkunas having testified to his belief
    that no negative environmental impacts were expected; the Board ultimately rejected
    the substance of that testimony as fact. The same is true with regard to the Board’s
    presentation of the other Mushroom Hill witnesses, and the trial court erred in
    concluding otherwise. See Trial Ct. Op. at 4.
    B. Sufficiency of the Conditional Use Application
    Turning to the substantive questions at issue, Section 295-94.1 of the
    Ordinance governs warehouses and storage facilities as conditional uses in the
    Township’s C-G Zoning District. It provides:
    Warehouses or storage as a principal conditional use in the
    [C-G District] shall meet the following conditions:
    A. Minimum lot area: 15 acres.
    B. The applicant shall provide a detailed description of the
    proposed use in each of the following topics:
    (1) The nature of the on-site activities and
    operations, the types of materials stored, the
    frequency of distribution and restocking, the
    duration period of storage of materials, and the
    methods for disposal of any surplus or damaged
    materials. In addition, the applicant shall furnish
    evidence that the disposal of materials will be
    11
    accomplished in a manner that complies with state
    and federal regulations.
    (2) The general scale of the operation, in terms of
    its market area, specific floor space requirements
    for each activity, and the total number of employees
    on each shift.
    (3) Any environmental impacts that are likely to be
    generated (e.g., odor, noise, smoke, dust, litter,
    glare, vibration, electrical disturbance, wastewater,
    stormwater, solid waste, etc.) and specific measures
    employed to mitigate or eliminate any negative
    impacts.
    (4) Site planning. The application shall include
    proper site layout, internal circulation, parking,
    buffering, and all other elements of proper design as
    specified in this chapter.
    (5) Neighborhood. The proposed use shall not
    substantially change the character of any
    surrounding residential neighborhood after
    considering any proposed conditions upon
    approval, such as limits upon hours of operation;
    safety.
    (6) The proposed use shall not create a significant
    hazard to the public health and safety, such as fire,
    toxic or explosive hazards.
    (7) The proposed use shall be suitable for the site,
    considering the disturbance of steep slopes, mature
    woodland, wetlands, floodplains, springs and other
    important natural features.
    (8) Hours of operation.
    12
    Ordinance § 295-94.1(B) (emphasis added).
    Mushroom Hill therefore bore the initial burden to prove that its
    application and evidence complied with this provision, which required Mushroom
    Hill to present the Board with sufficiently detailed descriptions of how the proposed
    warehouse project would impact the areas set forth in each of the eight criteria.
    Aldridge, 
    983 A.2d at 253
    . The Board was tasked with interpreting the Ordinance
    and determining on behalf of the locality whether Mushroom Hill’s application met
    the Ordinance’s requirement of a “detailed description” of how the proposed
    warehouse project would address the enumerated criteria. Luke, 932 A.2d at 54;
    Aldridge, 
    983 A.2d at 254
    .
    1. Types of Materials Stored
    Subsection 1 of Section 295-94.1(B) required Mushroom Hill to
    provide, inter alia, a “detailed description” of the types of materials that would be
    stored in the proposed warehouses. Ordinance § 295-94.1(B)(1). In the narrative
    accompanying its application, Mushroom Hill stated: “No tenant has been identified
    at this time for occupancy of any of the proposed warehouse buildings. It is
    anticipated that the tenant will be in the consumer retail area, such that consumer
    products will be brought to the property, for storage and distribution out [] of the
    property.” R.R. at 389a. Petkunas confirmed in his testimony that a tenant had not
    yet been secured, but stated that “the highest probability is that we would have
    companies that specialize in consumer, not durable products, right? We’re talking
    13
    about cereals, hair [products], or all food products, maybe shoes, something of that
    nature.” Id. at 79a.
    At the ensuing hearings, community residents raised concerns that
    “consumer products” could also include hazardous or toxic materials such as paint,
    solvents, pesticides, fertilizers, or ammunition, and that the application failed to
    ensure that such items or substances would not be included. Id. at 263a & 306a-09a.
