Court Opinion

ID: 5129128
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-11-24 15:08:51.672472+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:02:20.311107
License: Public Domain

NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE
                            APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
     This opinion shall not "constitute precedent or be binding upon any court ." Although it is posted on the
  internet, this opinion is binding only on the parties in the case and its use in other cases is limited. R. 1:36-3.

                                                     SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
                                                     APPELLATE DIVISION
                                                     DOCKET NO. A-5525-17
                                                                A-2208-18

IN THE MATTER OF NEW
JERSEY DEPARTMENT OF
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
WATERFRONT DEVELOPMENT
PERMIT, FLOOD HAZARD AREA
INDIVIDUAL PERMIT AND
FLOOD HAZARD AREA
VERIFICATION, 1500-16-0004.1
WFD16001, 1508-18-0002.1
FHA18001, and 1508-18-0002.1
FHA180002.
______________________________

IN THE MATTER OF NEW
JERSEY DEPARTMENT OF
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
FRESHWATER WETLANDS
GENERAL PERMIT #1 AND
WATER QUALITY CERTIFICATE
PERMIT NO. 1508-18-0002.1
(FWW180001).
______________________________

                Argued November 8, 2021 – Decided November 24, 2021

                Before Judges Sabatino, Rothstadt and Mayer.
        On appeal from the New Jersey Department of
        Environmental Protection.

        R. William Potter argued the cause for appellants
        Martha Steinberg, Gamal El-Zoghby, Michael Knight,
        Ricardo Valdes, Michael Pierro, Michele Pierro,
        David Fox, Andreas Beutler, Michaela Banck, The
        New     Jersey     Conservation     Foundation, and
        Environment New Jersey (Potter and Dickson,
        attorneys; R. William Potter, on the briefs).

        Jason Brandon Kane, Deputy Attorney General,
        argued the cause for respondent New Jersey
        Department of Environmental Protection (Andrew J.
        Bruck, Acting Attorney General, attorney; Melissa H.
        Raksa, Assistant Attorney General, of counsel; Jason
        Brandon Kane, Deputy Attorney General, on the
        brief).

        Amy Chung, Deputy Attorney General, argued the
        cause for respondent New Jersey Department of
        Transportation (Andrew J. Bruck, Acting Attorney
        General, attorney; Melissa H. Raksa, Assistant
        Attorney General, of counsel; David M. Kahler,
        Deputy Attorney General, on the brief).

        Afiyfa H. Ellington argued the cause for intervenor
        Westecunk Creek Association (Giordano, Halleran &
        Ciesla, PC, attorneys; Michael J. Gross and Afiyfa H.
        Ellington, on the brief).

        Daniel A. Greenhouse argued the cause for amicus
        curiae Save Barnegat Bay (Eastern Environmental
        Law Center, attorneys; Daniel A. Greenhouse and
        William D. Bittinger, on the brief).

PER CURIAM

                                                                A-5525-17
                                 2
        This consolidated appeal challenges three permits issued by the

Department of Environmental Protection ("the DEP") in 2018 to its fellow

state agency, the Department of Transportation ("the DOT"). If they are valid,

the permits allow the DOT to (1) dredge three waterways that flow into the

Barnegat Bay; and (2) deposit the wet dredged material into a nearby earthen

pit known as a confined disposal facility ("CDF") in Eagleswood Township in

Ocean County. The dredged material placed in the CDF eventually dries out,

and can be used for other purposes.

        The West Creek CDF was originally built in 1966. Further construction

of it took place pursuant to a five-year permit issued in 1983 by the DEP, with

the approval of the Army Corps of Engineers ("Army Corps"). The project

authorized by that permit involved the dredging of a single waterway, the

Westecunk Creek. In the ensuing decades since 1983, the CDF's eastern berm,

facing the bay, has substantially eroded and several people have built and

occupied homes across from the CDF. The DOT purchased the CDF site in

2006.

        The challenged 2018 permits would allow the DOT to relocate soil into

and raise the berm walls of the CDF from an above-ground height of about six

feet to a height of up to fifteen feet. Doing so increases the cubic volume of

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the CDF by approximately six times the capacity that had been approved and

built in 1983.

      Appellants are several residents and two environmental groups who

complain the present construction of the CDF disturbs the wetlands and

threatens endangered species. Although they do not contest the DEP permi ts

insofar as they authorize the dredging of the waterways, appellants contend the

permits concerning the CDF are invalid under the applicable statutes and

regulations.     As part of that contention, they argue the CDF has been

abandoned since 1983.

      Among      other   things,   appellants   and   an   amicus   environmental

organization assert that the DEP improperly issued a "General Permit" under

N.J.S.A. 13:9B-23 of the Freshwater Protection Act, N.J.S.A. 13:9B-1 to -30

("FWPA") for the CDF project. They argue the DEP should have conducted

the more rigorous process for issuing what is commonly known as an

"Individual Permit" under N.J.S.A. 13:9B-9 of FWPA.           For this and other

reasons, they seek to rescind the permits and halt the ongoing construction of

the CDF.

      Respondents, the DEP and the DOT, joined by an intervenor group of

boat owners and others who use the waterways being dredged under the

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permits, argue the permits in question are all valid and comport with the

applicable environmental statutes and regulations.    As a key part of their

defense, respondents contend the current CDF project is merely a fortification

of the CDF previously approved in 1983 and that it does not require an

Individual Permit under FWPA. Respondents further contend the conditions

set forth in the permits adequately protect the environment and local wildlife

habitats.

      For the reasons that follow, we remand this matter to the DEP for

reconsideration and more specific findings addressing whether the CDF project

complies with the applicable freshwater wetlands regulations. Among other

things, the DEP must (1) address what appears to be the substantial

enlargement of the CDF from its 1983 dimensions and whether that is an

"expansion" disallowed under a General Permit; (2) address whether the CDF

as rebuilt in 1983 was subsequently abandoned; (3) address whether depositing

dredged material from three waterways rather than one into the CDF is allowed

by a General Permit, and; (4) perform a more fulsome analysis of whether the

deviations from the 1983 project are only "minor," giving explicit

consideration to the objectors' expert reports.

                                                                       A-5525-17
                                       5
      In all other respects, we reject appellants’ legal challenges and affirm on

those issues.

                                       I.

      This matter specifically concerns permits issued by the DEP’s Division

of Land Use to the DOT’s Office of Maritime Resources ("OMR") approving

of permits for two projects: (1) a June 27, 2018 Waterfront Development

("WFD") Individual Permit (in-water) and Flood Hazard Area ("FHA")

Individual Permit and Verification, authorizing the DOT to conduct hydraulic

maintenance dredging of three channels to improve vessel navigation in the

Barnegat Bay (the "dredging project"); and (2) a December 17, 2018

Freshwater Wetlands General Permit No. 1 ("FWWGP1" or "GP1") and

combined Water Quality Certificate ("WQC"), together authorizing the DOT to

renovate and reconstruct the West Creek CDF on Dock Road, at Block 1, Lot

2.01, in Eagleswood Township to maintain and store the dredged material (the

"CDF project").

      We recite for completeness the salient aspects of the extensive

administrative record.   In doing so, we note no adjudicatory factfinding

hearings were conducted, although the parties substantially agree on much of

the history.

                                                                          A-5525-17
                                      6
      History of the West Creek CDF

      The property in question is Block 1, Lot 2.01 on the Eagleswood

Township tax map. Lot 2.01 consists of approximately 25.914 acres on the

southern side of Dock Road, a twenty-four-foot wide, two-lane paved roadway

with a limited shoulder and no sidewalks. At the eastern dead-end of Dock

Road is a waterfront public park and Green Acres recreational pier. Across the

street from Lot 2.01 are residential waterfront properties mostly developed

after 1983 and, at the time of these appeals, owned by various appellants. The

northern boundary of these properties abuts the Westecunk Creek in

Eagleswood Township. Farther inland along Dock Road are properties owned

by some of intervenor's members, and there is a municipal boat ramp and boat

slip area near the inland limit of the Westecunk Creek.

      The western boundary of Lot 2.01 ends in a salt marsh that floods during

each high tide. The eastern boundary "grades gently to a sharp bay shore line"

into Little Egg Harbor. Until 2016, the interior of Lot 2.01 was overgrown by

a variety of trees and common reed grass that was "seasonally mowed." To the

west and south of Lot 2.01 are portions of the United States Fish and Wildlife

Service's Edwin B. Forsythe Wildlife Refuge.

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      Located on Lot 2.01 is the West Creek CDF, which was originally

constructed in 1966. The CDF had been used for the management of dredged

sediment from the maintenance dredging of Westecunk Creek in 1966, 1972,

and 1983. A CDF is designed to allow the sediment in the slurry from dredge

spoils to settle and the liquid to drain back into the waterway. When the

material is sufficiently drained, the dried dredged material can be used to

increase the size of the CDF's berms or can be removed with trucks and used

for other purposes.

      The Army Corps had authorized the 1966 and 1972 dredgings of

Westecunk Creek, which occurred before the DEP assumed jurisdiction over

such activities. The 1983 dredging project was jointly authorized by the DEP's

Division of Coastal Resources and the Army Corps.

      Private entities had owned the property on which the CDF was located

during each of these past dredging events. In December 1982, the property's

private corporate owner, Raymond Rosen & Co., granted the DEP's Bureau of

Coastal Engineering ("BCE") a one-year, one-time easement "for the use and

purpose of depositing spoil and all material excavated, dug, or dredged from

the Westecunk Creek together with . . . the right to deposit and leave thereon

sand, clay, gravel and other earth material." The easement also gave BCE the

                                                                       A-5525-17
                                     8
ability to excavate ditches, and build and replace retaining embankments or

walls, sluiceways, and spillways.

      Thereafter, on January 5, 1983, the DEP's Tidelands Resource Council

issued a blanket revocable license to the BCE for a term of five years to dredge

an area of land under the State's existing navigational channels and to place the

dredged material on State-owned or State-claimed disposal sites or other sites

that were privately owned or claimed.

      In March 1983, the DEP's Division of Coastal Resources issued to the

BCE a five-year WFD permit to "[m]aintenance dredge an existing

navigational channel in Westecunk Creek." According to that permit,

"[a]pproximately 52,000 cubic yards of materials are to be dredged . . . . The

dredged spoils are to be deposited at a previously used disposal area identified

as Block 1, Lot 2 in Eagleswood Township." The project plans showed that

the dredged quantity would be 52,233 cubic yards ("cy") and the "typical dike"

or berm would be between a minimum of six feet and a maximum of seven

feet. A discharge pipe would be installed from the eastern berm to drain the

liquids back into the waterway.

      In January 2000, the OMR and all of its functions, powers, budget and

personnel were transferred from the DEP to the DOT.

