BILL REQ. #: S-4274.2
State of Washington | 59th Legislature | 2006 Regular Session |
Read first time 01/16/2006. Referred to Committee on Government Operations & Elections.
AN ACT Relating to critical areas safe harbor agreements; and amending RCW 36.70A.172 and 36.70A.060.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON:
Sec. 1 RCW 36.70A.172 and 1995 c 347 s 105 are each amended to
read as follows:
(1) In designating and protecting critical areas under this
chapter, counties and cities shall include the best available science
in developing policies and development regulations to protect the
functions and values of critical areas. In addition, counties and
cities shall give special consideration to conservation or protection
measures necessary to preserve or enhance anadromous fisheries.
(2) If it determines that advice from scientific or other experts
is necessary or will be of substantial assistance in reaching its
decision, a growth management hearings board may retain scientific or
other expert advice to assist in reviewing a petition under RCW
36.70A.290 that involves critical areas.
(3) At any point, whether prior to or following designation or
adoption actions required under this chapter, a county or city may
submit to the department a notice of intent to seek approval of a
critical areas safe harbor agreement that will result in equivalent or
better critical area functions and values in the applicable
jurisdiction, or in one or more of the critical areas listed in RCW
36.70A.030(5). Approval of a proposed critical areas safe harbor
agreement under subsection (8)(a) of this section constitutes full
compliance with the critical areas requirements of this chapter,
including requirements under subsection (1) of this section and RCW
36.70A.060 (2) and (3).
(4) A critical areas safe harbor development process initiated
under this section must be collaborative in nature and must seek
creative and locally appropriate solutions based on voluntary
participation in federal, state, or local programs that offer financial
incentives or other assistance to landowners and that encourage
voluntary legal commitments to actions that will protect or enhance
critical area functions and values.
(5) A city or county seeking to develop a critical areas safe
harbor agreement for approval must make efforts to invite participation
from the following:
(a) Local stakeholders and property owners;
(b) The department, the department of ecology, and the department
of fish and wildlife; and
(c) Any federal, state, or local agency, or any tribal authority,
with direct regulatory jurisdiction over subject matters related to the
functions and values of critical areas in the jurisdiction, including
agencies responsible for the regulatory protection of fish life,
wildlife, aquatic resources, wetlands, water quantity, and water
quality on private lands.
(6) A proposed critical areas safe harbor agreement must include
detailed descriptions of at least the following components:
(a) Goals set for the enhancement of critical area functions and
values, such as miles of riparian areas protected, acres enrolled in
conservation programs, or acres committed to particular land use
practices;
(b) Pertinent information relating to social and cultural issues,
economic concerns, or traditional land uses to be balanced when
considering locally appropriate implementation of the goals and
requirements of this chapter;
(c) Binding legal commitments to voluntary projects or actions,
whether currently in place or to be commenced by approval of a critical
areas safe harbor agreement under subsection (8)(a) of this section,
that will protect or enhance the functions and values of critical
areas. These projects may include, but are not limited to: Riparian
buffers; dedication of natural areas; conservation easements; purchase
or transfer of development rights; landscape management plans; best
management practices; and adaptive management strategies;
(d) State and local programs that foster creative and locally
appropriate solutions to protect or enhance the net functions and
values of critical areas in the jurisdiction, including but not limited
to: Clustering; mitigation banking; progress monitoring; and public
sector investments;
(e) Compliance with current legal requirements or permits that
protect or enhance fish life, wildlife, aquatic resources, wetlands,
water resources, or water quality; and
(f) Pertinent agencies consulted, and regulatory and permit review
processes involved, including but not limited to:
(i) Federal review of actions under the endangered species act (16
U.S.C. Sec. 1531 et seq.);
(ii) Federal permits required under section 404 of the federal
water pollution control act (33 U.S.C. Sec. 1251 et seq.);
(iii) State or federal review of projects under section 401 of the
federal water pollution control act (33 U.S.C. Sec. 1251 et seq.); and
(iv) Review and regulation of projects or activities related to:
Water quality under chapter 90.48 RCW; shorelines under chapter 90.58
RCW; and hydraulic project approval under chapter 77.55 RCW.
(7)(a) A city or county seeking approval of a proposed safe harbor
agreement for critical areas shall send the proposed agreement to the
department. Upon receipt, the department shall immediately transmit
the proposed agreement to the department of ecology and the department
of fish and wildlife.
