BILL REQ. #:  S-0507.2 



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SENATE BILL 5250
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State of Washington58th Legislature2003 Regular Session

By Senators Regala, Jacobsen, Fraser, Kohl-Welles and Kline

Read first time 01/20/2003.   Referred to Committee on Natural Resources, Energy & Water.



     AN ACT Relating to instream flows; amending RCW 90.22.060, 90.22.010, 90.54.020, 90.03.345, 77.55.050, and 90.03.290; reenacting and amending RCW 90.54.050; and adding a new section to chapter 90.22 RCW.

BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON:

Sec. 1   RCW 90.22.060 and 1998 c 245 s 172 are each amended to read as follows:
     ((By December 31, 1993, the department of ecology shall, in cooperation with the Indian tribes, and the department of fish and wildlife, establish a statewide list of priorities for evaluation of instream flows. In establishing these priorities, the department shall consider the achievement of wild salmonid production as its primary goal.)) (1) The purpose of this section is to specify the priorities to be used in establishing instream flows under RCW 90.22.010 and 90.54.020. Instream flows shall be established in rule for all mainstem rivers and primary tributaries of the state by the year 2010. The department of ecology, in close cooperation with the department of fish and wildlife, must pursue achievement of this goal as a matter of high priority. In developing and implementing the work plan required under subsection (2) of this section, priority shall be given to establishing instream flow rules in:
     (a) Water resource inventory areas numbers 1, 5, 7, 8, 9, 10, 12, 17, 18, 32, 35, 37, 38, 39, 45, 48, and 49 as those areas are established in chapter 173-500 WAC as it exists on the effective date of this section; and
     (b) Water resource inventory areas that are conducting planning under chapter 90.82 RCW as of the effective date of this section.
     (2) By December 2003, the department, in consultation with the department of fish and wildlife and with affected tribal governments, planning units under chapter 90.82 RCW, and local governments, shall publish a work plan that identifies where and when instream flows will be developed and adopted by rule in order to achieve the goals in this section. The work plan must also define tributary areas where flows should be addressed and provide a schedule for prioritizing, recommending, and setting flows in these areas, as appropriate. This work plan must be updated annually. By December 31st of each odd-numbered year, the department shall prepare a report on progress in implementing the work plan for the previous biennium.
     The department, in consultation with the department of fish and wildlife and with affected tribal governments, planning units under chapter 90.82 RCW, and local governments, shall develop and publish strategies for achieving flows that satisfy the flow requirements of the instream flow rules including, but not limited to, an identification of priorities for the use of state resources to achieve the flows. The strategies shall identify means of measuring whether progress toward achieving instream flow requirements and overcoming other limiting factors identified for streams is being made, and the actions that will be taken if such progress is not being made for a stream. For a water resource inventory area in which watershed planning is conducted under chapter 90.82 RCW and for which the planning unit has elected to recommend instream flows, the strategies shall be those contained in the plan developed under chapter 90.82 RCW.

