Dorr Earth Extraction ( 2015 )


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  •                                         STATE OF VERMONT
    SUPERIOR COURT                                                       ENVIRONMENTAL DIVISION
    Vermont Unit                                                           Docket No. 124-9-13 Vtec
    Dorr et al Earth Extraction Appeal                              DECISION ON THE MERITS
    This case involves a sand and gravel extraction operation on two parcels of land in the
    Town of Manchester, Vermont (the Town). The subject property is roughly located between a
    residential development known as Westview Estates and Town Shed Road, just east of U.S.
    Route 7, and is owned by Dorr Oil Co. and MGC, Inc. The extraction operations on both parcels
    pre-date the Town’s zoning ordinances, and therefore constitute a pre-existing use.
    On May 7, 2013 the Town Planning Director and Zoning Administrator (ZA) issued an
    Administrative Opinion letter to Donald Dorr stating that a zoning permit was needed to
    conduct earth extraction activity on either parcel. Donald Dorr, Dorr Oil Company, Inc., and
    MGC, Inc. (Appellants) appealed this opinion to the Town of Manchester Development Review
    Board (DRB).
    In an August 21, 2013 decision, the DRB affirmed the ZA’s determination that a zoning
    permit was necessary for all expansions1 of the surface area of extraction on land owned by
    Dorr Oil Co. and MGC, Inc. Appellants timely appealed that decision to this Court. Appellants
    ask this court to conclude that an expansion in the area being excavated does not require a
    permit. The Town takes the opposite position.
    The Court completed a site visit to the Property on the morning of October 16, 2014
    immediately followed by a merits hearing at Bennington District/Family Court in Bennington,
    Vermont. Appearing at the site visit and merits hearing were Appellants and their lawyer
    Nathan H. Stearns, Esq, and the Town through its lawyer Robert E. Woolmington, Esq. Several
    individuals who testified at the merits hearing also attended the site visit.
    1
    The Court notes that although the parties utilize the word “expansion,” the relevant provision of the Manchester
    Zoning Ordinance refers to “enlargement.” The Court understands the terms to be interchangeable and the
    parties use of “expansion” to refer to an enlargement under the Ordinance.
    1
    Based upon the evidence presented at trial, including that which was put into context by
    the site visit, the Court renders the following Findings of Fact.
    Findings of Fact
    1.     The property at issue is a parcel consisting of approximately 89 acres of land located off
    Barnumville Road in the town of Manchester (the Property). The Property is roughly
    situated between a residential development known as Westview Estates and Town Shed
    Road, just east of U.S. Route 7.
    2.     On July 22, 1987, Logan Dickie, Jr. and Phyllis Beattie Dickie conveyed the Property to
    Vermont to Real Estate Equities, Inc. (REEI).
    3.     On June 7, 1994, REEI conveyed approximately 47 acres of the northern portion of the
    Property (the Northern Parcel) to Dorr Oil Company. This included an approximately 50
    foot wide access road to the Northern Parcel that REEI had acquired after the 1987
    conveyance.
    4.     Also on June 7, 1994, REEI conveyed approximately 42 acres of the southern portion of
    the Property (the Southern Parcel) to Donald Dorr in his individual capacity.
    5.     On May 9, 1995 REEI executed a document entitled “Corrective Warranty Deed” that
    purported to convey the Northern Parcel to Donald Dorr in his individual capacity. That
    same day, Mr. Dorr executed a warranty deed that purported to convey the Northern
    Parcel to MGC, Inc., a corporation controlled by Mr. Dorr.
    6.     A significant deposit of sand and gravel extends throughout the Property.
    7.     At least three areas on the Southern Parcel and one area on the Northern Parcel were
    used for sand and gravel extraction operations prior to the adoption of the Town of
    Manchester Zoning Ordinance in 1970.
    8.     The parties dispute the extent, timing, and continuation of those extraction operations.
    9.     The parties agree that there has been expansion of the areas that have been physically
    disturbed in order to extract sand and gravel from the Property.
    10.    The parties dispute the extent, location, and timing of this expansion.
    2
    11.   On November 9, 1972, Albert Rossi obtained Act 250 Land Use Permit #8B0018 to
    develop a 19-lot subdivision on a parcel of land abutting what is now the Northern
    Parcel.