(b) Within fifteen days of receiving the proposed agreement from a
city or county, the department shall publish the proposed agreement in
the Washington State Register and post the agreement on its web site,
and must accept public comments for sixty days from the date of
publication. Comments must be considered by the department of ecology
and the department of fish and wildlife, and responses from those two
departments must be published on the department's web site no more than
fifteen days after the closure of the public comment period. Summary
responses may be provided in lieu of voluminous or repetitive comments.
(c) The department of ecology and the department of fish and
wildlife have thirty days after the close of the sixty-day public
comment period to approve or deny the safe harbor agreement for
critical areas as proposed by the city or county. Failure to approve
or deny the agreement within the thirty-day period is deemed approval
of the agreement by the department that fails to respond in a timely
manner.
(8)(a) Approval of a critical areas safe harbor agreement by both
the department of fish and wildlife and the department of ecology
constitutes full compliance with the critical areas requirements of
this chapter. Upon approval, the department shall post the approved
critical areas safe harbor agreement on its web site, and cause a
notice of adoption of the approved agreement to be published in the
Washington State Register.
(b) If the request for approval of the critical areas safe harbor
agreement is denied by one or both departments, the department or
departments denying the request have an additional sixty days to
provide the city or county specific reasons why the proposed agreement
will not provide equivalent or better protection of critical area
functions and values, and must provide recommendations in writing
detailing changes that would result in approval. A city or county may
then resubmit an amended critical areas safe harbor agreement under the
procedures established in subsections (7) through (9) of this section.
(9) A person aggrieved by a final decision to approve or deny a
proposed critical areas safe harbor agreement under subsections (7) and
(8) of this section has thirty days to appeal the decision to the
superior court in which property or critical areas affected by the
decision are located. The sole issue before the superior court is
whether the decision to approve or deny the proposed agreement was
clearly erroneous.
Sec. 2 RCW 36.70A.060 and 2005 c 423 s 3 are each amended to read
as follows:
(1)(a) Except as provided in RCW 36.70A.1701, each county that is
required or chooses to plan under RCW 36.70A.040, and each city within
such county, shall adopt development regulations on or before September
1, 1991, to assure the conservation of agricultural, forest, and
mineral resource lands designated under RCW 36.70A.170. Regulations
adopted under this subsection may not prohibit uses legally existing on
any parcel prior to their adoption and shall remain in effect until the
county or city adopts development regulations pursuant to RCW
36.70A.040. Such regulations shall assure that the use of lands
adjacent to agricultural, forest, or mineral resource lands shall not
interfere with the continued use, in the accustomed manner and in
accordance with best management practices, of these designated lands
for the production of food, agricultural products, or timber, or for
the extraction of minerals.
(b) Counties and cities shall require that all plats, short plats,
development permits, and building permits issued for development
activities on, or within five hundred feet of, lands designated as
agricultural lands, forest lands, or mineral resource lands, contain a
notice that the subject property is within or near designated
agricultural lands, forest lands, or mineral resource lands on which a
variety of commercial activities may occur that are not compatible with
residential development for certain periods of limited duration. The
notice for mineral resource lands shall also inform that an application
might be made for mining-related activities, including mining,
extraction, washing, crushing, stockpiling, blasting, transporting, and
recycling of minerals.
(2) Each county and city shall adopt development regulations that
protect critical areas that are required to be designated under RCW
36.70A.170. For counties and cities that are required or choose to
plan under RCW 36.70A.040, such development regulations shall be
adopted on or before September 1, 1991. For the remainder of the
counties and cities, such development regulations shall be adopted on
or before March 1, 1992.
(3) Such counties and cities shall review these designations and
development regulations when adopting their comprehensive plans under
RCW 36.70A.040 and implementing development regulations under RCW
36.70A.120 and may alter such designations and development regulations
to insure consistency.
(4) Approval by the department of ecology and the department of
fish and wildlife of a city or county safe harbor agreement for
critical areas under RCW 36.70A.172(8) constitutes compliance with the
critical areas requirements of this chapter.
(5) Forest land and agricultural land located within urban growth
areas shall not be designated by a county or city as forest land or
agricultural land of long-term commercial significance under RCW
36.70A.170 unless the city or county has enacted a program authorizing
transfer or purchase of development rights.