1288 - Ordinance - Repealing Ordinance No. 983 and 1088 RE State Environmental Policy ActORDINANCE NO. 1288
AN ORDINANCE REPEALING ORDINANCE NO. 983
AND NO. 1088 (CHAPTER 14.04 OF THE PORT
ORCHARD MUNICIPAL CODE) AND ADOPTING THE
FOLLOWING ORDINANCE WHICH COMPLIES WITH
THE NEW STATE ENVIRONMENTAL POLICY ACT
RULES AND PROCEDURES.
THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF PORT ORCHARD DOES ORDAIN AS FOLLOWS:
Section 1 - Repealer. Chapter 14.04 of the Port Orchard
Municipal Code, as adopted in Ordinances No. 983 and No. 1088, is
hereby REPEALED.
Section 2 - Authority. The City of Port Orchard adopts this
ordinance under the State Environmental Policy Act (SEPA), RCW
43.21C.120, and the SEPA rules, WAC 197-11-904.
This ordinance contains this City's SEPA procedures and
policies.
The SEPA rules, chapter 197-11 WAC, must be used in conjunc-
tion with this ordinance.
Section 3 - Adoption By Reference. The City adopts the
following sections of Chapter 173-806 of the Washington Administrative
Code by reference (known as SEPA model ordinance):
WAC 173-806-020
General Requirements - Purpose of this
Part and Adoption by Reference.
173-806-030
Additional Definitions.
173-806-065
Categorical Exemptions and Threshold
Determinations - Purpose of this Part and
Adoption by Reference.
173-806-080
Use of Exemptions.
173-806-110
EIS - Purpose of this Part and Adoption
by Reference.
173-806-120
Preparation of EIS - Additional
Considerations.
173-806-128
Commenting - Adoption by Reference.
173-806-150
Using Existing Environmental Documents -
Purpose of this Part and Adoption by
Reference.
173-806-155
SEPA and Agency Decisions - Purpose of
this Part and Adoption by Reference.
173-806-173
Notice/Statute of Limitations.
173-806-175
Definitions - Purpose of this Part and
Adoption by Reference.
173-806-180
Categorical Exemptions - Adoption by
Reference.
173-806-185
Agency Compliance - Purpose of this Part
and Adoption by Reference.
173-806-220
Severability
173-806-230
Forms - Adoption by Reference.
Section 4 - Designation Of Responsible Official. (1) For
those proposals for which the City is the lead agency, the responsible
official shall be the City Engineer except nonproject nature actions
including adoptions or approvals of utility, transportation, solid
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waste disposal rates and capital budgets. The responsible official
shall be the City Clerk for the above excepted actions.
(2) For all proposals for which the City is the lead agency,
the responsible official shall make the threshold determination,
supervise scoping and preparation of any required environmental impact
statement (EIS), and perform any other functions assigned to the "lead
agency" or "responsible official" by those sections of the SEPA rules
that were adopted by reference in WAC 173-806-020.
(3) The City shall retain all documents required by the SEPA
rules (Chapter 197-11 WAC) and make them available in accordance with
Chapter 42.17 RCW.
Section 5 - Lead Agency Determination And Responsibilities.
(1) The department within the City receiving an application for or
initiating a proposal that involves a nonexempt action shall determine
a lead agency for that proposal under WAC 197-11-050 and 197-11-922
through 197-11-940; unless the lead agency has been previously
determined or the department is aware that another department or
agency is in the process of determining the lead agency.
(2) When the City is the lead agency for a proposal, the
department receiving the application shall determine the responsible
official who shall supervise compliance with the threshold deter-
mination requirements and if an EIS is necessary, shall supervise
preparation of the EIS.
(3) When the City is not the lead agency for a proposal, all
departments of the City shall use and consider, as appropriate, either
the DNS or the final EIS of the lead agency in making decisions on the
proposal. No City department shall prepare or require preparation of
a DNS or EIS in addition to that prepared by the lead agency, unless
required under WAC 197-11-600. In some cases, the City may conduct
supplemental environmental review under WAC 197-11-600.
(4) If the City or any of its departments receives a lead
agency determination made by another agency that appears inconsistent
with the criteria of WAC 197-11-922 through 197-11-940, it may object
to the determination. Any objection must be made to the agency
originally making the determination and resolved within fifteen days
or receipt of the determination, or the City must petition the
department of ecology for a lead agency determination under WAC
197-11-946 within the fifteen. -day time period. Any such petition on
behalf of the City may be initiated by the responsible official with
the concurrence of the mayor.