    12.   On November 24, 1987, REEI and Richard Booth obtained an amendment to Land Use
    Permit #8B0018 (#8B0018-1) that reconfigured the previously approved subdivision.
    13.   On July 25, 1990, Richard Booth obtained Vermont State Subdivision Permit EC-8-0760
    authorizing a 19-lot subdivision on the Northern Parcel on behalf of REEI.
    14.   On September 7, 1990, Richard Booth obtained Act 250 approval for a 19-lot subdivision
    on the Northern Parcel under Permit #8B0018-2.           The Permit was amended on
    September 25, 1992 as Permit #8B0018-3 and again on October 11, 1994 by the current
    owner of the Northern Parcel, Donald Dorr, as Permit #8B0018-4.
    15.   In a decision dated May 14, 1990, the Town of Manchester Zoning Board of Adjustment
    (ZBA) approved a 19-lot subdivision on the Northern Parcel and Town Permit # 89-04-15
    was issued to the then-owner Richard Booth on May 22, 1990. The ZBA decision
    prohibited the extraction of gravel except as part of the construction of the
    infrastructure and residential uses contemplated in the subdivision permit. Gravel
    extraction for sale was expressly prohibited.
    16.   On October 14, 1992, the ZBA approved amendments to Town Permit # 89-04-15
    related to the access road and the use of a fire pond in lieu of water storage tanks, as
    originally approved. A Permit was issued based on this decision on November 17, 1992.
    17.   On May 7, 2013 the Town Planning Director and Zoning Administrator (ZA) issued an
    Administrative Opinion letter to Donald Dorr stating that a zoning permit was needed to
    conduct earth extraction activity on either the Northern or Southern Parcels. Donald
    Dorr, Dorr Oil Company, Inc., and MGC, Inc. (Appellants) appealed this opinion to the
    Town of Manchester Development Review Board (DRB).
    18.   In an August 21, 2013 decision, the DRB affirmed the ZA’s determination that a zoning
    permit was necessary for any expansion of the area where extraction occurs on the
    Property.
    19.   Appellants timely appealed the DRB’s August 21 decision to this Court.
    3
    Discussion
    The parties primarily dispute what constitutes the “expansion” of a preexisting sand and
    gravel extraction operation such that a municipal permit is required. The parties agree on two
    facts: first, that the gravel extraction operations on the Southern and Northern Parcels existed
    prior to the current zoning ordinance, and second, that the areas where the extraction
    operations occur have expanded since the adoption of the zoning ordinance.
    I.     Questions 1 & 2
    Appellants’ Statement of Questions (SOQ) raises the following two questions relating to
    what constitutes an “expansion” of a preexisting sand and gravel extraction operation:
    1. Whether or not continuation of the lawful, pre-existing use of Appellants’ property
    as a sand and gravel extraction operation, including the natural expansion thereof,
    where said use existed prior to the enactment of Section 8.3.2 of the Town of
    Manchester Zoning Ordinance, constitutes, without more, an “enlargement of the
    area on which such operations are conducted,” such that a zoning permit is required
    pursuant to Section 8.3.2 of the Town of Manchester Zoning Ordinance.
    2. Whether or not the natural continuation of Appellants’ pre-existing sand and gravel
    extraction use of their property, without an expansion of the lot or parcel of land on
    which the use is occurring, can constitute an “enlargement of the area on which
    such operations are conducted” pursuant to Section 8.3.2 of the Zoning Ordinance.
    The parties disagree on the scope of the Court’s review of these two questions.
    Appellants assert that Questions 1 & 2 set forth a very narrow review of whether the
    enlargement of the area on which the sand and gravel extraction operations are conducted
    requires Appellants to obtain a permit under § 8.3.1. Appellants point to the DRB’s decision in
    support of the narrow scope of these questions, which focused on the “enlargement of the
    area” language in Section 8.3.2 as the relevant standard for determining whether a permit is
    required. The Town argues that the Court’s review should be more broad and include whether
    an expanded use requires a permit.
    Our jurisdiction is limited to the issues presented in statements of questions filed by
    appellants. In re Garen, 
    174 Vt. 151
    , 156 (2002). The Vermont Supreme Court has directed,
    however, that the literal phrasing of issues raised in statements of questions cannot practically
    be considered in isolation from the decision below that prompted the appeal. In re Jolley
    4
    Assocs, 
    181 Vt. 190
    , 194 (2006). Neither Question 1 or 2 raises issues related to expanded use.
