BILL REQ. #: S-0259.1
State of Washington | 60th Legislature | 2007 Regular Session |
Read first time 01/11/2007. Referred to Committee on Agriculture & Rural Economic Development.
AN ACT Relating to clarifying existing requirements for conservation of agricultural lands; amending RCW 36.70A.020, 36.70A.060, and 36.70A.177; and creating a new section.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON:
NEW SECTION. Sec. 1 The legislature finds that the decision of
the Washington state supreme court in King County v. Central Puget
Sound Growth Management Hearings Board, 142 Wn.2d 543 (2000) reflects
the original and continuing intent of the legislature regarding
designation and conservation of agricultural lands under the growth
management act, when it says that the act creates an agricultural
conservation imperative that imposes an affirmative duty on local
governments to designate and conserve agricultural lands in order to
assure the maintenance and enhancement of the agricultural resource
industry, and, again, when it says that agricultural lands are
protected not for the sake of their ecological role but to ensure the
viability of the resource-based industries that depend upon them.
Allowing conversion of resource lands to other uses or allowing
incompatible uses impairs the viability of the agricultural industry.
The legislature intends to clarify the existing requirements of the
growth management act that pertain to conservation of agricultural
lands, in order to help assure that comprehensive plans and
corresponding development regulations adopted by local governments
conserve agricultural lands according to the original and continuing
intent of the growth management act as reflected in King County v.
Central Puget Sound Growth Management Hearings Board, 142 Wn.2d 543
(2000).
Sec. 2 RCW 36.70A.020 and 2002 c 154 s 1 are each amended to read
as follows:
The following goals are adopted to guide the development and
adoption of comprehensive plans and development regulations of those
counties and cities that are required or choose to plan under RCW
36.70A.040. The following goals are not listed in order of priority
and shall be used exclusively for the purpose of guiding the
development of comprehensive plans and development regulations:
(1) Urban growth. Encourage development in urban areas where
adequate public facilities and services exist or can be provided in an
efficient manner.
(2) Reduce sprawl. Reduce the inappropriate conversion of
undeveloped land into sprawling, low-density development.
(3) Transportation. Encourage efficient multimodal transportation
systems that are based on regional priorities and coordinated with
county and city comprehensive plans.
(4) Housing. Encourage the availability of affordable housing to
all economic segments of the population of this state, promote a
variety of residential densities and housing types, and encourage
preservation of existing housing stock.
(5) Economic development. Encourage economic development
throughout the state that is consistent with adopted comprehensive
plans, promote economic opportunity for all citizens of this state,
especially for unemployed and for disadvantaged persons, promote the
retention and expansion of existing businesses and recruitment of new
businesses, recognize regional differences impacting economic
development opportunities, and encourage growth in areas experiencing
insufficient economic growth, all within the capacities of the state's
natural resources, public services, and public facilities.
(6) Property rights. Private property shall not be taken for
public use without just compensation having been made. The property
rights of landowners shall be protected from arbitrary and
discriminatory actions.
(7) Permits. Applications for both state and local government
permits should be processed in a timely and fair manner to ensure
predictability.
(8) Natural resource industries. Maintain and enhance natural
resource-based industries, including productive timber, agricultural,
and fisheries industries. Encourage the conservation of productive
forest lands and productive agricultural lands, ((and)) discourage
incompatible uses, and prevent new incompatible uses.
(9) Open space and recreation. Retain open space, enhance
recreational opportunities, conserve fish and wildlife habitat,
increase access to natural resource lands and water, and develop parks
and recreation facilities.
(10) Environment. Protect the environment and enhance the state's
high quality of life, including air and water quality, and the
availability of water.
(11) Citizen participation and coordination. Encourage the
involvement of citizens in the planning process and ensure coordination
between communities and jurisdictions to reconcile conflicts.
(12) Public facilities and services. Ensure that those public
facilities and services necessary to support development shall be
adequate to serve the development at the time the development is
available for occupancy and use without decreasing current service
levels below locally established minimum standards.
(13) Historic preservation. Identify and encourage the
preservation of lands, sites, and structures, that have historical or
archaeological significance.
Sec. 3 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 on or
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) 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.
Sec. 4 RCW 36.70A.177 and 2006 c 147 s 1 are each amended to read
as follows:
(1) A county or a city may use a variety of innovative zoning
techniques in areas designated as agricultural lands of long-term
commercial significance under RCW 36.70A.170. The innovative zoning
techniques ((should)) must be designed to conserve agricultural lands
and should encourage the agricultural economy. Except as provided in
((subsection (3) of)) this section, ((a county or city should
encourage)) nonagricultural uses ((to)) on agricultural lands of long-term commercial significance must be limited to lands with poor soils
or otherwise not suitable for agricultural purposes.
(2) Innovative zoning techniques a county or city may consider
include, but are not limited to:
(a) Agricultural zoning, which limits the density of development
and restricts or prohibits nonfarm uses of agricultural land and may
allow accessory uses, including nonagricultural accessory uses and
activities, that support, promote, or sustain agricultural operations
and production, as provided in subsection (3) of this section;
(b) Cluster zoning, which allows new development on one portion of
the land, leaving the remainder in agricultural or open space uses;
(c) Large lot zoning, which establishes as a minimum lot size the
amount of land necessary to achieve a successful farming practice;
(d) Quarter/quarter zoning, which permits one residential dwelling
on a one-acre minimum lot for each one-sixteenth of a section of land;
and
(e) Sliding scale zoning, which allows the number of lots for
single-family residential purposes with a minimum lot size of one acre
to increase inversely as the size of the total acreage increases.
(3) Accessory uses allowed under subsection (2)(a) of this section
shall comply with the following:
(a) Accessory uses shall be located, designed, and operated so as
to not interfere with, and to support the continuation of, the overall
agricultural use of the property and neighboring properties, and shall
comply with the requirements of this chapter;
(b) Accessory uses may include:
(i) Agricultural accessory uses and activities, including but not
limited to the storage, distribution, and marketing of regional
agricultural products from one or more producers, agriculturally
related experiences, or the production, marketing, and distribution of
value-added agricultural products, including support services that
facilitate these activities; and
(ii) Nonagricultural accessory uses and activities as long as they
are consistent with the size, scale, and intensity of the existing
agricultural use of the property and the existing buildings on the
site. Nonagricultural accessory uses and activities, including new
buildings, parking, or supportive uses, shall not be located outside
the general area already developed for buildings and residential uses
and shall not otherwise convert more than one acre of agricultural land
to nonagricultural uses; and
(c) Counties and cities have the authority to limit or exclude
accessory uses otherwise authorized in this subsection (3) in areas
designated as agricultural lands of long-term commercial significance.
(4) Except as provided in this subsection (4), wetland mitigation
banking projects shall not be a permitted use on designated
agricultural lands of long-term commercial significance, but may be
permitted as a special use on other agricultural lands. "Wetland
mitigation banking project" means any public or private project that is
intended to create, restore, or enhance wetlands and includes the
alteration of the landscape by excavation or sculpting of soil or
alteration of hydrology developed expressly for the purpose of
providing compensatory mitigation in advance to offset for wetland
impacts from other projects. Conservation projects that consist
exclusively of planting vegetation or on-site mitigation projects
required for permitted activities may be permitted uses.
(5) This section shall not be interpreted to limit agricultural
production on designated agricultural lands.