SENATE BILL REPORT

SB 5713

This analysis was prepared by non-partisan legislative staff for the use of legislative members in their deliberations. This analysis is not a part of the legislation nor does it constitute a statement of legislative intent.

As of April 4, 2011

Title: An act relating to implementing recommendations developed in accordance with Substitute Senate Bill No. 5248, chapter 353, Laws of 2007

Brief Description: Implementing recommendations of the Ruckelshaus Center process.

Sponsors: Senators Haugen, Delvin, Hatfield, Shin and Parlette.

Brief History:

Committee Activity: Agriculture & Rural Economic Development: 2/14/11, 2/17/11 [DPS-WM].

Ways & Means: 2/24/11.

Brief Summary of Bill

  • Establishes the Voluntary Stewardship Program (Program).

  • Authorizes participating counties to protect critical areas in areas used for agricultural activities through the Program rather than through regulatory requirements of the Growth Management Act (GMA).

  • Directs the State Conservation Commission, with the advice of a statewide advisory committee, to administer the Program.

  • Establishes definitions and operational and implementation requirements for the Program.

SENATE COMMITTEE ON AGRICULTURE & RURAL ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT

Majority Report: That Substitute Senate Bill No. 5713 be substituted therefor, and the substitute bill do pass and be referred to Committee on Ways & Means.

Signed by Senators Hatfield, Chair; Shin, Vice Chair; Delvin, Ranking Minority Member; Becker, Haugen, Hobbs, Honeyford and Schoesler.

Staff: Bob Lee (786-7404)

SENATE COMMITTEE ON WAYS & MEANS

Staff: Chris Godwin (786-7441)

Background: In 2007 the Legislature charged the Ruckelshaus Center (Center) to conduct an examination of the conflict between the dual mandates of protecting agricultural land and protecting critical areas in local ordinances adopted under the GMA. The Center also was instructed to facilitate stakeholder discussions to identify policy and funding options for a resolution to this issue. A three-year moratorium was placed on the requirement for local governments to update their critical area ordinances as they specifically applied to agricultural activities. This moratorium was extended by legislative action in 2010 and expires on July 1, 2011.

This is the legislation that was formulated as a result of the facilitated stakeholder discussions.

Summary of Bill (Recommended Substitute): The Voluntary Stewardship Program (Program) is established as an option for counties to utilize. The purpose of the Program is to protect and enhance critical areas on lands used for agricultural activities through voluntary actions by agricultural operators.

In administering the Program, the State Conservation Commission (Commission) is assigned the following duties and tasks, including:Ÿ

Other administrative duties related to the Program are specified. For example, the Commission, the Department of Commerce (Commerce), the Department of Ecology, and other state agencies as directed by the Governor must cooperate and collaborate to implement the Program, and develop materials to assist local watershed groups in the development of required work plans. The Commission also must, according to a specified schedule, determine which watersheds and state agencies have received adequate funding to implement the Program in participating watersheds. Additionally, by August 31, 2015, and every two years thereafter, the Commission must report to the Legislature and participating counties on the participating watersheds that have received adequate funding to establish and implement the Program.

As an alternative to protecting critical areas used for agricultural activities through critical area development regulations mandated by the GMA, the legislative authority of a county may elect to protect these critical areas through the Program. A county choosing this alternative has six months from the effective date of the legislation to:Ÿ

Prior to adopting an ordinance or resolution to participate in the Program, the county must notify property owners and other affected and interested individuals, tribes, agencies, businesses, school districts, and organizations.

Subject to funding provisions, once a county elects to participate in the Program, the Program applies to all unincorporated property within a participating watershed upon which agricultural activities occur.

Counties that elect to participate in the Program are eligible for state funding to implement the Program, subject to the availability of state funding. These counties are also not required to implement the Program in a participating watershed until adequate funding is provided.

With limited exceptions, counties have two years following the effective date of the legislation to review and, if necessary, revise their development regulations adopted under the GMA to protect critical areas as they specifically apply to agricultural activities. If the county is not participating in the Program, this review and revision requirement applies to all unincorporated areas. If the county is participating in the Program, the review and revision requirement applies only to watersheds that are not participating in the Program. Subsequent reviews and revisions of these development regulations must occur according to applicable requirements of the GMA.

Once the Commission makes funds available to a county participating in the Program, the county, within 60 days, must:Ÿ

Designated watershed groups must develop a work plan to protect critical areas while maintaining the viability of agriculture in the watershed. The work plan must include goals and benchmarks for the protection and enhancement of critical areas. In developing the work plan, the watershed group must satisfy specified requirements, including:

A designated watershed group must submit the work plan to the director of the Commission for approval. Upon receipt of a work plan, the director must submit the work plan to a technical panel for review. The technical panel is to be comprised of the directors, or director's designees, of specified state agencies. The technical panel has 45 days after the Commission receives the work plan to review and assess the plan.

If the technical panel determines that the proposed work plan will protect critical areas while maintaining and enhancing the viability of agriculture in the watershed, it must recommend approval of the work plan and the director must approve the work plan. If the technical panel determines that the proposed work plan will not meet the criteria for approval, it must identify its reasons for the determination and the director must advise the watershed group of the reasons for the disapproval. The watershed group may modify and resubmit its work plan for review and potential approval. Provisions governing work plans that are not approved by the director, including requirements for a review by the statewide advisory committee, are specified.

The approval of a work plan by a designated watershed group triggers additional requirements. Within five years of the receipt of funding for a participating watershed, the watershed group must report to the director and the county on whether it has met the work plan's protection and enhancement goals and benchmarks. If the watershed group, the director, and the statewide advisory committee concur on the success of the plan, the watershed group must continue implementing the work plan.

