PROPOSED RULES
TRADE AND ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
Original Notice.
Preproposal statement of inquiry was filed as WSR 98-01-133.
Title of Rule: Criteria to analyze project consistency. The subject of the rule will be criteria for analyzing whether a proposed project is consistent with development regulations and the comprehensive plan adopted under chapter 36.70A RCW.
Purpose: To provide guidelines to local governments for analyzing project consistency with comprehensive plans and development regulations adopted under chapter 36.70A RCW.
Statutory Authority for Adoption: RCW 36.70B.040.
Statute Being Implemented: RCW 36.70B.030, 36.70B040 [36.70B.040].
Summary: These rules are advisory in nature and provide guidelines for better integrating permit review with environmental review under chapter 43.21C RCW, analyzing project consistency, determining when there is a deficiency in the comprehensive plan or development regulation during project review that may require future amendments to the plan or regulations, appealing consistency, and denying a project based on consistency analysis.
Reasons Supporting Proposal: Local governments planning under the Growth Management Act need guidance on how to analyze project consistency when consistency with applicable regulations is not clear.
Name of Agency Personnel Responsible for Drafting: Heather Ballash, 906 Columbia Street S.W., Olympia, WA 98504, (360) 664-2364; and Implementation: Shane Hope, 906 Columbia Street S.W., Olympia, WA 98504, (360) 753-1197.
Name of Proponent: Washington State Department of Community, Trade and Economic Development, governmental.
Rule is not necessitated by federal law, federal or state court decision.
Explanation of Rule, its Purpose, and Anticipated Effects: The Local Project Review Act authorizes the Department of Community, Trade and Economic Development to develop and adopt by rule criteria to assist local governments planning under RCW 36.70A.040 to analyze the consistency of project actions. These criteria are to be jointly developed with the Department of Ecology (RCW 36.70B.040(5)).
The rule provides guidelines for better integrating permit review with environmental review under chapter 43.21C RCW, analyzing project consistency, determining when there is a deficiency in the comprehensive plan or development regulation during project review that may require future amendments to the plan or regulations, appealing consistency, and denying a project based on consistency analysis. This rule is advisory in nature. It imposes no additional requirements for local governments in conducting project review.
Proposal does not change existing rules.
No small business economic impact statement has been prepared under chapter 19.85 RCW. This rule will impose no costs on business because it is procedural guidance to local governments and is advisory in nature.
Hearing Location: On March 1, 2000, at 6:30 p.m. - 9:00 p.m., at the Water Resources Education Center Conference Room, 4600 S.E. Columbia Way, Vancouver, WA; on March 14, 2000, at 6:30 p.m. - 9:00 p.m., at the Seattle Conference Center, Room G (Center House), 305 Harrison Street, Seattle, WA; on March 28, 2000, at 6:30 p.m. - 9:00 p.m., at the Hal Holmes Community Center, 201 North Ruby Street, Ellensburg, WA; and on March 29, 2000, at 6:30 p.m. - 9:00 p.m., at the Eastern Washington University Riverpoint Campus, 668 North Riverpoint Boulevard, Spokane, WA.
Assistance for Persons with Disabilities: Contact Chris Parsons at (360) 664-8809, by February 28, 2000, TDD (360) 586-4224, or (360) 586-1557.
Submit Written Comments to: Heather Ballash, Senior Planner, Department of Community, Trade and Economic Development, P.O. Box 48300, 906 Columbia Street S.W., Olympia, WA 98504, fax (360) 753-2950, or e-mail heatherb@cted.wa.gov, by March 31, 2000.
Date of Intended Adoption: May 1, 2000.
January 18, 2000
Busse Nutley
Deputy Director
OTS-3373.2
PROJECT CONSISTENCY
The Local Project Review Act (chapter 36.70B RCW) authorizes the department of community, trade, and economic development to develop and adopt by rule criteria to assist local governments planning under RCW 36.70A.040 to analyze the consistency of project actions. These criteria are to be jointly developed with the department of ecology (RCW 36.70B.040(5)).
