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Judge says Dockstader bridge must be removed

Sam Wilson Daily Inter Lake | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 9 years, 1 month AGO
by Sam Wilson Daily Inter Lake
| September 22, 2016 10:46 AM

A Flathead district judge on Monday voided Flathead County’s permit for a 540-foot bridge connecting Flathead Lake’s North Shore to Dockstader Island and ordered its removal.

Judge Robert B. Allison’s decision ruled in favor of a lawsuit filed in February 2015 by the Community Association for North Shore Conservation, finding that the county had violated the Lakeshore Protection Act.

In his decision, Allison wrote that actions by the county also precluded him from allowing the commissioners to make changes to the permit to bring it into compliance with the lakeshore regulations.

“The commissioners have shown the court their hand, and any remand would be meaningless,” Allison concluded in his ruling. “Thus, the court has no option but to declare the permit invalid and void [from the outset] and because the bridge was built without a permit, the remaining remedy is removal of the bridge and restoration of the lakeshore to its natural state.”

Since it was first proposed by developers Roger Sortino and Jolene Dugan in 2011, the bridge has elicited controversy in the North Shore area and prompted the creation of the environmental group opposing it. Dugan, who owns Dockstader Island and adjacent shoreline property, had joined with the county as an intervenor in the lawsuit.

Opponents have argued that the bridge would cause environmental damage to the lakeshore and nearby wetlands, detract from the scenic quality of the area and create a hazard for boat traffic.

In his decision, Allison sided with some of those arguments, noting that the county failed to consider visual impacts when it initially approved the permit, and appeared to reverse course in denying a permit amendment earlier this year that would have added minor decorative and structural changes to the bridge.

“The court is at a loss [as to] how basically cosmetic additions to a 481-foot bridge can cause these impacts, but the bridge itself does not,” he wrote.

Flathead County failed to properly apply criteria set forth by the lakeshore regulations, he added, and wrote that in its defense of the lawsuit, the county offered up “a standard of review that is not a standard of review and would essentially give the county carte blanche if a law grants them authority to make a decision.”

He further noted that because Dugan’s permit application did not specify a use for the bridge or refer to additional work that would be needed for a vehicular bridge, such as connecting roads, the county had accepted an incomplete permit and failed to consider the full impact of the project.

Community Association for North Shore Conservation Chair Dave Hadden hailed the decision as a victory for the state law regulating development on lakeside property.

“It’s a decision that really protects all of Montana and all of Montanans’ rights,” organization chair Dave Hadden said Thursday. “And without these decisions we would have no Montana Lakeshore Protection Act, and it would be a free-for-all on development around all of our beautiful lake.”

Deputy Flathead County Attorney Caitlin Overland, who is representing the county in the case, and an attorney for Jolene Dugan did not immediately return requests for comment Thursday.

The property owners have already invested significant resources into the project, which was granted five extensions by the county before its completion earlier this year.

Reporter Sam Wilson can be reached at 758-4407 or by email at swilson@dailyinterlake.com.

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