Bayfield Resources v. Western Wash. Gmh Bd.

244 P.3d 412
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedDecember 2, 2010
Docket39411-1-II
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 244 P.3d 412 (Bayfield Resources v. Western Wash. Gmh Bd.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bayfield Resources v. Western Wash. Gmh Bd., 244 P.3d 412 (Wash. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

244 P.3d 412 (2010)

BAYFIELD RESOURCES COMPANY, Appellant,
v.
WESTERN WASHINGTON GROWTH MANAGEMENT HEARINGS BOARD, Thurston County, Adams Cove Group, and Future Wise, Respondents.

No. 39411-1-II.

Court of Appeals of Washington, Division 2.

September 28, 2010.
As Amended on Grant of Reconsideration in Part and Granting Motion to Publish September 28, 2010.
Publication Ordered December 2, 2010.

*413 Eric Samuel Laschever, Stoel Rives LLP, Jason T. Morgan, Attorney at Law, Seattle, WA, for Appellant.

Martha Patricia Lantz, City of Tacoma Office of the City Attorney, Tacoma, WA, Jerald R. Anderson, Attorney at Law, Attorney Generals Office, Olympia, WA, for Defendant.

Jeffrey George Fancher, Attorney at Law, Olympia, WA, for Respondents.

HUNT, J.

¶ 1 Bayfield Resources Company appeals the Thurston County Superior Court's denial of its petition for review of the Western Washington Growth Management Hearings (GMH) Board's decision rejecting its petition to invalidate the Critical Areas Amendment under Thurston County Ordinance No. 13884, which excludes "certain critical areas," I Administrative Record (AR) at 23, from the required density calculation for Rural Residential R-1/5 (one-dwelling unit per five acres) lands, including portions of Bayfield's 700-acre property.[1] Bayfield argues that (1) the superior court erred in concluding that the Critical Areas Amendment did not violate substantive due process; (2) the GMH Board erroneously interpreted and applied Goal No. 6 of the Growth Management Act (GMA), Chapter 36.70A RCW; and (3) substantial evidence does not support the GMH Board's decision. We affirm the superior court's denial of Bayfield's substantive due process claim, and we affirm the GMH Board's denial of Bayfield's petition to invalidate the County zoning code's Critical Areas Amendment.

FACTS

I. Planned Rural Residential Development—Resource Protection Easements

¶ 2 Bayfield Resources Company owns approximately 700 acres of undeveloped property near Gull Harbor and Boston Harbor Road in Thurston County's "Rural Residential-One Dwelling Unit per Five Acres" zoning district. See Chapter 20.09 Thurston County Code (TCC). A portion of this property falls within the County's "critical areas" designation, which restricts development and imposes various land use and conservation *414 requirements. II AR at 456 (official zoning map).

¶ 3 In August 2002, Bayfield contacted the Thurston County Planning Department, asking about creating "resource protection easements" and subdividing portions of its property as a Planned Rural Residential Development (PRRD), using the easements as all or part of the PRRD's required "resource use parcel."[2] II AR at 500. The Planning Department replied by letter that the Code permits resource protection easements "to serve as all or part" of a resource use parcel. II AR at 500; see TCC 20.30A.040.

II. Procedure

A. Growth Management Act Compliance

¶ 4 In July 2005, the GMH Board found that the County's zoning scheme failed to comply with the Washington State Growth Management Act because it did not provide for a variety of rural densities as RCW 36.70A.070(5)(b)[3] requires. The GMH Board imposed a compliance schedule that required the County to amend its zoning code to "provide for a variety of rural densities" in compliance with RCW 36.70A.070(5)(b). Clerk's Papers (CP) at 120.

1. Public input on density rezone proposal

¶ 5 As part of its compliance effort, the County Planning Commission conducted open houses and workshops to receive public input about lands appropriate for density rezoning, held public meetings, and posted an online forum for public comment on the preliminary rezone proposals. In 2006, the Planning Commission revised the rezone proposals based on the public's response.

¶ 6 In early 2007, the Planning Commission submitted majority and minority rezone proposals to the Board of Commissioners, with a Staff Report comparing and contrasting the two proposals. In discussing whether to include a "[r]ezoning [provision] to [p]rotect [p]articular `[a]t [r]isk' [g]eographic [a]reas," the Staff Report noted that both proposals agreed on the following "reasoning":

Rezoning the Salmon Creek Basin would result in fewer homes being built in an area at risk of flooding from surfacing groundwater. Rezoning lands along the Nisqually Bluff would reduce the potential number of dwellings put at risk due to possible slope failure in that area. This reduction in allowed dwelling units coupled with the proposed reductions in maximum impervious surface allowances, would likely result in less stormwater generation and reduce the risk of slope failure. The Black River Corridor contains multiple wetlands and riparian areas that support wildlife; rezoning will help preserve this area.

III AR at 797.

¶ 7 The Board of Commissioners asked the County to prepare a "Critical Areas Innovative Technique" (Innovative Technique) proposal for the public to review in addition to the rezone proposal. I AR at 34. In identifying the rezone area, the County focused on lands physically constrained or hazardous to develop and lands of high habitat and environmental service value. The County provided maps delineating these areas, which it presented with other materials for public review. The public workshop groups prioritized the lands for rezone as those consisting of unbuildable lands, hazardous lands, wetlands, geographically sensitive areas, and conservation areas.

2. Innovative technique

¶ 8 During these public workshops, the Planning Commission discussed the idea of adopting an Innovative Technique to provide for a greater "variety of rural densities while leaving the rural zoning density unchanged." *415 III AR at 1015. The Planning Commission proposed three variations of this Innovative Technique, under which the County would (1) "exclude certain critical areas* from the density calculation," (2) "exclude certain critical areas* and [half] of the associated buffer from the density calculation," or (3) "exclude certain critical areas* and the entire associated [critical area] buffer." III AR at 1015 (emphasis omitted). The asterisks explained that the following critical areas would be excluded from the density calculation: "[R]ivers and streams up to the ordinary high water mark, 100-year floodplains, high ground water hazard areas, wetlands, landslide hazard areas, marine bluffs, oak stands and prairie defined and protected under Chapter 17.15" III AR at 1015.

¶ 9 The Planning Commission identified some of the benefits of adopting an Innovative Technique as follows:

1. The approach would result in less density in areas near sensitive critical areas, which may, in some cases, reduce cumulative impacts to the critical areas.
2. The proposal provides an objective and innovative way to effectively achieve a variety of rural densities.
3. The proposal could be combined with a transfer of development rights program and/or clustering proposal to lessen its impact on affected property owners.

III AR at 1016.

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244 P.3d 412, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bayfield-resources-v-western-wash-gmh-bd-washctapp-2010.