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                                        9
        Two years later, in January 2002, the DEP and the DOT entered into a

Memorandum of Agreement ("MOA") to "develop, implement and maintain a

comprehensive dredging and dredged material management and disposal plan

for the navigable waters of the State . . . ." The MOA provided the DEP with

funding to dredge "existing State navigation channels[,] including dredged

material disposal, siting and purchase/lease of dredged material disposal sites,

beneficial use projects, testing of material, and removal of hazards to

navigation."

        In 2005, the DEP met with local residents and township officials to

discuss dredging the Westecunk Creek. Since 2000, the DEP had received

hundreds of petitions seeking to have the Westecunk Creek dredged again to

make it more navigable for its "variety of users, including fishermen, boaters,

sportsmen and many local businesses which maintain their historic ties to the

bay."

        The DOT's Purchase of the Property and the PS&S Wetlands Study

        In July 2006, the DOT purchased Lot 2.01 for $520,000.

        In anticipation of renewed dredging activity, the State retained Paulus,

Sokolowski and Sartor, LLC ("PS&S"), an engineering firm, to prepare a

wetlands delineation report on Lot 2.01. In its February 2009 report, PS&S

                                                                         A-5525-17
                                      10
found that the construction of dikes and past discharge of fill had altered the

topography, vegetation, hydrology and soils on a majority of the site. The

report stated the discharge of fill materials from several past dredging events

had "compressed the original organic soils of the site and increased the

elevation from one to five feet above the adjacent marsh and isolated the

majority of the site from regular tidal inundation." Nevertheless, PS&S was

able to delineate the wetlands boundary "by changes in soil texture, depth to

groundwater and changes in the vegetation patterns," and "noted that the

transition from wetlands to uplands occurred gradually over a broad

transitional area." The report stated that "[d]uring one site visit near high tide,

no surface water was observed and ground water ranged from 0.75 to

approximately 2 feet below the ground surface."

      PS&S explained in the same report that during a second inspection,

"most of the site below elevation 2.2 feet was inundated at high tide ." Thus,

the report concluded that "[i]t is likely that nearly all of the site, except for the

higher elevations of the dikes, is inundated or saturated for at least a short

period during most years." The study substantiates the degree of erosion that

has occurred since 1983.

                                                                              A-5525-17
                                       11
      The 2010 Permit Applications

      In 2010, the BCE filed WFD and FWWGP1 applications to conduct

maintenance dredging of the Westecunk Creek to improve navigability and to

renovate the West Creek CDF to maintain the dredged material. Its proposed

plan was to dredge 138,862 cy from the Westecunk Creek and "rebuild" the

CDF on Lot 2.01 over 150 days with twelve-foot maximum height berms to

hold approximately 225,000 cy of dredged spoils.

      In response to BCE's permit applications, in September 2010, Clean

Ocean   Action    ("COA"),    an   environmental   coalition   advocating    for

"environmentally-sound beneficial use of dredged material," submitted a report

to the DEP with its conclusions about the project proposal. COA asserted that

the requirements for the freshwater wetlands general permit were not met and

that previous authorization for the project was "outdated and deficient." COA

noted the absence of any "specific requirements for the design, construction,

operation and maintenance, or interim/final closure of the CDF to prevent

adverse impacts to natural resources or public health." Reflecting upon all

three historical dredging events on the property, COA stated that

            the CDF should contain over 76,400 cubic yards (CY)
            of dredged material from 1972 and 1983 dredging
            events, plus an additional, unspecified portion of the
            100,000 CY generated during a 1966 dredging event.

                                                                        A-5525-17
                                     12
           The current elevation inside the 26-acre CDF,
           however, is only ~3 feet, suggesting a discharge of
           dredged material into the adjacent environment.

     Communications with the Army Corps

     In October 2010, the Army Corps requested additional information on

the BCE's proposals to conduct maintenance dredging in both Westecunk

Creek and Parkers Run, a nearby waterway in Little Egg Township. The BCE

told the Army Corps that only the portion of Parkers Run adjacent to the

municipal properties and boat ramp would be dredged because "[t]he proposed

CDF does not have sufficient capacity to store the volume of material

anticipated from simultaneously dredging the entire Parkers Run channel ."

The BCE continued:

           [t]he two channels have not been dredged since 1983
           due to monetary constraints. Currently, the Bureau of
           Coastal Engineering (BCE) has an existing
           Memorandum of Agreement (MOA) with the New
           Jersey Department of Transportation (NJDOT), who
           now funds dredging projects, to receive an annual
           appropriation for the funding of navigational dredging
           projects.    This office is requesting a ten year
           maintenance dredging permit for both channels, in the
           event that additional maintenance dredging is required
           within that timeframe . . . .

                 ...

           In the past, shoaling of these channels has been
           irregular, necessitating dredging from six to eighteen

                                                                    A-5525-17
                                   13
           years between dredging events. If a ten year
           maintenance dredging permit was issued, this office
           estimates up to one additional dredging event through
           the life of the permit.

     As to the Army Corps' question about "why the CDF was not

maintained," the BCE responded:

           This office has no knowledge of what property
           maintenance activities were conducted by the prior
           owners.     Aerial photography indicates that the
           vegetation had been mowed prior to state ownership.
           The CDF was last used for a state dredging project in
           1983.    A standard disposal agreement with the
           property owner was used. Over the years, this office
           has not received the funds to continue dredging nor
           perform maintenance on the site. In approximately
           2002, through the enclosed MOA, this office began
           using NJDOT funds for all state dredging projects
           conducted by this office.

           Sometime in 2003 or 2004, this office started
           receiving inquiries into the dredging of Westecunk
           Creek. With funding available, this office contacted
           the property owner with the intent of purchasing this
           site to ensure the availability of the site for future
           dredging operations required to provide safe
           navigation.

           In conversation with the property owner it appeared
           there was interest to develop the site as residential
           development. It was our understanding there were no
           pending permit applications for the site, though
           potential developers had contacted the Land Use
           Regulation Department regarding development on the
           site. Rather than enter into a one time use disposal
           agreement with the property owner, potentially

                                                                    A-5525-17
                                   14
            changing the characteristics of the site, this office in
            conjunction with NJDOT purchased this property to
            ensure the continued availability of this disposal site
            for the life of the existing navigation channel. The use
            of this site as a confined disposal facility has never
            changed nor been interrupted.

            [(Emphasis added).]

      As to the Army Corps' question about whether the CDF was "an active

disposal site and not abandoned," the BCE stated:

            This office has never considered this CDF as
            abandoned. Also, the lack of dredging funds does not
            constitute abandonment.          A portion of every
            Westecunk Creek dredging event has been disposed of
            in this disposal site. Use of this site for this upcoming
            dredging is continued use. The property has not been
            used, nor permitted, for any activity other than a
            disposal facility. NJDOT purchased this property
            specifically for the continued use as a disposal
            facility.

      The BCE also assured the Army Corps it had ruled out alternatives to its

proposal, stating:

            Hydraulic dredging is . . . the only feasible method for
            dredging these areas. Mechanical dredging would be
            much more time consuming and costly to be
            practicable, and pose the potential for a much larger
            negative environmental impact.

                     ...

            The only method of dredging which would not require
            the use of a CDF would be side cast disposal into open

                                                                        A-5525-17
                                     15
            waters or onto the adjacent marsh. Material side cast
            into Westecunk Creek would quickly be re-deposited
            directly into the channel, necessitating more frequent
            dredging. Material side cast outside of Westecunk
            Creek would have a great impact on critical wildlife
            habitat. Material free pumped onto the adjacent marsh
            would cause a much larger negative environmental
            impact to a much greater area of wetlands.

            [(Emphasis added).]

      The June 2011 Public Hearing

      The DEP conducted a public hearing in June 2011 for comments on the

BCE's then-pending permit applications. At the hearing, one commenter noted

that the original twelve-foot-high berms built in the 1980's on the north, south,

and west side of the property were now between two and five feet high, and

the berms on the east side of the property no longer existed.

      In July 2011, the BCE advised the Army Corps that "[a]t this time, the

CDF is going to be strictly used as the disposal site for Westecunk Creek and

Parkers Run," unless channels within a four-mile radius needed dredging and

had no closer CDF sites for disposal. Also, the BCE expressed no plans to use

the dredged material once dried.

      The October 2011 WFD Permit and Its 2016 Termination

      In October 2011, the DEP's Office of Dredging and Sediment

Technology issued the BCE a combined WFD permit and FWWGP1

                                                                          A-5525-17
                                     16
conditionally authorizing a "[o]ne-time maintenance dredging event" of the

Westecunk Creek of approximately 138,862 cy of sediment via hydraulic

pumping. This would result in the loss of seven acres of freshwater wetlands.

The permit also authorized "[r]enovation of the existing confined disposal

facility using dredged material presently contained within the CDF to

reestablish the existing berms and reconstruct the eastern-most berm to an

elevation of twelve feet."   The "special conditions" attached to the permit

included the requirement that "[a]ll temporary dredging pipeline and CDF

outfall pipes must be removed within sixty (60) days of termination of

discharge from the CDF."

     Ultimately, the 2011 permit was "terminated for cause" in April 2016

due to the State Executive Branch's reorganization after Superstorm Sandy.

Relevant here, the State-conducted channel maintenance dredging program

was transferred from the DEP's BCE to the DOT's OMR, "but the permit was

not transferred" and would "not be used," resulting in a termination of the

permit. Thus, no work under that permit occurred.

     Nevertheless, in February 2015, before the 2011 permit's termination,

the DEP's Tidelands Resource Council approved a blanket revocable dredging

                                                                      A-5525-17
                                    17
tidelands license to the DOT's OMR to dredge land under State tidelands for

twenty-four years from May 2014 to May 2038.

      The DOT's Bulldozing Activities in 2016

      In March and early April 2016, the DEP received numerous complaints

of a bulldozer operating in the wetlands on Lot 2.01, clearing the site and

disturbing nesting ospreys.   The DEP's Bureau of Coastal and Land Use

Compliance and Enforcement ("the BCLUCE") investigated and found that the

vegetation consisting of common reed grass had been cleared along all of the

berms and pathways bisecting the CDF. The DOT admitted it had undertaken

"geotechnical investigation and site clearing" at the CDF property, belie ving

its actions to be authorized under approved statewide general permits for

geotechnical investigation and the maintenance of existing facilities. Based on

its initial inspections, the BCLUCE agreed, and advised the DOT, to complete

its activities by April 15, 2016, so as not to disturb the observed nesting

ospreys near the CDF.

