SSB 6231 -
By Representative
ADOPTED AND ENGROSSED 03/06/08
On page 3, after line 3, insert the following:
"(5) The marine protected areas work group established under this
section shall coordinate with the marine managed areas work group
established in section 5 of this act. The marine protected areas work
group is to focus primarily on marine protected areas located in
coastal waters as defined in RCW 43.143.020, while the marine managed
areas work group established in section 5 of this act is to focus
primarily on the Puget Sound. The two work groups may share resources
and expertise when appropriate."
On page 3, after line 3, strike all of section 3 and insert the following:
"NEW SECTION. Sec. 3 (1) The legislature finds that many state
agencies and local governments administer marine protected areas,
preserves, conservation areas, and other similar geographically based
area designations that are a valuable means to protect and enhance
Puget Sound's marine resources. The legislature further finds that
climate change impacts and increased population and development in the
Puget Sound basin will place further stresses upon sustaining the
biological diversity and ecosystem health of Puget Sound.
(2) It is the intent of the legislature that state and local
actions intended to protect, conserve, and manage marine life and
resources be conducted in a coordinated manner, use the best available
science, consider the projected impacts on Puget Sound's marine areas
from climate change, and contribute to the recovery of the Puget
Sound's environmental health by 2020.
(3) It is the purpose of this act to:
(a) Create a strategic network of marine managed areas that
contribute to conserving the biological diversity and ecosystem health
of Puget Sound and that maximizes the effectiveness of the role of
marine managed areas in achieving the recovery of Puget Sound's health
by 2020;
(b) Strengthen the coordination of marine managed areas among
multiple state agencies and local governments and align these efforts
with the work of the Puget Sound partnership to recover the Puget
Sound's health by 2020;
(c) Provide for management and designation of marine managed areas
programs on an ecosystem basis and incorporate the best available
scientific information into these programs;
(d) Adopt a plan that builds a comprehensive system of marine
managed areas in Puget Sound, adopts goals and benchmarks for
maintaining the diversity of marine life and resources in Puget Sound,
and is based upon anticipated threats and stressors such as climate
change impacts;
(e) Recognize the interrelationship of the marine ecosystem
throughout the Pacific Northwest, and the multiple entities, including
local, state, provincial, and federal governments, as well as tribal
governments and first nations, that are involved in managing marine
managed areas; and
(f) Adopt codified criteria and procedures applicable to the
aquatic reserve program on state-owned aquatic lands.
Sec. 4 RCW 90.71.010 and 2007 c 341 s 2 are each amended to read
as follows:
((Unless the context clearly requires otherwise,)) The definitions
in this section apply throughout this chapter unless the context
clearly requires otherwise.
(1) "Action agenda" means the comprehensive schedule of projects,
programs, and other activities designed to achieve a healthy Puget
Sound ecosystem that is authorized and further described in RCW
90.71.300 and 90.71.310.
(2) "Action area" means the geographic areas delineated as provided
in RCW 90.71.260.
(3) "Benchmarks" means measurable interim milestones or
achievements established to demonstrate progress towards a goal,
objective, or outcome.
(4) "Board" means the ecosystem coordination board.
(5) "Council" means the leadership council.
(6) "Environmental indicator" means a physical, biological, or
chemical measurement, statistic, or value that provides a proximate
gauge, or evidence of, the state or condition of Puget Sound.
(7) "Implementation strategies" means the strategies incorporated
on a biennial basis in the action agenda developed under RCW 90.71.310.
(8) "Marine managed area" means a named, discrete geographic marine
or estuarine area designated by statute, ordinance, resolution, or
administrative action, whose designation is intended to protect,
conserve, or otherwise manage the marine life and resources within the
area.
(9) "Nearshore" means the area beginning at the crest of coastal
bluffs and extending seaward through the marine photics zone, and to
the head of tide in coastal rivers and streams. "Nearshore" also means
both shoreline and estuaries.