(5) Departments of the City are authorized to make agreements
as to lead agency status or shared lead agency duties for a proposal
under WAC 197-11-942 and 197-11-944: PROVIDED, that the responsible
official and any department that will incur responsibilities as the
result of such agreement approve the agreement.
(6) Any department making a lead agency determination for a
private project shall require sufficient information from the
applicant to identify which other agencies have jurisdiction over the
proposal.
Section 6 - Additional Considerations In Time Limits
licable To The SEPA Process. The following time limits (expressed
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in calendar days) shall apply when the City processes licenses for all
private projects and those government proposals submitted to the City
by other agencies:
(1) Categorical exemptions. The City shall identify whether
an action is categorically exempt within seven days of receiving a
completed application.
(2) Threshold determinations.
(a) The City should complete threshold determinations that
can be based solely upon review of the environmental checklist for the
proposal within fifteen days of the date an applicant's adequate
application and completed checklist are submitted.
(b) When the responsible official requires further informa-
tion from the applicant or consultation with other agencies with
jurisdiction:
(i) The City should request such further information
within fifteen days of receiving an adequate application and completed
environmental checklist;
(ii) The City shall wait no longer than thirty days for a
consulted agency to respond;
(iii) The responsible official should complete the
threshold determination within fifteen days of receiving the requested
information from the applicant or the consulted agency.
(c) When the City must initiate further studies, including
field investigations, to obtain the information to make the threshold
determination, the City should complete the studies within thirty days
of receiving an adequate application and a completed checklist.
(d) The City shall complete threshold determinations on
actions where the applicant recommends in writing that an EIS be
prepared, because of the probable significant adverse environmental
impact(s) described in the application, within fifteen days of
receiving an adequate application and completed checklist.
Section 7 - Environmental Checklist. A completed environ-
mental checklist (or a copy), in the form provided in WAC 197-11-960,
shall be filed at the same time as an application for a permit,
license, certificate, or other approval not specifically exempted in
this ordinance; except, the checklist is not needed if the City/County
and applicant agree an EIS is required, SEPA compliance has been
completed, or SEPA compliance has been initiated by another agency.
The City shall use the environmental checklist to determine the lead
agency and, if the City is the lead agency, for the determining the
responsible official and for making the threshold determination.
Section 8 - Additional Elements To Be Covered In An EIS. The
following additional elements are part of the environment for t e
purpose of EIS content, but do not add to the criteria for threshold
determinations or perform any other function or purpose under this
ordinance:
(1) Economy
(2) Employment
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(3) Sociological factors
(4) Cost -benefit analysis.
Section 9 - Public Notice. (1) Whenever the City issues a
DNS under WAC 197-11-340(2) or a DS under WAC 197-11-360(3), the City
shall give public notice as follows:
(a) If public notice is required for a nonexempt license, the
notice shall state whether a DS or DNS has been issued and when
comments are due.
(b) If no public notice is required for the permit or
approval, the City shall give notice of the DNS or DS by:
(i) Posting the property, for site -specific proposals,
and
(ii) Publishing notice in a newspaper of general
circulation in the City area where the proposal is located.
(c) Whenever the City issues a DS under WAC 197-11-360(3),
the City shall state the scoping procedure for the proposal in the DS
as required in WAC 197-11-408 and in the public notice.
(2) Whenever the City issues a DEIS under WAC 197-11-455(5)
or a SEIS under WAC 197-11-620, notice of the availability of those
documents shall be given by:
(a) Indicating the availability of the DEIS in any public
notice required for a nonexempt license; and
(b) Posting the property, for site -specific proposals; and
(c) Publishing notice in a newspaper of general circulation
in the City area where the proposal is located.
(3) Whenever possible, the City shall integrate the public
notice required under this section with existing notice procedures for
the City's nonexempt permit(s) or approval(s) required for the
proposal.
(4) The City may require an applicant to complete the public
notice requirements for the applicant's proposal at his or her
expense.
Section 10 - Designation Of Official To Perform Consulted
Agency Responsibilities For The City. (1) The Mayor or his designee
shall be responsible for preparation of written comments for the City
in response to a consultation request prior to a threshold deter-
mination, participation in scoping and reviewing a DEIS.