Sec. 2   RCW 90.22.010 and 1997 c 32 s 4 are each amended to read as follows:
     (1) The department of ecology ((may)) shall establish ((minimum)) instream water flows or levels for the state's major rivers, streams, lakes, or other public waters ((for the purposes of protecting fish, game, birds or other wildlife resources, or recreational or aesthetic values of said public waters whenever it appears to be in the public interest to establish the same. In addition, the department of ecology shall, when requested by the department of fish and wildlife to protect fish, game or other wildlife resources under the jurisdiction of the requesting state agency, or if the department of ecology finds it necessary to preserve water quality, establish such minimum flows or levels as are required to protect the resource or preserve the water quality described in the request or determination. Any request submitted by the department of fish and wildlife shall include a statement setting forth the need for establishing a minimum flow or level. When the department acts to preserve water quality, it shall include a similar statement with the proposed rule filed with the code reviser. This section shall not apply to waters artificially stored in reservoirs, provided that in the granting of storage permits by the department of ecology in the future, full recognition shall be given to downstream minimum flows, if any there may be, which have theretofore been established hereunder)) consistent with the standards and procedures of this section and RCW 90.54.020.
     (2) Instream flows shall be established to protect the full range of applicable instream interests and values, including fish and wildlife habitat, water quality, navigation, and scenic, aesthetic, and environmental quality values. In establishing instream flows, the department shall seek to fulfill instream interests and values based upon both state and federal laws and federal treaties. Instream flows should be established with the objective of being achievable a majority of the time, recognizing seasonal variation, when based upon hydrological records of natural flow conditions. On streams or stream reaches where fish populations are the predominant consideration, instream flows shall be established sufficient to support the biological needs of fish at all life stages with the objective of achieving sustainable and harvestable levels of fish.
     (3) A higher instream flow may be established where recommended by an approved watershed plan under chapter 90.82 RCW or other similar comprehensive planning process. In considering whether to adopt or recommend a higher instream flow, the department and watershed planning units shall be guided by the allocation policies declared in RCW 90.54.020, including application of the maximum net benefits standard to alternative uses of water for instream and offstream purposes.
     (4) Where consistent with the requirements of subsection (2) of this section and RCW 90.54.020, instream flow rules must incorporate an instream flow component established by:
     (a) The conditions for a license issued by the federal energy regulatory commission after May 1994, for a hydroelectric power generating facility, where the department of ecology with the agreement of the department of fish and wildlife has approved or otherwise formally acknowledged the instream flow component on behalf of the state;
     (b) The conditions established under a habitat conservation plan approved under the federal endangered species act, where the department of ecology with the agreement of the department of fish and wildlife has approved or otherwise formally acknowledged the instream flow component on behalf of the state; and
     (c) The federal Yakima river basin water enhancement project pursuant to Public Law 103-434.
     (5) In establishing instream flows, the department shall use the best available scientific information. When adequate information is not available for a lake, stream, or stream reach and may not be obtainable in a timely manner, an instream flow shall be established that places the least risk upon jeopardizing the protection of instream values, with the objective of reviewing and potentially revising the level when adequate information becomes available. In developing and selecting methodologies for use in establishing flows or levels for the recovery of fish populations, and in developing criteria to select methods to apply in each situation, the department shall consult with the department of fish and wildlife, Indian tribes, and the science panel created under RCW 77.85.040, and shall consult periodically with them in updating methodologies. The department may select from among several acceptable methodologies for a specific stream or lake, based upon considerations such as fish species of principal concern, available funding and staffing, the depletion of stream flows, and the safety of personnel conducting the evaluation.
     (6) The department shall apply a scientific-based adaptive management process following the adoption of instream flow rules. This shall include periodic review of hydrological, biological, and other information regarding the level of protection of instream resources and values, regular monitoring, and assessment consistent with the rule implementation plan required under section 4 of this act, a scientific and peer review process, and revision of adopted rules based upon new information and analysis when appropriate to better achieve the level of protection required by this section and RCW 90.54.020.
     (7) In establishing instream flows, the department shall accord substantial weight to the recommendations of a planning unit making a timely recommendation for that lake, stream, stream reach, or other public body of water as part of an approved watershed plan under chapter 90.82 RCW. Where fish populations are a principal instream value in establishing the instream flow, the department shall accord substantial weight to the recommendations of the department of fish and wildlife and Indian tribes with a treaty-based fishery right in the water body, and shall provide a written explanation of any departure from such recommendations
.