(((9))) (10) "Panel" means the Puget Sound science panel.
(((10))) (11) "Partnership" means the Puget Sound partnership.
(((11))) (12) "Plan" means the Puget Sound marine managed areas
plan developed under section 5 of this act.
(13) "Puget Sound" means Puget Sound and related inland marine
waters, including all salt waters of the state of Washington inside the
international boundary line between Washington and British Columbia,
and lying east of the junction of the Pacific Ocean and the Strait of
Juan de Fuca, and the rivers and streams draining to Puget Sound as
mapped by water resource inventory areas 1 through 19 in WAC
173-500-040 as it exists on July 1, 2007.
(((12))) (14) "Puget Sound partner" means an entity that has been
recognized by the partnership, as provided in RCW 90.71.340, as having
consistently achieved outstanding progress in implementing the 2020
action agenda.
(((13))) (15) "Watershed groups" means all groups sponsoring or
administering watershed programs, including but not limited to local
governments, private sector entities, watershed planning units,
watershed councils, shellfish protection areas, regional fishery
enhancement groups, marine ((resource[s])) resources committees
including those working with the Northwest straits commission,
nearshore groups, and watershed lead entities.
(((14))) (16) "Watershed programs" means and includes all
watershed-level plans, programs, projects, and activities that relate
to or may contribute to the protection or restoration of Puget Sound
waters. Such programs include jurisdiction-wide programs regardless of
whether more than one watershed is addressed.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 5 A new section is added to chapter 90.71 RCW
to read as follows:
(1) The partnership shall prepare a Puget Sound marine managed
areas plan to coordinate and strengthen all of the marine managed areas
programs managed by state agencies and local governments.
(2) The chair of the council shall designate a work group on marine
managed areas to prepare the plan. The work group shall include one or
more members of the Puget Sound science panel, one of whom must chair
the work group. The work group must include, but not be limited to,
state agencies and local governments with regulatory jurisdiction over
or that manage marine managed areas including, but not limited to, the
department of natural resources, the department of fish and wildlife,
the parks and recreation commission, and the department of ecology.
The work group shall also include the state biodiversity council,
created by executive order 04-02, or the biodiversity council's
successor entity. The chair of the council shall also invite
representatives of tribal governments, federal agencies, cities,
counties, and nongovernmental organizations that have designated or
have significant interests in the management of Puget Sound marine
managed areas. The chair of the council may also invite
representatives from other states and provinces and first nation and
tribal governments with interests in marine managed areas in the
Pacific Northwest to participate on the work group as observers.
(3) The plan must include, but not be limited to:
(a) Guidelines for identifying key species of concern, threats to
these species, and threshold levels of protected habitat needed to
recover these species and Puget Sound as a whole to health by 2020;
(b) Guidelines for incorporating the best available scientific
information when designating and managing marine managed areas;
(c) Guidelines for managing areas on an ecosystem basis and for
coordinating multiple programs and areas within the same
biogeographical regions to achieve ecosystem-based management;
(d) Benchmarks to measure progress toward the recovery of species
and protected habitat;
(e) Recommendations for adequate levels of funding for the
designation, long-term management, and monitoring of the marine managed
areas in the network;
(f) Strategies to address the projected impacts to marine managed
areas from population growth, existing and proposed upland and aquatic
lands development, and storm water discharges to Puget Sound;
(g) Strategies to prepare for and manage the impacts of climate
change, including impacts due to sea level changes, salinity changes,
water temperature, increased acidification, and changes in frequency
and intensity of precipitation events affecting storm water discharges
to marine waters;
(h) An adaptive management component in which new information on
the progress of implementing management goals for the individual marine
managed areas and overall goals for all such areas, the contribution
these areas are making toward the goals of recovering the health of
Puget Sound by 2020, and climate change impacts may be considered and
integrated into the designation and management of marine managed areas;
and
(i) Methodologies for synthesizing monitoring results with
programmatic goals to inform decision making on subsequent designation
and marine managed areas strategies and any necessary changes in
implementation strategies to increase the effectiveness of the marine
managed areas program in achieving the goal of recovering the Puget
Sound's health by 2020.