      However, upon further review, the BCLUCE determined that the DOT's

clearing activities were not authorized under the issued permits but

nevertheless, after a site inspection on June 30, 2016, closed the incident

report without further action requiring restoration. The BCLUCE found that

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                                    18
the cleared areas had "naturally re-vegetated" with the dominant onsite

vegetation, common reed grass "and to the extent that trees were removed , the

existing trees on the site will reseed and reestablish new trees without the need

for planting . . . [and] NJDOT's activities did not disturb the onsite osprey nest

and fledgling osprey were observed in the nearby nest." The BCLUCE warned

that any future development the DOT planned to undertake would need to be

properly permitted.

      The Subject Permit Applications

      In June 2016, the DOT's OMR applied to the DEP for a WFD individual

permit and a WQC to dredge three waterways:                Westecunk Creek in

Eagleswood Township, Parkers Run in Little Egg Harbor Township, and Cedar

Run in Stafford Township. The stated purpose of the DOT's dredging project

was to "restore navigation to authorized depths throughout the channel," with

the dredged material "proposed to be placed at the West Creek CDF." The

DOT's application contained proofs of public notice, project location maps,

site plans, a compliance statement addressing the applicable regulations, a

sampling report for the dredged material, and a license concerning the DOT's

authority to dredge the waterways.

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      In August 2017, the DOT submitted a data request to the DEP's Division

of Parks & Forestry seeking information concerning the state and federal

threatened and endangered plant and animal species on the property. After

searching various databases, the National Heritage Program in the DEP's

Office of Natural Lands Management found evidence of nesting ospreys,

wintering bald eagles, and numerous types of other birds foraging on the

property, which the State also classified as threatened, endangered, or of

special concern. The same was true in the immediate vicinity of the property,

within one mile of the property, and one mile from the property.

      In February 2018, in connection with its dredging project, the DOT's

OMR applied to the DEP for a combined FHA permit and an FWWGP1 to

rehabilitate the West Creek CDF and store the dredged materials on Lot 2.01.

In the statement of compliance attached to the application, the DOT stated that

there was not an outfall pipe on the site and that the berms had been reduced to

between four and seven feet and, in some waterfront areas, the berms had been

completely destroyed by storms and tidal erosion.        The DOT planned to

"rehabilitate" the berms with dredged material found in the CDF from its last

use up to a height of fifteen feet and install an outfall pipe to discharge water

from the dredged material slurry deposited into the CDF.         The DOT also

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included topographic maps, site photographs, correspondence regarding

wildlife and wildlife habitat, proofs of public notice, and site plans in its

permit application.

      Objections to the DOT's Permit Applications and the Lee Report

      In the spring of 2018, appellants and their counsel submitted written

public comments to the DEP opposing the DOT's applications.             Counsel

complained that an FWWGP1 should not be issued because (1) there is not an

"existing" CDF already at the site, and in turn there is not a "currently

serviceable" facility, which is a prerequisite to obtaining the permit; (2) there

would be unacceptable impacts on threatened and endangered species; (3) the

DEP failed to consider several alternative locations to store the dredge spoils;

and (4) the neighboring residences would suffer from noise, odors, dust,

pollution, and truck traffic.

      Attached to one of the objectors' counsel's letters was an expert report

dated July 25, 2016, by Lee and Associates (the "Lee Report"), which

concluded that "there is no 'existing CDF' at the West Creek site." The Lee

Report found, based on review of the record, the Army Corps' published

maintenance and closure standards for CDFs, and a site visit, that the West

Creek CDF was not an existing, serviceable facility, as required by an

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FWWGP1. The report listed many characteristics of an existing, serviceable

CDF, including berms that are sufficient to retain material; adequate roads for

operation, maintenance, and removal of material; natural features to protect

groundwater; and buffer lands to prevent dust, noise, odors, and pollution from

affecting nearby properties and wildlife. Additionally, the report further stated

that Army Corps and the DEP guidance documents required CDFs to have

approved closure plans, which included maintenance and reporting, to ensure

that potentially contaminated material remained confined.

      The Lee Report asserted that many of the necessary characteristics of an

existing CDF were missing from the West Creek CDF.            For example, the

berms had eroded, with trees growing in their places. In addition, there were

not adequate measures in place to block public access to the site or protect

wildlife from being contaminated by the deposited sediments. Further, the

report noted that, because the West Creek CDF had no closure plan and none

of its owners had ever submitted maintenance or other reports for this

deteriorated facility, no CDF existed on Lot 2.01.

      In March 2018, the DEP's staff issued a threatened and endangered

species habitat report reviewing the CDF project, which recommended

precautions to protect a nearby osprey nesting habitat from potential

                                                                          A-5525-17
                                     22
disturbance by prohibiting work at the site from April 1 through August 31 of

each year.

      Phases I and II

      On May 1, 2018, the DOT emailed the DEP verifying the West Creek

CDF's capacity and outlining the two planned phases of construction. The

email stated:

             The plan is to build the CDF up in two phases.

             Phase I will use existing material on site to construct
             berms to a height of +10.75' NAVD88. [1] This will
             generate 146,850 CY of air capacity. Assuming a
             bulking factor of 1.3, this would give us
             approximately 113,000 CY of in situ capacity. Once
             this has been placed, the material would be allowed to
             drain and dry for some period of time until it becomes
             workable with standard equipment.

             Phase II will use the newly dewatered material to raise
             the berm elevation to a height of +20.0' NAVD88.
             This will generate 289,770 CY of additional air
             capacity. Assuming a bulking factor of 1.3, this
             would give us approximately 222,900 CY of in situ
             capacity.

             This approach generates a total of approximately
             335,900 CY of in situ capacity. The currently

[1]
   NAVD88 means "North American Vertical Datum of 1988" and is used to
measure vertical positions, i.e., elevations, throughout the United States as
established by the National Geodetic Survey. United States v. Sweeney, 483
F. Supp. 3d 871, 920 n.49 (E.D. Cal. 2020).
                                                                       A-5525-17
                                     23
             proposed round of dredging will remove 262,300 CY
             if the entire footprint is dredged to project depth.

             This analysis illustrates that there is ample capacity at
             the West Creek CDF to handle the proposed dredging.

      Later in May 2018, the DEP's staff issued an engineering report finding

the CDF project met the rules enforcing the Flood Hazard Area Control Act

("FHACA").         The report recommended approval of the project with

conditions—such as installing sediment barriers and soil erosion control

measures prior to beginning any work, in addition to prohibiting the storage,

staging, or operating of construction equipment in any channel, wetland, or

transition area.

      The Revised CDF Plan

      Responding to the public comments, the DOT revised its proposed CDF

plan in June 2018 by reducing the proposed final berm height from +20.0'

NAVD88 (twenty feet) to +15.0' NAVD88 (fifteen feet), and changing the

construction access to further avoid potential adverse effects on the adjacent

residential neighbors, Green Acres property, wetlands, and riparian zones.

      On June 27, 2018, the DEP issued a WFD environmental report, finding

that the CDF project met the applicable regulations but certain conditions were

needed. Those conditions included prohibiting dredging shellfish lease areas,

                                                                         A-5525-17
                                      24
prohibiting dredging from January 1 to June 30 to protect migrating

anadromous fish species and winter flounder, protecting submerged aquatic

habitat by floating the dredge pipeline above such habitat, and mandating a

twenty-four-hour hydraulic retention time to allow for the settling of dredged

material to minimize water quality impacts. The DEP's staff also issued an

FHA Permit Environmental Report, finding that the CDF project met the

FHACA rules at N.J.A.C. 7:13 with similar conditions required as listed in the

WFD Environmental Report.

      The June 2018 FHA and WFD Permits

      On June 27, 2018, the DEP issued an approved FHA permit and

verification for the revised CDF project and a WFD permit with a WQC for the

dredging project, 2 incorporating into the permits its staff's recommended

conditions listed in the environmental reports. Reconstruction of the CDF

would result in the disturbance of 7.457 acres of freshwater wetlands that had

formed on the interior of the CDF since 1983, and the temporary disturbance

of 0.299 acres of freshwater.

      In July 2018, the DEP met with appellants and other neighboring

residents to discuss their concerns. Thereafter, the DEP received additional

2
  Appellants do not contest the WFD dredging permit, and limit their appeal to
the permits concerning the CDF.
                                                                       A-5525-17
                                    25
comments from appellants' counsel and two environmental groups objecting to

the CDF project.

      The December 2018 Issuance of the FWWGP1 and WQC Permits

      On December 17, 2018, the DEP issued an FWWGP1 and WQC to the

DOT for the CDF project, together with the staff's recommended conditions

mandating construction activities within the facility footprint, prohibiting the

use of heavy equipment near osprey nests between April 1 and August 31,

prohibiting the use of heavy equipment outside of business hours on weekdays,

scheduling inspections twice daily, and directing control measures for odor

and dust.

      The DEP also published its responses to the numerous public comments

it received concerning the CDF project. In response to contentions that the

dredged material was not suitable for reconstruction of the CDF, the DEP

found that the existing material on the site had been evaluated for geotechnical

suitability for use in construction of berms, and was consistent with the Army

Corps' requirements. The DEP found no evidence of a berm failure and noted

that the CDF would be inspected at least twice daily during the proposed

activities.

                                                                         A-5525-17
                                     26
      As to alternative locations for disposal of materials from the dredging

project, the DEP confirmed that the West Creek CDF was centrally located to

the channels and close enough so that a small diameter hydraulic pipeline

dredge could be used during the dredging. It deemed the site "the least cost

environmentally acceptable alternative," and found no other State-owned

available CDF facilities within a five-mile radius.

      Furthermore, the DEP found that the project will not have an adverse

impact on endangered or threatened wildlife, plant species, or critical wildlife

habitats so long as specific measures were implemented, including a

seasonable prohibition on the use of heavy equipment within 300 meters of an

occupied osprey nest.

      The Present Appeals

      Appellants, a group of local residents on Dock Road and two

environmental organizations, the New Jersey Conservation Foundation and

Environment New Jersey, filed the present appeals respectively in August

2018 and in January 2019. The appeals have been consolidated. Appellants'

arguments are supported by an advocacy group as amicus curiae, Save

Barnegat Bay ("SBB").       Respondents are the DEP and the DOT. They are

                                                                         A-5525-17
                                     27
supported by an intervenor group, Westecunk Creek Association, who

advocates for navigation and boating in the local waterways.

      While the appeals were pending, appellants moved twice before this

court pursuant to Rule 2:9-5 in March 2021 and in August 2021 for an

emergent stay of the reconstruction of the CDF, pending appeal.          Both

applications were denied. After we denied the second emergent application in

August 2021, appellants sought relief from the Supreme Court. The Court

remanded the stay request to be addressed in the first instance by the DEP

Commissioner.

      On September 14, 2021, the DEP Commissioner issued a thirteen-page

order denying the emergent stay request. Thereafter this court denied the stay

once more, but scheduled a prompt oral argument on the merits. No further

Supreme Court review has occurred.