Sec. 3   RCW 90.54.020 and 1997 c 442 s 201 are each amended to read as follows:
     Utilization and management of the waters of the state shall be guided by the following general declaration of fundamentals:
     (1) Uses of water for domestic, stock watering, industrial, commercial, agricultural, irrigation, hydroelectric power production, mining, fish and wildlife maintenance and enhancement, recreational, and thermal power production purposes, and preservation of environmental and aesthetic values, and all other uses compatible with the enjoyment of the public waters of the state, are declared to be beneficial.
     (2) Allocation of waters among potential uses and users shall be based generally on the securing of the maximum net benefits for the people of the state. Maximum net benefits shall constitute total benefits less costs including opportunities lost.
     (3) The quality of the natural environment shall be protected and, where possible, enhanced as follows:
     (a) ((Perennial rivers and streams of the state shall be retained with base flows necessary to provide for preservation of wildlife, fish, scenic, aesthetic and other environmental values, and navigational values)) Flows in the state's perennial rivers and streams shall be managed to protect the full range of applicable instream interests and values, including fish and wildlife habitat, water quality, navigation, and scenic, aesthetic, and environmental quality values. Regulatory instream flows shall be established pursuant to RCW 90.22.010. Lakes and ponds shall be retained substantially in their natural condition. Withdrawals of water or the establishment of regulatory instream flows which would conflict ((therewith)) with the level of protection required by this subsection shall be authorized only in those situations where ((it is clear that overriding considerations of the public interest will be served)):
     (i) It is necessary to meet emergency public health or safety needs; or
     (ii) It is necessary to meet emergency economic needs that are regionwide, where full mitigation is provided for lowering flows or levels critical for the survival of critical or depressed fish populations; and
     (iii) The authorized uses or exceptions to established regulatory flows are of limited duration
.
     (b) Waters of the state shall be of high quality. Regardless of the quality of the waters of the state, all wastes and other materials and substances proposed for entry into said waters shall be provided with all known, available, and reasonable methods of treatment prior to entry. Notwithstanding that standards of quality established for the waters of the state would not be violated, wastes and other materials and substances shall not be allowed to enter such waters which will reduce the existing quality thereof, except in those situations where it is clear that overriding considerations of the public interest will be served. Technology-based effluent limitations or standards for discharges for municipal water treatment plants located on the Chehalis, Columbia, Cowlitz, Lewis, or Skagit river shall be adjusted to reflect credit for substances removed from the plant intake water if:
     (i) The municipality demonstrates that the intake water is drawn from the same body of water into which the discharge is made; and
     (ii) The municipality demonstrates that no violation of receiving water quality standards or appreciable environmental degradation will result.
     (4) The development of multipurpose water storage facilities shall be a high priority for programs of water allocation, planning, management, and efficiency. The department, other state agencies, local governments, and planning units formed under section 107 or 108 ((of this act)), chapter 442, Laws of 1997 shall evaluate the potential for the development of new storage projects and the benefits and effects of storage in reducing damage to stream banks and property, increasing the use of land, providing water for municipal, industrial, agricultural, power generation, and other beneficial uses, and improving stream flow regimes for fisheries and other instream uses.
     (5) Adequate and safe supplies of water shall be preserved and protected in potable condition to satisfy human domestic needs.
     (6) Multiple-purpose impoundment structures are to be preferred over single-purpose structures. Due regard shall be given to means and methods for protection of fishery resources in the planning for and construction of water impoundment structures and other artificial obstructions.
     (7) Federal, state, and local governments, individuals, corporations, groups and other entities shall be encouraged to carry out practices of conservation as they relate to the use of the waters of the state. In addition to traditional development approaches, improved water use efficiency and conservation shall be emphasized in the management of the state's water resources and in some cases will be a potential new source of water with which to meet future needs throughout the state.
     (8) Development of water supply systems, whether publicly or privately owned, which provide water to the public generally in regional areas within the state shall be encouraged. Development of water supply systems for multiple domestic use which will not serve the public generally shall be discouraged where water supplies are available from water systems serving the public.
     (9) Full recognition shall be given in the administration of water allocation and use programs to the natural interrelationships of surface and ground waters.
     (10) Expressions of the public interest will be sought at all stages of water planning and allocation discussions.
     (11) Water management programs, including but not limited to, water quality, flood control, drainage, erosion control and storm runoff are deemed to be in the public interest.

NEW SECTION.  Sec. 4   A new section is added to chapter 90.22 RCW to read as follows:
     Within one year of adopting an instream flow or level rule, the department of ecology shall adopt an implementation plan describing actions needed to protect flows or levels subject to the rule. The plan provisions shall include but are not limited to:
     (1) Needed flow gauges or other measuring methods on key stream reaches;
     (2) Roles and responsibilities of the department and the department of fish and wildlife in protecting the flows or restoring flows;
     (3) Enforcement of the flows against unauthorized withdrawals; and
     (4) Performance measures and assessment of the level of protection of instream resources and values, to assist with the periodic review required by RCW 90.22.010.

