WAC 173-425-060
Outdoor burning permit
program/requirements. (1) Permit program.
(a) Ecology or local air authorities may consult with
fire protection authorities, conservation districts, or
counties to determine if any of these agencies are capable and
willing to serve as the permitting agency and/or enforcing
agency for particular types of burning in an area of the
state. Ecology or local air authorities may enter into
agreements with any capable agencies to identify the
permitting agencies and enforcing agencies for each type of
burning and determine the type of permit appropriate for each
area where a permit is required. (RCW 70.94.654)
(b) Permitting agencies may use, as appropriate, a
verbal, electronic, written, or general permit established by
rule, for any type of burning that requires a permit:
Provided, That a written permit should be used, where
feasible, for land clearing burning, storm or flood debris
burning in areas where residential burning and land clearing
burning are prohibited under WAC 173-425-040 (1), (2), or (3),
and other outdoor burning (except any other outdoor burning
necessary to protect public health and safety). (RCW 70.94.745(4))
(c) The rule for a general permit must establish periods
of time when any burning under the permit must occur. General
permits must also include all appropriate conditions for
burning as stated in subsection (4) of this section.
(2) Types of burning that require a permit. Except as
otherwise stated, a permit is required for the following types
of outdoor burning in all areas of the state under the
jurisdiction of this chapter:
(a) Residential burning (except in the nonurban areas of
any county with an unincorporated population of less than
fifty thousand; (RCW 70.94.745(2))
(b) Land clearing burning; (RCW 70.94.745(2))
(c) Storm or flood debris burning; (RCW 70.94.743 (1)(c))
(d) Tumbleweed burning (except in counties with a
population of less than two hundred fifty thousand); (RCW 70.94.745(5))
(e) Weed abatement fires; (RCW 70.94.650 (1)(a))
(f) Firefighting instruction fires for training to fight
structural fires in urban growth areas and cities with a
population over ten thousand, and all other firefighting
instruction fires, except firefighting instruction fires for
training to fight structural fires as provided in RCW 52.12.150, aircraft crash rescue fires as provided in RCW 70.94.650(5), and forest fires; (RCW 70.94.650 (1)(b))
(g) Rare and endangered plant regeneration fires; (RCW 70.94.651(1))
(h) Indian ceremonial fires (except on lands within the
exterior boundaries of Indian reservations unless provided for
by intergovernmental agreement); (RCW 70.94.651(2))
(i) Recreational fires with a total fuel area that is
greater than three feet in diameter and/or two feet in height
(except in the nonurban areas of counties with an
unincorporated population of less than fifty thousand; and
(RCW 70.94.765)
(j) Other outdoor burning (if specifically authorized by
the local air authority or ecology). (RCW 70.94.765)
(3) Fees. Permitting agencies may charge a fee for any
permit issued under the authority of this chapter: Provided,
That a fee must be charged for all permits issued for weed
abatement fires and firefighting instruction fires. All fees
must be set by rule and must not exceed the level necessary to
recover the costs of administering and enforcing the permit
program. (RCW 70.94.650(2) and 70.94.780)
(4) Permit decisions. Permitting agencies must approve
with conditions, or deny outdoor burning permits as needed to
achieve compliance with this chapter. All permits must
include conditions to satisfy the requirements in WAC 173-425-050, and they may require other conditions, such as
restricting the time period for burning, restricting
permissible hours of burning, imposing requirements for good
combustion practice, and restricting burning to specified
weather conditions. Permitting agencies may also include
conditions to comply with other laws pertaining to outdoor
burning. (RCW 70.94.745, 70.94.750, and 70.94.780)
(5) Establishment of a general permit and requirements
for residential burning.
