WAC 365-190-040
Process. (1) The classification and
designation of natural resource lands and critical areas is an
important step among several in the overall growth management
process. These steps, outlined in subsections (4) and (5) of
this section comprise a vision of the future, and that vision
gives direction to the steps in the form of specific goals and
objectives. Under the act, the timing of the first steps
coincided with development of the larger vision through the
comprehensive planning process.
(2) The act required preliminary classifications and
designations of natural resource lands and critical areas to
be completed in 1991. Counties and cities planning under the
act were to enact interim regulations to protect and conserve
these natural resource lands and critical areas by September
1, 1991. By July 1, 1992, counties and cities not planning
under the act were to bring their development regulations into
conformance with their comprehensive plans. By July 1, 1993,
counties and cities planning under the act were to adopt
comprehensive plans, consistent with the goals of the act. Implementation of the comprehensive plans was to occur by the
following year.
(3) Under RCW 36.70A.130, all counties and cities must
review, and if needed, update their natural resource lands and
critical areas designations. Counties and cities fully
planning under the act must also review and, if needed, update
their natural resource lands conservation provisions,
comprehensive plans and development regulations. Legal
challenges to some updates have led to clarifications of the
ongoing review and update requirements in RCW 36.70A.130, and
the process for implementing those requirements. The process
description and recommendations in this section incorporate
those clarifications and describe both the initial designation
and conservation or protection of natural resource lands and
critical areas, as well as subsequent local actions to amend
those designations and provisions.
(4) Classification is the first step in implementing RCW 36.70A.170 and requires defining categories to which natural
resource lands and critical areas will be assigned.
(a) Counties and cities are encouraged to adopt
classification schemes that are consistent with federal and
state classification schemes and those of adjacent
jurisdictions to ensure regional consistency. Specific
classification schemes for natural resource lands and critical
areas are described in WAC 365-190-050 through 365-190-130.
(b) State agency classification schemes are available for
specific critical area types, including the wetlands rating
systems for eastern and western Washington from the Washington
state department of ecology, the priority habitats and species
categories and recommendations from the Washington state
department of fish and wildlife, and the high quality
ecosystem and rare plant categories and listings from the
department of natural resources, natural heritage program.
The Washington state department of natural resources provides
significant information on geologic hazards and aquatic
resources that may be useful in classifying these critical
areas. Not all areas classified by state agencies must be
designated, but such areas may be likely candidates for
designation.
(5) Designation is the second step in implementing RCW 36.70A.170.
(a) Pursuant to RCW 36.70A.170, natural resource lands
and critical areas must be designated based on their defined
classifications. For planning purposes, designation
establishes:
(i) The classification scheme;
(ii) The distribution, location, and extent of the uses
of land, where appropriate, for agriculture, forestry, and
mineral extraction; and
(iii) The general distribution, location, and extent of
critical areas.
(b) Inventories and maps should indicate designations of
natural resource lands. In circumstances where critical areas
cannot be readily identified, these areas should be designated
by performance standards or definitions, so they can be
specifically identified during the processing of a permit or
development authorization.
(c) Designation means, at a minimum, formal adoption of a
policy statement, and may include further legislative action. Designating inventoried lands for comprehensive planning and
policy definition may be less precise than subsequent
regulation of specific parcels for conservation and
protection.
(d) Successful achievement of the natural resource
industries goal set forth in RCW 36.70A.020 requires the
conservation of land base sufficient in size and quality to
maintain and enhance those industries, and the development and
use of land use techniques that discourage uses incompatible
to the management of designated lands.
(e) Mineral resource lands especially should be
designated as close as possible to their likely end use areas,
to avoid losing access to those valuable minerals by
development, and to minimize the costs of production and
transport. It is expected that mineral resource lands will be
depleted of minerals over time, and that subsequent land uses
may occur on these lands after mining is completed.
(6) Classifying, inventorying, and designating lands or
areas does not imply a change in a landowner's right to use
his or her land under current law. The law requires that
natural resource land uses be protected from land uses on
adjacent lands that would restrict resource production.
