City of Kennewick v. Futurewise

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedMarch 8, 2022
Docket37800-4
StatusUnpublished

This text of City of Kennewick v. Futurewise (City of Kennewick v. Futurewise) 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
City of Kennewick v. Futurewise, (Wash. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

FILED MARCH 8, 2022 In the Office of the Clerk of Court WA State Court of Appeals, Division III

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON DIVISION THREE

CITY OF KENNEWICK, ) ) No. 37800-4-III Petitioner, ) ) v. ) ) FUTUREWISE, a Washington nonprofit ) UNPUBLISHED OPINION corporation; BENTON COUNTY, ) political subdivision of the State of ) Washington; and GROWTH ) MANAGEMENT HEARINGS BOARD, ) an administrative agency of the State of ) Washington, ) ) Respondents. )

SIDDOWAY, A.C.J. — The City of Kennewick (City) appeals a final decision and

order of the Eastern Washington Growth Management Hearings Board (Board). The

Board concluded that Benton County’s (County’s) expansion of the City’s urban growth

area (UGA) was noncompliant with the Growth Management Act, chapter 36.70A RCW

(GMA), by failing to comply with RCW 36.70A.110, .115, and .020(2). The Board

based its findings and conclusions on the County’s failure to “show its work” as to how

the UGA expansion corresponded to the Office of Financial Management’s (OFM)

population growth projections. A majority of the Board rejected the City’s argument that No. 37800-4-III City of Kennewick v. Futurewise, et al.

the Board’s proceedings became moot when the City annexed the area that had been

added to its UGA.

We hold that the Board’s “show your work” requirement was improperly applied

where the petitioner, Futurewise, did not present a prima facie challenge to the results of

a City land capacity analysis on which the County relied in adopting the expanded UGA.

Because the Board’s finding that the County failed to show its work is the sole basis on

which it found failures to comply with the GMA, its decision and order ignores the

presumption of validity and shifts the burden of proof. We reverse the Board’s findings

of noncompliance and its remand order for this reason, and need not reach the contested

issue of whether the City’s annexation rendered proceedings moot.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

The City of Kennewick is the largest of five cities located within Benton County.

It is located along the southwest bank of the Columbia River, just southeast of the

confluence of the Columbia and Yakima rivers and across from the confluence of the

Columbia and Snake rivers. Interstate 82, a four-lane divided highway, runs parallel to

its southwest border; southwest of that lies unincorporated Benton County.

Application for and approval of a UGA expansion

As far back as 2012, the City viewed it as desirable to identify and obtain land use

development approval for industrial use land that would enjoy easy access to the

Interstate 82 corridor. In 2013 and 2014, the City applied to expand its UGA by 1,263

2 No. 37800-4-III City of Kennewick v. Futurewise, et al.

acres to the south and retract its easternmost UGA by 240 acres. Its request to remove

the 240 acres was approved, but its request to expand to the south was ultimately

unsuccessful. Futurewise v. Benton County, No. 14-1-0003, 2014 WL 7505300 at *1 (E.

Wash. Growth Mgmt. Hr’gs Bd. Oct. 15, 2014).

The County’s next UGA application period was set for the fall of 2018, and the

City at that point applied to the County to increase the City’s UGA by adding 279.53

acres of land adjacent to and southwest of the City. The land was vacant and designated

rural remote under the comprehensive plan. The City proposed that the land be

designated industrial.

The City’s application to expand its UGA gave, as its reason, that “[w]ith the 2037

population projection of 112,044, it is expected that Kennewick will need an additional

1,000 acres to accommodate an additional 32,924 residents,” and the City’s land capacity

analysis indicated there would be shortage of land for parks, public facilities, schools,

industrial uses, open space and public service uses within the City’s UGA. Clerk’s

Papers (CP) at 660. The 2037 population projection was material because the GMA

requires that a county’s UGA is to be “[b]ased upon the growth management population

projection made for the county by the [OFM].” RCW 36.70A.110(2).

The City explained its interest in developable industrial land to “provide

employment opportunities now and into the future that will diversify its economy,”

providing the following history:

3 No. 37800-4-III City of Kennewick v. Futurewise, et al.

In 2016 Kennewick commissioned ECONorthwest to complete a regional industrial lands analysis in order to get a better sense of what types of industrial lands exist within the Tri-Cities region. The study found that while “the region has a large amount of vacant or underutilized industrial zoned land . . . there are few large desirable sites ready for development in the region (City of Kennewick Industrial Zoned Land Assessment, 2016, pg. 3). Over the last 2 years the City of Kennewick has received 15 requests for Information from the Washington State Department of Commerce for industrial lands meeting certain criteria. Of those 15, Kennewick was not able to respond to 10 of them. The characteristic that was common to each of those 10 requests was the acreage. Other limiting factors included the lack of appropriately zoned industrial lands near an Interstate and the lack of large parcels zoned for heavy industrial activities.

CP at 660.

Among materials submitted in support of the City’s UGA expansion application

was a 2018 UGA Information Spreadsheet, identified by the City as page 5 of its Updated

Land Capacity Summary 2018 (Nov. 14, 2018). This is one of a handful of key

documents that the parties and Board members referred to repeatedly in proceedings

below, often citing them by the “IR” (index of records) or “Tab” number used to locate

documents in the administrative record. To assist the reader in following record

references, we include the IR/Tab number citations for these key records.

The 2018 UGA Information Spreadsheet, IR/Tab 179, is set forth below. The

“uniform formula” identified in the “Needs” column is provided for by the County’s

Countywide Planning Policy (CPP) #4. CPP #4 provides that the “[UGA] of each City

shall be based upon official and accepted population projections for minimum [sic] of 20

years.” CP at 646. The “uniform formula” requires the jurisdictions within the County to

4 No. 37800-4-III City of Kennewick v. Futurewise, et al.

take into consideration a total of 11 categories and adjustments (identified as “A” through

“K”) in arriving at the jurisdiction’s land area needs. CP at 647.

CP at 839 (IR/Tab 179).1 The “Surplus/Deficit” column on the far right shows a shortage

of land for parks, public facilities, schools, industrial uses, open space and public service

uses as described in the application’s narrative. The deficit identified for industrial uses

is 774.5 acres.

The County’s planning commission considered the City’s UGA expansion

application on November 12, 2019. A staff report provided to the planning

commissioners before the meeting explained that the proposed UGA expansion addressed

a “774.5-acre deficit of lands designated for industrial use within the City’s current

1 A left-hand column, identifying the uses and adjustments as “A” through “K,” was cropped to improve the readability of the remainder.

5 No.

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