A basic principle of the Growth Management Act (GMA) and the Local Project Review Act is that land use decisions made in adopting a comprehensive plan and development regulations under chapter 36.70A RCW should not be revisited during project review. When review of a project indicates that it is consistent with earlier land use decisions, that project should not be reevaluated or scrutinized with respect to whether those decisions were appropriate. Given the number of jurisdictions and agencies in the state, it is essential to establish a uniform framework for jurisdictions planning under the GMA to consider the consistency of a proposed project with the applicable development regulations or, in the absence of applicable regulations, the adopted comprehensive plan.
Consistency should be considered in the project review process by analyzing four factors found in applicable regulations or plans. The four factors are:
(1) The type of land use allowed;
(2) The level of development allowed, such as dwelling units per acre or other measures of intensity;
(3) Infrastructure, such as the adequacy of public facilities and services to serve the proposed project; and
(4) The characteristics of the proposed development, such as assessment for compliance with specific development regulations or standards. This uniform approach is based upon existing project review practices and should not place a "new" burden on applicants or local government. The intent is that consistency analysis be largely a matter of code checking for most projects, which are simple or routine. More complex projects may require more analysis of these factors, including any required studies. During project review, a question may be raised about whether a project is consistent with applicable regulations or plans after some initial analysis. A project's consistency with applicable development regulations may not initially be clear due to the complexity of the project or the regulations. For example, provision for infrastructure. In these cases, the criteria in the rule are intended to provide guidance to local government, applicants, and reviewers in conducting a consistency analysis. The criteria are not intended for every aspect of the project, only for those aspects where there are still questions of consistency after the initial review.
This rule is advisory in nature. As provided by RCW 36.70B.040, local governments may develop and apply their own procedures for determining project consistency.
[]
(1) "GMA" means the Growth Management Act, chapter 36.70A RCW and those statutes codified in other chapters of the Revised Code of Washington that were enacted or amended as part of chapter 17, Laws of 1990 1st ex. sess. and chapter 32, Laws of 1991 sp. sess.
(2) "GMA county/city" means a county or city that is planning under RCW 36.70A.040.
(3) "SEPA" means the State Environmental Policy Act of 1971, chapter 43.21C RCW, and the SEPA rules, chapter 197-11 WAC, as enacted or later amended.
[]
The GMA is a fundamental building block of regulatory reform. The GMA should serve as an integrating framework for other land use-related laws. (ESHB 1724, Section 1.)
Integration of permit review and environmental review is intended to eliminate duplication in processes and requirements. The legislature recognized that consistency analysis and determinations of whether environmental impacts have been adequately addressed involve many of the same studies and analyses. SEPA substantive authority should not be used to condition or deny a permit for those impacts adequately addressed by the applicable development regulations.
The primary role of environmental review under SEPA at the project level is to focus on those environmental impacts that have not been addressed by a GMA county's/city's development regulations and/or comprehensive plan adopted under chapter 36.70A RCW, or other local, state, and federal laws and regulations. SEPA substantive authority should only be used when the impacts cannot be adequately addressed by existing laws. As consistency analysis involves the application of development regulations and/or the comprehensive plan to a specific project, it will also help answer the question of whether a project's environmental impacts have been adequately addressed by the regulations and/or plan policies.
During project review, a GMA county/city may determine that some or all of the environmental impacts of the project have been addressed by its development regulations, comprehensive plan, or other applicable local, state, or federal laws or rules (RCW 43.21C.240 and WAC 197-11-158). The GMA county/city may make this determination during the course of environmental review and preparation of a threshold determination (including initial consistency review), if the impacts have been adequately addressed in the applicable regulations, plan policies, or other laws. "Adequately addressed" is defined as having identified the impacts and avoided, otherwise mitigated, or designated as acceptable the impacts associated with certain levels of service, land use designations, development standards, or other land use planning decisions required or allowed under the GMA. Once a determination has been made that an impact has been adequately addressed, the jurisdiction may not require additional mitigation for that impact under its SEPA substantive authority.