      According to representations made to us at oral argument, Phase I of the

project is still ongoing but must halt on or before December 31, 2021, due to

conditions in place to protect wildlife habitats.

                                                                       A-5525-17
                                      28
                                       II.

      As a preliminary matter, we address the argument of appellants and SBB

that the CDF project is invalid because the DEP did not issue a permit under

the Coastal Area Facility Review Act ("CAFRA"), N.J.S.A. 13:19-1 to -21. In

particular, the objectors contend such a CAFRA permit is necessary because

the present CDF project enlarges what is known as the "footprint of

development" of the structure built and approved under the 1983 permit. This

argument fails, for the reasons that follow.

      The Legislature enacted CAFRA in 1973 "to protect the unique and

fragile coastal zones of the State." In re Egg Harbor Assocs. (Bayshore Ctr.),

94 N.J. 358, 364 (1983). Except for certain activities expressly exempted,

CAFRA mandates that any proposed development within a coastal area that

meets certain construction and development thresholds must obtain a permit

from the DEP before commencing construction.        In re Protest of Coastal

Permit Program Rules, 354 N.J. Super. 293, 310 (App. Div. 2002) (citing

N.J.S.A. 13:19-5, -5.2, and -5.3).

      The DEP executes its CAFRA authority through the Coastal Zone

Management ("CZM") Rules at N.J.A.C. 7:7-1.1 to -29.10. These regulations

contain "the procedures for reviewing coastal permit applications" and "the

                                                                       A-5525-17
                                      29
substantive standards for determining development acceptability and the

environmental impact of projects for which coastal permits are submitted."

Protest of Coastal Permit Program Rules, 354 N.J. Super. at 312. The DEP

also uses the CZM Rules to evaluate coastal wetlands permits, waterfront

development permits, and water quality certificates. N.J.A.C. 7:7-1.1.

      Before the 2016 permits were terminated, the DEP responded to the

public's comments by stating that the CDF project proposed at that time did

not require a CAFRA permit because the renovation of a pre-existing CDF that

remains within its previous boundaries was not "development" as defined

under CAFRA or its implementing regulations. The DEP explained:

            The proposed renovation of the Eagleswood Township
            CDF will remain entirely within the "footprint of
            development" of the pre-existing CDF and, in fact,
            will have a reduced "footprint of development" from
            the prior CDF use. The renovation of the CDF will
            involve using dredged material presently within the
            CDF to strengthen and raise the three existing berms
            (to the north, south, and west) to an elevation of
            twelve feet NAVD88. This dredged material also will
            be used to reconstruct the eastern-most berm, which
            has been destroyed by storm events and erosion since
            the last use of the CDF.          This berm will be
            reconstructed westward of its previous location to
            provide a 50-ft buffer between the CDF and the bay
            and will thus be reconstructed within the previous
            footprint of development . . . . The renovation of the
            CDF also will involve the re-construction of the weir
            box within the interior of the CDF and will not change

                                                                         A-5525-17
                                    30
            the footprint of the structure. Thus, a CAFRA permit
            is not required for the renovation of the CDF.

            [(Emphasis added).]

      Thereafter, although the DEP did not specifically mention "CAFRA" in

its responses to the public's comments on the 2018 permits at issue, it used the

same reasoning and essentially referred to the statute when it concluded in its

2018 Flood Hazard Area Permit Environmental Report that "[t]he project

consists of reconstruction of an existing CDF within the same footprint" and

that "the rehabilitation and use of an existing dredged material management

area within the same existing footprint is not considered 'development'"

pursuant to the CZM Rules.        Thus, even if the DEP did not specifically

mention CAFRA, it essentially told the public, as it told the DOT, that it had

concluded the current CDF project was not subject to CAFRA's permitting

requirements.

      The objectors argue on appeal that a CAFRA permit is required for the

CDF project because the proposed CDF is clearly an enlargement of the long -

abandoned 1983 site and that its "footprint" will increase because under the

new permits, the CDF is planned to be greater in height and volume than the

CDF under the 1983 permits. With regard to height, the new berms will be up

to fifteen feet high as opposed to the berms built under the 1983 permit, which

                                                                         A-5525-17
                                     31
were six to seven feet high. Next, they argue the volume of the dredge spoils

placed in the berms is exponentially greater than the volume under the original

1983 permit because the CDF will hold dredged materials from three, not one,

waterways.    The berms accordingly have increased capacity to hold more

dredged material. The CDF under the 1983 permit held approximately 52,000

cy, whereas the CDF under the new permits is expected to hold approximately

350,000 cy—a volume almost seven times greater.

      The objectors also complain that there is no pre-existing CDF, because it

was never maintained, the former owners tried to develop Lot 2.01 for other

uses, the 1982 easement was limited to a one-time use, and the historical deeds

identified the land as "vacant."

      In response, the DEP maintains that the CZM Rules clarify that the

"rehabilitation and use of an existing dredged material management area

within the same footprint" is not "development" pursuant to CAFRA and the

CZM Rules.

      The term "development" is statutorily defined by CAFRA as "the

construction, relocation, or enlargement of any building or structure and all

site preparation therefor . . . and shall include . . . public development."

N.J.S.A. 13:19-3.    One exemption from having to comply with CAFRA's

                                                                        A-5525-17
                                    32
permitting requirements is when "[t]he enlargement of [a] development . . .

does not result in . . . the enlargement of the footprint of the development."

N.J.S.A. 13:19-5.2(c) (emphasis added).

      As the parties correctly point out, N.J.A.C. 7:7-1.5 of the CZM Rules

likewise defines "development" as:

            [A]ny activity for which a coastal wetlands permit,
            waterfront development permit, or Federal consistency
            determination is required, including site preparation
            and clearing. Development for an application under
            CAFRA means the construction, relocation, or
            enlargement of the footprint of development of any
            building or structure and all site preparation therefor,
            the grading, excavation, or filling on beaches and
            dunes, and shall include . . . public development.
            Development under CAFRA and the Waterfront
            Development Law does not include repairs or
            maintenance such as replacing siding, windows, or
            roofs, unless such repairs or maintenance are
            associated with enlargements which are not exempt
            under CAFRA . . . or the Waterfront Development
            Law . . . . Development under CAFRA does not
            include debris removal or cleanup provided such
            activities do not involve excavation, grading, or filling
            on beaches and dunes.

            [(Emphasis added).]

N.J.A.C. 7:7-2.2(b)(13)(iii) further states that "[d]evelopment is not . . . [t]he

rehabilitation and use of an existing dredged material management area within

the same footprint." (Emphasis added).

                                                                           A-5525-17
                                      33
      Although the definition is not cited in the briefs, N.J.A.C. 7:7-1.5, which

appears in the CZM regulations under CAFRA, defines the phrase "footprint of

development" as "the vertical projection to the horizontal plane of the exterior

of all exterior walls of a structure." N.J.A.C. 7:7-1.5.3

      At first blush, this definition of a "footprint" conceivably could

encompass height because it uses the words "vertical projection."              Ibid.

(emphasis added).    However, as the Attorney General persuasively explained

at oral argument, that the vertical aspect of a footprint in this context concerns

only a "projection" from the structure's base.        The projection is used to

ascertain, from a bird's eye view, whether a horizontal cross-section of the

structure at any point in its elevation is wider than its base. 4 For instance, if a

3
  The DEP originally adopted the term "footprint of development" in 2008 as a
definition in N.J.A.C. 7:7E-1.8, 40 N.J.R. 1836(a) (Apr. 7, 2008), but
recodified that regulation to N.J.A.C. 7:7-1.5 in 2015, as part of its effort to
consolidate the Coastal Permit Program Rules and the CZM Rules. 47 N.J.R.
1392(a) (July 6, 2015).
4
  In an illustrative administrative law decision, Fay v. N.J. Dep't of Env't Prot.,
No. ELU-CA 706-09, 2011 WL 3305404, at *1 (Feb. 8, 2011), homeowners
wanted to expand their single-family home and build a new deck. The DEP
denied their CAFRA permit application because the property was located on a
dune. Ibid. In upholding the agency's denial, the Administrative Law Judge
found that the property has a "footprint" of "980 square feet." Ibid. The
homeowners' expert admitted that, as an alternative to expanding the home to
cover more of the dune, "the dwelling could be reconstructed and expanded
vertically within the existing footprint." Id. at 6. This is consistent with the
                                                                             A-5525-17
                                       34
hypothetical homeowner within the freshwater wetlands area constructed a

deck on the third story of her home that was wider than the home's horizontal

base on the first floor, such an overhanging deck would presumably be outside

of the "footprint."

      We adopt this reasonable interpretation of the term. It is consistent with

a common understanding of the term "footprint" in other building and land use

contexts. That common understanding conceives of a footprint as being two-

dimensional in nature, representing the horizontal area of the base of the

structure.   This horizontal, two-dimensional attribute is expressed in both

statutes and regulations 5 and in case law. 6

DEP's contention here that a vertical expansion of a structure does not enlarge
the "footprint of development." We have cited Fay to show that consistency,
and we have not cited the case as precedential authority. See R. 1:36-3.
5
  See, e.g., N.J.S.A. 13:18A-5.1(b)(3) (stating that to obtain approval for one's
application for reconstructing or expanding a single family dwelling within
five years of its deconstruction or demolition, one must prove "the foundation
of the demolished . . . dwelling . . . will constitute the footprint of the
improvement or reconstruction"); N.J.S.A. 4:1C-32.1(g) (explaining a
condition of the use of land or structures for a special permit for rural
microenterprise activity is that the expansion of the existing building space
must not exceed 500 square feet in total footprint area); N.J.A.C. 7:7 -
15.2(f)(2)(iv)(6) (permitting development on a dune that contains a deck,
patio, or porch without compliance with the usual dune rules if, among other
things, "the footprint of development of the deck, patio, or porch enclosure
does not exceed 400 square feet"); N.J.A.C. 7:7-4.7(a)(7) (authorizing
expansion of a residential development parallel to the mean high water line if,
                                                                          A-5525-17
                                       35
      For this reason, we reject appellants' claim that a CAFRA permit under

N.J.S.A. 13:19-5.2(c) was required for the CDF because the horizontal

"footprint of development" was not enlarged. 7

among other things, the expansion "does not increase the surface area of the
footprint of the development by a cumulative total of more than 400 square
feet on the property"); N.J.A.C. 7:7-4.22(a)(3) (permitting the construction of
a "swimming pool, spa or hot tub and associated decking" if, among other
things, the footprint of the area on which there is already construction
combined with the new construction does not exceed "750 square feet");
N.J.A.C. 2:76-23.6(a)(6)(i), (a)(7)(i) (requiring expansion of an existing
personal wireless service facility or construction of a new personal wireless
service facility to not "exceed 500 square feet in footprint area").
6
  See, e.g., Rumson Estates, Inc. v. Mayor & Council of Borough of Fair
Haven, 177 N.J. 338, 347 (2003) (describing the proposed structure at issue in
the case as a "two story single-family house with a 1,600 square foot
footprint"); Mullen v. Ippolito Corp., 428 N.J. Super. 85, 97, 104-05 (App.
Div. 2012) (holding that an objector sufficiently complained to the
municipality that the defendant was expanding the physical "footprint" of his
property by expanding the motel's fence and boardwalk area around the pool
into the public boardwalk right of way); Heritage at Towne Lake, LLC v.
Planning Bd. of Borough of Sayreville, 422 N.J. Super 75, 77 (App. Div. 2010)
(noting land use applicant's testimony at a Planning Board meeting that "the
building footprint will be the same, and the building elevations will be the
same," implying elevation is not included in the footprint) (emphasis added);
Dragon v. N.J. Dep't of Env't Prot., 405 N.J. Super 478, 483 (App. Div. 2009)
(holding CAFRA did not give the DEP the power to allow a homeowner to
expand the "size, height and footprint" of his home without issuing him a
permit, distinguishing height from footprint) (emphasis added).
7
  Nevertheless, as we discuss in Part III, infra, that does not resolve the
question of whether increases in height and volume are encompassed within
the FWPA prohibition on "expand[ing]" a previously permitted structure.
N.J.A.C. 7:7A-7.1(a)(2).
                                                                        A-5525-17
                                    36
                                       III.