    One pointed out that the unannounced presence of such items or materials in the
    warehouses could be a danger to firefighters who might be called to the site in the
    event of a fire or other emergency. Id. at 339a. The proposed conditions Mushroom
    Hill submitted at the final hearing did not address this concern. See id. at 453a-54a.
    The Board concluded that the application did not provide sufficiently
    detailed information regarding the types of materials to be stored aside from a
    reference to “consumer products.”       Bd. Op. at 19.     According to the Board,
    Mushroom Hill “provided only general information regarding the frequency of
    distribution and restocking and the duration of storage of materials” and “provided
    no information regarding the methods for disposal of any surplus or damaged
    materials.” Id.
    The trial court, upon concluding that the Board’s recitation of the
    Mushroom Hill witnesses’ testimony averring the project’s compliance with Section
    295-94.1(B) amounted to findings of fact, reversed the Board’s decision. Trial Ct.
    Op. at 5. The trial court added that the Board’s conclusion that Mushroom Hill failed
    to provide sufficient information as to this and the other factors was erroneous, as it
    would have mandated more detail from Mushroom Hill than a conditional use
    proceeding required. Id. at 6.
    14
    Although the Ordinance does not specifically define or characterize
    exactly what would constitute a “detailed description” of the provision’s required
    factors, Mushroom Hill has not challenged Section 295.94.1(B) on the basis of
    vagueness or ambiguity.          We observe, however, that “detailed” is defined in
    Merriam Webster’s Dictionary as “marked by abundant detail or by thoroughness in
    treating small items or parts.”5 Likewise, the American Heritage Dictionary defines
    “detailed” as “[c]haracterized by abundant use of detail or thoroughness of
    treatment.”6 The common comparative term in these definitions is thoroughness,
    which by any common understanding requires something more from an applicant
    than a minimal or generic description.
    An ordinance may call for developers to provide detail in their
    applications even if the proposal is at a relatively early stage where full specifications
    are not yet required. In Elizabethtown/Mount Joy Associates, L.P. v. Mount Joy
    Township Zoning Hearing Board, 
    934 A.2d 759
     (Pa. Cmwlth. 2007), the ordinance
    required applicants to submit detailed plans for exterior lighting that could impact
    neighboring areas.7 
    Id. at 767
    . We agreed with the local board that the developer’s
    application for a shopping mall failed to do so and that the developer’s promises to
    comply with all requirements going forward were insufficient where it had provided
    5
    Merriam-Webster Online Dictionary, available at https://www.merriam-webster.com/
    dictionary/detailed (last visited March 7, 2022).
    6
    Am. Heritage Online Dictionary, available at https://www.ahdictionary.com/word/
    search.html?q=detailed (last visited March 7, 2022).
    7
    Elizabethtown/Mount Joy Associates is a “special exception case,” which are generally
    equivalent to conditional use matters: “A conditional use is nothing more than a special exception
    which falls within the jurisdiction of the municipal governing body rather than the zoning hearing
    board.” In re Thompson, 
    896 A.2d at 670
    . Therefore, “the law regarding conditional uses and
    special exceptions is virtually identical[.]” 
    Id.
    15
    only a conceptual plan for the project: “Simply put, a concept plan is insufficient to
    warrant the granting of a special exception; rather, to be entitled to receive a special
    exception, the applicant must come forward with evidence detailing its compliance
    with the necessary requirements.” 
    Id. at 767-68
    . The point of requiring some level
    of detail at the application stage is to ensure the local board has enough information
    to determine whether the applicant has demonstrated compliance with the
    requirements and the proposed use is truly appropriate. 
    Id.
     at 763
    Here, Mushroom Hill merely stated in its written application that the
    warehouses would retain tenants in “consumer retail,” and Petkunas’s only
    testimony on the matter was to suggest possibilities, such as food, beauty products,
    and shoes. R.R. at 78a-79a & 389a. Mushroom Hill never addressed the concerns
    raised by the residents about toxic or hazardous materials, either through witnesses
    or in the proposed conditions it prepared in response to the objections. See 
    id.
     at
    453a-54a.