If the watershed group determines that protection goals and benchmarks have not been met, it must propose an adaptive management plan, to be approved or disapproved by the director, to achieve the unmet goals and benchmarks. If the watershed group determines that enhancement goals and benchmarks have not been met, the watershed group must determine what additional voluntary actions are needed to meet the benchmarks, identify funding necessary to implement these actions and then proceed with the associated implementation.

Similar work plan evaluation and reporting measures are required within ten years after receipt of funding for a participating watershed and every five years thereafter. Provisions for watersheds with adaptive management plans that are not approved by the director and watersheds that, as determined by the watershed group, do not meet protection goals and benchmarks are specified.

Various evaluation and consultation requirements pertaining to evaluation reports by watershed groups of work plans are specified.

If any of the following events occur, a participating county must take remedial actions:

The remedial action options, which must be taken within 18 months of a triggering event, include the following, of which the county must complete one:Ÿ

A county electing to participate in the Program may withdraw through an adopted ordinance or resolution. A withdrawal may occur from the Program at the end of three years, five years, or eight years from receipt of funding, or at any time after ten years from receipt of funding. A county that withdraws a participating watershed from the Program must, within 18 months, review and, if necessary, revise its development regulations that protect critical areas in the applicable watershed as they specifically apply to agricultural activities.

A county that participates in the Program and is achieving related benchmarks and goals is generally not required to update development regulations that protect critical areas as they specifically apply to agricultural activities in the participating watershed. Exceptions to this provision are specified. Additionally, unless the watershed group and the Director agree that Program-related goals and benchmarks have been met, counties electing to participate in the Program must, beginning ten years from receiving Program funding, review and, if necessary, revise development regulations to protect critical areas as they specifically apply to agricultural activities in a participating watershed according to a recurring schedule established in the GMA.

Several miscellaneous provisions related to the establishment and implementation of the Program are specified. Examples are specified below:Ÿ

EFFECT OF CHANGES MADE BY AGRICULTURE & RURAL ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT COMMITTEE (Recommended Substitute): Makes numerous technical changes. Changes name of program from the Agricultural and Critical Areas Voluntary Stewardship Program to the Voluntary Stewardship Program. Specifies that nothing in the legislation, other than the Growth Management Act, may be construed to (1) interfere with or supplant the ability of any agricultural operator to work cooperatively with a conservation district or or participate in state or federal conservation program; (2) require an agricultural operator to discontinue agricultural activities legally existing before the effective date of a specific section; (3) prohibit the voluntary sale or leasing of land for conservation purposes; (4) grant counties or state agencies additional authority to regulate critical areas on lands used for agricultural activities; and (5) limit the authority of a state agency, local government, or landowner to carry out its legal obligations. Adds severability clauses.

Appropriation: None.

Fiscal Note: Available.

Committee/Commission/Task Force Created: No.

Effective Date: Ninety days after adjournment of session in which bill is passed.

Staff Summary of Public Testimony on Original Bill (Agriculture & Rural Economic Development): PRO: Critical area ordinance have been the most controversial requirement for counties to implement under the Growth Management Act. Counties have expended significant resources in the past in developing critical area ordinances and in litigation over those ordinances. Developing this alternative process took three and one-half years to negotiate but today county, environmental, and agricultural groups are jointly supporting this legislation. This bill provides four years to obtain funding and gives time to counties to engage in this process.

OTHER: The Ruckelshaus Center convened the groups as requested by the Legislature.

Persons Testifying (Agriculture & Rural Economic Development): PRO: Eric Johnson, Washington Association of Counties; April Putney, Futurewise; Dan Wood, Washington State Farm Bureau; Harry Reinhart, King County; Bill Robinson, Nature Conservancy; Mo McBroom, Washington Environmental Council; Jeanne McNeil, Washington State Nursery and Landscape Association; Ron Shultz, Washington State Conservation Commission; Jack Field, Washington Cattlemen's Association; Jay Gordon, Washington State Dairy Federation.

OTHER: Michael Kern, Ruckelshaus Center.

Staff Summary of Public Testimony on Recommended Substitute (Ways & Means): PRO: This bill is the result of an assignment given to the Ruckelshaus Center in 2007 to determine a solution to balancing interests between the environment and agriculture. The Native American tribes decided not to participate in this effort out of concerns related to a regulatory backstop. The bill does allow for continued input by the Native American tribes going forward. The Commission has been working with other state agencies. Their funding assumes federal dollars and assumes that costs would be phased including planning, grant issuance, and implementation. This is a new approach that relies on voluntary enhancement of critical areas as opposed to a regulatory approach. Counties must develop a plan to protect their critical areas that includes benchmarks and goals. It is important to establish benchmarks to determine whether the program is effective, and to monitor those benchmarks. We endorse the bill and the agreement in the bill rather than establishing aggressive agricultural buffers around critical areas on agricultural land. We know there is a federal and local cost to this program and we have been looking at federal programs for funding. We appreciate that this is a collaborative program that will end contention that currently exists in the critical area ordinance process.

OTHER: This bill is the product of a legislative initiative to help the agricultural interest, tribes, counties, and environmentalists to ensure prosperous farms and protect the environment. The tribes did not participate in the last year because they were concerned about the efficacy of the program, but the process allows for them to react at multiple points.

Persons Testifying (Ways & Means): PRO: Ron Schultz, State Conservation Commission; Bill Robinson, Nature Conservancy; Dan Wood, Washington Farm Bureau; Eric Johnson, Association of Counties.

OTHER: William Ruckelshaus, Ruckelshaus Center.