    Furthermore, the DRB’s August 21, 2013 decision determined that the standard within the
    Zoning Ordinance for determining whether a zoning permit is required for Appellants’ pre-
    existing earth-extraction operation is whether there has been an enlargement of the area on
    which such operations are conducted. In re Appeal of Donald Dorr, et al, Findings of Fact,
    Conclusions and Order, at 2–3 (Town of Manchester Dev. Review Bd. Aug. 21, 2013).
    This Court cannot review issues not raised in a statement of questions. Village of
    Woodstock v. Bahramian, 
    160 Vt. 417
    , 424 (1993). If the Town wanted this Court to review the
    standard applied by the DRB, it was required to file a notice of cross-appeal and raise the issue
    in a statement of questions. We therefore conclude that our review of whether a permit is
    required under the current ordinance is limited to whether there has been an enlargement of
    the area on which the sand and gravel extraction operations are conducted.
    We look to the Town of Manchester Zoning Ordinance (the Ordinance) for guidance in
    answering Questions 1 and 2. The Ordinance has a section dedicated to “Earth Products
    Removal.” Ordinance § 8.3. This section allows for the removal of “[t]opsoil, rock, sand, gravel,
    or similar materials” in any district, provided a special permit is issued by the Development
    Review Board. Id. at § 8.3.1. In addition to satisfying all criteria for conditional use approval,
    “including considerations of noise and vibration,” this special permit also requires consideration
    of grading plans, drainage plans, and reclamation of the site after conclusion of the operation,
    as well as special consideration for removal of earth resources from streambeds. Id. The
    Ordinance further provides that “[e]xisting sand and gravel, or other extractive operations,
    must conform with the bylaw from its effective date with respect to any enlargement of the
    area on which such operations are conducted.” Id. at § 8.3.2 [emphasis added]. Thus, we
    consider whether § 8.3.2 requires Appellants to obtain a permit under § 8.3.1 in order to
    continue sand and gravel extraction on the Property in the context of the above findings of fact.
    The familiar rules of statutory construction apply to the interpretation of a zoning
    ordinance. In re Appeal of Trahan, 
    2008 VT 90
    , ¶ 19, 
    184 Vt. 262
    . We will “construe words
    according to their plain and ordinary meaning, giving effect to the whole and every part of the
    ordinance.” 
    Id.
     Where the plain meaning of the ordinance is clear it must be enforced and no
    5
    further interpretation is necessary.      Vermont Alliance of Nonprofit Orgs. v. City of
    Burlington, 
    2004 VT 57
    , ¶ 6, 
    177 Vt. 47
     (citing Hill v. Conway, 
    143 Vt. 91
    , 93 (1983)). In
    construing statutory or ordinance language, our “paramount goal” is to implement the intent of
    its drafters. Colwell v. Allstate Ins. Co., 
    2003 VT 5
    , ¶ 7, 
    175 Vt. 61
    . We will therefore “adopt a
    construction that implements the ordinance's legislative purpose and, in any event, will apply
    common sense.” In re Laberge Moto-Cross Track, 
    2011 VT 1
    , ¶ 8, 
    189 Vt. 578
     (quotations
    omitted).
    The Town argues that based on the plain language of section 8.3.2, any enlargement of
    the area being excavated requires a permit because the area being excavated is the area where
    operations are conducted. Appellants argue that under the “diminishing assets” doctrine, the
    majority rule in the United States, the parcel containing the resource itself constitutes the area
    on which the operations are conducted.         Appellants argue that if the Court adopts the
    diminishing assets doctrine, a mere expansion of the area being excavated since the adoption
    of the zoning ordinance cannot be grounds to require a permit under the Ordinance as a matter
    of law. As one court has described the diminishing assets doctrine:
    In a quarrying business the land itself is a material or resource. It constitutes a
    diminishing asset and is consumed in the very process of use. Under such facts
    the ordinary concept of use . . . must yield to the realities of the business in
    question and the nature of its operations. We think that in cases of a
    diminishing asset the enterprise is “using” all that land which contains the
    particular asset and which constitutes an integral part of the operation,
    notwithstanding the fact that a particular portion may not yet be under actual
    excavation. It is in the very nature of such business that reserve areas be
    maintained which are left vacant or devoted to incidental uses until they are
    needed. Obviously it cannot operate over an entire tract at once.