    The Board has been tasked with protecting residents’ safety, interests,
    and property from harmful impacts due to development, and even in the relatively
    limited context of conditional use proceedings, the Board was within its discretion
    to conclude that Mushroom Hill’s response to this factor, which was limited to its
    statements that the warehouses would be for “consumer products” or tenants in
    “consumer retail” was neither sufficiently thorough nor sufficiently detailed to meet
    the requirements of Section 295-94.1(B). Even if, as Petkunas testified, warehouses
    are commonly developed on a speculative basis as to the ultimate tenants and
    products, this does not absolve Mushroom Hill of the responsibility to comply with
    the Ordinance’s requirements for approving a warehouse as a conditional use,
    including providing a “detailed description” of the types of materials to be stored
    16
    and processed. See R.R. at 79a-80a. And as noted, a mere stated intention to comply
    with all local requirements, as Mushroom Hill expressed throughout the proceedings
    before the Board, is insufficient to show entitlement to a conditional use. In re
    Thompson, 
    896 A.2d at 680
    .
    We therefore conclude that the Board did not err in concluding that
    Mushroom Hill’s application did not satisfy this factor.8
    2. Environmental Impacts
    Subsection 3 required Mushroom Hill to provide a detailed description
    of “[a]ny environmental impacts that are likely to be generated (e.g., odor, noise,
    smoke, dust, litter, glare, vibration, electrical disturbance, wastewater, stormwater,
    solid waste, etc.) and specific measures employed to mitigate or eliminate any
    negative impacts.” Ordinance § 295-94.1(B)(3). In the narrative accompanying its
    application, Mushroom Hill stated: “No adverse environmental impacts are
    anticipated. Restricting the truck traffic away from the residents to the south will
    reduce any noise impact.” R.R. at 389a. Petkunas reiterated this point in his
    testimony and added that no manufacturing would be taking place, so no smoke or
    fumes were expected, that any dust would be inside the buildings and not released
    outside, and that no heavy usage of electricity or creation of vibrations was expected.
    Id. at 77a & 81a-83a. Petkunas also averred that the project would not encroach on
    any sensitive natural areas. Id. at 84a-85a. Petkunas acknowledged that a fully
    detailed plan for stormwater runoff and sediment control had not yet been completed
    8
    The Board also credited the testimony and comments of the neighbors who objected to
    Mushroom Hill’s application. Bd. Op. at 16. We note, however, that since Mushroom Hill failed
    to show compliance with the Ordinance’s requirements, the burden never shifted to the residents.
    See Aldridge, 
    983 A.2d at 253
    .
    17
    but asserted that during that process, Mushroom Hill would engage the necessary
    state, county, and local authorities to ensure full compliance with any environmental
    requirements and standards. R.R. at 173a, 179a-80a, 186a, & 196a-98a.
    When questioned about this factor, Ferraro stated that Mushroom Hill
    planned to add trees between the warehouse facilities and the residential area as a
    noise barrier, but also acknowledged that concrete walls “would be more sufficient
    than trees.” R.R. at 175a-76a. Ferraro also testified that CRG has agreed to include
    a two-mile nature trail on the property for use by nearby residents and will
    “definitely consider” maintaining an existing trail already on the property. R.R. at
    91a-92a.
    Local residents raised numerous questions and concerns about the
    environmental impact of the project, including diesel fumes and emissions from
    trucks entering and leaving the site, groundwater contamination and release of radon
    gas from the underlying limestone, adverse impacts on local wildlife, the immediate
    and long-term effects of deforestation due to the clearcutting of mature trees required
    for the proposed construction, and similar problems in an area nearby where
    warehouses have been abandoned, but the natural terrain they sit on has not
    recovered from their construction and operation. R.R. at 239a, 319a-25a & 350a-
    52a.
    In its subsequent proposed conditions, Mushroom Hill promised
    compliance with noise, light, and sewer regulations, agreed to work with the
    Township to ensure minimal environmental impact from construction, and stated
    that it would consider using permeable pavement where possible “[i]f there is a
    benefit and other means of ground water infiltration are not used and allowed [by
    regulations and authorities] and economical, in [Mushroom Hill’s] sole discretion.”