      As noted in our introduction, the pivotal issue in this appeal turns out to

be the DEP's issuance of a General Permit and its failure to issue an Individual

Permit under FWPA.        To address that pivotal issue, some preliminary

discussion about FWPA is necessary.

      FWPA was enacted in 1987 and became effective on July 1, 1988.

N.J.S.A. 13:9B-1 to -30. In passing that law, the Legislature

            determine[d] that in this State, where pressures for
            commercial and residential development define the
            pace and pattern of land use, it is in the public interest
            to establish a program for the systematic review of
            activities in and around freshwater wetland areas
            designed to provide predictability in the protection of
            freshwater wetlands . . . [and] that it shall be the
            policy of the State to preserve the purity and integrity
            of freshwater wetlands from random, unnecessary or
            undesirable alteration or disturbance . . . .

            [N.J.S.A. 13:9B-2 (emphasis added).]

      FWPA divides freshwater wetlands into three designated categories:

those of (1) exceptional resource value, N.J.S.A. 13:9B-7(a); (2) intermediate

resource value, N.J.S.A. 13:9B-7(c); and (3) ordinary resource value, which

includes detention facilities such as a CDF, N.J.S.A. 13:9B-7(b).

      Generally, a permit under FWPA is required to conduct a regulated

activity, including the "removal, excavation, disturbance or dredging of soil,

                                                                          A-5525-17
                                      37
sand, gravel, or aggregate material of any kind" and the "dumping, discharging

or filling with any materials," within a designated location. N.J.S.A. 13:9B-3.

Two main types of freshwater wetlands permits are available:            General

Permits, N.J.A.C. 7:7A-5 and -7; and Individual Permits, N.J.A.C. 7:7A-9 and

-10.8

        FWPA authorizes the DEP to issue General Permits for specifically

defined activities regulated within freshwater wetlands, without the need for

the applicant to satisfy the more rigorous process required for Individual

Permits.    N.J.S.A. 13:9B-23.    In this regard, N.J.S.A. 13:9B-23 states in

relevant part:

             c. The [DEP] shall issue additional general permits on
             a Statewide or regional basis for the following
             categories of activities, if the [DEP] determines, after
             conducting an environmental analysis and providing
             public notice and opportunity for a public hearing, that
             the activities will cause only minimal adverse
             environmental impacts when performed separately,
             will have only minimal cumulative adverse impacts on
             the environment, will cause only minor impacts on
             freshwater wetlands, will be in conformance with the
             purposes of [FWPA], and will not violate any
             provision of the Federal Act:

                   ....

8
 The DEP's regulations implementing FWPA provide for three other types of
permits in N.J.A.C. 7:7A-2.1(b) that do not pertain here.
                                                                         A-5525-17
                                      38
                  (9) Maintenance, reconstruction, or repair
                  of buildings or structures lawfully existing
                  prior to the effective date of [FWPA] or
                  permitted [FWPA], provided that these
                  activities do not result in disturbance of
                  additional freshwater wetlands upon
                  completion of the activity.

            [N.J.S.A. 13:9B-23(c)(9) (emphasis added).]

      A General Permit issued under N.J.S.A. 13:9B-23(c) automatically

expires after five years unless the DEP reviews it within that time period, and

then modifies or reissues the permit. N.J.S.A. 13:9B-23. "Review" includes

"public notice and [an] opportunity for public hearing." N.J.S.A. 13:9B-23.

      If an applicant's proposed activities do not qualify for issuance of a

General Permit under one of the categories in N.J.S.A. 13:9B-23, an

application can be submitted for approval under an Individual Permit pursuant

to N.J.S.A. 13:9B-9 and N.J.S.A. 13:9B-13. See In re Freshwater Wetlands

Gen. Permit No. 16, 379 N.J. Super. 331, 335 (App. Div. 2005) (stating if a

General Permit does not apply, the proposed regulated activities, "could still

be approved under an [I]ndividual [P]ermit"); In re Authorization for

Freshwater Wetlands Gen. Permits ("In re FWPA Authorization"), 372 N.J.

Super. 578, 582 n.2 (App. Div. 2004) ("Compared to a [G]eneral [P]ermit,

[I]ndividual [P]ermits require the applicant to meet more demanding standards

                                                                        A-5525-17
                                     39
and requirements.").    See also N.J.A.C. 7:7A-9.1 (stating "[a] person shall

obtain an [I]ndividual [P]ermit . . . in order to undertake any activity that does

not meet the requirements of . . . an authorization under a [G]eneral [P]ermit").

      According to FWPA's implementing regulations, N.J.A.C. 7:7A-1.1 to

-22.20, the type of activities that specifically qualify for a GP1are minor in

scope. Therefore, they do not compel the intensity of DPE review that is

required for issuing an Individual Permit. N.J.A.C. 7:7A-7.1(a).

       Specifically, and critical to our analysis, an FWWGP1:

            authorizes activities in freshwater wetlands . . .
            required to carry out the repair, rehabilitation,
            replacement, maintenance, or reconstruction of a
            previously authorized, currently serviceable structure,
            . . . lawfully existing prior to July 1, 1988 . . . and:

                  1. The previously authorized structure . . .
                  or facility has not been and will not be put
                  to any use other than as specified in any
                  permit       authorizing    its     original
                  construction; and

                  2. The activities do not expand, widen, or
                  deepen the previously authorized feature,
                  and do not deviate from any plans of the
                  original activity . . .

            [N.J.A.C. 7:7A-7.1(a)(1) and (2) (emphasis added).]

The regulation then adds the following important exception and proviso:

                                                                           A-5525-17
                                      40
             . . . except that minor deviations due to changes in
             materials or construction techniques and which are
             necessary to make repairs, rehabilitation, or
             replacements are allowed, provided such changes do
             not result in disturbance of additional freshwater
             wetlands or State open waters upon completion of the
             activity.

             [Ibid. (emphasis added). 9]

      Citing these FWPA regulations, appellants and amicus SBB contend the

CDF project was not eligible for an FWWGP1 for several reasons:

      (1) there was no "currently serviceable" CDF on the site, as required by

N.J.A.C. 7:7A-7.1(a);

      (2) the CDF was not "lawfully existing," as required by N.J.A.C. 7:7A-

7.1(a), and has been abandoned;

      (3) the proposed CDF activities will "expand, widen, or deepen" the

CDF authorized in 1983, which violates N.J.A.C. 7:7A-7.1(a)(2); and

      (4) the project will threaten and cause significant and harmful impacts to

the nearby residences and to the extensive threatened and endangered wildlife

inhabiting the site. 10

9
 The DEP amended N.J.A.C. 7:7A-7.1 in April 2021, but no changes were
made to subsection (a). 53 N.J.R. 514(b), 522-23 (Apr. 5, 2021).
10
  In their emergent brief filed in September 2021, appellants argue for the first
time that N.J.A.C. 7:7A-5.7(b)(1) explicitly prevents the use of a GP1 to
                                                                          A-5525-17
                                      41
      We address these contentions, and other related aspects of FWPA

regulations, in turn. In doing so, we are cognizant that if any one of them is

correct, the legal basis for a General Permit in this case under FWPA collapses

and an Individual Permit is required.

      Our interpretation and application of the pertinent regulations is guided

by well-established principles. Regulations are given the effect of their plain

language in the context of the entire regulatory scheme.          J.H. v. R&M

Tagliareni, LLC, 239 N.J. 198, 214 (2019) (citing Medford Convalescent &

Nursing Ctr. v. Div. of Med. Assistance & Health Servs., 218 N.J. Super. 1, 5

(App. Div. 1985) (citation omitted)). Courts "cannot rearrange the wording of

the regulation, if it is otherwise unambiguous, or engage in conjecture that will

subvert its plain meaning."    US Bank, N.A. v. Hough, 210 N.J. 187, 199

(2012). Courts are required to interpret the regulation sensibly and not in a

manner that leads to an absurd result.       In re N.J.A.C. 12:17-2.1, 450 N.J.

Super. 152, 166-67 (App. Div. 2017).

deposit dredge on wetlands. We are not required to review this newly raised
argument that was not presented in their merits briefs, but even if we did, this
argument is unavailing. Even though N.J.A.C. 7:7A-5.7(b)(1) declares that
"[n]o material shall be deposited or dewatered in freshwater wetlands," it does
not preclude an applicant, such as the DOT, from seeking a separate permit to
authorize that activity, such as a GP1, which occurred here.
                                                                          A-5525-17
                                        42
      When interpreting a regulation, we are guided by the same general

principles as we are when interpreting a statute. In re Eastwick College LPN-

RN Bridge Program, 225 N.J. 533, 542 (2016); US Bank, 210 N.J. at 202. The

main objective is to determine the intent of the drafter, which is most often

found in the plain language of the regulation. In re Eastwick College, 225 N.J.

at 542. If the plain language does not clearly manifest the drafter's intent, we

are permitted to use extrinsic sources to determine the meaning. Ibid. (citing

US Bank, 210 N.J. at 199).

      A. "Currently Serviceable" Structure

      Appellants and SBB contend the West Creek CDF was not a "currently

serviceable" structure as required by N.J.A.C. 7:7A-7.1(a) because the project

requires the DOT to construct the CDF "from the ground up" by excavating the

base of the site in the initial phase to create the berms that had been already

bulldozed. Respondents and intervenor disagree with that interpretation.

