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Crescent Bar residents score another victory

by Royal Register EditorTed Escobar
| August 25, 2014 11:51 AM

CRESCENT BAR – The residents of Crescent Bar Island scored a major victory recently when the Port of Quincy settled and agreed to testify, if necessary, to facts that could be damaging to the Grant PUD in its defense against a lawsuit by the residents.

Among other things to which the POQ agrees is its belief that the PUD was less than truthful when it ordered the POQ in 2010 to evict the islanders. The POQ said it learned later that the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission had not ordered the PUD to evict the islanders.

The island is under the control of the PUD. It leased the entire property to the POQ in 1962 for the purposes of development. The POQ leased the island to Crescent Bar Inc., and CBI leased lots to individuals. Eviction notices went out in 2010. The islanders were to be gone in 2012.

The islanders didn't go. Instead they bought CBI and filed a lawsuit in 2011 to force the PUD and POQ to honor the leases to 2052. In the settlement agreement, the POQ makes it clear the residents have leases to at least 2023.

“They're on our side now,” CBI Counsel Dale Foreman said.

Federal Judge Justin L. Quackenbush of Spokane held a hearing on Friday, Aug. 22, on a motion for summary judgment filed by the islanders. He did not make a decision. He suggested to the PUD and the people go to binding arbitration with no preconditions, according to a CBI spokesman.

Quackenbush has said in the past he believes the PUD agreed to 2023 and made promises regarding 2052.

The POQ's decision to settle hinged on several facts to which it stipulated. It agreed that:

  • On March 13, 1970, the Port entered into a lease with a Predecessor to CBI (PCBI). The lease was to terminate March 31, 2012.
  • On February 8, 1973, the Port and PCBI amended the March 13, 1970, lease to extend the term of the lease to 50 years from March 1, 1973 to February 28, 2023.
  • In the event of any conflict between the March 13, 1970, lease and the February 8, 1973, lease, the terms of the February 8, 1973, lease were to control.
  • On February 26, 1973, by Resolution No. 2927, the PUD agreed to submit to the Federal Power Commission a request for an extension of the June 5, 1962, lease to February 28, 2023.
  • The Port has learned that, in the course of the PUD’s relicensing of the Priest Rapids Hydroelectric Project, PUD representatives stated to lot and condominium owners that the lease would be extended for the term of the expected new license.
  • On April 26, 2010, the PUD commissioners voted to allow the 1979 lease to expire in 2012 without ever having sought FERC approval of an extension of the term, as promised in the 1979 lease and throughout the FERC relicensing process.
  • A Port commissioner and the Port's attorney met with PUD officials to determine, among other things, the reasons behind the PUD’s termination of the 1979 lease.

Referencing a March 10, 2010, letter from FERC and alleged telephone conversations with FERC staff, PUD officials told the Port its decision not to extend or provide new private leases at Crescent Bar Island had been required by FERC.

  • On May 18, 2010, partly in reliance on the PUD’s statements that FERC required termination of private uses on Crescent Bar Island in 2012, the Port issued a Notice of Termination to CBI.
  • On April 17, 2014, FERC’s Office of General Counsel issued a letter addressed to CBI counsel with the following statement by general counsel for FERC: "The PUD was not required to evict your [CBI's] clients from Crescent Bar Island."
  • The PUD's statements regarding FERC requirements affected the manner in which the Port addressed the claims of Plaintiffs and CBI before and during the course of this Lawsuit. The Port incurred hundreds of thousands of dollars in legal fees and expenses defending Plaintiffs’ claims, partially as a consequence of the statements by the PUD that the Port now believes were not accurate.
  • The PUD was and is required to seek in good faith and with due diligence FERC approval of the extension of the 1979 lease to February 28, 2023, or in the alternative, demand that the PUD provide new leases that allow Island residents, including lot and condominium owners and CBI, to remain on the leased property at least until February 28, 2023.
  • In the event this matter goes to trial, the Port, its commissioners, and its attorneys (except to the extent of attorney/client privileged discussions) agree they will testify truthfully regarding the facts of the case.