(4) The plan must also include comprehensive objectives for
coordinating existing marine managed areas and designating additional
areas to achieve a network of marine managed areas contributing to
long-term conservation of important biota and marine ecosystems and
recovery of Puget Sound by 2020. In developing the objectives the work
group shall rely primarily upon existing plans and objectives relating
to conservation of marine life in Puget Sound, and the program plans
prepared by state agencies and local governments administering marine
managed areas programs. The plan must also consider activities and
uses within or adjacent to marine managed areas that are allowed under
existing leases of state-owned aquatic lands issued under chapter
79.105 RCW.
(5) The plan must be completed by July 1, 2010, and submitted to
the council for its review and approval. The plan must be incorporated
into the Puget Sound action agenda adopted under RCW 90.71.310. The
council shall provide for public review and comment on the plan in a
manner comparable to the other provisions of the Puget Sound action
agenda. The council may, with the assistance of the work group, amend
the plan from time to time using public review and comment procedures
comparable to those that apply when other elements of the Puget Sound
action agenda are revised.
(6) The marine managed areas work group established under this
section shall coordinate with the marine protected areas work group
established in section 2 of this act. The marine managed areas work
group is to focus primarily on the Puget Sound, while the marine
protected areas work group established in section 2 of this act is to
focus primarily on coastal waters as defined in RCW 43.143.020. The
two work groups may share resources and expertise when appropriate.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 6 (1) The work product delivered by the marine
managed areas work group established in section 5 of this act must
include at least one case study regarding how consistent standards,
methods, or protocols that may aid governmental organizations with the
future identification of marine managed areas can be developed.
(2) The case study required by this section must be designed to
analyze how and when future marine managed areas can or should be
developed in urbanized areas where the purpose of the marine protected
area is to protect the marine shoreline and adjacent upland
environmental, cultural, or community values.
(3) The case study required by this section must be located in an
urban marine waterway located in Puget Sound adjacent to uplands areas
available for public access that includes at least one park area
developed, in part, with money from the Washington wildlife and
recreation program that includes or is planning to include a seawall,
walking paths, interpretive displays, and a cultural botanical display
area and includes within the borders of the case study area at least
one nearby area of state-owned aquatic lands currently under lease with
the department of natural resources for use as an industrial marine
repair facility capable of servicing marine vessels that are seventy-five feet or more in length.
(4) Until the results of the case study required by this section
are delivered to the leadership council of the Puget Sound partnership
as part of the work product required by section 5 of this act, the city
government with jurisdiction over uplands adjacent to the case study
area is prohibited from allowing any shoreline uses or expansions not
currently authorized for shorelines located within or adjacent to the
case study area if the shoreline use or expansion is related to an
industrial use capable of performing any of the following actions on
marine vessels that are seventy-five feet or more in length:
Construction, refurbishment, maintenance, repair, lay berthing, or
demolition.
Sec. 7 RCW 79.105.210 and 2005 c 155 s 143 are each amended to
read as follows:
(1) The management of state-owned aquatic lands shall preserve and
enhance water-dependent uses. Water-dependent uses shall be favored
over other uses in state-owned aquatic land planning and in resolving
conflicts between competing lease applications. In cases of conflict
between water-dependent uses, priority shall be given to uses which
enhance renewable resources, water-borne commerce, and the navigational
and biological capacity of the waters, and to statewide interests as
distinguished from local interests.
(2) Nonwater-dependent use of state-owned aquatic lands is a low-priority use providing minimal public benefits and shall not be
permitted to expand or be established in new areas except in
exceptional circumstances where it is compatible with water-dependent
uses occurring in or planned for the area.