      To begin, the West Creek CDF is a "structure." Although not defined in

FWPA or its regulations, the term "structure" is instructively defined in the

CZM Rules as "any assembly of materials above, on, or below the surface of

the land or water, including, but not limited to, buildings, fences, dams,

pilings, footings, breakwaters, culverts, pipes, pipelines, piers, roads, railroads,

                                                                             A-5525-17
                                       43
and bridges, and includes floating structures."    N.J.A.C. 7:7-1.5 (emphasis

added).   The berms that surround the CDF and hold the dredged material

comprise such an "assembly of materials."

     That said, there is no definition of a "currently serviceable" structure in

FWPA or its implementing regulations, except as it applies to dams. Although

not mentioned by the parties, a dam regulation, N.J.A.C. 7:7A-7.18, provides

criteria for a "GP18" permit authorizing dam repair, and likewise refers to

what makes a dam "currently serviceable":

            (a) General permit 18 authorizes activities in
            freshwater wetlands, transition areas, and State open
            water as necessary for the repair, rehabilitation,
            replacement, maintenance, reconstruction, or removal
            of a dam, as defined in the Department's dam safety
            rules at N.J.A.C. 7:20-1.2.

            (b) A dam that is currently serviceable may be
            repaired, rehabilitated, replaced, maintained or
            reconstructed under general permit 18. A dam is
            considered currently serviceable if it meets any of the
            following criteria:

                  1. The dam is in use, that is, the dam is
                  impounding water at a normal pool
                  elevation for which it was designed, at the
                  time of submittal of the general permit
                  application;

                  2. The dam is not in use, and has been out
                  of use for no more than five years prior to

                                                                         A-5525-17
                                    44
                   submittal    of    the    general    permit
                   application; or

                   3. The dam is not in use, but has been out
                   of use for up to 10 years prior to submittal
                   of the general permit application, but the
                   applicant documents that public funding
                   was actively sought for repairs during the
                   10 years.

             (c) A dam that is not currently serviceable, as defined
             in (b) above, may not be repaired, rehabilitated,
             replaced, maintained or reconstructed, but may be
             removed.

             [N.J.A.C. 7:7A-7.18 (emphasis added).]

      The West Creek CDF, of course, is not a dam.            Even so, applying

analogous concepts of what is a "currently serviceable" structure, we conclude

it was reasonable for the DEP to conclude the West Creek CDF is such a

structure.

      Although not mentioned by the parties, the Army Corps defines

"currently serviceable" in the context of nationwide general permits ("NWPs")

as "[u]seable as is or with some maintenance, but not so degraded as to

essentially require reconstruction."11      Reissuance and Modification of

11
   The Army Corps issues NWPs to authorize activities under Section 404 of
the Clean Water Act and Section 10 of the Rivers and Harbors Act of 1899,
where those activities will have minimal individual and cumulative adverse
environmental effects. 86 Fed. Reg. 2744, 2875; 82 Fed. Reg. 1860, 2006.
                                                                         A-5525-17
                                      45
Nationwide Permits, 86 Fed. Reg. 2744, 2875 (Jan. 13, 2021); Issuance and

Reissuance of Nationwide Permits, 82 Fed. Reg. 1860, 2006 (Jan. 6, 2017).

This definition is used, for example, to review an Army Corps' NWP3(a),

which applies to maintenance of structures and authorizes:

            [t]he repair, rehabilitation, or replacement of any
            previously authorized, currently serviceable structure
            or fill . . . , provided that the structure or fill is not to
            be put to uses differing from those uses specified or
            contemplated for it in the original permit or the most
            recently authorized modification. Minor deviations in
            the structure's configuration or filled area, including
            those due to changes in materials, construction
            techniques, requirements of other regulatory agencies,
            or current construction codes or safety standards that
            are necessary to make the repair, rehabilitation, or
            replacement are authorized.             This NWP also
            authorizes the removal of previously authorized
            structures or fills. . . .

            [82 Fed. Reg. at 1984 (emphasis added).]

      A federal NWP3 "only authorizes maintenance activities" of "repair,

rehabilitation, or replacement."     82 Fed. Reg. 1879, 1984.           By contrast,

N.J.A.C. 7:7A-7.1(a) authorizes an FWWGP1 for "activities . . . required to

NWPs were first issued in 1977. Regulatory Programs of the Corps of
Engineers, 42 Fed. Reg. 37122 (July 19, 1977). After 1977, NWPs were
issued, reissued, revised, or expired every few years. 86 Fed. Reg. 2744,
2875; 82 Fed. Reg. 1860, 2006. In 1991, the provisions were relocated into an
appendix to the Code of Federal Regulations, but were removed in 1997 and
are now published only in the Federal Register. Doyal v. N.J. Dep't of Env't
Prot., 390 N.J. Super. 185, 191 n.2 (App. Div. 2007).
                                                                             A-5525-17
                                       46
carry    out   the   repair,   rehabilitation,   replacement,   maintenance,    or

reconstruction" of the structure. (Emphasis added).       Hence, by adding the

concept of reconstruction, the activities authorized by a FWWGP1 are broader

than the ones permitted by an NWP3(a).

        There is no evidence in the record that the CDF, even with its

dilapidated, eroded, and bulldozed berms, has not continued to hold dredged

material from 1983 and the prior dredgings. The CDF could reasonably be

considered functional in that respect, although it apparently requires

rehabilitation and reconstruction to safely accept and hold any newly dredged

material. Therefore, if the CDF is holding dredged material but requires some

reconstruction, repair, and maintenance to reach its full holding capacity, then

it is considered currently serviceable, even if it has been dormant for some

time.

        We therefore reject appellants' argument that the West Creek CDF was

not a "previously authorized currently serviceable structure" as required by

N.J.A.C. 7:7A-7.1 to qualify for a GP1.

        B. "Lawfully Existing" and Abandonment

        Appellants and SBB next contend the West Creek CDF was not

"lawfully existing" as required by N.J.A.C. 7:7A-7.1. They emphasize that

                                                                          A-5525-17
                                       47
none of its former owners, nor its current owner, complied with the annual

reporting mandates outlined in the DEP's October 1997 Dredging Technical

Manual and Appendix G to the CZM Rules titled "The Management and

Regulation of Dredging Activities and Dredged Materials in New Jersey's

Tidal Waters," effective July 6, 2015. Moreover, the private property owners

repeatedly attempted to develop the property, both residentially and

commercially, which the objectors argue illustrates the CDF was not lawfully

existing at, between, and after the times of those ventures.

      Appellants and SBB further assert it does not matter that the word

"existing" is not defined by FWPA or its implementing regulations, because

there were no photographs or facts in the record showing that a CDF

physically existed on Lot 2.01 when the DEP reviewed the DOT's GP1

application. Respondents and intervenor counter that the CDF manifestly

"existed" when the DOT applied for the General Permit.

      It is undisputed that the deposit of dredge spoils into the West Creek

CDF was authorized under the permit issued in 1983. It is likewise undisputed

that no dredge spoils have been deposited into the CDF after that activity.

      N.J.A.C. 7:7A-7.1 states that the structure must be "previously

authorized, [and]. . . lawfully existing prior to July 1, 1988." (Emphasis

                                                                          A-5525-17
                                      48
added). Contrary to appellants' contentions, this language, when read plainly,

concerns the legal status of the structure, not the extent of its physical

condition. The word "lawfully" modifies the term "existing."

      Appellants and SBB contend the lawful status of the CDF has lapsed

under general principles of abandonment associated with the Municipal Land

Use Law ("MLUL"), N.J.S.A. 40:55D-68. Under the MLUL, nonconforming

uses or structures on a property existing at the time a zoning ordinance

changes "may be continued upon the lot or in the structure so occupied and any

such structure may be restored or repaired in the event of partial destruction

thereof." N.J.S.A. 40:55D-68.

      In S&S Auto Sales, Inc. v. Zoning Bd. of Adjustment for Borough of

Stratford, 373 N.J. Super. 603, 613-14 (App. Div. 2004), a case where the use

of the property as an automobile dealership enjoyed the status of a

nonconforming use under the MLUL, we explained the concept of

abandonment in that context:

                  Abandonment of a nonconforming use
            terminates the right to its further use. The traditional
            test of abandonment requires the concurrence of two
            factors: (1) an intention to abandon, and (2) some
            overt act or failure to act which carries a sufficient
            implication that the owner neither claims nor retains
            any interest in the subject matter of the abandonment
            ....

                                                                       A-5525-17
                                     49
                  . . . Temporary non-use does not constitute
            abandonment. A change in ownership or tenancy does
            not terminate a nonconforming use . . . nor does the
            temporary inability to find a new tenant.

                   . . . [T]he owner must demonstrate that the
            intention to continue the use is a continuing and
            definite intention, which must be substantiated by all
            of the circumstances surrounding the cessation. The
            owner bears the burden of proof by a preponderance
            of the evidence.

            [(Citations omitted) (emphasis added).]

      In Villari v. Zoning Bd. of Adjustment of Deptford, 277 N.J. Super. 130,

137 (App. Div. 1994), another case involving abandonment under the MLUL,

we held that the landowners had abandoned the use of their land as a pig farm

for up to fifteen years during which they used the land to grow corn and alfalfa

and failed to maintain the fence or enclosed area "in any manner related to the

raising of hogs or pigs." Ibid. In response to the landowners' contention that

they always intended to resume pig farming on the property, we determined

that "even if plaintiffs did not have an actual subjective intention to abandon

the raising of pigs, we would sustain the [Land Use] Board's decision based on

plaintiffs' prolonged cessation of that use." Ibid. Thus, the time of non-use

must be considered, along with the "subjective intent to resume the conforming

use." Berkeley Square Ass'n, Inc. v. Zoning Bd. of Adjustment of Trenton,

                                                                         A-5525-17
                                     50
410 N.J. Super. 255, 268 (App. Div. 2009) (quoting S&S, 373 N.J. Super. at

624).

        Here, appellants contend for several reasons that the West Creek CDF

was abandoned long ago by its owners for any future use as a CDF. First, a

former private owner developed a plan for residential and commercial uses,

which evidences an intent to abandon the CDF. Second, the state coastal

permit authorizing the deposit of dredge spoils into the CDF in 1983 was

limited to a "one time only" disposal of approximately 52,000 cy dredged from

the Westecunk Creek, and no deposits were ever made thereafter. Third, no

owner "maintained" Lot 2.01 as a CDF, as evidenced from the disintegrated

berms, the missing drainage pipe, and the dilapidated weir box. Fourth, if the

DEP or the DOT had intended to preserve the CDF, the State would have

recorded some interest in the property, instead of letting the one-year 1983

easement expire. Finally, none of the owners prepared an annual maintenance

report updating the site's status and condition or identifying a five-year plan of

projected activities, as appellants say was required by the DEP Dredging

Technical Manual written in October 1997 and one of the appendices to the

CZM Rules.