Sec. 5   RCW 90.03.345 and 1979 ex.s. c 216 s 7 are each amended to read as follows:
     (1) The establishment of reservations of water for agriculture, hydroelectric energy, municipal, industrial, and other beneficial uses under RCW 90.54.050(1) or ((minimum)) instream flows or levels under RCW 90.22.010 or 90.54.040 shall constitute appropriations within the meaning of this chapter with priority dates as of the ((effective dates of their establishment)) date of filing of notice of rule making under RCW 34.05.320. Whenever an application for a permit to make beneficial use of public waters embodied in a reservation, established after September 1, 1979, is filed with the department of ecology after the effective date of such reservation, the priority date for a permit issued pursuant to an approval by the department of ecology of the application shall be the effective date of the reservation.
     (2) No later than October 1, 2003, the department shall adopt a protocol applicable to the processing of applications for new water withdrawals and applications for changes or transfers, for the consideration of the impact of the proposed change or transfers upon the flows subject to the instream flows during the period between the establishment of a priority date as determined under RCW 90.82.080(2) and the adoption of a final instream flow rule.

Sec. 6   RCW 77.55.050 and 1993 sp.s. c 2 s 29 are each amended to read as follows:
     It is the policy of this state that a flow of water sufficient to support game fish and food fish populations be maintained at all times in the streams of this state.
     The director of ecology shall promptly give the director notice of each filing application for a permit to divert or store water and of each application for a change or transfer of a water right. The director has thirty days after receiving the notice to state his or her objections to the application and of any proposed conditions on approval of the application for the protection of flows sufficient to support fish populations. The permit shall not be issued until the thirty-day period has elapsed. The directors of ecology and fish and wildlife shall jointly develop an interagency agreement providing procedures for consultation on filings regarding water bodies that provide habitat for critical or depressed fish stocks, including provisions allowing predecisional review and comment by the director of the department of fish and wildlife upon the department of ecology's proposed decisions on applications that may adversely affect water bodies whose flows or levels are a limiting factor in the recovery of fish species listed or proposed for listing under the federal endangered species act or determined by the department of fish and wildlife to be depressed or critical.
     The director of ecology may refuse to issue a permit if, in the opinion of the director, issuing the permit might result in lowering the flow of water in a stream below the flow ((necessary to adequately)) sufficient to support food fish and game fish populations in the stream.
     The provisions of this section shall in no way affect existing water rights.

