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- Seneca Meadows, Inc. v. Town of Seneca Falls
Seneca Meadows, Inc. v. Town of Seneca Falls
Geography
Year
2017
Document Type
Litigation
Part of
About this case
Filing year
2017
Status
Judgment for petitioner and vacating of local law affirmed.
Geography
Docket number
CA 23-01878
Court/admin entity
United States → State Courts → New York Supreme Court, Appellate Division (N.Y. App. Div.)
Case category
State Law Claims (US) → State Impact Assessment Laws (US)
Principal law
United States → New York State Environmental Quality Review Act (SEQRA)
At issue
Landfill owner-operator's challenge to a New York town's law prohibiting continued operation of the landfill after the landfill's current permits expire.
Topics
, ,
Documents
Filing Date
Document
Type
Topics
Beta
03/20/2026
Judgment for petitioner and vacating of local law affirmed.
In a lawsuit brought by the owner and operator of the sole landfill in the Town of Seneca Falls, the New York Appellate Division affirmed the determination by a trial court that the Town of Seneca Falls Town Board failed to comply with its substantive obligations under the State Environmental Quality Review Act (SEQRA) when it enacted a local law prohibiting continued operation of solid waste disposal facilities after the expiration of the landfill’s current permits. The Appellate Division in December 2024 ruled that the owner-operator lacked standing to make SEQRA claims and reversed the trial court, but the New York Court of Appeals reversed that decision in December 2025. After the Court of Appeals remitted the case for consideration of the merits, the Appellate Division found that the Town Board failed to identify the relevant areas of environmental concern, take the required hard look at those concerns, and make a reasoned elaboration of the basis for its determination. The court rejected the Town respondents’ contention that the Town Board was not obligated to consider the potential increase in greenhouse gas emissions resulting from the landfill’s closure because the owner-operator did not raise the concern and because such a consequence was speculative. The Appellate Division described the Town respondents’ position as “legally and factually flawed.” The court noted that under SEQRA it was the Town Board’s obligation, not the owner-operator’s, to identify the relevant areas of environmental concern and that, in any event, the owner-operator’s air quality expert had “specifically warned” during a hearing that closure “could likely result in an increase in greenhouse gas emissions, as waste may have to be transported a greater distance.” The Appellate Division acknowledged the principle that SEQRA does not require investigation of “every conceivable environmental problem” but agreed with the court below that “the transportation of waste to other locations and the concomitant increase in greenhouse gas emissions by hauling vehicles constituted a nonspeculative impact that could be reasonably expected to result” from the closure, particularly given the landfill’s size. The Appellate Division further found that the record established that the “cursory examination” performed by the Town Board was insufficient to demonstrate a hard look at environmental concerns.
Decision
Summary
Landfill owner-operator's challenge to a New York town's law prohibiting continued operation of the landfill after the landfill's current permits expire.
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Group
Topics
Greenhouse gas
Economic sector