WAC 222-16-105
Cooperative habitat enhancement
agreements. (1) Purpose. A cooperative habitat enhancement
agreement (CHEA) is intended to remove disincentives for
landowners who create, enhance, or maintain habitat for the
northern spotted owl or marbled murrelet by providing them
with protection against future spotted owl or marbled murrelet
rules caused by their enhancement activities. A CHEA is an
agreement between the department and a landowner, developed in
cooperation with the department of fish and wildlife, for the
purpose of creating, enhancing, or maintaining northern
spotted owl habitat and/or marbled murrelet habitat. The
agreement will apply only to forest land identified by the
landowner:
(a) For northern spotted owls, outside of the median home
range circles of northern spotted owl site centers in
existence at the time of implementation.
(b) For marbled murrelets, any current unoccupied or
potential future habitat.
(2) Authority. Outside of the median home range circles
of northern spotted owls or an occupied marbled murrelet site,
the department, in consultation with the department of fish
and wildlife, may enter into agreements with nonfederal
landowners to create, enhance, or maintain habitat that the
northern spotted owl and/or the marbled murrelet can be
expected to utilize. During the term of these agreements,
forest practices covered by the agreements shall not be
classified as Class IV-Special on the basis of critical
habitat (state) or critical habitat (federal) for the northern
spotted owl or the marbled murrelet. This does not preclude
classification as Class IV-Special because of the presence of
other factors listed in WAC 222-16-050(1).
(3) Baseline.
(a) Each agreement shall identify a baseline level of
habitat, and the department shall not permit forest practices
that reduce the habitat below the baseline during the term of
the agreement.
(b) For northern spotted owls, the baseline may range
from zero habitat to the overall levels of suitable spotted
owl habitat and dispersal habitat that existed across the land
in question at the time the agreement is entered into.
(c) For marbled murrelets, the baseline may range from
zero habitat to the overall levels of suitable marbled
murrelet habitat that existed across the land in question at
the time the agreement is entered into.
(d) The department shall determine, working with the
landowner and in consultation with the department of fish and
wildlife, the appropriate baseline, taking into consideration:
(i) The size of the landowner's ownership and the ability
of the landowner to maintain habitat conditions across the
landscape in question over time;
(ii) The overall benefits of the agreement to the
northern spotted owl or marbled murrelet including both the
proposed measures to create, enhance, or maintain habitat and
the proposed baseline levels; and
(iii) The term of the agreement.
(4) Form and content of CHEAs.
(a) The department shall, in consultation with the
department of fish and wildlife, have the authority to define
the form and content of CHEAs. The form and content may vary
among agreements, but each must provide sufficient information
for the department, the public, and other reviewers to
understand and evaluate the agreement against the standards
established under this section.
(b) For northern spotted owls, in addition to the
elements required by the department, each agreement shall
include a plan to avoid harvesting, road construction, or the
aerial application of pesticides, between March 1 and August
31, on the seventy acres of highest quality suitable spotted
owl habitat surrounding any known northern spotted owl site
centers on lands covered by the agreement.
(5) Approval of a CHEA. Upon receipt of a CHEA, the
department shall circulate the agreement to the department of
fish and wildlife, affected Indian tribes, local governmental entities, other forest landowners
in the SOSEA (if the CHEA is in a SOSEA), and the public for
review and comment. Within sixty days of receipt of the
agreement, the department shall review the comments and
approve or disapprove the agreement or submit the agreement to
the landowner to revise as appropriate. The department, after
consultation with the department of fish and wildlife, may
approve the agreement if the agreement will create, enhance,
or maintain habitat conditions for:
(a) The northern spotted owl in a manner that provides a
measurable contribution toward meeting the goals of the SOSEA
or a measurable benefit to northern spotted owls outside
SOSEAs.
(b) The marbled murrelet in a manner that provides a
measurable benefit to the species.
(6) Enforcement of CHEAs. The department shall review
all applications and notifications from the landowner,
proposed within the agreement area, for consistency with the
agreement. Any applications or notifications found to be
inconsistent with the agreement shall be returned to the
landowner for modification. After landowner review,
applications and notifications which are not consistent with
the agreement shall be classified based on the rules in effect
at the time of application and without any of the benefits of
the agreement.
[Statutory Authority: RCW 76.09.040. 08-24-011, §
222-16-105, filed 11/21/08, effective 12/22/08. Statutory
Authority: Chapter 34.05 RCW, RCW 76.09.040, [76.09.]050,[76.09.]370
, 76.13.120(9). 01-12-042, § 222-16-105, filed
5/30/01, effective 7/1/01. Statutory Authority: RCW 76.09.040 and chapter 34.05 RCW. 97-15-105, § 222-16-105,
filed 7/21/97, effective 8/21/97.]