Thus, through the project review process:
(1) If the applicable regulations require studies that adequately analyze all of the project's specific probable adverse environmental impacts, additional studies under SEPA will not be necessary on those impacts;
(2) If the applicable regulations require measures that adequately address such environmental impacts, additional measures would likewise not be required under SEPA; and
(3) If the applicable regulations do not adequately analyze or address a proposal's specific probable adverse environmental impacts, SEPA provides the authority and procedures for additional review. (Note to RCW 43.21C.240.)
[]
(1) "Project consistency" refers to whether a project is consistent with adopted and applicable development regulations, or in their absence, comprehensive plans adopted under chapter 36.70A RCW.
(2) Project review for consistency is not subject to the provisions of this chapter for regulations or plans that:
(a) Do not exist or have not been adopted under chapter 36.70A RCW; or
(b) Do not apply to the particular project (e.g., no need to review compliance with floodplain ordinances if the site is not in a floodplain).
(3) The adopted and applicable development regulations/plans that apply to a project fall into four basic categories, which are defined in different levels of detail by GMA counties/cities:
(a) Type of land use;
(b) Level of development (dwelling units per acre or other measures of density);
(c) Infrastructure to support the proposed project (public facilities and services); and
(d) The other characteristics of the development (how the project is sited or otherwise built and operated from a growth management/land use and environmental perspective).
(4) Reviewing consistency in these four categories will be largely a code-checking exercise for relatively simple or routine projects in GMA counties/cities with specific development regulations, while more complex projects or projects that affect critical areas may require more analysis.
[]
(1) In considering the four basic categories of project consistency, it may not be clear on initial review whether a project is consistent with a particular applicable development regulation, or in its absence, the comprehensive plan. The following criteria, in the form of questions, are intended to assist cities/counties, applicants, and reviewers in analyzing for consistency.
(a) Type of land use: Is the project's proposed land use within the range of allowable uses identified for this site in the comprehensive plan/development regulation? This would include uses that may be allowed under certain circumstances if they satisfy approval criteria, for example, planned unit developments, conditional uses, or special uses.
(b) Level of development: Is the project's proposed land use within the range of densities, including dwelling units per acre or other measures of intensity, as defined in the comprehensive plan/development regulations? Other measures of intensity may include, but are not limited to, such measures as square footage of nonresidential development, number of employees, or floor area ratio.
(c) Infrastructure: Are the system-wide public facilities and services necessary to serve the development available? To make this decision, the local jurisdiction should ask:
(i) Is the system-wide infrastructure sufficient to serve the development? (If yes, no need to ask the next question.)
(ii) Have any system improvements needed for the proposed development and site:
(A) Been identified as necessary to support development in the comprehensive plan; and
(B) Had provision for funding in the comprehensive plan (e.g., capital facilities plan, utilities element, transportation improvement plan)? Alternatively, can the applicant demonstrate capacity, e.g., through a certificate of concurrency process? (If yes, no need to ask the next question.)
(iii) Will the proposed project use more capacity than the usage or assumptions on which the capital facilities plan, utilities element, or transportation improvement plan were based, or will the project cause current service levels to fall below level of service standards identified in the comprehensive plan? (If yes, does the applicant want to pay for the improvements or allow the GMA county/city to docket the issue for future plan amendment?)
(d) Characteristics of development: Does the proposed project:
(i) Meet or fall within the range of numerical standards that apply? (Examples of numerical standards may include, but are not limited to, number of dwelling units per acre, floor area ratio, building setbacks, building height, lot size, lot coverage, minimum width and depth for new lots, parking requirements, and density/intensity bonuses or incentives. In applying some of these standards, some overlap may occur with the analysis for level of development, i.e., units per acre and floor area ratio.)
