WAC 173-27-040
Developments exempt from substantial
development permit requirement. (1) Application and
interpretation of exemptions.
(a) Exemptions shall be construed narrowly. Only those
developments that meet the precise terms of one or more of the
listed exemptions may be granted exemption from the
substantial development permit process.
(b) An exemption from the substantial development permit
process is not an exemption from compliance with the act or
the local master program, nor from any other regulatory
requirements. To be authorized, all uses and developments
must be consistent with the policies and provisions of the
applicable master program and the Shoreline Management Act. A
development or use that is listed as a conditional use
pursuant to the local master program or is an unlisted use,
must obtain a conditional use permit even though the
development or use does not require a substantial development
permit. When a development or use is proposed that does not
comply with the bulk, dimensional and performance standards of
the master program, such development or use can only be
authorized by approval of a variance.
(c) The burden of proof that a development or use is
exempt from the permit process is on the applicant.
(d) If any part of a proposed development is not eligible
for exemption, then a substantial development permit is
required for the entire proposed development project.
(e) Local government may attach conditions to the
approval of exempted developments and/or uses as necessary to
assure consistency of the project with the act and the local
master program.
(2) The following developments shall not require
substantial development permits:
(a) Any development of which the total cost or fair
market value, whichever is higher, does not exceed five
thousand dollars, if such development does not materially
interfere with the normal public use of the water or
shorelines of the state. The dollar threshold established in
this subsection must be adjusted for inflation by the office
of financial management every five years, beginning July 1,
2007, based upon changes in the consumer price index during
that time period. "Consumer price index" means, for any
calendar year, that year's annual average consumer price
index, Seattle, Washington area, for urban wage earners and
clerical workers, all items, compiled by the Bureau of Labor
and Statistics, United States Department of Labor. The office
of financial management must calculate the new dollar
threshold and transmit it to the office of the code reviser
for publication in the Washington State Register at least one
month before the new dollar threshold is to take effect. For
purposes of determining whether or not a permit is required,
the total cost or fair market value shall be based on the
value of development that is occurring on shorelines of the
state as defined in RCW 90.58.030 (2)(c). The total cost or
fair market value of the development shall include the fair
market value of any donated, contributed or found labor,
equipment or materials;
(b) Normal maintenance or repair of existing structures
or developments, including damage by accident, fire or
elements. "Normal maintenance" includes those usual acts to
prevent a decline, lapse, or cessation from a lawfully
established condition. "Normal repair" means to restore a
development to a state comparable to its original condition,
including but not limited to its size, shape, configuration,
location and external appearance, within a reasonable period
after decay or partial destruction, except where repair causes
substantial adverse effects to shoreline resource or
environment. Replacement of a structure or development may be
authorized as repair where such replacement is the common
method of repair for the type of structure or development and
the replacement structure or development is comparable to the
original structure or development including but not limited to
its size, shape, configuration, location and external
appearance and the replacement does not cause substantial
adverse effects to shoreline resources or environment;
(c) Construction of the normal protective bulkhead common
to single-family residences. A "normal protective" bulkhead
includes those structural and nonstructural developments
installed at or near, and parallel to, the ordinary high water
mark for the sole purpose of protecting an existing
single-family residence and appurtenant structures from loss
or damage by erosion. A normal protective bulkhead is not
exempt if constructed for the purpose of creating dry land. When a vertical or near vertical wall is being constructed or
reconstructed, not more than one cubic yard of fill per one
foot of wall may be used as backfill. When an existing
bulkhead is being repaired by construction of a vertical wall
fronting the existing wall, it shall be constructed no further
waterward of the existing bulkhead than is necessary for
construction of new footings. When a bulkhead has
deteriorated such that an ordinary high water mark has been
established by the presence and action of water landward of
the bulkhead then the replacement bulkhead must be located at
or near the actual ordinary high water mark. Beach
nourishment and bioengineered erosion control projects may be
considered a normal protective bulkhead when any structural
elements are consistent with the above requirements and when
the project has been approved by the department of fish and
wildlife.