    18
    
    Id.
     at 453a-54a. Mushroom Hill did not respond, either in testimony or in its
    subsequent written proposed conditions, to concerns about the continuous output of
    diesel exhaust, carbon monoxide, carbon dioxide, nitrogen, hydrocarbons, and
    nitrogen oxide from trucks coming to and leaving the proposed facility. See 
    id.
     at
    237a-39a & 453a-54a. The Board found Mushroom Hill’s submission for this
    criterion insufficient, concluding that adequate information had not been provided
    to meet the requirement of a detailed description “beyond the general statement that
    ‘[n]o adverse environmental impacts are anticipated’” and the promise to direct truck
    traffic away from the residential area. Bd. Op. at 19-20.
    Regarding what may meet a “detailed description” requirement in the
    context of environmental impact, Geiselman v. Hellam Township Board of
    Supervisors (Pa. Cmwlth., No. 805 C.D. 2020, filed Oct. 20, 2021), 
    2021 WL 4878980
     (unreported),9 is instructive. There, a conditional use application was
    sought to build a winery and event space in a location zoned for rural-agricultural
    use after two prior applications had failed to meet the township ordinance’s noise
    restrictions. Id. at 2, 
    2021 WL 4878980
    , at *1. The ordinance at issue required a
    “detailed written plan” explaining how the proposal would address such concerns.
    Id. at 5, 
    2021 WL 4878980
    , at *2. The applicants’ written submission was described
    as follows:
    In support of the application, Applicants submitted a
    written plan with “a detailed description of proposed
    winery events, sanitation provisions, [a] plan for noise
    control, an explanation of how amplified sound [would]
    be addressed, an explanation of how noise complaints
    [would] be addressed, and provisions for the control of
    9
    Unreported decisions of this Court issued after January 15, 2008, may be cited as
    persuasive authority pursuant to Section 414(a) of this Court’s Internal Operating Procedures. 
    210 Pa. Code § 69.414
    (a).
    19
    lighting.” On weekdays, the hours of operation would be
    from noon until 8:00 or 9:00 p.m., with the closing
    extended to 10:00 p.m. on Fridays and Saturdays. Sunday
    hours would be from noon until 5:00 p.m. All outdoor
    winery events would end by 10:00 p.m. and indoor ones
    by 11:00 p.m.
    Id. at 4, 
    2021 WL 4878980
    , at *1 (internal record citations omitted). The Board
    approved the application and specifically commended the applicants’ written
    submission; the trial court and this Court affirmed. Id. at 11, 
    2021 WL 4878980
    , at
    **5-6.
    In Williams Holding Group, LLC v. Board of Supervisors of West
    Hanover Township, 
    101 A.3d 1202
     (Pa. Cmwlth. 2014), the applicant sought
    conditional use approval for a proposed stormwater facility.          Before seeking
    approval, the applicant had secured permits for the project from the Pennsylvania
    Department of Environmental Protection and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. 
    Id. at 1218
    . The local board denied the application, and the trial court affirmed, but this
    Court reversed after determining that those permits, which were of record, amounted
    to substantial compliance with the zoning provision at issue in that case. 
    Id.
     at 1218-
    19.
    Geiselman and Williams Holding Group offer examples of due
    diligence where a conditional use ordinance requires detailed information from
    applicants. In both cases, the applicants expended recognizable effort in preparing
    their responses.   Here, Mushroom Hill has provided no evidence that it has
    considered the potential environmental impact of the proposed warehouses. Its
    20
    continued bald assertions, without more, that it will comply with all regulations are
    insufficient to establish entitlement to a conditional use. Aldridge, 
    983 A.2d at 25
    .
    Compared with the level of detail in the Geiselman application,
    Mushroom Hill’s submission cannot be said to provide a “detailed description” of
    how the environmental concerns of subsection 3 would be addressed. As the Board
    noted, Mushroom Hill’s application contained no description at all except a promise
    to direct truck traffic away from the residential area to lessen noise. Bd. Op. at 19-
    20. Mushroom Hill failed entirely to address any of the other environmental
    concerns raised by the community residents, such as groundwater contamination and
    radon release from the underground limestone if any blasting occurs during
    construction and the impact on local wildlife and federally protected migratory
    birdlife due to the need to clear-cut mature trees on the parcel in order to build the
    warehouses. R.R. at 319a-25a & 350a-52a.
