Spokane County v. Eastern Washington Growth Management Hrg Board

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedApril 9, 2015
Docket31941-5
StatusUnpublished

This text of Spokane County v. Eastern Washington Growth Management Hrg Board (Spokane County v. Eastern Washington Growth Management Hrg Board) 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.

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Spokane County v. Eastern Washington Growth Management Hrg Board, (Wash. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

FILED

APRIL 9, 2015

In the Office of the Clerk of Court

W A State Court of Appeals, Division III

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

DIVISION THREE

SPOKANE COUNTY, a political )

subdivision of the State of Washington, ) No. 31941-5-III )

Respondent, )

)

v. ) ) UNPUBLISHED OPINION EASTERN WASHINGTON GROWTH ) MANAGEMENT HEARINGS BOARD, a ) statutory entity, ) )

Other, )

FIVE MILE PRARIE NEIGHBORHOOD )

ASSOCIATION, and FUTUREWISE, a )

Washington Non-Profit Organization, )

) Appellants, ) ) HARLEY C. DOUGLAS, Inc., )

Respondent. )

FEARING, J. - We address once again the compliance of Spokane County with

Washington's intractable Growth Management Act (GMA), chapter 36.70A RCW, this No. 31941-5-111

Spokane County v. E. Wash. Growth Mgmt. Hr 'gs Bd.

time in the context of a comprehensive plan amendment that rezoned a parcel of land.

The reviewing administrative agency, the Growth Management Hearings Board

(GMHB), invalidated the amendment, and the superior court reversed. We reverse in part

and affirm in part the decisions of the superior court and remand the case to the GMHB

for further proceedings.

Our previous decision in Spokane County v. Eastern Washington Growth

Management Hearings Board, 173 Wn. App. 310, 293 P.3d 1248 (2013) (Spokane

County 1), provides answers to some of the issues raised in this appeal, but this appeal

asks many other questions. Like the dispute in Spokane County I, this dispute is fact

specific and demands a thorough review of the Spokane County comprehensive plan and

a zoning ordinance, an intimate evaluation of the record before the Spokane County

Board of Commissioners and the GMHB, and an analysis of the GMA. We address both

the merits of the challenge to the rezone and procedural issues under the GMA.

FACTS

Neighbors to 22.3 acres of undeveloped land and environmental groups

challenged, before the GMHB, Spokane County's Resolution 11-1191. We refer to the

challengers collectively as the "Neighborhood Association." The resolution adopted

many changes to Spokane County's comprehensive plan. This appeal solely addresses a

narrow portion ofthe resolution, the portion that adopted amendment ll-CPA-05 to the

county's comprehensive plan and rezoned the 22.3 acres along N. Waikiki Road from

No. 31941-5-111 Spokane County v. E. Wash. Growth Mgmt. Hr 'gs Ed.

low-density residential to medium-density residential. The amendment allows the

placement of multifamily complexes on the land, whereas the former zoning allowed

duplexes as the most intense use on the tract. The Neighborhood Association contends

the rezone, in part, failed to recognize the lack of access and lack of available utilities to

the site and thereby violated Spokane County's comprehensive plan, its zoning code, and

theGMA.

Washington's GMA requires a county to adopt and maintain comprehensive plans

and development regulations which, among other goals, provide for the public facilities

and services needed to support new development and reasonably zone land within the

county. The GMA demands that a county yearly update the comprehensive plan. To

help understand the dispute on appeal, we sketch critical fragments of the Spokane

County comprehensive plan. The comprehensive plan conveniently divides itself into

chapters by subject matter, with the first chapter being an introduction. The introductory

chapter explores the nature of a comprehensive plan and outlines the demands of I I Washington's GMA.

Spokane County's comprehensive plan encompasses a set of goals, policies, maps,

illustrations, and implementation strategies that outline acceptable methods of physical,

social, and economic growth in the county. A central theme of the plan is the promotion I of economic development that occurs in harmony with environmental protection and

preservation of natural resources. The plan "establishes a pattern of land uses to shape

No.31941-5-III Spokane County v. E. Wash. Growth Mgmt. Hr 'gs Bd.

the future in desirable ways." Admin. Record (AR) at 835. Map designations

incorporate residential, commercial, industrial and mixed-use areas. Identifying and

defining these land use categories ensures compatibility among uses, protection of

property values, and efficient provision of infrastructure and services.

Chapter 2 of Spokane County's comprehensive plan addresses "'urban land use"

and its pages start with the letters "UL." AR at 843-44. The urban land use chapter

provides policy guidance for the development of Spokane County's unincorporated urban

areas. The chapter's policies strive to improve quality of life, provide opportunities for

innovative approaches to land use, and protect the county's community character. The

policies work in tandem with the comprehensive plan map, which illustrates the location

of various land use categories.

Chapter 2 of the comprehensive plan outlines plan goals, with each goal separately

numbered beginning with UL.l. One goal is to identify and designate land for residential

use into the three categories of low-, medium-, and high-density areas. Policy UL. 7 .1.

Low-density residential includes a density range of 1 to and including 6 dwelling units

per acre; medium-density residential includes a range of greater than 6 to and including

15 dwelling units per acre; and high-density residential is greater than 15 dwelling units

per acre. This appeal entails Spokane County's change ofa tract of land from low-

density residential to medium-density residential under the county's comprehensive plan f and zoning ordinance. 1 4 f

I No. 31941-5-111 Spokane County v. E. Wash. Growth Mgmt. Hr 'gs Bd.

A number of goals in the comprehensive plan's Chapter 2 address the location of

multifamily housing. The Neighborhood Association claims Spokane County's rezone

violated some of these goals, in particular:

UL.2.16 Encourage the location of medium and high density residential categories near commercial areas and public open spaces and on sites with good access to major arterials. UL.2.17 Site multifamily homes throughout the Urban Growth Area as follows: a) Integrated into or next to neighborhood, community or urban activity centers. b) Integrated into small, scattered parcels throughout existing residential areas. New multi-family homes should be built to the scale and design of the community or neighborhood, while contributing to an area-wide density that supports transit and allows for a range of housing choices.

AR at 848. A third urban land use policy goal, UL.2.20 reads:

UL.2.20 Encourage new developments, including multifamily projects, to be arranged in a pattern of connecting streets and blocks to allow people to get around easily by foot, bicycle, bus or car. Cul-de-sacs or other closed street systems may be appropriate under certain circumstances including, but not limited to, topography and other physical limitations which make connecting systems impractical.

ARat 849

Chapter 7 of the Spokane County comprehensive plan addresses capital facilities

and utilities. The chapter's pages begin with CF -1 and its goals begin with CF.1.

According to the plan, public facilities and services are often taken for granted, but,

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