(d) Emergency construction necessary to protect property
from damage by the elements. An "emergency" is an
unanticipated and imminent threat to public health, safety, or
the environment which requires immediate action within a time
too short to allow full compliance with this chapter. Emergency construction does not include development of new
permanent protective structures where none previously existed.
Where new protective structures are deemed by the
administrator to be the appropriate means to address the
emergency situation, upon abatement of the emergency situation
the new structure shall be removed or any permit which would
have been required, absent an emergency, pursuant to chapter 90.58 RCW, these regulations, or the local master program,
obtained. All emergency construction shall be consistent with
the policies of chapter 90.58 RCW and the local master
program. As a general matter, flooding or other seasonal
events that can be anticipated and may occur but that are not
imminent are not an emergency;
(e) Construction and practices normal or necessary for
farming, irrigation, and ranching activities, including
agricultural service roads and utilities on shorelands,
construction of a barn or similar agricultural structure, and
the construction and maintenance of irrigation structures
including but not limited to head gates, pumping facilities,
and irrigation channels: Provided, That a feedlot of any
size, all processing plants, other activities of a commercial
nature, alteration of the contour of the shorelands by
leveling or filling other than that which results from normal
cultivation, shall not be considered normal or necessary
farming or ranching activities. A feedlot shall be an
enclosure or facility used or capable of being used for
feeding livestock hay, grain, silage, or other livestock feed,
but shall not include land for growing crops or vegetation for
livestock feeding and/or grazing, nor shall it include normal
livestock wintering operations;
(f) Construction or modification of navigational aids
such as channel markers and anchor buoys;
(g) Construction on shorelands by an owner, lessee or
contract purchaser of a single-family residence for their own
use or for the use of their family, which residence does not
exceed a height of thirty-five feet above average grade level
and which meets all requirements of the state agency or local
government having jurisdiction thereof, other than
requirements imposed pursuant to chapter 90.58 RCW. "Single-family residence" means a detached dwelling designed
for and occupied by one family including those structures and
developments within a contiguous ownership which are a normal
appurtenance. An "appurtenance" is necessarily connected to
the use and enjoyment of a single-family residence and is
located landward of the ordinary high water mark and the
perimeter of a wetland. On a statewide basis, normal
appurtenances include a garage; deck; driveway; utilities;
fences; installation of a septic tank and drainfield and
grading which does not exceed two hundred fifty cubic yards
and which does not involve placement of fill in any wetland or
waterward of the ordinary high water mark. Local
circumstances may dictate additional interpretations of normal
appurtenances which shall be set forth and regulated within
the applicable master program. Construction authorized under
this exemption shall be located landward of the ordinary high
water mark;
(h) Construction of a dock, including a community dock,
designed for pleasure craft only, for the private
noncommercial use of the owner, lessee, or contract purchaser
of single-family and multiple-family residences. A dock is a
landing and moorage facility for watercraft and does not
include recreational decks, storage facilities or other
appurtenances. This exception applies if either:
(i) In salt waters, the fair market value of the dock
does not exceed two thousand five hundred dollars; or
(ii) In fresh waters the fair market value of the dock
does not exceed ten thousand dollars, but if subsequent
construction having a fair market value exceeding two thousand
five hundred dollars occurs within five years of completion of
the prior construction, the subsequent construction shall be
considered a substantial development for the purpose of this
chapter.