Development regulations adopted to protect critical areas may
limit some land development options. Land uses are regulated
on a parcel basis and innovative land use management
techniques should be applied when counties and cities adopt
development regulations to conserve and protect designated
natural resource lands and critical areas. The purpose of
designating natural resource lands is to enable industries to
maintain access to lands with long-term commercial
significance for agricultural, forest, and mineral resource
production. The purpose is not to confine all natural
resource production activity only to designated lands nor to
require designation as the basis for a permit to engage in
natural resource production. The department provides
technical assistance to counties and cities on a wide array of
regulatory options and alternative land use management
techniques.
(7) Overlapping designations. The designation process
may result in critical area designations that overlay other
critical area or natural resource land classifications. Overlapping designations should not necessarily be considered
inconsistent. If two or more critical area designations apply
to a given parcel, or portion of a given parcel, both or all
designations apply.
(a) If a critical area designation overlies a natural
resource land designation, both designations apply. For
counties and cities required or opting to plan under the act,
reconciling these multiple designations will be the subject of
local development regulations adopted pursuant to RCW 36.70A.060.
(b) If two or more natural resource land designations
apply, counties and cities must determine if these
designations are incompatible. If they are incompatible,
counties and cities should examine the criteria to determine
which use has the greatest long-term commercial significance,
and that resource use should be assigned to the lands being
designated.
(8) Counties and cities must involve the public in
classifying and designating natural resource lands and
critical areas. The process should include:
(a) Public participation program:
(i) Public participation should include, at a minimum,
representative participation from the following entities:
Landowners; representatives of agriculture, forestry, mining,
business, environmental, and community groups; tribal
governments; representatives of adjacent counties and cities;
and state agencies. The public participation program should
include early and timely public notice of pending designations
and regulations and should address proposed nonregulatory
incentive programs.
(ii) Counties and cities are encouraged to consider a
variety of opportunities to adequately communicate with the
public. These methods of notification may include, but are
not limited to, traditional forms of mailed notices, published
announcements, electronic mail, and internet sites to
distribute informational brochures, meeting times, project
timelines, and design and map proposals to provide an
opportunity for the public to participate.
(iii) The department provides technical assistance in
preparing public participation programs.
(b) Adoption process. Statutory and local processes
already in place governing land use decisions are the minimum
processes required for designation and regulation pursuant to
RCW 36.70A.060 and 36.70A.170. At a minimum the following
steps should be included in the adoption process:
(i) Accept the requirements of chapter 36.70A RCW;
(ii) Consider minimum guidelines developed by the
department under RCW 36.70A.050;
(iii) Consider other definitions used by state and
federal regulatory agencies;
(iv) Consider definitions used by similarly situated
counties and cities;
(v) Determine recommended definitions and check
conformance with minimum definitions in chapter 36.70A RCW;
(vi) Adopt definitions, classifications, and standards;
(vii) Apply definitions by mapping designated natural
resource lands; and
(viii) Establish procedures for amending natural resource
lands and critical areas designations.
(c) Intergovernmental coordination.
(i) The act requires coordination among counties and
cities to reconcile conflicts and strive for consistent
definitions, standards, and designations within regions. The
minimum coordination process may include one of two options:
(A) Notification option: Adjacent cities (or those with
overlapping or adjacent planning areas); counties and the
cities within them; and adjacent counties would provide each
other and special purpose districts and special purpose
districts within them notice of their intent to classify and
designate natural resource lands and critical areas within
their jurisdiction. Counties or cities receiving notice may
provide comments and input to the notifying jurisdiction. The
notifying jurisdiction specifies a comment period prior to
adoption. Within forty-five days of the jurisdiction's date
of adoption of classifications or designations, affected
jurisdictions are supplied information on how to locate a copy
of the proposal. The department may provide mediation
services to counties and cities to help resolve disputed
classifications or designations.
(B) Interlocal agreement option: Adjacent counties and
cities; all the cities within a county; or several counties
and the cities within them may choose to cooperatively
classify and designate natural resource lands and critical
areas within their jurisdictions. Counties and cities by
interlocal agreement would identify the definitions,
classification, designation, and process that will be used to
classify and designate lands within their areas. State and
federal agencies or tribes may participate in the interlocal
agreement or be provided a method of commenting on
designations and classifications prior to adoption by
jurisdictions.