    Mushroom Hill’s response to this factor, limited to promises that no
    adverse environmental impacts are anticipated from the project and to direct truck
    traffic away from the residential area, is more like the underdeveloped lighting plan
    in Elizabethtown/Mount Joy Associates. Bd. Op. at 19-20. That plan also provided
    few particulars and details while promising future compliance with any
    requirements. 
    934 A.2d at 767
    . There, as here, when an ordinance requires a level
    of detail in a use application, it is to ensure that sufficient due diligence has been
    undertaken by an applicant that promises of future compliance may not prove to be
    empty. 
    Id. at 763
    . Therefore, the Board acted within its discretion and did not err
    in concluding that Mushroom Hill failed to meet this factor.
    21
    3. Character of the Surrounding Neighborhood
    Subsection 5 required a detailed explanation assuring that the proposed
    facility “shall not substantially change the character of any surrounding residential
    neighborhood after considering any proposed conditions upon approval, such as
    limits upon hours of operation; safety.” Ordinance § 295-94.1(B)(5). In its narrative
    accompanying the application, Mushroom Hill stated: “The buildings are designed
    such that the truck movements will not occur between the buildings and the
    residential neighborhood to the south. Screening will be installed in this area.” R.R.
    at 389a.
    With regard to Chambers Hill Road, which runs south of the parcel and
    through the adjoining residential neighborhood, Petkunas testified that the road
    would have an access point to and from the site but did not mention any
    qualifications or limitations on access. R.R. at 72a-73a. Ferraro subsequently
    testified that based on a meeting with Township representatives, access would no
    longer be from Chambers Hill Road. Id. at 93a-94a. Still later, however, Neal
    testified that based on a meeting with PennDOT, access from Chambers Hill Road
    had been restored to the plans with a limitation preventing vehicles from making left
    turns onto or from the road. Id. at 159a-60a & 171a. As of the final hearing,
    therefore, the proposal still anticipated truck traffic on Chambers Hill Road.
    Petkunas also testified that the proposal would exclude truck loading
    docks on the south side of the site in order to ensure distance from the residential
    community and that there would be no encroachment on sensitive natural areas in
    the vicinity. R.R. at 77a & 84a-85a. Ferraro added that Mushroom Hill would
    provide upgraded visual and noise buffering (trees, walls, or a combination of both)
    22
    in order to minimize impact on the neighborhood, include a new nature trail for
    residents, and would “definitely consider” maintaining an existing trail used by
    residents. Id. at 91a-93a & 166a-67a. When asked by a resident about the security
    and noise impact on the elementary school adjoining the property to the south,
    Ferraro acknowledged that the school had not yet been specifically considered but
    maintained that it would be part of the development process for the full land use
    plan. Id. at 176a-77a.
    Neal also testified that based on his traffic calculations, the project
    would not create unreasonable delays at the affected intersections and would not
    violate minimum “safe stopping sight distance” standards, which pertain to visual
    limitations on a vehicle driver’s ability to see an oncoming pedestrian or vehicle and
    stop in order to avoid a collision. R.R. at 104a-06a. He acknowledged, however,
    that based on his study, the warehouse facility would add an estimated 1,936 new
    total trips per day (both going to and coming from the facility) to the roads in the
    immediate vicinity, of which an estimated 766 would be trucks. Id. at 131a & 434a.
    Notably, the community residents asserted that Mushroom Hill’s
    application failed to provide a sufficient explanation of the project’s potential impact
    on the neighborhood (including the adjacent elementary school) in terms of traffic,
    environmental damage, property values, noise, fumes, and emissions from trucks,
    visual and noise buffering, safety issues for pedestrians, bicycle riders, and school
    buses, or drainage issues. R.R. at 267a-76a, 280a, 282a, 315a-18a & 350a-52a.