For purposes of this section salt water shall include the
tidally influenced marine and estuarine water areas of the
state including the Pacific Ocean, Strait of Juan de Fuca,
Strait of Georgia and Puget Sound and all bays and inlets
associated with any of the above;
(i) Operation, maintenance, or construction of canals,
waterways, drains, reservoirs, or other facilities that now
exist or are hereafter created or developed as a part of an
irrigation system for the primary purpose of making use of
system waters, including return flow and artificially stored
ground water from the irrigation of lands;
(j) The marking of property lines or corners on
state-owned lands, when such marking does not significantly
interfere with normal public use of the surface of the water;
(k) Operation and maintenance of any system of dikes,
ditches, drains, or other facilities existing on September 8,
1975, which were created, developed or utilized primarily as a
part of an agricultural drainage or diking system;
(l) Any project with a certification from the governor
pursuant to chapter 80.50 RCW;
(m) Site exploration and investigation activities that
are prerequisite to preparation of an application for
development authorization under this chapter, if:
(i) The activity does not interfere with the normal
public use of the surface waters;
(ii) The activity will have no significant adverse impact
on the environment including but not limited to fish,
wildlife, fish or wildlife habitat, water quality, and
aesthetic values;
(iii) The activity does not involve the installation of
any structure, and upon completion of the activity the
vegetation and land configuration of the site are restored to
conditions existing before the activity;
(iv) A private entity seeking development authorization
under this section first posts a performance bond or provides
other evidence of financial responsibility to the local
jurisdiction to ensure that the site is restored to
preexisting conditions; and
(v) The activity is not subject to the permit
requirements of RCW 90.58.550;
(n) The process of removing or controlling aquatic
noxious weeds, as defined in RCW 17.26.020, through the use of
an herbicide or other treatment methods applicable to weed
control that are recommended by a final environmental impact
statement published by the department of agriculture or the
department of ecology jointly with other state agencies under
chapter 43.21C RCW;
(o) Watershed restoration projects as defined herein. Local government shall review the projects for consistency
with the shoreline master program in an expeditious manner and
shall issue its decision along with any conditions within
forty-five days of receiving all materials necessary to review
the request for exemption from the applicant. No fee may be
charged for accepting and processing requests for exemption
for watershed restoration projects as used in this section.
(i) "Watershed restoration project" means a public or
private project authorized by the sponsor of a watershed
restoration plan that implements the plan or a part of the
plan and consists of one or more of the following activities:
(A) A project that involves less than ten miles of
streamreach, in which less than twenty-five cubic yards of
sand, gravel, or soil is removed, imported, disturbed or
discharged, and in which no existing vegetation is removed
except as minimally necessary to facilitate additional
plantings;
(B) A project for the restoration of an eroded or
unstable stream bank that employs the principles of
bioengineering, including limited use of rock as a
stabilization only at the toe of the bank, and with primary
emphasis on using native vegetation to control the erosive
forces of flowing water; or
(C) A project primarily designed to improve fish and
wildlife habitat, remove or reduce impediments to migration of
fish, or enhance the fishery resource available for use by all
of the citizens of the state, provided that any structure,
other than a bridge or culvert or instream habitat enhancement
structure associated with the project, is less than two
hundred square feet in floor area and is located above the
ordinary high water mark of the stream.
(ii) "Watershed restoration plan" means a plan, developed
or sponsored by the department of fish and wildlife, the
department of ecology, the department of natural resources,
the department of transportation, a federally recognized
Indian tribe acting within and pursuant to its authority, a
city, a county, or a conservation district that provides a
general program and implementation measures or actions for the
preservation, restoration, re-creation, or enhancement of the
natural resources, character, and ecology of a stream, stream
segment, drainage area, or watershed for which agency and
public review has been conducted pursuant to chapter 43.21C RCW, the State Environmental Policy Act;
(p) A public or private project that is designed to
improve fish or wildlife habitat or fish passage, when all of
the following apply:
(i) The project has been approved in writing by the
department of fish and wildlife;
(ii) The project has received hydraulic project approval
by the department of fish and wildlife pursuant to chapter 77.55 RCW; and
(iii) The local government has determined that the
project is substantially consistent with the local shoreline
master program. The local government shall make such
determination in a timely manner and provide it by letter to
the project proponent.
