Summit Waller Community Association v. Pierce County

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedFebruary 6, 2019
Docket50363-8
StatusUnpublished

This text of Summit Waller Community Association v. Pierce County (Summit Waller Community Association v. Pierce 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
Summit Waller Community Association v. Pierce County, (Wash. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

Filed Washington State Court of Appeals Division Two

February 6, 2019

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

DIVISION II SUMMIT-WALLER COMMUNITY No. 50363-8-II ASSOCIATION, NORTH CLOVER CREEK/COLLINS COMMUNITY COUNCIL,

Appellants,

v.

PIERCE COUNTY UNPUBLISHED OPINION

Respondent,

and

BETHEL SCHOOL DISTRICT, SUMNER SCHOOL DISTRICT, PENINSULA SCHOOL DISTRICT, EATONVILLE SCHOOL DISTRICT, and GRAHAM MC, LLC and APOGEE CAPITAL, LLC and HIGH VALLEY INVESTMENT, LLC and TACOMA SCHOOL DISTRICT,

Respondents.

JOHANSON, J. — Summit-Waller Community Association, North Clover Creek, and the

Collins Community Council (collectively the “Communities”) appeal an order of the Central Puget

Sound Region Growth Management Hearings Board (Board). The Board upheld Pierce County’s No. 50363-8-II

approval of an area-wide map amendment M-2 to a land use designation map in the Pierce County

Comprehensive Plan (Comprehensive Plan),1 which redesignated eight parcels of land within the

County. The Communities argue that the Board erred as a matter of law that its order was

unsupported by substantial evidence and that the Board’s decision was arbitrary and capricious.

The Communities also contend that the Board erred when it concluded that their timeliness

challenge to amendment M-2 was moot. Finally, the Communities raise some arguments here that

they did not raise before the Board, thus we do not consider them. Finding no error, we affirm.

FACTS

The Communities challenge the redesignation of eight parcels of land2 located in an area

covered by the Comprehensive Plan. The County redesignated the land use of the eight parcels

from “Employment Center” (EC) to “High Density Residential” (HRD). Clerk’s Papers (CP) at

12. The Pierce County Council (Council) approved the redesignation in amendment M-2 by

passing Ordinance No. 2015-40.

Amendment M-2 allowed an HRD land use designation for the eight parcels, which in turn

allowed “multifamily and high density single-family and two-family housing” development with

up to “25 dwelling units per acre.” Administrative Record (AR) at 1894, 1892. An HRD land use

designation allows for “limited neighborhood commercial retail and service uses.” AR at 1892.

1 Amendment M-2 was an amendment to the Mid-County Community Plan, which is part of the Comprehensive Plan. A community plan is a local development plan that adds to, but cannot conflict with, “the Countywide Comprehensive Plan.” For ease of reference, we describe amendment M-2 as an amendment to the Comprehensive Plan, rather than as an amendment to the Mid-County Community Plan. 2 The eight parcels cover approximately 34 acres in Pierce County between Tacoma and Puyallup. The parcels are within an Urban Growth Area (UGA) boundary.

2 No. 50363-8-II

Before the amendment, the eight parcels consisted of mostly vacant property. The Communities

were located in a rural separator land use designated area south of the eight parcels.

I. 2014 AMENDMENTS TO THE PIERCE COUNTY CODE (PCC)

In 2014, the Council amended chapter 19C.10 PCC, titled “Procedures for Amendments to

the Comprehensive Plan.” AR at 1675. The Council adopted former PCC 19C.10.050(F) (2014),

which provided that applications for amendments to the Comprehensive Plan proposed as part of

the periodic update under GMA provision RCW 36.70A.130(5)(a) “shall not be subject to the

application requirements of [former PCC] 19C.10.050 E [(2014)] or [former PCC] 19C.10.055

[(2009)] but shall include an analysis and recommendation pursuant to [former] PCC 19C.10.065

[(2014)].” AR at 1678. As part of the amendment to chapter 19C.10 PCC, the Council adopted

former PCC 19C.10.065(A), which provided that

[d]uring a required [Growth Management Act (GMA), ch. 36.70A RCW,] periodic update, the Planning and Land Services [(PALS)] Department shall evaluate Council-Initiated amendments based upon [a list of factors].

CP at 214. The amendments to chapter 19C.10 PCC were approved in Ordinance 2014-31s, which

became effective on July 1.

II. AMENDMENT M-2 TO THE COMPREHENSIVE PLAN

A. APPLICATION FOR AMENDMENT M-2

On July 30, Scott Edwards, the managing member of Apogee Capital LLC and High Valley

Investment LLC (collectively “Intervenors”), filed an application for amendment M-2.

Amendment M-2 was an area-wide map amendment, which the County defined as “a proposed

change or revision to the Comprehensive Plan Generalized Land Use Map.” Former PCC

19C.10.030(A) (2005). “An Area-Wide Map amendment, unlike a parcel or site-specific land use

3 No. 50363-8-II

reclassification proposal, is of area-wide significance and includes many separate properties under

various ownerships.” Former PCC 19C.10.030(A).

As proposed in the application, amendment M-2 sought to amend the land use designation

and zone classification for the eight parcels at issue. The application suggested that the Council

approve an “Urban Center”3 land use designation with an implementing “Community Center”

(CC) zone classification. CP at 155. A CC land use designation “has as its focus a significant

traffic generator around which develops a concentration of other commercial office, services, and

some high-density residential development.” AR at 1892.

At the time of the application, the eight parcels had an EC land use designation with an

implementing Community Employment (CE) zone classification.

B. RESOLUTION R2014-94S

In September, the Council initiated a number of proposed amendments to the

Comprehensive Plan as part of the “continuing review and evaluation” required under GMA

provision RCW 36.70A.130. CP at 147. One such Council-initiated amendment was amendment

M-2.4 In Resolution No. R2014-94s, the resolution initiating amendment M-2, the Council

directed PALS to “evaluate Council initiated amendments pursuant to [former PCC] 19C.10.065.”

CP at 148. The Council also noted that “all applications received for Council initiation by July 31,

3 There was no Urban Center land use designation at the time, but there was an Urban Center zoning category in the Zone Classifications Table, which included a CC zone classification. Former PCC 18A.27.010 (2014). 4 The Council initially referred to amendment M-2 as Map Amendment PA-21.

4 No. 50363-8-II

2014, were reviewed against the acceptance criteria adopted in [former PCC] 19C.10.050[(F)]”

and that “applications that did not meet the criteria were removed from consideration.” CP at 148.

C. PALS INITIAL STAFF REPORT

PALS submitted a staff report to the Pierce County Planning Commission (Planning

Commission) analyzing amendment M-2 based on the criteria enumerated under former PCC

19C.10.065(A). PALS (1) answered “[u]ndetermined” in response to whether there was “a

community or countywide need” for amendment M-2 and whether the amendment would “provide

public benefits”; (2) noted that there was infrastructure available and summarized the nearby

sewers, water utilities, roads, schools, and fire district; (3) noted a physical constraint on the eight

parcels that “development regulations address[ed]”; (4) noted an environmental constraint that

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