Robertson v. May

153 Wash. App. 57
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedOctober 13, 2009
DocketNo. 37911-2-II
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 153 Wash. App. 57 (Robertson v. May) 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
Robertson v. May, 153 Wash. App. 57 (Wash. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

¶1 Gregg and Margo May and several of their neighbors1 (collectively, the Mays) appeal the superior court’s reversal of the Shoreline Hearings Board’s denial of a permit for Ronald and Kathryn Robertson and Jon and Mari Kvinsland to build a joint-use pier originating from the common boundary between their two waterfront properties. The Mays argue that the Board correctly concluded that the joint-use pier would (1) conflict with the Pierce County Code (Code) and Shoreline Master Program; (2) undermine the policies set forth under the Washington State Shoreline Management Act of 1971, chapter 90.58 RCW; and (3) cause adverse cumulative effects. Holding that substantial evidence does not support the Board’s [62]*62conclusions and that the Board’s conclusions were based on clearly erroneous applications of the law, we affirm the superior court’s reversal of the Board’s decision and reinstate the Hearing Examiner’s approval of the Robertsons’ and Kvinslands’ Substantial Development Permit to build a joint-use pier.

Hunt, J.

[62]*62FACTS

I. Shoreline Development

A. Joint-Use Pier

¶2 Ronald and Kathryn Robertson and Jon and Mari Kvinsland own adjacent waterfront properties on Hale Passage in unincorporated Pierce County. They applied for a permit to construct a joint-use pier, ramp, and float structure (joint-use pier)2 that would extend 100 feet into the water from “the property line between their respective parcels.” Their development site is part of a 300-yard-wide, crescent-shaped beach within Pierce County’s Rural Residential Environment shoreline designation.

f 3 The Robertson and Kvinsland families intend to use the proposed pier for recreational purposes, including swimming, boating, fishing, and temporary moorage. Although both families have buoys and the Robertsons’ property includes a concrete boat ramp, the joint-use pier would provide safer boat and water access for their older and disabled family members. The joint-use pier would measure 6 feet wide by 50 feet long; it would also include a 4-foot by 32-foot aluminum ramp and an 8-foot by 24-foot float section. Eight galvanized steel pilings would support the pier and would provide “stops” — a mechanism to prevent the pier from grounding on the beach during low tide. The pier structure would use metal grating to allow light to pass through to the water below.

[63]*63¶4 The Robertsons and the Kvinslands also want to install a separate floating watercraft lift (float lift) to provide long-term moorage space for the Robertsons’ boat, approximately 150 feet from the pier’s end (425 feet from the Robertsons’ bulkhead). The float lift would measure 18 feet long by 12 feet wide. The Kvinslands intend to use their existing buoy, not the float lift, for long-term moorage of their boat.

B. Rural Residential Environment

¶5 This Rural Residential Environment shoreline designation is an area of “medium-intensity land use” that serves as a buffer between highly intensive urban development and nonintensive rural development areas. After the Urban Environment, the Rural Residential Environment is the second most intensive land use designation under the County Shoreline Master Program. In both the Urban and the Rural Residential environments, the County permits outright the construction of uncovered saltwater piers that measure 50 feet or less in length and cost less than $2,500. For a pier that exceeds these length or cost limitations or otherwise “materially interferes with the normal public use of the water or shorelines,” the Code requires a Substantial Development Permit (SDP).

¶6 The proposed pier site lies about midpoint along a beautiful, though not pristine, 300-yard-wide crescent beach. Many residential developments border this stretch of beach, including waterfront homes, seawalls, bulkheads, and shoreline moorage devices. In addition, three 50-foot piers and one 150-foot pier are visible on either side of this beach, which itself currently contains no over-the-water structures.

¶7 Before submitting their permit applications, the Robertsons and the Kvinslands hired Daniel Cheney, a marine biologist from BioAquatics International LLC, to conduct a biological evaluation of the development site. After surveying and evaluating the area, Cheney concluded [64]*64that (1) the joint-use pier would have “no significant effect” on area fish; and (2) the pier’s design would include grating, pile stops, and other mitigation measures to reduce shading and environmental impacts to the bottom habitat.

II. Procedure

A. Permit Applications

f 8 The Robertsons and the Kvinslands submitted their SDP joint-use pier application to the County;3 they also applied for a Shoreline Conditional Use Permit (SCUP) to install the float lift. While these permit applications were pending, the Mays wrote to the County’s Department of Planning and Land Services to express concerns about the pier’s aesthetic and environmental impacts. Area residents also signed a petition opposing the Robertson-Kvinsland permit applications. The Squaxin Island Indian Tribe opposed the permit applications by letter, asserting that the joint-use pier would degrade forage-fish habitat, contrary to tribal goals for salmon recovery.

B. County Determination of Nonsignificance

f 9 The County Planning Department issued a Determination of Nonsignificance (DNS), concluding that the joint-use pier “will have no significant adverse environmental impacts on fish and wildlife, water, noise, transportation, air quality, environmental health, public services and utilities, or land and shoreline uses.” Ex. at Pll. The Mays did not appeal the DNS, but they asked the County, by letter, to reconsider its decision, asserting that (1) the project would adversely impact the environment; (2) Cheney’s biological evaluation was insufficient; and (3) although the pier application proposed a structure with 8 pilings, the DNS [65]*65incorrectly noted “10 associated pilings.” The County corrected the number of pilings noted on the DNS, but it otherwise denied the Mays’ request for reconsideration.

C. Department of Fish and Wildlife Project Approval

¶10 Several months later, the Washington State Department of Fish and Wildlife (Fish and Wildlife) issued a Hydraulic Project Approval for the pier project. Ex. at R70. The Mays appealed this decision, alleging that the approval conflicted with Fish and Wildlife’s policies. But Fish and Wildlife denied the Mays’ appeal, determining that (1) the Mays argued, “without offering proof or [expert] testimony,” that because the joint-use pier would be built in a sand lance spawning area,4 it would necessarily damage that habitat, ex. at R72; (2) the Mays had incorrectly assumed that the project would ground on the beach during low tide when, in fact, the project’s pilings would have “stops” to prevent it from grounding, ex. at R72; (3) the project complied with Fish and Wildlife policies, state laws, and administrative regulations; and (4) the project was “unlikely to damage sand lance or their habitat.” Ex. at R72.

D. County Staff Report

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
153 Wash. App. 57, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robertson-v-may-washctapp-2009.