The legislature recognizes the importance of
providing the greatest diversity of habitats, particularly
riparian, wetland, and old growth habitats, and of assuring the
greatest diversity of species within those habitats for the
survival and reproduction of enough individuals to maintain the
native wildlife of Washington forest lands. The legislature also
recognizes the importance of long-term habitat productivity for
natural and wild fish, for the protection of hatchery water
supplies, and for the protection of water quality and quantity to
meet the needs of people, fish, and wildlife. The legislature
recognizes the importance of maintaining and enhancing fish and
wildlife habitats capable of sustaining the commercial and
noncommercial uses of fish and wildlife. The legislature further
recognizes the importance of the continued growth and development
of the state's forest products industry which has a vital stake
in the long-term productivity of both the public and private
forest land base.
The development of a landscape planning system would help
achieve these goals. Landowners and resource managers should be
provided incentives to voluntarily develop long-term multispecies
landscape management plans that will provide protection to public
resources. Because landscape planning represents a departure
from the use of standard baseline rules and may result in
unintended consequences to both the affected habitats and to a
landowner's economic interests, the legislature desires to
establish up to seven experimental pilot programs to gain
experience with landscape planning that may prove useful in
fashioning legislation of a more general application.
(1) Until December 31, 2000, the department in cooperation
with the department of fish and wildlife, and the department of
ecology when relating to water quality protection, is granted
authority to select not more than seven pilot projects for the
purpose of developing individual landowner multispecies landscape
management plans.
(a) Pilot project participants must be selected by the
department in cooperation with the department of fish and
wildlife, and the department of ecology when relating to water
quality protection, no later than October 1, 1997.
(b) The number and the location of the pilot projects are to
be determined by the department in cooperation with the
department of fish and wildlife, and the department of ecology
when relating to water quality protection, and should be selected
on the basis of risk to the habitat and species, variety and
importance of species and habitats in the planning area,
geographic distribution, surrounding ownership, other ongoing
landscape and watershed planning activities in the area,
potential benefits to water quantity and quality, financial and
staffing capabilities of participants, and other factors that
will contribute to the creation of landowner multispecies
landscape planning efforts.
(c) Each pilot project shall have a landscape management
plan with the following elements:
(i) An identification of public resources selected for
coverage under the plan and measurable objectives for the
protection of the selected public resources;
(ii) A termination date of not later than 2050;
(iii) A general description of the planning area including
its geographic location, physical and biological features,
habitats, and species known to be present;
(iv) An identification of the existing forest practices
rules that will not apply during the term of the plan;
(v) Proposed habitat management strategies or prescriptions;
(vi) A projection of the habitat conditions likely to result
from the implementation of the specified management strategies or
prescriptions;
(vii) An assessment of habitat requirements and the current
habitat conditions of representative species included in the
plan;
(viii) An assessment of potential or likely impacts to
representative species resulting from the prescribed forest
practices;
(ix) A description of the anticipated benefits to those
species or other species as a result of plan implementation;
(x) A monitoring plan;
(xi) Reporting requirements including a schedule for review
of the plan's performance in meeting its objectives;
(xii) Conditions under which a plan may be modified,
including a procedure for adaptive management;
(xiii) Conditions under which a plan may be terminated;
(xiv) A procedure for adaptive management that evaluates the
effectiveness of the plan to meet its measurable public resources
objectives, reflects changes in the best available science, and
provides changes to its habitat management strategies,
prescriptions, and hydraulic project standards to the extent
agreed to in the plan and in a timely manner and schedule;
(xv) A description of how the plan relates to publicly
available plans of adjacent federal, state, tribal, and private
timberland owners; and
(xvi) A statement of whether the landowner intends to apply
for approval of the plan under applicable federal law.
(2) Until December 31, 2000, the department, in agreement
with the department of fish and wildlife, and the department of
ecology when the landowner elects to cover water quality in the
plan, shall approve a landscape management plan and enter into a
binding implementation agreement with the landowner when such
departments find, based upon the best scientific data available,
that:
(a) The plan contains all of the elements required under
this section including measurable public resource objectives;
(b) The plan is expected to be effective in meeting those
objectives;
(c) The landowner has sufficient financial resources to
implement the management strategies or prescriptions to be
implemented by the landowner under the plan;
(d) The plan will:
(i) Provide better protection than current state law for the
public resources selected for coverage under the plan considered
in the aggregate; and
(ii) Compared to conditions that could result from
compliance with current state law:
(A) Not result in poorer habitat conditions over the life of
the plan for any species selected for coverage that is listed as
threatened or endangered under federal or state law, or that has
been identified as a candidate for such listing, at the time the
plan is approved; and
(B) Measurably improve habitat conditions for species
selected for special consideration under the plan;
(e) The plan shall include watershed analysis or provide for
a level of protection that meets or exceeds the protection that
would be provided by watershed analysis, if the landowner selects
fish or water quality as a public resource to be covered under
the plan. Any alternative process to watershed analysis would be
subject to timely peer review;
(f) The planning process provides for a public participation
process during the development of the plan, which shall be
developed by the department in cooperation with the landowner.