    In its subsequent proposed conditions, Mushroom Hill maintained that
    the proposal currently anticipated access to and from Chambers Hill Road via right
    turns only, but that it would fund a study on restricting all truck access to Chambers
    Hill Road along the length of the parcel to Mushroom Hill Road on the east, roughly
    23
    where the elementary school is located. R.R. at 453a. Mushroom Hill reiterated that
    it would provide additional trees and perhaps walls to buffer the residential area. Id.
    However, other than general promises to comply with all pertinent regulations for
    noise, light, sewer, and groundwater issues, Mushroom Hill’s proposed conditions
    did not specifically speak to the project’s impact on the character of the
    neighborhood, although the developer promised to contribute a total of $250,000 to
    the Township to offset potential adverse effects on residential properties “or for any
    other proper municipal purpose.” Id. at 454a.
    The Board found Mushroom Hill’s presentation with regard to this
    criterion insufficient, stating:
    The Application did not adequately prove that the Project
    would not substantially change the character of the
    surrounding neighborhood. In fact, the evidence presented
    proved the opposite. There were no conditions of approval
    that would correct this deficiency in the Application,
    including a limit on the hours of operation of the Project.
    The screening proposed by [Mushroom Hill] was woefully
    insufficient to adequately protect adjacent and
    neighboring residential areas from the impact of the
    proposed industrial use. The Project would clearly
    jeopardize safety in the immediate area, including traffic
    in the area of Route 322, [and] Chambers Hill and Penhar
    Roads.
    Bd. Op. at 20.
    The Board’s conclusion is supported by the record. For example, as
    discussed above, the written application states that “truck movements will not occur
    between the buildings and the residential neighborhood to the south,” but Mushroom
    Hill’s witnesses presented conflicting testimony, ultimately indicating that
    Chambers Hill Road truck access was planned, albeit with a limitation precluding
    24
    left turns into or out of the site. R.R. at 72a-73a, 93a-94a, 159a-60a, 171a & 389a.
    The written conditions proposed by Mushroom Hill at the final hearing also included
    the Chambers Hill Road truck access, merely adding a caveat that Mushroom Hill
    would fund a study on restricting such access. Id. at 453a. Mushroom Hill’s
    presentation also failed to address neighborhood concerns other than those involving
    Chambers Hill Road, such as Ferraro’s admission that Mushroom Hill had not given
    any specific consideration to the project’s impact on the elementary school adjoining
    the property to the south, even after Mushroom Hill learned of such concerns
    throughout the proceedings. Id. at 176a-77a.
    Accordingly, the Board did not abuse its discretion in concluding that
    Mushroom Hill’s presentation failed to provide sufficient detail on how the proposed
    warehouse project would impact the character of the adjacent residential area
    pursuant to subsection 5 of Section 295-94.1(B). This is particularly so considering
    Mushroom Hill’s own evidence that over 1 million square feet of new construction
    would be added and nearly 2,000 vehicles per day (including nearly 800 trucks)
    could be coming and going on the neighborhood’s main road where an elementary
    school bordering the site property is located. R.R. at 131a. In addition to the Board’s
    duty to protect the interests of local residents, deference is also due to local zoning
    authorities’ expertise in and knowledge of local conditions. See Luke, 932 A.2d at
    54; Tidd v. Lower Saucon Twp. Zoning Hearing Bd., 
    118 A.3d 1
    , 9 (Pa. Cmwlth.
    2015). The Board was likely well aware of the nature and character of the area at
    issue and the probable impact of this project on the neighborhood. Therefore, with
    25
    regard to this criterion, the Board acted within its discretion and did not err in its
    determination that Mushroom Hill failed to meet its burden of proof.
    4. Health and Safety Hazards
    Subsection 6 of Section 295.94.1(B) requires a detailed explanation
    assuring that the proposed facility “shall not create a significant hazard to the public
    health and safety, such as fire, toxic or explosive hazards.” Ordinance § 295-
    94.1(B)(6). In its narrative accompanying the application, Mushroom Hill stated:
    “The buildings will have sprinkler systems installed and toxic or hazardous materials
    are not anticipated to be stored in any great quantity.” R.R. at 389a (emphasis
    added).