(a) A general permit for residential burning is hereby
adopted for use in any area where ecology (or a local air
authority that has adopted this general permit by reference)
and any designated enforcing agencies have agreed that a
general permit is appropriate for residential burning, and
have notified the public where the permit applies. All
burning under this permit must comply with the conditions in
(c) of this subsection, and it must be restricted to the first
and second weekends (Saturday and Sunday) in April and the
third and fourth weekends in October, unless alternative days
are substituted by the enforcing agency and adequate notice of
the substitution is provided to the public. Alternative days
may only be substituted if conditions on the prescribed days
are unsuitable due to such things as poor air quality, high
fire danger, unfavorable meteorology, likely interference with
a major community event, or difficulties for enforcement. (RCW 70.94.745(4))
(b) Local air authorities may also adopt a general permit
for residential burning that prescribes a different set of
days, not to exceed eight days per year, when any burning
under the permit must occur: Provided, That the public must
be given adequate notice regarding where and when the permit
will apply. (RCW 70.94.745(4))
(c) The following conditions apply to all residential
burning allowed without a permit under WAC 173-425-060 (2)(a)
or allowed under a general, verbal, or electronic permit:
(i) The person responsible for the fire must contact the
permitting agency and/or any other designated source for
information on the burning conditions for each day.
(ii) A fire may not be ignited, and must be extinguished,
if an air pollution episode, impaired air quality condition,
or fire danger burn ban that applies to the burning, is
declared for the area.
(iii) The fire must not include garbage, dead animals,
asphalt, petroleum products, paints, rubber products,
plastics, paper (other than what is necessary to start a
fire), cardboard, treated wood, construction/demolition
debris, metal, or any substance (other than natural
vegetation) that normally releases toxic emissions, dense
smoke, or obnoxious odors when burned.
(iv) The fire must not include materials hauled from
another property.
(v) If any emission from the fire is detrimental to the
health, safety, or welfare of any person, if it causes damage
to property or business, or if it causes a nuisance, the fire
must be extinguished immediately.
(vi) A person capable of extinguishing the fire must
attend it at all times, and the fire must be extinguished
before leaving it.
(vii) No fires are to be within fifty feet of structures.
(viii) Permission from a landowner, or owner's designated
representative, must be obtained before starting an outdoor
fire.
(ix) Any burn pile must not be larger than four feet by
four feet by three feet.
(x) Only one pile at a time may be burned, and each pile
must be extinguished before lighting another.
(xi) If an outdoor container is used for burning, it must
be constructed of concrete or masonry with a completely
enclosed combustion chamber and equipped with a permanently
attached spark arrester constructed of iron, heavy wire mesh,
or other noncombustible material with openings not larger than
one-half inch.
(xii) No fire is permitted within five hundred feet of
forest slash.
Persons not able to meet these requirements or the
requirements in WAC 173-425-050 must apply for and receive a
written permit before burning. Failure to comply with all
requirements of this subsection voids any applicable permit,
and the person responsible for burning may be subject to
enforcement action under subsection (6) of this section.
(6) Field response and enforcement. Any agency that
issues permits, or adopts a general permit for any type of
burning in an area, is responsible for field response to
outdoor burning complaints and enforcement of all permit
conditions and requirements of this chapter related to that
type of burning in the area, unless another agency has agreed
under WAC 173-425-060 (1)(a) to be responsible for certain
field response or enforcement activities. Except for
enforcing WAC 173-425-050 (3)(a)(iii), local air authorities
and ecology may also perform these activities. Local air
authorities or ecology will also be responsible for enforcing
any requirements that apply to burning that is prohibited or
exempt from permits in areas under their jurisdiction, unless
another agency agrees to be responsible.
Permitting agencies and enforcing agencies may require
that corrective action be taken, and may assess penalties to
the extent allowed under their general and specific
authorities if they discover noncompliance with this chapter. A fire protection authority called to respond to, control, or
extinguish an illegal or out-of-control fire may charge, and
recover from the person responsible for the fire, the costs of
its response and control action.
[Statutory Authority: RCW 70.94.700, [70.94.]755 and
Governor's Executive Order 97-02. 00-07-066 (Order 97-39), §
173-425-060, filed 3/13/00, effective 4/13/00. Statutory
Authority: Chapter 70.94 RCW. 92-24-077 (Order 91-57), § 173-425-060, filed 12/1/92,
effective 1/1/93.]