    Du Page County v. Elmhurst-Chicago Stone Co., 
    165 N.E.2d 310
    , 313 (Ill. 1960).
    In our October 10, 2014 decision on summary judgment, we provided the following
    conclusion. After considering all evidence introduced during our merits hearing, we affirm this
    conclusion:
    To date, neither this Court, nor the Vermont Supreme Court, has
    expressly adopted the diminishing assets doctrine with respect to local
    zoning regulations. Prior Act 250 decisions are, however, illustrative of
    the issue before the Court. In considering whether preexisting gravel
    extraction operations require a State Land Use (Act 250) Permit, the
    6
    former Environmental Board has adopted a similar rule based on similar
    reasoning:
    The Board has previously ruled that contiguous expansion
    of the excavation area within the pre-existing tract is not a
    change, provided that the excavation operation is
    expanded and operated in essentially the same manner as
    it was before [the adoption of Act 250]. It is in the nature
    of gravel pits to continue to expand the extraction area
    while following a gravel vein.
    E.g. Re: Dale E. Percy, Inc., Declaratory Ruling No. 251, Findings of Fact,
    Conclusions of Law, and Order at 5 (Vt. Envtl. Bd. Mar. 26, 1992)
    (citations omitted).2 We find no reason why this same logic and
    reasoning should not apply within the municipal land use context. Thus,
    we conclude that the area being used by an earth extraction operation
    includes not only the area of land presently disturbed but the entire
    parcel containing the resources on which extraction activities are taking
    place as well. An enlargement of the area of disturbed land, without any
    other changes, does not therefore require a permit under Ordinance §
    8.2.3.
    This determination, however, does not mean there are no limits on preexisting sand and
    gravel extraction operations, not does it infer that such an operation may never need a permit.
    Ordinance § 8.3.2 states that a pre-existing sand and gravel extraction operation needs a permit
    for “any enlargement of the area on which operations are conducted.” While we conclude that
    the diminishing assets doctrine informs the definition of “area on which such operations are
    conducted” under § 8.3.2, we do not review or determine in this proceeding whether § 8.3.2
    eliminates the requirement that preexisting operations obtain authorization before increasing
    extraction rates, truck traffic, or the type or amount of equipment in use.3
    2
    The Vermont Supreme Court has held that the diminishing assets doctrine does not obviate the requirement that
    a preexisting development receive an Act 250 permit if it undergoes a substantial change. In re L.W. Haynes, Inc.,
    
    150 Vt. 572
    , 574 (1988). It is within the context of these Act 250 cases that the Environmental Board has applied
    reasoning substantially similar to the diminishing assets doctrine and the Board’s reasoning was not disturbed by
    the Vermont Supreme Court on appeal. Re: Robert and Barbara Barlow, Declaratory Ruling No. 234, Findings of
    Fact, Conclusions of Law, and Order, at 8–9 (Vt. Envtl. Bd. Sept. 20, 1991) (applying rule similar to diminishing
    assets doctrine), aff'd, In re Barlow, 
    160 Vt. 513
     (1993).
    3
    Our October 10, 2014 Decision on Summary Judgment further stated:
    Case law also supports our finding that an increase in extraction rates, truck traffic, or the type
    or amount of equipment in use requires a permit. “One of the primary goals of zoning is to
    gradually eliminate nonconforming uses because ‘they are inconsistent with the purpose of
    developing use-consistent areas in communities.’ As such, we strictly construe zoning
    ordinances allowing nonconforming uses.” In re Casella Waste Management, Inc., 
    2003 VT 49
    ,
    7
    Finally, evidence was offered that the Northern Parcel is subject to both State and
    Municipal permits that prohibited sand and gravel extraction operations. The parties disagree
    as to the status of these permits.4 While it is inefficient to decline to review whether these
    permits have any bearing on questions 1 and 2, we conclude that the narrow scope of our
    review in this appeal does not allow us to consider the impact, if any, of these State and
    Municipal permits.