(ii) Counties or cities may begin with the notification
option in (c)(i)(A) of this subsection and choose to change to
the interlocal agreement method in (c)(i)(B) of this
subsection prior to completion of the classification and
designations within their jurisdictions. Approaches to
intergovernmental coordination may vary between natural
resource land and critical area designation. It is intended
that state and federal agencies with land ownership or
management responsibilities, special purpose districts, and
Indian tribes with interests within the counties or cities
adopting classification and designation be consulted and their
input considered in the development and adoption of
designations and classifications. The department may provide
mediation services to help resolve disputes between counties
and cities that are using either the notification or
interlocal agreement method of coordinating between
jurisdictions.
(d) Mapping natural resource lands. Mapping should be
done to identify designated natural resource lands. For
counties and cities fully planning under the act, natural
resource lands designations must be incorporated into the
comprehensive plan land use element and should be shown on the
future land use map required under RCW 36.70A.070.
(9) Evaluation. When counties and cities adopt a
comprehensive plan, the act requires them to evaluate their
designations and development regulations to assure that they
are consistent with and implement the comprehensive plan. When considering changes to the designations or development
regulations, counties and cities should seek
interjurisdictional coordination and must include public
participation.
(10) Designation amendment process.
(a) Land use planning is a dynamic process. Designation
procedures should provide a rational and predictable basis for
accommodating change.
(b) Reviewing natural resource lands designation. In
classifying and designating natural resource lands, counties
must approach the effort as a county-wide or regional process.
Counties and cities should not review natural resource lands
designations solely on a parcel-by-parcel process.
Designation amendments should be based on consistency with one
or more of the following criteria:
(i) A change in circumstances pertaining to the
comprehensive plan or public policy related to designation
criteria in WAC 365-190-050(3), 365-190-060(2), and
365-190-070(3);
(ii) A change in circumstances to the subject property,
which is beyond the control of the landowner and is related to
designation criteria in WAC 365-190-050(3), 365-190-060(2),
and 365-190-070(3);
(iii) An error in designation or failure to designate;
(iv) New information on natural resource land or critical
area status related to the designation criteria in WAC 365-190-050(3), 365-190-060(2), and 365-190-070(3); or
(v) A change in population growth rates, or consumption
rates, especially of mineral resources.
(11) Use of innovative land use management techniques.
(a) Natural resource uses have preferred and primary
status in designated natural resource lands. Counties and
cities must determine if and to what extent other uses will be
allowed. If other uses are allowed, counties and cities
should consider using innovative land management techniques
that minimize land use incompatibilities and most effectively
maintain current and future natural resource lands.
(b) Techniques to conserve and protect agricultural,
forest lands, and mineral resource lands include the purchase
or transfer of development rights, fee simple purchase of the
land, less than fee simple purchase, purchase with leaseback,
buffering, land trades, conservation easements, current use
assessments, innovative zoning, or other innovations which
maintain current uses and assure the conservation of these
natural resource lands.
(12) Development in and adjacent to agricultural, forest,
and mineral resource lands shall assure the continued
management of these lands for natural resource production. Uses that would convert natural resource lands to other uses
or would interfere with the allowed natural resource uses must
be prohibited except as authorized in accessory uses under RCW 36.70A.177 or other applicable statutes. Any uses adjacent to
agricultural, forest, and mineral resource lands of long-term
commercial significance must not interfere with their
continued use for the production of agricultural, forest, or
mineral products respectively. Counties and cities should
consider the adoption of right-to-farm provisions, and may
also adopt measures to conserve and enhance marine
aquaculture. Covenants or easements recognizing that farming,
forestry, and mining activities will occur should be imposed
on new development in or adjacent to agricultural, forest, or
mineral resource lands. Where buffering is used it should be
on land within the adjacent development unless an alternative
is mutually agreed on by adjacent landowners.
[Statutory Authority: RCW 36.70A.050 and 36.70A.190. 10-03-085, § 365-190-040, filed 1/19/10, effective 2/19/10. Statutory Authority: RCW 36.70A.050. 91-07-041, §
365-190-040, filed 3/15/91, effective 4/15/91.]