Sec. 7   RCW 90.03.290 and 2001 c 239 s 1 are each amended to read as follows:
     (1) When an application complying with the provisions of this chapter and with the rules of the department has been filed, the same shall be placed on record with the department, and it shall be its duty to investigate the application, and determine what water, if any, is available for appropriation, and find and determine to what beneficial use or uses it can be applied. If it is proposed to appropriate water for irrigation purposes, the department shall investigate, determine and find what lands are capable of irrigation by means of water found available for appropriation. If it is proposed to appropriate water for the purpose of power development, the department shall investigate, determine and find whether the proposed development is likely to prove detrimental to the public interest, having in mind the highest feasible use of the waters belonging to the public.
     (2)(a) If the application does not contain, and the applicant does not promptly furnish sufficient information on which to base such findings, the department may issue a preliminary permit, for a period of not to exceed three years, requiring the applicant to make such surveys, investigations, studies, and progress reports, as in the opinion of the department may be necessary. If the applicant fails to comply with the conditions of the preliminary permit, it and the application or applications on which it is based shall be automatically canceled and the applicant so notified. If the holder of a preliminary permit shall, before its expiration, file with the department a verified report of expenditures made and work done under the preliminary permit, which, in the opinion of the department, establishes the good faith, intent, and ability of the applicant to carry on the proposed development, the preliminary permit may, with the approval of the governor, be extended, but not to exceed a maximum period of five years from the date of the issuance of the preliminary permit.
     (b) For any application for which a preliminary permit was issued and for which the availability of water was directly affected by a moratorium on further diversions from the Columbia river during the years from 1990 to 1998, the preliminary permit is extended through June 30, 2002. If such an application and preliminary permit were canceled during the moratorium, the application and preliminary permit shall be reinstated until June 30, 2002, if the application and permit: (i) Are for providing regional water supplies in more than one urban growth area designated under chapter 36.70A RCW and in one or more areas near such urban growth areas, or the application and permit are modified for providing such supplies, and (ii) provide or are modified to provide such regional supplies through the use of existing intake or diversion structures. The authority to modify such a canceled application and permit to accomplish the objectives of (b)(i) and (ii) of this subsection is hereby granted.
     (3) The department shall make and file as part of the record in the matter, written findings of fact concerning all things investigated, and if it shall find that there is water available for appropriation for a beneficial use, and the appropriation thereof as proposed in the application will not impair existing rights or be detrimental to the public welfare, it shall issue a permit stating the amount of water to which the applicant shall be entitled and the beneficial use or uses to which it may be applied: PROVIDED, That where the water applied for is to be used for irrigation purposes, it shall become appurtenant only to such land as may be reclaimed thereby to the full extent of the soil for agricultural purposes. But where:
     (a) T
here is no unappropriated water in the proposed source of supply((,)); or ((where))
     (b) The water source is a stream or lake for which the best available measuring records or other information indicates that during a majority of the time on a seasonal basis over the previous ten years the stream flows or lake levels have been lower than established instream flows or a flow or level adopted for purposes of review of the application in the absence of an established instream flow rule; or
     (c) T
he proposed use conflicts with existing rights((,)); or
     (d) The proposed use threatens to prove detrimental to the public interest, having due regard to the highest feasible development of the use of the waters belonging to the public, it shall be duty of the department to reject such application and to refuse to issue the permit asked for.
     (4) If the permit is refused because of conflict with existing rights and such applicant shall acquire same by purchase or condemnation under RCW 90.03.040, the department may thereupon grant such permit. Any application may be approved for a less amount of water than that applied for, if there exists substantial reason therefor, and in any event shall not be approved for more water than can be applied to beneficial use for the purposes named in the application. In determining whether or not a permit shall issue upon any application, it shall be the duty of the department to investigate all facts relevant and material to the application. After the department approves said application in whole or in part and before any permit shall be issued thereon to the applicant, such applicant shall pay the fee provided in RCW 90.03.470: PROVIDED FURTHER, That in the event a permit is issued by the department upon any application, it shall be its duty to notify the director of fish and wildlife of such issuance.

Sec. 8   RCW 90.54.050 and 1997 c 439 s 2 and 1997 c 32 s 3 are each reenacted and amended to read as follows:
     (1) In conjunction with the programs provided for in RCW 90.54.040(1), whenever it appears necessary to the director in carrying out the policy of this chapter, the department may by rule adopted pursuant to chapter 34.05 RCW((:
     (1)
)) reserve and set aside waters for beneficial utilization in the future((, and)).
     (2) When sufficient information and data are lacking to allow for the making of sound decisions, the department may withdraw various waters of the state from additional appropriations until such data and information are available. Before proposing the adoption of rules to withdraw waters of the state from additional appropriation under this subsection, the department shall consult with the standing committees of the house of representatives and the senate having jurisdiction over water resource management issues.
     (3) Whenever the department determines based upon measuring records or other information that flows or levels have been lower than established instream flows or levels adopted under chapter 90.22 RCW a majority of the time on a seasonal basis over the previous ten years, or that authorizing additional appropriations may adversely affect achieving such flows or levels, the department shall adopt a rule withdrawing the water body from additional appropriation. Such a rule shall remain in effect until repealed by the department based upon a determination that flow protection measures, reduced withdrawals, or other actions indicate that additional appropriations may be authorized without adversely affecting established instream flows or levels.
     (4)
Prior to the adoption of a rule under this section, the department shall conduct a public hearing in each county in which waters relating to the rule are located. The public hearing shall be preceded by a notice placed in a newspaper of general circulation published within each of said counties. Rules adopted hereunder shall be subject to review in accordance with the provisions of RCW 34.05.240.

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