    II.      Questions 3, 4, & 5
    Appellants raise the following three related questions within their Statement of
    Questions (referred to hereinafter as the “JAM Golf Challenge”):
    3. Whether or not the provisions of Section 8.3.2 of the Zoning Ordinance specify
    sufficient conditions and safeguards to guide applicants and decision makers, or
    whether the language in said section is standardless and vague, such that Section
    8.3.2 should be deemed unenforceable.
    4. Whether or not Section 8.3.2 provides sufficient standards or definitions of its terms
    to allow an applicant or decision maker to determine the meaning of the terms
    “enlargement” or “area” in the context of Section 8.3.2.
    5. Whether or not the language of Section 8.3.2 provides sufficient notice to applicants
    as to what would constitute an “enlargement” of an “area” as required by due
    process of law.
    ¶ 9, 
    175 Vt. 335
     (quoting In re Gregoire, 
    170 Vt. 556
    , 559 (1999) (mem.)) (internal citations
    omitted). Within the Act 250 context, increased extraction rates at a preexisting gravel
    extraction operation and corresponding increases in the number and size of trucks entering and
    exiting the operation, which may result in a significant impact under the ten Act 250 Criteria,
    constitute a “substantial change” to the preexisting operation which requires an Act 250 Permit
    or amendment. In re Barlow, 
    160 Vt. 513
    , 522–23 (1993). We see no reason why significant
    changes in extraction rates, truck traffic, the type or amount of equipment being used, and
    similar factors would not constitute an expansion of a preexisting nonconforming sand and
    gravel extraction operation as well.
    As we conclude above in this merits decision, our scope of review in this appeal is narrow and does not include
    additional further consideration or analysis concerning extraction rates, truck traffic, or the type or amount of
    equipment in use. Thus, within this merits decision we do not revisit this further analysis. To the extent necessary,
    any conclusions reached in our October 10 Decision on Summary Judgment are hereby revised in accordance with
    V.R.C.P. Rule 54(b).
    4
    In an October 2014 decision, the Vermont Supreme Court affirmed that the Northern Parcel is subject to a valid
    Act 250 Land Use Permit (LUP) and that any continued gravel extraction requires an amendment to that LUP.
    Natural Res. Bd. Land Use Panel v. Donald Dorr, MGC, Inc., and Dorr Oil Co., 
    2015 VT 1
    , available at
    http://info.libraries.vermont.gov/supct/current/op2013-215.html.
    8
    The parties provided no evidence or argument on these three questions pre-trial, during
    trial, or post-trial. We consider these JAM Golf Challenges to argue that § 8.3.2 of the
    Ordinance contains “unduly vague and unenforceable” terms and that this Court should
    therefore void these provisions as unconstitutional.
    We remind the parties that when reviewing a municipal land use decision, we begin
    with the presumption that a zoning regulation is constitutional. In re Highlands Development
    Co., LLC, No. 194-10-03 Vtec, slip op. at 13 (Vt. Envtl. Ct. Feb. 2, 2010) (Wright, J.) (citing Hunter
    v. State, 
    2004 VT 108
    , ¶ 31, 
    177 Vt. 339
    ). “In the context of land-use regulation, our approach
    to complaints of standardless, arbitrary discretion focuses on the criteria for due process and
    equal protection.” In re Pierce Subdivision Application, 
    2008 VT 100
    , ¶ 19, 
    184 Vt. 365
     (citing In
    re Handy, 
    171 Vt. 336
    , 345-46 (2000). Regulations must therefore “specify sufficient conditions
    and safeguards” to guide both applicants and decisionmakers. In re Appeal of JAM Golf, LLC,
    
    2008 VT 110
    , ¶ 13, 
    185 Vt. 201
     (citing Town of Westford v. Kilburn, 
    131 Vt. 120
    , 122 (1973).
    As to due process, we consider whether the regulation provides standards or guidelines
    that “give notice to those seeking an understanding of what is regulated.”                In re Irish
    Construction Application, No. 44-3-08 Vtec, slip op. at 6 (Vt. Envtl. Ct. Nov. 2, 2009) (Durkin, J.)