The management plans must be submitted to the department and
the department of fish and wildlife, and the department of
ecology when the landowner elects to cover water quality in the
plan, no later than March 1, 2000. The department shall provide
an opportunity for public comment on the proposed plan. The
comment period shall not be less than forty-five days. The
department shall approve or reject plans within one hundred
twenty days of submittal by the landowner of a final plan. The
decision by the department, in agreement with the department of
fish and wildlife, and the department of ecology when the
landowner has elected to cover water quality in the plan, to
approve or disapprove the management plan is subject to the
environmental review process of chapter 43.21C RCW, provided that
any public comment period provided for under chapter 43.21C RCW
shall run concurrently with the public comment period provided in
this subsection (2).
(3) After a landscape management plan is adopted:
(a) Forest practices consistent with the plan need not
comply with:
(i) The specific forest practices rules identified in the
plan; and
(ii) Any forest practice rules and policies adopted after
the approval of the plan to the extent that the rules:
(A) Have been adopted primarily for the protection of a
public resource selected for coverage under the plan; or
(B) Provide for procedural or administrative obligations
inconsistent with or in addition to those provided for in the
plan with respect to those public resources; and
(b) If the landowner has selected fish as one of the public
resources to be covered under the plan, the plan shall serve as
the hydraulic project approval for the life of the plan, in
compliance with *RCW 77.55.100.
(4) The department is authorized to issue a single landscape
level permit valid for the life of the plan to a landowner who
has an approved landscape management plan and who has requested a
landscape permit from the department. Landowners receiving a
landscape level permit shall meet annually with the department
and the department of fish and wildlife, and the department of
ecology where water quality has been selected as a public
resource to be covered under the plan, to review the specific
forest practices activities planned for the next twelve months
and to determine whether such activities are in compliance with
the plan. The departments will consult with the affected Indian
tribes and other interested parties who have expressed an
interest in connection with the review. The landowner is to
provide ten calendar days' notice to the department prior to the
commencement of any forest practices authorized under a landscape
level permit. The landscape level permit will not impose
additional conditions relating to the public resources selected
for coverage under the plan beyond those agreed to in the plan.
For the purposes of chapter 43.21C RCW, forest practices
conducted in compliance with an approved plan are deemed not to
have the potential for a substantial impact on the environment as
to any public resource selected for coverage under the plan.
(5) Except as otherwise provided in a plan, the agreement
implementing the landscape management plan is an agreement that
runs with the property covered by the approved landscape
management plan and the department shall record notice of the
plan in the real property records of the counties in which the
affected properties are located. Prior to its termination, no
plan shall permit forest land covered by its terms to be
withdrawn from such coverage, whether by sale, exchange, or other
means, nor to be converted to nonforestry uses except to the
extent that such withdrawal or conversion would not measurably
impair the achievement of the plan's stated public resource
objectives. If a participant transfers all or part of its
interest in the property, the terms of the plan still apply to
the new landowner for the plan's stated duration unless the plan
is terminated under its terms or unless the plan specifies the
conditions under which the terms of the plan do not apply to the
new landowner.
(6) The departments of natural resources, fish and wildlife,
and ecology shall seek to develop memorandums of agreements with
federal agencies and affected Indian tribes relating to tribal
issues in the landscape management plans. The departments shall
solicit input from affected Indian tribes in connection with the
selection, review, and approval of any landscape management plan.
If any recommendation is received from an affected Indian tribe
and is not adopted by the departments, the departments shall
provide a written explanation of their reasons for not adopting
the recommendation.
(7) The department is directed to report to the forest
practices board annually through the year 2000, but no later than
December 31st of each year, on the status of each pilot project.
The department is directed to provide to the forest practices
board, no later than December 31, 2000, an evaluation of the
pilot projects including a determination if a permanent landscape
planning process should be established along with a discussion of
what legislative and rule modifications are necessary.
[2003 c 39 § 34; 1997 c 290 § 1.]
NOTES:
*Reviser's note: RCW 77.55.100 was repealed by 2005 c 146 § 1006.