(3) The department shall consider the natural values of state-owned
aquatic lands as wildlife habitat, natural area preserve,
representative ecosystem, or spawning area prior to issuing any initial
lease or authorizing any change in use. The department may withhold
from leasing lands which it finds to have significant natural values,
or may provide within any lease for the protection of such values.
When withdrawing lands from leasing for the purposes of managing an
aquatic reserve, the department shall be guided by the procedures and
criteria of section 8 of this act.
(4) The power to lease state-owned aquatic lands is vested in the
department, which has the authority to make leases upon terms,
conditions, and length of time in conformance with the state
Constitution and chapters 79.105 through 79.140 RCW.
(5) State-owned aquatic lands shall not be leased to persons or
organizations which discriminate on the basis of race, color, creed,
religion, sex, age, or physical or mental handicap.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 8 A new section is added to chapter 79.105 RCW
under a new subchapter heading of "aquatic reserve system" to read as
follows:
(1) The aquatic reserve system is established. The aquatic reserve
system is comprised of those areas of state-owned aquatic lands
designated by the department prior to the effective date of this
section and any areas added to the system by order of the commissioner
thereafter.
(2) State-owned aquatic lands that have one or more of the
following characteristics may be included by order of the commissioner
in the system as an aquatic reserve:
(a) The lands have been identified as having high priority for
conservation, natural systems, wildlife, or low-impact public use
values;
(b) The lands have flora, fauna, geological, recreational,
archaeological, cultural, scenic, or similar features of critical
importance and have retained to some degree or reestablished its
natural character;
(c) The lands provide significant examples of native ecological
communities;
(d) The lands have significant sites or features threatened with
conversion to incompatible uses; and
(e) The lands have been identified by the Puget Sound science panel
created in RCW 90.71.270 as critical to achieving recovery of Puget
Sound by 2020.
(3)(a) The commissioner shall adopt procedures for submission of
reserve nominations and for public participation in the review of
proposed reserves.
(b) If, consistent with the best available scientific information,
a reserve no longer meets the goals and objectives for which it was
designated, and adaptive management has not been successful to meet the
goals and objectives, the commissioner may by order modify the reserve
boundaries or remove the area from reserve status.
(c) The commissioner shall provide public participation procedures
for the proposals.
(4) In the designation and management of reserves within Puget
Sound, as geographically defined in RCW 90.71.010, the commissioner
shall be guided by the marine managed areas plan adopted under section
5 of this act. Within twenty-four months of the adoption of the marine
managed areas plan under section 5 of this act, the department shall
complete a review of existing management plans and pending reserve
nominations for consistency with the guidelines and recommendations in
the marine managed areas plan. The commissioner shall accord
substantial weight to any recommendations provided by the Puget Sound
partnership regarding the designation and management of reserves within
Puget Sound.
(5) Where the commissioner determines that management of the taking
of fish, shellfish, or wildlife within or adjacent to the reserve would
enhance the objectives for which the reserve has been created, the
commissioner shall request that the fish and wildlife commission act
pursuant to section 9 of this act to adopt supporting rules.
(6) The aquatic reserve system must be coordinated with other
marine managed areas, federally recognized marine protected areas, and
related regulatory programs. The department shall:
(a) Cooperate with other state agencies and local governments to
manage state-owned aquatic lands consistently with the management of
uses and activities in the same geographic areas by state parks, the
department of fish and wildlife, the department of ecology, and other
state agencies; and
(b) Provide recommendations to local governments in updating their
shoreline master programs and in sponsoring local marine park reserves
or voluntary stewardship areas to seek consistent planning and
management activities in areas adjacent to designated reserves.
(7)(a) State agencies with authority over construction activities
or water discharges in state waters or that otherwise implement
programs that affect a designated aquatic reserve shall give special
consideration to increasing protection and reducing and preventing
pollution of these areas, consistent with the management objectives of
the reserve.
