WAC 365-195-920
Criteria for addressing inadequate
scientific information. Where there is an absence of valid
scientific information or incomplete scientific information
relating to a county's or city's critical areas, leading to
uncertainty about which development and land uses could lead
to harm of critical areas or uncertainty about the risk to
critical area function of permitting development, counties and
cities should use the following approach:
(1) A "precautionary or a no risk approach," in which
development and land use activities are strictly limited until
the uncertainty is sufficiently resolved; and
(2) As an interim approach, an effective adaptive
management program that relies on scientific methods to
evaluate how well regulatory and nonregulatory actions achieve
their objectives. Management, policy, and regulatory actions
are treated as experiments that are purposefully monitored and
evaluated to determine whether they are effective and, if not,
how they should be improved to increase their effectiveness. An adaptive management program is a formal and deliberate
scientific approach to taking action and obtaining information
in the face of uncertainty. To effectively implement an
adaptive management program, counties and cities should be
willing to:
(a) Address funding for the research component of the
adaptive management program;
(b) Change course based on the results and interpretation
of new information that resolves uncertainties; and
(c) Commit to the appropriate time frame and scale
necessary to reliably evaluate regulatory and nonregulatory
actions affecting critical areas protection and anadromous
fisheries.
[Statutory Authority: RCW 36.70A.190 (4)(b). 00-16-064, §
365-195-920, filed 7/27/00, effective 8/27/00.]