(1) Fundamental land use planning choices
made in adopted comprehensive plans and development regulations
shall serve as the foundation for project review. The review of a
proposed project's consistency with applicable development
regulations, or in the absence of applicable regulations the
adopted comprehensive plan, under RCW 36.70B.040 shall incorporate
the determinations under this section.
(2) During project review, a local government or any
subsequent reviewing body shall determine whether the items listed
in this subsection are defined in the development regulations
applicable to the proposed project or, in the absence of applicable
regulations the adopted comprehensive plan. 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;
and
(c) Availability and adequacy of public facilities identified
in the comprehensive plan, if the plan or development regulations
provide for funding of these facilities as required by chapter 36.70A RCW.
(3) During project review, the local government or any
subsequent reviewing body shall not reexamine alternatives to or
hear appeals on the items identified in subsection (2) of this
section, except for issues of code interpretation. As part of its
project review process, a local government shall provide a
procedure for obtaining a code interpretation as provided in RCW 36.70B.110.
(4) Pursuant to RCW 43.21C.240, a local government may
determine that the requirements for environmental analysis and
mitigation measures in development regulations and other applicable
laws provide adequate mitigation for some or all of the project's
specific adverse environmental impacts to which the requirements
apply.
(5) Nothing in this section 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 policies adopted under RCW 43.21C.060. Project review shall be used to identify specific project design
and conditions relating to the character of development, such as
the details of site plans, curb cuts, drainage swales,
transportation demand management, the payment of impact fees, or
other measures to mitigate a proposal's probable adverse
environmental impacts, if applicable.
(6) Subsections (1) through (4) of this section apply only to
local governments planning under RCW 36.70A.040.
[1995 c 347 § 404.]
NOTES:
Intent -- Findings -- 1995 c 347 §§ 404 and 405: "In enacting RCW 36.70B.030 and 36.70B.040, the legislature intends to establish a
mechanism for implementing the provisions of chapter 36.70A RCW
regarding compliance, conformity, and consistency of proposed
projects with adopted comprehensive plans and development
regulations. In order to achieve this purpose the legislature
finds that:
(1) Given the extensive investment that public agencies and a
broad spectrum of the public are making and will continue to make
in comprehensive plans and development regulations for their
communities, it is essential that project review start from the
fundamental land use planning choices made in these plans and
regulations. If the applicable regulations or plans identify the
type of land use, specify residential density in urban growth
areas, and identify and provide for funding of public facilities
needed to serve the proposed development and site, these decisions
at a minimum provide the foundation for further project review
unless there is a question of code interpretation. The project
review process, including the environmental review process under
chapter 43.21C RCW and the consideration of consistency, should
start from this point and should not reanalyze these land use
planning decisions in making a permit decision.
(2) Comprehensive plans and development regulations adopted by
local governments under chapter 36.70A RCW and environmental laws
and rules adopted by the state and federal government have
addressed a wide range of environmental subjects and impacts. These
provisions typically require environmental studies and contain
specific standards to address various impacts associated with a
proposed development, such as building size and location, drainage,
transportation requirements, and protection of critical areas. When a permitting agency applies these existing requirements to a
proposed project, some or all of a project's potential
environmental impacts will be avoided or otherwise mitigated. Through the integrated project review process described in
subsection (1) of this section, the local government will determine
whether existing requirements, including the applicable regulations
or plans, adequately analyze and address a project's environmental
impacts. RCW 43.21C.240 provides that project review should not
require additional studies or mitigation under chapter 43.21C RCW
where existing regulations have adequately addressed a proposed
project's probable specific adverse environmental impacts.
(3) Given the hundreds of jurisdictions and agencies in the
state and the numerous communities and applicants affected by
development regulations and comprehensive plans adopted under
chapter 36.70A RCW, it is essential to establish a uniform
framework for considering the consistency of a proposed project
with the applicable regulations or plan. Consistency should be
determined in the project review process by considering four
factors found in applicable regulations or plans: The type of land
use allowed; the level of development allowed, such as units per
acre or other measures of density; infrastructure, such as the
adequacy of public facilities and services to serve the proposed
project; and the character of the proposed development, such as
compliance with specific development standards. This uniform
approach corresponds to existing project review practices and will
not place a burden on applicants or local government. The
legislature intends that this approach should be largely a matter
of checking compliance with existing requirements for most
projects, which are simple or routine, while more complex projects
may require more analysis. RCW 43.21C.240 and 36.70B.030 establish
this uniform framework and also direct state agencies to consult
with local government and the public to develop a better format
than the current environmental checklist to meet this objective.
(4) When an applicant applies for a project permit,
consistency between the proposed project and applicable regulations
or plan should be determined through a project review process that
integrates land use and environmental impact analysis, so that
governmental and public review of the proposed project as required
by this chapter, by development regulations under chapter 36.70A RCW, and by the environmental process under chapter 43.21C RCW run
concurrently and not separately.
(5) RCW 36.70B.030 and 36.70B.040 address three related needs
with respect to how the project review process should address
consistency between a proposed project and the applicable
regulations or plan:
(a) A uniform framework for the meaning of consistency;
(b) An emphasis on relying on existing requirements and
adopted standards, with the use of supplemental authority as
specified by chapter 43.21C RCW to the extent that existing
requirements do not adequately address a project's specific
probable adverse environmental impacts; and
(c) The identification of three basic land use planning
choices made in applicable regulations or plans that, at a minimum,
serve as a foundation for project review and that should not be
reanalyzed during project permitting." [1995 c 347 § 403.]