WHATCOM COUNTY FIRE DIST. v. County

215 P.3d 956
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedAugust 13, 2009
Docket61431-2-I
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 215 P.3d 956 (WHATCOM COUNTY FIRE DIST. v. 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
WHATCOM COUNTY FIRE DIST. v. County, 215 P.3d 956 (Wash. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

215 P.3d 956 (2009)

WHATCOM COUNTY FIRE DISTRICT NO. 21, Respondent,
v.
WHATCOM COUNTY, a municipal corporation, Defendant,
Birch Point Village, LLC, a Washington corporation; Schmidt Constructing, Inc., a Washington corporation; Bright Haven Builders, LLC, a Washington corporation; Mayflower Equities, Inc.; Lisa Schenk and Mike Sumner, Appellants.

No. 61431-2-I.

Court of Appeals of Washington, Division 1.

June 22, 2009.
Publication Ordered August 13, 2009.

*957 Philip J. Buri, Buri Funston Mumford PLLC, Bellingham, WA, for Appellant.

Jonathan K. Sitkin, Chmelik Sitkin & Davis PS, Bellingham, WA, Philip A. Talmadge, Talmadge/Fitzpatrick, Tukwila, WA, for Respondent.

APPELWICK, J.

¶ 1 The Growth Management Act, chapter 36.70A RCW, vests counties with the primary authority to plan future development, including concurrency planning with providers of public services. Because the Whatcom County Comprehensive Plan establishes the standards for service and finds that the fire district has the capacity to meet that standard, the fire district is foreclosed from evaluating concurrency with new development on a project-by-project basis and requiring a concurrency mitigation fee. We reverse the Whatcom County Superior Court and reinstate the permit approvals.

FACTS

¶ 2 This appeal concerns four proposed development projects located in Whatcom County's (County) Birch Bay area. Although the developers of the projects applied individually for permit approvals from the County, the superior court consolidated the appeals.

¶ 3 Birch Bay is an area six miles south of the Canadian border and seventeen miles north of the City of Bellingham. The County has designated Birch Bay an urban growth area.

¶ 4 In 2001, the County began developing the Birch Bay Community Plan (BBCP), as part of the County's long term planning process. For this appeal, the relevant parts of the BBCP are its discussions of fire protection facilities and services. Fire District No. 13[1] (District) contributed expertise and in kind services, as a stakeholder in the BBCP planning process. The BBCP established that the District must meet the "gold standard" for successful emergency medical services, which "is four to six minute response times for aid services and 15 to 20 minutes for ambulance services." Further, the BBCP determined that:

Fire District # 13 responds between five to six minutes. To shorten the response time the fire District has career and volunteer firefighters and emergency medical technicians manning the fire station in Birch Bay 24 hours a day.

Further, regarding future proposed expansions and improvements, the BBCP notes that:

Increased population, particularly in the Birch Point area will necessitate the [sic] manning the fire station at Semiahmoo on a 24-hour basis. Additional equipment will also need to be brought to the station to maximize its effectiveness. These costs will be born [sic] by taxes paid by the growing population. The Birch Bay station now being utilized as a manned fire station must under go [sic] substantial remodeling in the future to house firefighters and EMTs.

¶ 5 Four applicants submitted separate plans for residential and/or commercial developments in Whatcom County. The proposals include Horizon's Village at Semiahmoo, a mixed use development consisting of 200 residential units, commercial, and retail space. A second proposed project, from Schmidt Constructing, Inc., includes the Bay Breeze Cluster Plat, consisting of 16 single family lots, a 47,390 foot reserve area, and a storm water facility. The third proposed project, at Harborview Road, is a residential development of a total of 85 units. The fourth proposed project is the Birch Bay Center, a commercial development consisting of a total of 108,000 square feet of building area. The County approved site specific rezones, binding site plans, preliminary long subdivision permits, and binding site plans for these projects.

*958 ¶ 6 Whatcom County Code (WCC) requires that applications for development contain written verifications of the availability of fire protection services. WCC 21.05.120(3)(b). In August 2005, the District issued a letter confirming that it provided fire protection services to the Birch Bay area and that it would serve the listed property.[2] But, the District reserved the right to make additional comments or conditions on the proposed project.

¶ 7 The District passed Resolution 2005-017 and Resolution 2006-01. Both resolutions sought to advise Whatcom County on the need for mitigation under the State Environmental Policy Act (SEPA), because it was unable to provide services at "an urban level in a manner consistent with urban levels of service as established by the Whatcom County Birch Bay Community Plan and national fire standards." Because it anticipated growth in residential populations, which it would not be able to adequately serve, the District demanded that the County impose mitigation measures in the form of fees prior to approval of a SEPA Mitigated Determination of Non-Significance (MDNS), a Final Environmental Impact Statement, or project permits for residential development.

¶ 8 Birch Point Village, LLC, applied for a site specific rezone, planned unit development, and binding site plan for its Horizon's Village at Semiahoo development. County staff recommended that the permits be granted, but did not recommend mitigation fees.[3] The Whatcom County Hearing Examiner also recommended approval.

¶ 9 The County issued a MDNS for the project pursuant to SEPA on March 16, 2006. The District appealed on April 13, 2006. The District claimed that the SEPA determination did not adequately address the impacts of the project on the District's ability to provide medical response, fire response, and transport. The District argued that it was appropriate for the developer to pay a mitigation fee of $384 per vehicle average daily trip, to be paid directly to the District or, in the alternative, a $2,500 fee per residential living unit and that the commercial parts of the development pay a proportionate fee.

¶ 10 On May 3, 2006, the County SEPA official issued a new MDNS with two conditions. First, it conditioned that the developer contribute to a planning study regarding the District's ability to provide services for new growth and the need for a concurrency assessment contribution, to be made by the applicant and paid to the District. Second, if the planning study was not completed prior to actual development, it required the applicant and the District to enter into a mediated agreement to determine the project's fees to the District to mitigate impacts of development, based on available estimates of the impacts of increased population created by the proposed development.

¶ 11 The Whatcom County Hearing Examiner reversed and revised the SEPA official's MDNS. He found that the District's argument, under WCC 20.80.21, that individual projects cannot be approved unless the District has issued a concurrency letter erroneous. The hearing examiner stated, "[i]n this case, since the Whatcom County Council has the authority to determine concurrency under the Growth Management Act and since the Whatcom County Council has determined within the Birch Bay Comprehensive Plan that Fire District No. 13 has adequate current capacity and that arrangements for adequate funding are in place to provide for future growth, Fire District No.

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Related

Whatcom County Fire District No. 21 v. Whatcom County
171 Wash. 2d 421 (Washington Supreme Court, 2011)
WHATCOM FIRE DIST. NO. 21 v. Whatcom County
256 P.3d 295 (Washington Supreme Court, 2011)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
215 P.3d 956, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/whatcom-county-fire-dist-v-county-washctapp-2009.