    (citing In re Handy, 
    171 Vt. 336
    , 344-45, 
    764 A.2d 1226
     (2000)). This requires “guidance as to
    what may be fairly expected from landowners” and cannot leave an applicant “uncertain as to
    what factors are to be considered by the [municipal panel].” JAM Golf, 2008 VT at ¶ 14 (citing
    In re Miserocchi, 
    170 Vt. 320
    , 325 (2000)); Handy, 171 Vt. at 345 (citing Kilburn, 131 Vt. at 124).
    As to equal protection, we consider whether the regulation provides standards “that
    sufficiently guide municipal decisions.” Handy, 171 Vt. at 344–45 (citing Kilburn, 131 Vt. at
    124). This requires “a definite and certain policy and rule of action for the guidance of the
    [decision maker]” and cannot allow for the “exercise of discretion in an arbitrary or
    discriminatory fashion.” State v. Chambers, 
    144 Vt. 234
    , 239 (1984) (citing State v. Auclair, 
    110 Vt. 147
    , 163 (1939); Pierce, 2008 VT at ¶ 20 (citing Kilburn, 131 Vt. at 124).
    We will consider two factors to determine whether a regulation is void for vagueness
    and thus unconstitutional: first, whether the regulation provides basic standards sufficient to
    establish “a definite and certain policy and rule of action” to guide the decsionmaker and
    9
    prevent the exercise of discretion in an arbitrary or discriminatory fashion; and second,
    whether the regulation is “sufficiently precise that an ordinary person using the means
    available and ordinary common sense can understand the meaning and comply.” State v.
    Chambers, 
    144 Vt. 234
    , 239 (1984) (citing Citing State v. Auclair, 
    110 Vt. 147
    , 163 (1939));
    Rogers v. Watson, 
    156 Vt. 483
    , 491 (1991) (citing Brody v. Barasch, 
    155 Vt. 103
    , 111 (1990) (not
    necessary to “detail each and every act or conduct that is prohibited” as long as language
    “conveys a definite warning as to proscribed conduct when measured by common
    understanding and practices”). The regulatory provision must therefore define the particular
    resource or feature to be protected and provide standards against which the decisionmaker will
    assess the application relative to those features. Highlands, No. 194-10-03 Vtec, slip op. at 15.
    We remind the parties, however, that land use regulation is “an area where some
    imprecision and generality is necessary and inevitable” and that some degree of flexibility is
    permitted. Rogers, 156 Vt. at 491; see also Handy, 171 Vt. at 349; Kilburn, 
    131 Vt. 124
     (“On one
    hand the standards governing the delegation of such authority should be general enough to
    avoid inflexible results, yet on the other hand they should not leave the door open to unbridled
    discrimination.”). It is not unconstitutional if a regulation is general enough to avoid inflexible
    results as long as it is “accompanied by some ability of landowners to predict how discretion
    will be exercised” and specificity sufficient to prevent “ad-hoc decision making that is
    essentially arbitrary.” Highlands Development Co., LLC, No. 194-10-03 Vtec, slip op. at 14-15
    (citing JAM Golf, 2008 VT at ¶13-14); Handy, 171 Vt. at 349; Miserocchi, 170 Vt. at 325. For this
    reason, we consider the regulation in the context of the entire ordinance so that “even if some
    of the bylaws’ objectives are general,” it may be constitutional “as long as other provisions
    impose specific limits to guide and check the [decisionmaker’s] discretion.” Rogers, 156 Vt. at
    491; Pierce, 
    2008 VT 100
     at ¶ 24 (“By providing both general and specific standards for []
    review, the bylaw strikes an appropriate balance between providing guidance to the
    Commission and avoiding inflexible requirements which would defeat the creativity and
    flexibility required to effectuate the goals of the [bylaws].”)).
    Appellants’ challenge focuses on the language “enlargement” and “area” and Appellants
    seem to assert that these terms are of the type of standardless language which gives the
    10
    decision maker unfettered discretion. As noted above, “[o]ur goal in interpreting [a zoning
    regulation], like a statute, ‘is to give effect to the legislative intent.’” In re Bjerke Zoning Permit
    Denial, 
    2014 VT 13
    , ¶ 22 (quoting Lubinsky v. Fair Haven Zoning Bd., 
    148 Vt. 47
    , 49 (1986)). We
    will “construe words according to their plain and ordinary meaning, giving effect to the whole
    and every part of the [regulation].” In re Appeal of Trahan, 
    2008 VT 90
    , ¶ 19, 
    184 Vt. 262
    .
