Conservation Northwest v. Okanogan County

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedJune 16, 2016
Docket33194-6
StatusUnpublished

This text of Conservation Northwest v. Okanogan County (Conservation Northwest v. Okanogan County) 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
Conservation Northwest v. Okanogan County, (Wash. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

FILED JUNE 16, 2016 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

CONSERVATION NORTHWEST; and ) METHOW VALLEY CITIZENS ) No. 33194-6-111 COUNCIL, ) ) Appellants, ) ) v. ) UNPUBLISHED OPINION ) OKANOGAN COUNTY, ) ) Respondent. )

FEARING, C.J. -This appeal asks the question, among others, of whether

Okanogan County sufficiently completed an environmental checklist, under the State

Environmental Protection Act (SEPA), chapter 43.21C RCW, when adopting an

ordinance permitting all-terrain vehicles (ATV) traffic on county roads in segments with

a speed limit of 35 m.p.h. or less. Our task is to apply the law rather than to choose a side

between ATV riding enthusiasts and environmental groups. In a painfully long opinion

necessitated by extended facts, a lengthy procedural background, and numerous legal No. 33194-6-111 Conservation Nw. v. Okanogan County

issues, we hold that, under SEP A rules, Okanogan County failed to satisfactorily prepare

the environmental checklist. We respect the recreational value of A TVs and note that

Okanogan County may still enact an ATV ordinance, but must complete a thorough

environmental checklist.

FACTS

We first introduce the parties. Defendant Okanogan County, located in north

central Washington, is the largest Washington county and the fifty-fourth largest United

States county by area. Okanogan County borders British Columbia to the north, the

Columbia River to the south, Ferry County to the east, and the Cascade Mountains to the

west.

Only thirty percent of the land within Okanogan County lies in private ownership

due to state and federal land proprietorship. A portion of the Colville Indian Reservation

sits in the southeast corner of the county.

The geographic features of Okanogan County include the Cascade Mountains, the

Columbia River, the Okanogan River, and the Methow Valley. The Methow Valley

serves as a destination for outdoor enthusiasts and offers hundreds of square miles of

cross-country ski trails, snowmobile parks, mountain biking trails, and opportunities for

snowshoeing, fishing, camping, and hiking.

Plaintiff Conservation Northwest (CNW) is a nonprofit conservation organization

with offices and members in Okanogan County. PlaintiffMethow Valley Citizens

2 No. 33194-6-111 Conservation Nw. v. Okanogan County

Council (MVCC) is a private nonprofit membership organization, established in 1977 to

preserve the wildlife, waters, and farmland of the Meth ow Valley. Both CNW and

MVCC members visit lands within Okanogan County for aesthetic enjoyment of nature.

The two environmental organizations rely on the same data and forward the same legal

arguments in this appeal.

Melanie Rowland signed a declaration on behalf ofMethow Valley Citizens

Council. Rowland, a MVCC board member and MVCC attorney, resides in Twisp. She

explores state wildlife and forest lands and federal lands in Okanogan County for hiking,

photography, bird and wildlife watching, and the study of native plants and trees.

George Wooten signed a declaration on behalf of Conservation Northwest and

Meth ow Valley Citizens Council. Wooten, also a resident of Twisp, is a staff member of

CNW and a member ofMVCC. Wooten is a botanist who contracts with agencies and

individuals for fuel mapping, plant and animal surveys, and wetland delineation. He also

teaches biology classes, including botany, at Wenatchee Valley College North in

Okanogan. Wooten visits conservation trust lands, state wildlife lands, state forest lands,

and federal lands and roads in Okanogan County for the activities of hiking, photography,

and observing birds, wildflowers, and native trees and plants.

Our statement of facts now moves to a recitation of recent law. On July 3, 2013,

Washington Governor Jay Inslee signed into law Engrossed Substitute House Bill

(ESHB) 1632, an act regulating the use of off-road vehicles (ORVs) in Washington.

3 No. 33194-6-111 Conservation Nw. v. Okanogan County

LAWS OF 2013, 2d Spec. Sess., ch. 23, at 2865. In enacting ESHB 1632, the legislature

found:

that off-road vehicle users have been overwhelmed with varied confusing rules, regulations, and ordinances from federal, state, county, and city land managers throughout the state to the extent standardization statewide is needed to maintain public safety and good order.

LAWS OF 2013, 2d Spec. Sess., ch. 23, § 1(1). Through ESHB 1632, the Washington

legislature sought to:

(a) Increase opportunities for safe, legal, and environmentally acceptable motorized recreation; (b) decrease the amount of unlawful or environmentally harmful motorized recreation; (c) generate funds for use in maintenance, signage, education, and enforcement of motorized recreation opportunities; (d) advance a culture of self-policing and abuse intolerance among motorized recreationists; (e) cause no change in the policies of any governmental agency with respect to public land; (t) not change any current ORV usage routes as·authorized in chapter 213, Laws of 2005; (g) stimulate rural economies by opening certain roadways to use by motorized recreationists which will in tum stimulate economic activity through expenditures on gasoline, lodging, food and drink, and other entertainment purposes; and (h) require all wheeled all-terrain vehicles to obtain a metal tag.

LAWS OF 2013, 2d Spec. Sess., ch. 23, § 1(2).

Section 6 of ESHB 1632 opened state highways, with a speed limit of thirty-five

miles per hour or less, to the operation of wheeled all-terrain vehicles (WATVs). LA ws

OF 2013, 2d Spec. Sess., ch. 23, § 6; codified at RCW 46.09.455(1). Section 6 of the

enactment also granted counties with a population of fifteen thousand or more the

authority to open county public roadways for WA TV use. Codified at RCW

4 No. 33194-6-III Conservation Nw. v. Okanogan County

46.09.455(l)(c)(i). RCW 46.09.455 now reads, in pertinent part:

(1) A person may operate a wheeled all-terrain vehicle upon any public roadway of this state, not including nonhighway roads and trails, having a speed limit of thirty-five miles per hour or less subject to the following restrictions and requirements:

(c)(i) A person may not operate a wheeled all-terrain vehicle on a public roadway within the boundaries of a county, not including nonhighway roads and trails, with a population of fifteen thousand or more unless the county by ordinance has approved the operation of wheeled all- terrain vehicles on county roadways, not including nonhighway roads and trails.

(iii) Any public roadways, not including nonhighway roads and trails, authorized by a legislative body of a county under (c)(i) of this subsection or designated as unsuitable under (c)(ii) of this subsection must be listed publicly and made accessible from the main page of the county web site.

(e) Any person who violates this subsection commits a traffic infraction. (2) Local authorities may not establish requirements for the registration of wheeled all-terrain vehicles.

ESHB 1632 took effect on July 28, 2013. FINAL B. REP. ON ENGROSSED SUBSTITUTE

H.B. 1632, at 6, 63d Leg., 2d Spec. Sess. (Wash. 2013).

ESHB 1632 employed the term "off-road vehicle" or "ORV" nearly

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