WAC 173-158-080
Wetlands management. Wetlands are areas
of great natural productivity and hydrological utility,
providing natural flood control, flood desynchronization, and
flow stabilization of rivers and streams. The unrestricted
use and development of wetlands will destroy many of these
beneficial qualities which directly affect human health and
safety during flood events. The piecemeal alteration and
destruction of wetlands through draining, dredging, filling
and other means has an adverse cumulative impact on their
ability to reduce flood damages.
Communities should, to the maximum extent possible, seek
to avoid the short and long term adverse impacts associated
with the destruction or modification of wetlands, especially
those activities which limit or disrupt the ability of the
wetland to ameliorate flooding impacts. Proposals for
development within special flood hazard areas (base flood
plains) should be reviewed for their possible impacts on
wetlands located within the flood plain. Communities should
ensure that development activities in or around wetlands do
not negatively affect public safety, health, and welfare by
disrupting the wetlands' ability to reduce flood and storm
hazards.
Communities may request technical assistance from the
department of ecology in identifying wetland areas. Existing
wetland map information from the National Wetlands Inventory
(NWI) can be used in conjunction with the community's FIRM to
prepare an overlay zone indicating critical wetland areas
deserving special attention. Local wetlands management
strategies can also be developed which will preserve these
valuable areas.
[Statutory Authority: Chapter 86.16 RCW. 88-10-058 (Order
88-6), § 173-158-080, filed 5/4/88.]