    Because zoning regulations limit common law property rights, we resolve any uncertainty in
    favor of the property owner. Bjerke Zoning Permit Denial, 
    2014 VT 13
    , ¶ 22.
    Ordinance Section 8.3.2 states:
    Existing sand and gravel, or other extractive operations, must conform with this
    bylaw from its effective date with respect to any enlargement of the area on
    which such operations are conducted.
    Section 8.3.2 clearly defines sand and gravel extraction operations as the particular
    resource or feature to be protected and provides “any enlargement” as a standard relative to
    those features on review. Furthermore, we believe an ordinary person using the means
    available and ordinary common sense can understand the meaning and comply with § 8.3.2.
    Rogers v. Watson, 
    156 Vt. 483
    , 491–91 (1991). We therefore disagree with Appellants assertion
    and conclude that § 8.3.2 provides sufficient guidance to prevent unbridled discrimination. To
    conclude otherwise would allow any legal dispute over terms or language within an ordinance
    to potentially result in the municipal ordinance being rendered unenforceable. This would be
    an irrational result which we always endeavor to avoid. See, e.g. In re Stowe Club Highlands,
    
    164 Vt. 272
    , 280 (1995) (rejecting construction of a zoning regulations that lead to irrational
    results
    It is only when the regulatory scheme, considered in its entirety, provides limitless
    discretion and opens the door to arbitrary and discriminatory decisions that the presumption of
    constitutionality be overcome and the offending regulations struck down. The Ordinance at
    issue in this case provides sufficient standards by the plain meaning of the phrase “any
    enlargement” of existing extractive operations, combined with our clear legal precedent,
    thereby providing clear guidance to the municipal panel, or this Court on appeal. We therefore
    conclude that § 8.3.2 is enforceable.
    11
    III.   Question 6
    The final question raised by Appellants is as follows:
    6. Whether or not section 8.3 of the Zoning Ordinance renders Applicants’ pre-existing
    sand and gravel operation a non-conforming use pursuant to Section 1.14 of the
    Zoning Ordinance. If the answer is affirmative, does the diminishing asset doctrine
    apply; and if the diminishing asset doctrine is applicable, is the Applicants’ ongoing
    sand and gravel operation on its existing lands an enlargement of the area pursuant
    to Section 8.3.2 so as to require a special permit.
    The Ordinance at Section 1.14 provides the following two definitions:
    Nonconforming use: Use of land that does not conform to the present bylaw. . .
    Non-conforming Use: A use of land or of a structure which does not comply with
    the provisions of this bylaw. . .
    The Ordinance allows gravel extraction operations in every district so long as a special
    permit is obtained. Ordinance at § 8.3.1 (“Topsoil, rock, sand, gravel, or similar materials may
    be removed or taken from any district . . . .”). Absent an expansion of the area of extraction a
    preexisting use does not require a special permit.         Thus, Applicants pre-existing gravel
    extraction operations are not a nonconforming use under the Ordinance. Having reached this
    conclusion we need not address the remainder of SOQ 6.
    Conclusion
    A lawfully preexisting sand and gravel extraction operation may continue to expand
    along a vein of sand or gravel within the greater parcel without the expansion alone
    constituting an enlargement of the area on which such operations are conducted under the
    Town of Manchester Zoning Ordinance. The questions of whether other significant changes to
    a lawfully preexisting use may require that the operation come into compliance with the
    current zoning regulations is not presently before the Court. Keeping in mind our limited
    review in the present matter, we conclude that Appellants’ operation does not require a zoning
    permit under the Town of Manchester Zoning Ordinance.
    12
    We also conclude that the Ordinance at issue in this case provides sufficient standards
    to guide the municipal panel, or this Court on appeal, and therefore § 8.3.2 is not standardless
    or vague and is therefore enforceable. Finally, we conclude that Applicants’ pre-existing gravel
    extraction operations are not a Nonconforming use or a Non-conforming Use under the
    Ordinance.
    Electronically signed on February 27, 2015 at 10:30 AM pursuant to V.R.E.F. 7(d).
    _________________________________________
    Thomas G. Walsh, Judge
    Superior Court, Environmental Division
    13