                                                                           A-5525-17
                                      51
      Initially, we note appellants' reliance is misplaced on whether the former

CDF owners complied with mandatory reporting requirements in the DEP's

1997 Dredging Technical Manual or in Appendix G to the CZM Rules. FWPA

provides that developments, such as the present one, which were approved by

the Army Corps prior to the Act's effective date on July 1, 1988:

            which projects would otherwise be subject to State
            regulation on or after the effective date of this act,
            shall be governed only by the Federal Act, and shall
            not be subject to any additional or inconsistent
            substantive requirements of [FWPA]; provided,
            however, that upon the expiration of a permit issued
            pursuant to the Federal Act any application for a
            renewal thereof shall be made to the appropriate
            regulatory agency.

            [N.J.S.A. 13:9B-4(d)(3).]

Based on that statute, the reporting requirements cited by appellants would not

apply to the CDF until after the DOT applied to the DEP for a new permit.

      The abandonment issue is being presented to us without the benefit of

any reasoned analysis by the agency in its final agency decision.12 Nor did the

12
    Before the present permits were issued in 2018, the question of
abandonment did arise in earlier permit applications. In 2010, when BCE filed
permit applications to conduct maintenance dredging of the Westecunk Creek,
the Army Corps questioned whether the site was "an active disposal site and
not abandoned." BCE responded that it has "never considered this [site] as
abandoned." This exchange arguably suggests that the DEP's legal position on
the alleged irrelevance of abandonment has not been consistent.
                                                                         A-5525-17
                                     52
DEP Commissioner's September 14, 2021 decision denying appellants'

emergent request for a stay pending appeal mention abandonment. Instead,

respondents' briefs adopt a categorial position that abandonment, as it is

understood under the MLUL and related case law, is irrelevant to DEP

freshwater wetlands permitting. That is not entirely clear because the DEP has

at times, albeit not in a GP1 context, looked to abandonment principles in its

regulatory role.

      We note in this regard the DEP has relied in the past on the MLUL's

doctrine of abandonment to review permit applications, that is, specifically to

review FHA permits. In Asdal Builders, LLC v. N.J. Dep't of Env't Prot., 426

N.J. Super. 564, 577 (App. Div. 2012), a civil penalty action, the DEP

Commissioner used the abandonment doctrine to deny an after-the-fact stream

encroachment permit. Although we did not reject the doctrine's conceptual

applicability to a DEP permitting case, we did conclude that the

Commissioner's determination the property was abandoned was incorrect on

the facts presented. Ibid.

       In addition, we note the concept of abandonment is found in FWPA,

albeit for cranberry bogs, blueberry fields, and ongoing farming, ranching, or

silviculture operations. In N.J.S.A. 13:9B-4(a), the Legislature exempts those

                                                                        A-5525-17
                                    53
activities from the requirements of obtaining a freshwater wetlands permit.

For the purposes of explaining that particular exemption, N.J.S.A. 13:9B-4(f)

injects concepts of abandonment:

            For the purposes of the exemptions in subsection a. of
            this section, a cranberry bog, blueberry field, or
            portion thereof, on which any of the activities
            specifically pertaining to cranberry bogs or blueberry
            fields listed in that subsection has occurred within the
            prior five years shall be considered an established,
            ongoing farming operation, and shall not be deemed
            abandoned. The lack of a commercial harvest or
            production of a crop on or from the bog or field shall
            not be a determining factor as to whether the
            agricultural use has been abandoned.

            [N.J.S.A. 13:9B-4(f) (emphasis added).]

      These exemptions relating to the abandonment of blueberry fields and

cranberry bogs are also found in FWPA's implementing regulations. N.J.A.C.

7:7A-1.3 states:

            "Abandoned" means, with respect to an agricultural
            field, including a blueberry field or a cranberry bog,
            that the field was used for agriculture, but has not
            been used to produce a crop or product, or maintained
            or improved for agricultural purposes, for five years or
            more. If an agricultural field has been abandoned for
            40 or more years, it shall no longer be considered an
            abandoned agricultural field.        The lack of a
            commercial harvest or production of a crop on or from
            a cranberry bog or blueberry field shall not be a
            determining factor as to whether the agricultural use
            has been abandoned.

                                                                       A-5525-17
                                     54
           [N.J.A.C. 7:7A-1.3 (emphasis added).]

N.J.A.C. 7:7A-1.3 adds that

           "Established, ongoing farming, ranching, or
           silviculture operation" [under this regulation] means
           activities on areas subject to a farming, ranching, or
           silviculture use as of June 30, 1988, which use has
           been pursued continuously since June 30, 1988.
           Activities on areas lying fallow as part of a
           conventional rotational cycle that does not exceed five
           years are part of an established operation. Activities
           that bring an area into farming, silviculture, or
           ranching use are not part of an established operation.
           An operation ceases to be established when the area
           on which it was conducted has been converted to
           another use or has lain idle for so long that
           modifications to the hydrological regime are necessary
           to resume operations, or for more than five years,
           whichever is shorter.

           A cranberry bog, blueberry field, or portion thereof
           that was used for such purposes as of June 30, 1988,
           and on which any of the activities listed at N.J.A.C.
           7:7A-2.4(c)2 and 3 have occurred within the prior five
           years shall be considered an established, ongoing
           farming operation and shall not be deemed abandoned.
           The lack of a commercial harvest or production of a
           crop on or from the lands shall not be a determining
           factor as to whether the agricultural use has been
           abandoned.

           [Ibid. (emphasis added).]

     These citations, coupled with the DEP's response to the Army Corps'

query in 2010, undercut the DEP's legal argument that the doctrine of

                                                                     A-5525-17
                                   55
abandonment is irrelevant to the issuance of a GP1 permit and has no bearing

upon whether the CDF in this case was a "lawfully existing" structure when

the DOT applied for that permit. Based on the apparent historical usage of the

doctrine of abandonment by the Legislature and the DEP, the agency must

consider the factual record anew and make an explicit, evidence-based current

determination as to whether the West Creek CDF had been abandoned due to

its long years of erosion, alleged lack of maintenance, and alleged return to its

natural state after the 1983 dredging and disposal. 12

      Although we recognize the Attorney General's assertion in its brief on

behalf of the DEP that appellants' claims of abandonment do not matter here,

an agency's appellate brief is no place for it to rehabilitate its order. In re

N.J.A.C. 7:1B-1.1 et seq., 431 N.J. Super. 100, 139 (App. Div. 2013).

12
   We do not consider the question of abandonment as synonymous with the
previously discussed issue of whether the CDF is a "currently service able"
structure. As we pointed out, supra, the latter term can encompass the
historical uses of the structure and does not hinge upon the elements of
abandonment. It is conceivable, for instance, that a CDF is "currently
serviceable" in terms of its physical properties, but nonetheless had been
abandoned by its owners by failing to use it for a prolonged period of time.
                                                                          A-5525-17
                                      56
      C. "Expand, Widen, or Deepen"

      Appellants and SBB contend the proposed activities for the CDF project

will "expand, widen, or deepen" the CDF that had been previously authorized

in 1983, and thereby violate N.J.A.C. 7:7A-7.1(a)(2).

      The DEP argues in response that because the new plan does not expand

the 1983 CDF's "footprint" under CAFRA, it does not "expand" the use of the

1983 CDF under FWPA. That argument mixes apples with oranges.

      Notably, in its undated responses to public comments concerning the

proposed CDF, the DEP declared:

            Comment 1:

            Freshwater Wetlands General Permit No. 1
            Applicability. Several comments were received that
            reconstruction of existing confined disposal facility
            (CDF) does not meet the requirements of the
            Freshwater Wetlands General Permit No. 1 because
            the site has not been used in decades and there is no
            current CDF on site.

            Response:

            NJDEP has determined the project meets the
            requirements of the Freshwater Wetlands General
            Permit No. 1. Maintenance dredging of the
            Westecunk Creek channel has occurred several times
            dating back to 1940 and most recently in 1983. The
            CDF was constructed for dredged material
            management for the last three maintenance dredging
            events (1966, 1972, and 1983) and continues to serve

                                                                     A-5525-17
                                    57
            as a confined disposal facility and has not been put to
            any other use. All reconstruction activities will take
            place within the footprint of the existing CDF. The
            CDF will not be expanded, widened, or deepened.
            The berms of the CDF will be reconstructed to an
            elevation of 15.0' NAVD '88, but the depth of the
            structure is limited to the previous elevation of the
            underlying coastal marsh.

            ....

            Comment 8:

            CDF Berm Height and View Obstruction. Several
            comments were received stating that the elevated CDF
            berms would obstruct the view of the adjacent
            properties.

            Response: The reconstruction of the CDF is to occur
            in phases with the initial phase using dredged material
            presently contained within the CDF to reconstruct the
            berms to an elevation of 10.75' NAVD 88. The
            second phase will reconstruct berms to an elevation of
            15' NAVD 88. All reconstruction activities will take
            place within the footprint of the existing CDF. There
            are no specific height limitations under the General
            Permit No. 1 provided the CDF is not expanded,
            widened, or deepened.

      We discern critical shortcomings with the DEP's analysis reflected in

these Responses. For one thing, the Responses' narrow focus on the fact that

the reconstructed berms will not "widen" or "deepen" the CDF essentially

ignores the regulation's additional broader term, "expand."

                                                                      A-5525-17
                                     58
      A substantial increase in the above-ground height and overall volume

capacity of a structure would appear to comprise an "expan[sion]" of that

structure. Enlarging the height and volume of a structure would seem to be

included among the various ways in which it can "expand."

      The term "expand," as used within N.J.A.C. 7:7A-7.1(a)(2), is not

defined   in   the   DEP's   regulations.    Nevertheless,    a   common-sense

understanding of "expand" would not confine the term to increases in only

width and depth, but also would embrace increases in other dimensions, such

as height and volume. The definition of "expand" in Webster's II New College

Dictionary 394 (1999) includes "[t]o increase the volume, size, or scope of . . .

. " Otherwise, if height or volume did not matter, a property owner with a

previously approved two-story building located in freshwater wetlands

conceivably could avoid getting an Individual Permit when adding ten more

stories and creating a massive tower, so long as the width of the building did

not change.