    Petkunas reiterated that point in his testimony and added that
    Mushroom Hill would ensure compliance with all relevant regulations. R.R. at 85a
    & 197a. In response, residents raised concerns that diesel fumes and emissions from
    hundreds of trucks coming into and leaving the site daily would create health hazards
    for residents in the area that buffering could not prevent, that hazardous or toxic
    materials (paint, solvents, pesticides, fertilizers, or ammunition) would be on site,
    and that since the application failed to specify what would be stored in the
    warehouses, in the event of a fire or other emergency, first responders would not be
    sufficiently aware of hazards they might encounter on the site. Id. at 239a, 263a,
    306a-09a, 322a-23a & 339a. Mushroom Hill’s proposed conditions, which it
    submitted at the final hearing after hearing the residents’ concerns, did not address
    these issues. See id. at 453a-54a.
    The Board rejected Mushroom Hill’s presentation on this criterion as
    “vague and ambiguous,” in that “no guarantees or assurances were given that the
    26
    proposed use would not create a significant hazard . . . . [Mushroom Hill] appears
    to be attempting to preserve its right to store toxic or explosive hazardous materials
    within the [p]roject, and it has not adequately explained to the Board how it will
    safely accommodate such risks.” Bd. Op. at 20-21.
    Mushroom Hill’s presentation on this issue is particularly sparse given
    the level of detail produced by the applicants in Geiselman and the permits secured
    prior to application in Williams Holding Group, as discussed above in Section 2
    (discussing environmental impacts). Moreover, the issue in Geiselman was solely
    noise, which may be characterized as more of a nuisance factor than toxic or
    hazardous materials, which can cause actual bodily harm over the short or long term.
    By contrast, Mushroom Hill’s averment that it would not store such materials “in
    any great quantity” without disclosure or other safeguards, was insufficient to
    warrant approval, much like the lighting plan in Elizabethtown/Mount Joy
    Associates. In fact, the lighting plan found wanting in that case apparently had
    significantly more detail than Mushroom Hill’s response here. See 
    934 A.2d at 767
    .
    Moreover, Petkunas’s testimony that Mushroom Hill would comply with all relevant
    regulations, without more, was insufficient to establish entitlement to a conditional
    use. See In re Richboro CD Partners, 
    89 A.3d at 749
    . Therefore, with regard to this
    criterion, the Board acted within its discretion and did not err in concluding it had
    not been met.
    5. Impact on Existing Natural Features
    Subsection 7 requires a detailed description of the project’s site
    suitability “considering the disturbance of . . . mature woodland[s] . . . and other
    important natural features.”     Ordinance § 295-94.1(B)(7).       Mushroom Hill’s
    27
    application stated that the project “will not unnecessarily disturb” any mature
    woodlands and that it would comply with any federal regulations for impacted
    wetlands. R.R. at 390a. Petkunas reiterated that Mushroom Hill’s goal in this
    project was to stay away from sensitive natural areas. Id. at 84a-85a. Ferraro
    indicated that Mushroom Hill planned to provide new trees as buffers between the
    project and the residential area, maintain an existing nature trail, and consider adding
    a new trail, but did not speak specifically to how the project would impact the site.
    Id. at 91a-92a & 166a-67a. In response, residents expressed concerns for local
    wildlife, the effects of deforestation due to the clearcutting of mature trees required
    for the proposed construction, parts of the parcel that serve as temporary homes and
    nesting areas to federally protected migratory birds, and the example of nearby
    abandoned warehouse facilities on natural terrain that has yet to recover from the
    construction and presence of such facilities. R.R. at 323a-25a, 350a-52a & 453a-
    54a. Mushroom Hill’s subsequent proposed conditions did not specifically address
    this factor. See R.R. at 453a-54a.
    The Board concluded that Mushroom Hill’s application failed to
    provide sufficient information for this criterion:
    No information was provided by [Mushroom Hill]
    regarding the known karst geology of the site and the
    surrounding area and the construction and blasting hazards
    that may result from the Project. No information was
    provided regarding existing steep slopes, mature
    woodlands or wetlands and how they would be
    accommodated in the Project site.
    Bd. Op. at 21.