(b) The department should participate in any public processes
regarding water discharge or construction permitting affecting aquatic
reserves to aid other agencies in their understanding of the provisions
of this subsection.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 9 A new section is added to chapter 77.12 RCW
to read as follows:
(1) The commission may adopt rules governing the taking of fish,
shellfish, or wildlife within or adjacent to an aquatic reserve
designated by the department of natural resources under section 8 of
this act, or other marine managed areas, as that term is defined in RCW
90.71.010. The commission shall give consideration within sixty days
to any rule changes requested by the commissioner of public lands to
support the purposes of an aquatic reserve.
(2) This section is in addition to and does not limit the
commission's authority to establish rules governing the taking of fish,
shellfish, or wildlife under any other authority.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 10 The Puget Sound partnership shall provide
the plan required by section 5 of this act to the appropriate
committees of the legislature by December 1, 2010, together with its
recommendations for further policy legislation and budget
recommendations to enhance Puget Sound marine managed areas programs.
Sec. 11 RCW 90.71.300 and 2007 c 341 s 12 are each amended to
read as follows:
(1) The action agenda shall consist of the goals and objectives in
this section, implementation strategies to meet measurable outcomes,
benchmarks, ((and)) identification of responsible entities, and the
marine managed areas plan adopted under section 5 of this act. By
2020, the action agenda shall strive to achieve the following goals:
(a) A healthy human population supported by a healthy Puget Sound
that is not threatened by changes in the ecosystem;
(b) A quality of human life that is sustained by a functioning
Puget Sound ecosystem;
(c) Healthy and sustaining populations of native species in Puget
Sound, including a robust food web;
(d) A healthy Puget Sound where freshwater, estuary, nearshore,
marine, and upland habitats are protected, restored, and sustained;
(e) An ecosystem that is supported by ground water levels as well
as river and stream flow levels sufficient to sustain people, fish, and
wildlife, and the natural functions of the environment;
(f) Fresh and marine waters and sediments of a sufficient quality
so that the waters in the region are safe for drinking, swimming,
shellfish harvest and consumption, and other human uses and enjoyment,
and are not harmful to the native marine mammals, fish, birds, and
shellfish of the region.
(2) The action agenda shall be developed and implemented to achieve
the following objectives:
(a) Protect existing habitat and prevent further losses;
(b) Restore habitat functions and values;
(c) Significantly reduce toxics entering Puget Sound fresh and
marine waters;
(d) Significantly reduce nutrients and pathogens entering Puget
Sound fresh and marine waters;
(e) Improve water quality and habitat by managing storm water
runoff;
(f) Provide water for people, fish and wildlife, and the
environment;
(g) Protect ecosystem biodiversity and recover imperiled species;
and
(h) Build and sustain the capacity for action.
Sec. 12 RCW 36.125.030 and 2007 c 344 s 4 are each amended to
read as follows:
(1) The Puget Sound ((action team, or its successor organization,))
partnership shall serve as the regional coordinating entity for marine
resources committees created in the southern Puget Sound and the
department of fish and wildlife shall serve as the regional
coordinating entity for marine resources committees created for the
outer coast.
(2) The regional coordinating entity shall serve as a resource to,
at a minimum:
(a) Coordinate and pool grant applications and other funding
requests for marine resources committees;
(b) Coordinate communications and information among marine
resources committees;
(c) Assist marine resources committees to measure themselves
against regional performance benchmarks;
(d) Assist marine resources committees with coordinating local
projects to complement regional priorities;
(e) Assist marine resources committees to interact with and
complement other marine resources committees, and other similar groups,
constituted under a different authority; and
(f) Coordinate with the Northwest Straits commission on issues
common to marine resources committees statewide.
NEW SECTION. Sec. 13 If specific funding for the purposes of
this act, referencing this act by bill or chapter number, is not
provided by June 30, 2008, in the omnibus appropriations act, this act
is null and void."
Correct the title.