(ii) Promote or not substantially conflict with narrative standards that apply? (Examples of narrative standards include performance standards, engineering or design criteria, methods for determining compliance such as monitoring or contingency plans, and mandatory policies or criteria.) Analysis of consistency with narrative standards may be contingent upon preparation, completion, and approval of required studies, plans, determinations, or monitoring (e.g., delineation of critical areas, mitigation plans, etc.).
(e) For purposes of this section, "system-wide" infrastructure means those public services or facilities that may be needed to serve a geographic area greater than the specific site on which the project is located. For example, sewer systems, water systems, or transportation systems that serve a geographic area beyond the project site. Public services or facilities that are not system-wide and may be needed on or near a proposed project (such as drainage facilities, utility connections or transportation improvements to primarily serve the project) should be addressed through analysis of the characteristics of development.
(2) Analysis of project consistency should take into consideration regulatory standards and policies that provide a method to reconcile a project's proposed type of development, level of development, infrastructure needs, or characteristics of development with development regulation and/or comprehensive plan requirements. Such provisions include, but are not limited to, variance and conditional use procedures, innovative land use techniques, developer funding for infrastructure construction or improvements, and project-specific mitigation measures.
(3) If the information needed to analyze project consistency does not exist in the applicable development regulations or comprehensive plan, the county or city should determine whether a deficiency exists pursuant to WAC 365-197-060.
[]
(1) Project review may continue under SEPA and other applicable laws, if, during project review, a GMA county/city identifies a deficiency in the applicable development regulations or the policies in the comprehensive plan. The identified deficiency shall be docketed for possible future development regulation or plan amendments. The applicant may proceed as provided in subsection (4)(c) of this section. The project review process shall not be used as a comprehensive planning process. Docketed deficiencies shall be considered through the normal amendment process for comprehensive plans or development regulations.
(2) "Deficiency" in a development regulation or comprehensive plan refers to the absence of required or potentially desirable1 contents of a comprehensive plan or development regulation. It does not refer to whether a development regulation adequately addresses a project's probable specific adverse environmental impacts, which the permitting agency could mitigate in the normal project review process. Some project-specific impacts could be identified that the agency will need to or prefer to address at the project level rather than in the comprehensive plan or development regulations.
For purposes of docketing, use of the term "deficiency" shall not mean that a comprehensive plan or development regulation adopted by a county or city under chapter 36.70A RCW is invalid or out of compliance with chapter 36.70A RCW. Docketing is intended to allow and encourage GMA counties/cities to improve their plans and regulations as a result of experience in reviewing projects, but without stopping review of the project that may have disclosed the "deficiency."
(3) A project should not be found to be inconsistent with applicable regulations or the plan if the inconsistency is the result of a deficiency of one of the four criteria for project consistency. The deficiency should be docketed for possible future regulation or plan amendments, and the project proponent can proceed with either of the options provided in subsection (4)(c) of this section.
(4) The process for identifying and docketing deficiencies during project review is outlined below. The project is analyzed for consistency with the applicable regulations, or in their absence, the plan. If the information to analyze consistency:
(a) Is in the regulations or plan and the project is clearly consistent or inconsistent, the project should proceed through the project review decision process.
(b) Is in the regulations or plan but consistency cannot be clearly determined, more analysis may be required using the criteria in WAC 365-197-040 to analyze consistency.
(c) Does not exist in the regulations or plan, the absence should be docketed for possible future regulation or plan amendments. At this point the applicant may:
(i) Await docketing and decision on the proposed amendment to address the deficiency before proceeding with the project review process; or
(ii) Proceed with the project review process under SEPA and other applicable laws.
[]
(1) When and how appeals of consistency may fit into a GMA county's/city's appeal process depends upon the individual jurisdiction's project review and appeals process. Nothing in this section requires documentation or dictates a GMA county's/city's procedures for considering consistency.