      A cardinal principle when interpreting a statute or regulation is to give

meaning to each word within it. DKM Residential Props. Corp. v. Twp. of

Montgomery, 182 N.J. 296, 307 (2005). We disfavor interpretations that result

in words serving as mere surplusage. Ibid. Here, the regulation's inclusion of

                                                                          A-5525-17
                                     59
the word "expand," along with the terms "widen" and "deepen," adds breadth

to its dimension and meaning. Width and depth are specific, but not exclusive,

measures of expansion. The absence of the terms "height" and "volume" from

the regulation's listing of dimensional terms is not dispositive, given the

inclusion of the all-encompassing term "expand," which logically covers

width, depth, and height, and volume.

       The pertinent FWPA regulation, N.J.A.C. 7:7A-7.1(a), disallows the

issuance of a GP1 for activities that "expand, widen, or deepen the previously

authorized structure." The word "feature" encompasses a "structure" such as a

CDF.      N.J.A.C. 7:7A-16.7, titled "Additional application requirements for an

authorization under a general permit, for an individual permit, or for a transition

area waiver," requires a GP1 applicant to submit a site plan with "[e]xisting

features, such as lot lines, structures, land coverage, and vegetation . . . . " N.J.A.C.

7:7A-16.7(c)(4)(i) (emphasis added). Additionally, N.J.A.C. 7:7A–2.3 states that a

permitted type of “normal property maintenance” is the "[m]aintenance of artificial

features including the repair, rehabilitation, replacement, maintenance or

reconstruction of any previously authorized, currently serviceable structure," again

treating a structure as a kind of feature. N.J.A.C. 7:7A-2.3(b)(1)(i)(9) (emphasis

added).

                                                                                 A-5525-17
                                         60
      This leads us to conclude that the DEP's permit decisions are materially

lacking in the necessary analysis to establish that the proposed CDF does not

"expand" the CDF that had been approved and built in 1983. We reject the DEP's

contention that there is no expansion if the horizontal footprint does not expand.

These additional dimensions of height and volume, which go beyond a

"footprint," must be considered when determining whether an "expan[sion]"

occurred.    The matter must be remanded to require the Commissioner to

reconsider the question. On reconsideration, the DEP must provide a cogent and

sufficient statement of reasons to justify why an almost seven-fold increase in

volume and a more than two-fold increase in the height of the CDF berms does not

represent an "expansion" of the structure disallowed by a General Permit and does

not require an Individual Permit.

      D. "Any Use Other Than as Specified"

      As a related concern under the terms of N.J.A.C. 7:7A-1(a), the DEP's final

agency decision does not explain why the CDF facility "will not be put to any use

other than as specified in any permit authorizing its original construction."

N.J.A.C. 7:7A-1(a)(1).    A proper application of the regulation in its entirety

requires this analysis. The objectors assert that the DOT's plan to convert the

CDF into a regional CDF will improperly go beyond the use of the CDF under

                                                                           A-5525-17
                                      61
the 1983 permit, which was limited to a one-time easement to deposit a modest

amount of dredge spoils.

      The 1983 permit authorized the CDF to be used for holding dredging spoils

from only one waterway, i.e., the Westecunk Creek.          The present project is

designed to accept dredged material from two additional waterways, i.e., Parkers

Run and Cedar Run.       The propriety of these additional "uses" also must be

addressed on remand by the Commissioner.

     E. "Minor Deviations," "Changes in Materials or Construction Techniques,"
and No "Additional Freshwater Wetlands Disturbances"

      As we have already noted, N.J.A.C. 7:7A-7.1(a)(2) disallows a GP1 if the

activities "deviate from any plans of the original activity, except that minor

deviations due to changes in materials or construction techniques and which are

necessary to make repairs, rehabilitation, or replacements are allowed, provided

such changes do not result in disturbance of additional freshwater wetlands or State

open waters upon completion of the activity." (Emphasis added).

      Appellants and SBB argue the current CDF project is a major, not a minor,

deviation from the plan authorized by the 1983 permit. They further assert the

current ongoing project is, in fact, disturbing additional freshwater wetlands. The

DEP and the DOT disagree.

                                                                             A-5525-17
                                       62
       The DEP's permitting decisions in the record are inadequate in addressing

these issues. The DEP declares that the changes are only "minor deviations," but

that conclusory statement falls short of the reasoned analysis required to obtain a

GP1 under FWPA. The permitting decisions also neither provide any explanation,

nor identify any evidence, that "changes in materials or construction techniques"

have necessitated the revision and expansion of the CDF.

      We do recognize that the GP1 issued by the DEP attaches numerous

conditions to minimize the disturbance of additional wetlands, and that the DEP

took steps to issue a stern letter to the DOT enforcing those conditions when it

learned about acts of non-compliance in spring 2021. Nonetheless, this is yet

another aspect of the agency decision that needs renewed attention and

amplification on remand.

                                         IV.

      In our discussion in Part III, supra, we have identified several critical issues

that require further consideration and reasoned analysis by the DEP. We must

remand the case to the agency for that to take place. We do not do so lightly. But

there is well-established precedent supporting such a prudent course of action.

      Case law has long instructed that as a general principle of sound

administrative practice and judicial review, agencies must articulate in their

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final decisions the specific reasons they relied upon in reaching their

determinations. "[N]o matter how great a deference the court is obliged to

accord the administrative determination which it is being called upon to

review, it has no capacity to review at all unless . . . the agency has stated its

reasons grounded in [the] record for its action." State v. Atley, 157 N.J. Super.

157, 163 (App. Div. 1978); see also In re FWPA Authorization, 372 N.J.

Super. at 594 (invoking this principle in remanding a final agency decision by

the DEP for additional analysis and findings). The agency must provide an

"expression of [its] reasoning which . . . led to the conclusion below[.]" Lister

v. J.B. Eurell Co., 234 N.J. Super. 64, 73 (App. Div. 1989). "We cannot give

deference to an agency's factfinding unless we have 'confidence that there has

been a careful consideration of the facts in issue and appropriate findings

addressing the critical issues in dispute.'"        In the Matter of Thomas

Orban/Square Props., LLC, 461 N.J. Super. 57, 77 (App. Div. 2019) (quoting

Bailey v. Bd. of Review, 339 N.J. Super. 29, 33 (App. Div. 2001)).

      Our opinion in In re FWPA Authorization exemplifies the importance of

an administrative agency expressly addressing and adjudicating—in the first

instance—all of the issues that bear upon the validity of a permit under the

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pertinent laws and regulations. We will discuss that opinion in some depth

because of its instructive guidance.

      In 2001, a building company applied to the DEP for a FWPA General

Permit with plans to construct a road, a cul-de-sac, and numerous single-

family homes on freshwater wetlands. Id. at 580-81. A prerequisite to obtain

such a permit was that the wetlands had to be "isolated," meaning they were

not a part of a "surface water tributary system." Id. at 582-83 (citing N.J.S.A.

13:9B-23(b)). Many nearby residents opposed the application on the grounds

that the wetlands on which the company wanted to build were not isolated, but

instead was "hydrologically connected to a swale and ditch system carrying

runoff from the site . . . to a nearby stream." Id. at 584.

      After inspecting the property three times, the DEP concluded in a letter

of interpretation ("LOI") that the wetlands were isolated, and the application

could go forward. Id. at 586-90. In response to its LOI, the DEP received

additional objections from an array of politicians, environmental groups, and

individuals. Id. at 591-92. The DEP met with the objectors and discussed

their concerns, but ultimately issued the applicant the requested permit on May

2003 without any "findings of fact or analysis of the materials submitted by the

objectors." Id. at 592-93. The DEP reiterated that the wetlands are isolated,

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permitting construction, but did not respond to any of the specific objections.

Id. at 592.

      On appeal by the objectors, we held in In re FWPA Authorization that

"all . . . FWPA permitting actions require that certain findings first be made by

[the] DEP consistent with the applicable statutory criteria[,]" which the DEP

did not issue in that case. Id. at 595-56. Our opinion identified numerous

deficiencies and omissions from the DEP's findings and analyses. 13

      For those many reasons, we remanded In re FWPA Authorization "for

further investigative analysis as may be determined by [the DEP] . . . and for

the necessary fact-findings we have held are required." Id. at 598. We did not

retain jurisdiction. Ibid. We anticipated that a "subsequent reviewing court,"

13
   Among other things, we noted the DEP had not addressed the "abundance of
factual material" that could support an outcome contrary to the one it reached.
Id. at 596. For example, the DEP did not sufficiently address that the property
creates off-site flows when flooded, which is a characteristic of non-isolated
wetlands. Ibid. Further, the DEP characterized in a conclusory fashion the
off-site flow as a "sheet flow," a term not defined in any corresponding statute
or regulation. Id. at 596-97. Also, the DEP did not give any explanation or
differentiation between this type of flow and one that would make the wetlands
sufficiently isolated. Ibid. Additionally, the DEP had not inspected the
property during a "wet" season, making the court skeptical that the DEP had
adequately observed the flow conditions to correctly label the property as
isolated. Id. at 597. The DEP also relied heavily on a map which it failed to
provide to the parties and the court, and it failed to provide analysis of the map
and its connection to the property characterization issue. Ibid.
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if a further appeal were pursued, "could better analyze" the appellants' record

deficiency arguments. Id. at 598.

        We follow a similar path here. The matter is remanded to the DEP to

consider, as expeditiously as possible, all of the items we have identified in

Part III of this opinion as in need of further consideration. Upon concluding

that review, the Commissioner or his designee shall issue a detailed final

agency decision that contains factfinding and reasoned analysis sufficient to

enable further appellate review if pursued by the objectors, or by the DOT, or

both.    In the course of its review, the DEP should expressly consider the

opinions of appellants' expert in the Lee Report on the pertinent topics that

have not been disposed of in this opinion, and any material factual

developments that have occurred since the Report was issued in 2018.

        While the remand is pending, the DEP and the DOT shall retain the

discretion to reconsider whether a General Permit is the most appropriate

permit for this particular situation or, alternatively, whether the submission by

the DOT and consideration by the DEP of an Individual Permit application at

this juncture would be more suitable and expeditious. We provide no advisory

opinion on any of these subjects.

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      The remand shall be completed by March 31, 2022, unless the

Commissioner advises this court by letter that a reasonable extension of that

deadline is imperative, bearing in mind the protracted history of this dispute.

In the meantime, we are not persuaded that a stay of the current activity at the

project site is warranted. As the parties are well aware, this court has denied a

stay pending appeal on multiple occasions during this litigation, and the

Supreme Court has not ruled otherwise. As a practical matter, we are aware

that, due to habitat cycles and other factors, the dredging and construction

activity must stop by December 31, 2021 and cannot resume until July 2022.

The status quo need not be changed at this time, pending the outcome of the

remand.

      All other points raised on appeal lack sufficient merit to warrant

discussion. R. 2:11-3(e)(1)(D) and (E).

      Affirmed in part and remanded in part for further consideration,

consistent with this opinion. We do not retain jurisdiction.

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