    This factor speaks to natural features of the landscape that, once
    disturbed by development, may be gone forever.             The Board, having local
    28
    knowledge of the setting and area, was well within its discretion to conclude that
    Mushroom Hill’s averment that it would try to avoid impacting natural areas lacked
    sufficient, or any, detail to assure the Board of Mushroom Hill’s ultimate ability to
    fulfill its promises of compliance. See Luke, 932 A.2d at 54; Elizabethtown/Mount
    Joy Associates, 
    934 A.2d at 763
    .           This is true even though conditional use
    proceedings are limited in nature, and particularly because a developer’s mere
    promise to comply with regulations is insufficient to warrant approval. Aldridge,
    
    983 A.2d at 253
    . In light of the foregoing, the Board did not err in finding Mushroom
    Hill failed to meet this criterion.
    6. Other Factors
    Mushroom Hill bore the burden to comply with all eight criteria set
    forth in Section 295.94.1(B) of the Ordinance and its failure to meet its burden
    regarding any one factor would be sufficient to support the Board’s denial of
    Mushroom Hill’s conditional use application. As set forth above, the Board did not
    err in finding Mushroom Hill failed to provide sufficiently detailed descriptions of
    its plans with regard to the above-discussed factors addressing the project’s external
    impact and relationship with the area and neighborhood. We note also that the
    Board’s overall conclusions are supported in the record by the testimony of Ihlein,
    who stated that from the perspective of the Township’s Planning Commission,
    Mushroom Hill had not initially provided sufficient information, and by the time of
    third hearing, several months later, “from what I see so far . . . [Mushroom Hill] still
    29
    has not met all of the tests in the conditions required by the Zoning Ordinance.” R.R.
    at 230a.
    However, in the interest of thoroughness, we conclude the Board was
    also within its discretion to determine that Mushroom Hill did not meet the
    additional factors, which pertain more to internal operations.         For example,
    subsection 8 required Mushroom Hill to provide a detailed description of the
    proposed hours of operation. Ordinance § 295-94.1(B)(8). Mushroom Hill’s
    application stated: “As no tenants have been identified, specific hours cannot be
    determined at this time. It is anticipated that one or two shifts would be operating
    between the hours of 7AM and 9PM typical of warehouse buildings in the area.”
    R.R. at 390a. Petkunas testified that while the bulk of activity happening outdoors
    within sight or sound of the neighborhood would probably occur between morning
    and evening, the written application response was not a guarantee that operations
    would be limited to those hours: “I expect 24-hour operations in these buildings.”
    Id. at 86a. In addition to residents’ concerns about daytime traffic on Chambers Hill
    Road, there were concerns that unrestricted overnight operations could affect the
    neighborhood’s quality of life. Id. at 263a. Mushroom Hill did not address this issue
    in the proposed conditions it submitted at the final hearing. See id. at 453a-54a.
    Given Mushroom Hill’s failure to commit to any restriction on the facility’s hours
    of operation or provide any detail about how much activity might occur during
    overnight hours when residents could be impacted by noise and light issues, the
    Board’s conclusion that Mushroom Hill failed to satisfy this factor was within its
    discretion. Bd. Op. at 21.
    30
    We therefore reverse the trial court and reinstate the Board’s denial of
    Mushroom Hill’s application.10
    IV. Conclusion
    For the foregoing reasons, the trial court’s order is reversed.
    __________________________________
    CHRISTINE FIZZANO CANNON, Judge
    Judge Wallace did not participate in the decision of this case.
    10
    As we uphold the Board’s determination that Mushroom Hill failed to meet the six
    Ordinance criteria discussed above, we do not reach the additional two criteria pertaining to
    “internal” issues (scale of the operation and site layout). We also do not reach the Board’s assertion
    that Mushroom Hill also failed to comply with other more general aspects of the Ordinance.
    31
    IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
    Mushroom Hill, LLC                   :
    :
    v.                        :
    :
    Swatara Township Board               :
    of Commissioners,                    :   No. 178 C.D. 2021
    Appellant                 :
    ORDER
    AND NOW, this 8th day of March, 2022, the January 27, 2021, order
    of the Court of Common Pleas of Dauphin County is REVERSED.
    __________________________________
    CHRISTINE FIZZANO CANNON, Judge