(2) Fundamental land use planning decisions made in comprehensive plans and development regulations should not be revisited at the project level. During project review, the local government or any subsequent reviewing body shall not reexamine alternatives to or hear appeals on the planning decisions specified in subsection (3)(a) through (c) of this section, except for issues of code interpretation. The planning decisions in subsection (3)(a) through (c) of this section are a subset of the four basic categories of criteria for analyzing project consistency under WAC 365-197-050 (1)(a) through (d). The planning decisions in subsection (3)(a) through (c) of this section are identified in RCW 36.70B.030(2) as decisions that are determinative and cannot be reexamined at the project level if they have been addressed in the development regulations and/or comprehensive plan. As project review includes environmental review, the local government or subsequent reviewing body shall not reexamine or hear appeals on how the environmental impacts of those planning decisions in subsection (3)(a) through (c) of this section were addressed under chapter 43.21C RCW. However, if environmental information is required to analyze project consistency under subsection (3)(a) through (c) of this section and that information is not available, the decision may still be challenged procedurally under SEPA.
(3) During project review, a GMA county/city or any subsequent reviewing body shall determine whether the items listed in (a) through (c) of this subsection are defined in the development regulations applicable to the proposed project or, in the absence of applicable regulations, the adopted comprehensive plan under chapter 36.70A RCW. At a minimum, such applicable regulations or plans shall be determinative of the:
(a) Type of land use permitted at the site, including uses that may be allowed under certain circumstances, such as planned unit developments and conditional and special uses, if the criteria for their approval have been satisfied;
(b) Density of residential development in urban growth areas, including densities that may be allowed under certain circumstances, such as planned unit developments and density bonuses;
(c) Availability and adequacy of public facilities:
(i) That are needed to serve the proposed development;
(ii) That are identified in the comprehensive plan; and
(iii) For which the plan or development regulations identify the sources of funding, as required by chapter 36.70A RCW.
(4) Upon a determination of consistency of the project with the planning decisions in subsection (3)(a) through (c) of this section, no further analysis of the project with respect to those items will be required. However, because the planning decisions in subsection (3)(a) through (c) of this section do not include all of the project review criteria in WAC 365-197-050 (1)(a) through (d), further analysis may be required to apply the remaining criteria listed in WAC 365-197-050 (1)(a) through (d) that are not addressed in the planning decisions in subsection (3)(a) through (c) of this section. For example, analysis of residential densities outside the urban growth area or the character of development may still need to be addressed.
(5) For purposes of this section, "code interpretation" includes the correct application of the applicable regulations or plan to the project. As part of its project review process, each GMA county/city must adopt procedures for obtaining a code interpretation pursuant to RCW 36.70B.030(3) and 36.70B.110(11). A GMA county/city may provide a formal or informal process for code interpretation. The GMA county or city or subsequent reviewing body may consider comments on the application of regulations or the plan to the project without requiring a formal code interpretation.
(6) As provided above, agencies should not be revisiting fundamental land use planning decisions made in comprehensive plans and development regulations at the project level. However, nothing is this chapter limits the authority of a permitting agency to approve, condition, or deny a project as provided in its development regulations adopted under chapter 36.70A RCW and in its SEPA substantive policies adopted under RCW 43.21C.060. An agency may still use its authority under adopted development regulations or SEPA substantive policies to condition a project. For example, an agency may condition a project to reduce neighborhood traffic, which would have the effect of reducing the level of development otherwise permitted by zoning ordinance.
[]
(1) An agency has the authority to deny a project if it:
(a) Is inconsistent and does not comply with the applicable development regulations, or in their absence, the adopted comprehensive plan;
(b) Will result in significant adverse environmental impacts which cannot be mitigated per RCW 43.21C.060 and WAC 197-11-660; or
(c) Does not comply with other local, state, or federal law and rules.
(2) This rule is not intended to modify any criteria developed by a GMA county/city for denying a project.
[]