Fish habitat enhancement projects that conform to the
provisions of RCW 77.55.181 are determined to be consistent
with local shoreline master programs, as follows:
(A) In order to receive the permit review and approval
process created in this section, a fish habitat enhancement
project must meet the criteria under (p)(iii)(A)(I) and (II)
of this subsection:
(I) A fish habitat enhancement project must be a project
to accomplish one or more of the following tasks:
• Elimination of human-made fish passage barriers,
including culvert repair and replacement;
• Restoration of an eroded or unstable streambank
employing the principle of bioengineering, including limited
use of rock as a stabilization only at the toe of the bank,
and with primary emphasis on using native vegetation to
control the erosive forces of flowing water; or
• Placement of woody debris or other instream structures
that benefit naturally reproducing fish stocks.
The department of fish and wildlife shall develop size or
scale threshold tests to determine if projects accomplishing
any of these tasks should be evaluated under the process
created in this section or under other project review and
approval processes. A project proposal shall not be reviewed
under the process created in this section if the department
determines that the scale of the project raises concerns
regarding public health and safety; and
(II) A fish habitat enhancement project must be approved
in one of the following ways:
• By the department of fish and wildlife pursuant to
chapter 77.95 or 77.100 RCW;
• By the sponsor of a watershed restoration plan as
provided in chapter 89.08 RCW;
• By the department as a department of fish and
wildlife-sponsored fish habitat enhancement or restoration
project;
• Through the review and approval process for the jobs
for the environment program;
• Through the review and approval process for
conservation district-sponsored projects, where the project
complies with design standards established by the conservation
commission through interagency agreement with the United
States Fish and Wildlife Service and the natural resource
conservation service;
• Through a formal grant program established by the
legislature or the department of fish and wildlife for fish
habitat enhancement or restoration; and
• Through other formal review and approval processes
established by the legislature.
(B) Fish habitat enhancement projects meeting the
criteria of (p)(iii)(A) of this subsection are expected to
result in beneficial impacts to the environment. Decisions
pertaining to fish habitat enhancement projects meeting the
criteria of (p)(iii)(A) of this subsection and being reviewed
and approved according to the provisions of this section are
not subject to the requirements of RCW 43.21C.030 (2)(c).
(C)(I) A hydraulic project approval permit is required
for projects that meet the criteria of (p)(iii)(A) of this
subsection and are being reviewed and approved under this
section. An applicant shall use a joint aquatic resource
permit application form developed by the office of regulatory
assistance to apply for approval under this chapter. On the
same day, the applicant shall provide copies of the completed
application form to the department of fish and wildlife and to
each appropriate local government. Local governments shall
accept the application as notice of the proposed project. The
department of fish and wildlife shall provide a fifteen-day
comment period during which it will receive comments regarding
environmental impacts. Within forty-five days, the department
shall either issue a permit, with or without conditions, deny
approval, or make a determination that the review and approval
process created by this section is not appropriate for the
proposed project. The department shall base this
determination on identification during the comment period of
adverse impacts that cannot be mitigated by the conditioning
of a permit. If the department determines that the review and
approval process created by this section is not appropriate
for the proposed project, the department shall notify the
applicant and the appropriate local governments of its
determination. The applicant may reapply for approval of the
project under other review and approval processes.
(II) Any person aggrieved by the approval, denial,
conditioning, or modification of a permit under this section
may formally appeal the decision to the hydraulic appeals
board pursuant to the provisions of this chapter.
(D) No local government may require permits or charge
fees for fish habitat enhancement projects that meet the
criteria of (p)(iii)(A) of this subsection and that are
reviewed and approved according to the provisions of this
section.
[Statutory Authority: RCW 90.58.030 (3)(e), 90.58.045,90.58.065
, 90.58.140(9), 90.58.143, 90.58.147, 90.58.200,90.58.355
, 90.58.390, 90.58.515, 43.21K.080, 71.09.250,71.09.342
, 77.55.181, 89.08.460, chapters 70.105D, 80.50 RCW. 07-02-086 (Order 05-12), § 173-27-040, filed 1/2/07, effective
2/2/07. Statutory Authority: RCW 90.58.140(3) and[90.58].200
. 96-20-075 (Order 95-17), § 173-27-040, filed
9/30/96, effective 10/31/96.]