(2) This person shall be responsible for the City's
compliance with WAC 197-11-550 whenever the City is a consulted agency
and is authorized to develop operating procedures that will ensure
that responses to consultation requests are prepared in a timely
fashion and include data from all appropriate departments of the City.
Section 11 - Substantive Authority. (1) The policies and
goals set forth in this ordinance are supplementary to those in the
existing authorization of the City of Port Orchard.
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(2) The City may attach conditions to a permit or approval
for a proposal so long as:
(a) Such conditions are necessary to mitigate specific
probable adviser environmental impacts identified in environmental
documents prepared pursuant to this ordinance;
(b) Such conditions are in writing;
(c) The mitigation measures included in such conditions are
reasonable and capable of being accomplished;
(d) The City has considered whether other local, state or
federal mitigation measures applied to the proposal are sufficient to
mitigate the identified impacts; and
(e) Such conditions are based on one or more policies in
subsection (4) of this section and cited in the license or other
decision document.
(3) The City may deny a permit or approval for a proposal on
the basis of SEPA so long as:
(a) A finding is made that approving the proposal would
result in probable significant adverse environmental impacts that
are identified in a FEIS or final SEIS prepared pursuant to this
ordinance;
(b) A finding is made that there is no reasonable mitigation
measures capable of being accomplised that are sufficient to mitigate
the identified impact; and
(c) The denial is based on one or more policies identified in
subsection (4) of this section and idenitifed in writing in the
decision document.
(4) The City designates and adopts by reference the following
policies as the basis for the City's exercise of authority pursuant to
this section:
(a) The City shall use all practical means, consistent with
other essential considerations of state policy, to improve and
coordinate plans, functions, programs, and resources to the end that
the state and its citizens may:
(i) Fulfill the repsonsibilities of each generation as
trustee of the environment for succeeding generations;
(ii) Assure for all people of Washington safe, healthful,
productive and aesthetically and culterally pleasing surroundings;
(iii) Attain the widest range of beneficial uses of the
environment without degradation, risk to health or safety, or other
undesirable and unintended consequences;
(iv) Preserve important historic, cultural and natural
aspects of our national heritage;
(v) Maintain, whenever possible, an environment which
supports diversity and variety of individual choice;
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(vi) Achieve a balance between population and resource
use which will permit high standards of living and a wide sharing of
life's amenities; and
(vii) Enhance the quality of renewable resources and
approach the maximum attainable recyclying of depetable resources.
(b) The City recognizes that each person has a fundamental
and inalienable right to a healthful environment and that each person
has a responsibility to contribute to the preservation and enhancement
of the environment.
(c) The City adopts by reference the policies set forth in
the Port Orchard Zoning Ordinance.
(5) Except for permits or variances issued pursuant to the
Shoreline Mangement Program adopted by the City, when any proposal or
action not requiring a decision of the City is conditioned or denied
on the basis of SEPA by a nonelected official, the decision shall be
appealable to the City's board of adjustments and appeals. Such
appeal may be perfected by the proponent or any aggrieved party by
giving notice to the responsible official within ten days of the
decision being appealed. Review by the City's board of adjustments
and appeals shall be on a denovo basis.
Section 12 - Environmentally Sensitive Areas. (1) The City
Council shall designate environmentally sensitive areas under the
standards of WAC 197-11-908 and shall file maps designating such
areas, together with the exemptions from the list in WAC 197-11-908
that are inapplicable in such areas, with the City Clerk, the Kitsap
County Auditor, and the Department of Ecology, Headquarters Office,
Olympia, Washington. The environmentally sensitive area designations
shall have full force and effect of law as of the date of filing.
(2) The City shall treat proposals located wholly or
partially within an environmentally sensitive area no differently than
other proposals under this ordinance, making a threshold determination
for such proposals. The City shall not automatically require an EIS
for a proposal merely because it is proposed for location in an
environmentally sensitive area.
(3) Certain exemptions do not apply on lands covered by
water, and this remains true regardless of whether or not lands
covered by water are mapped.
Section 13 - Fees. The City shall require the following fees
for its activities in accordance with the provisions of this
ordinance:
(1) Threshold determination. For every environmental
checklist the City will review when it is lead agency, the City shall
collect a fee of $50.00 from the proponent of the proposal prior to
undertaking the threshold determination. The time periods provided by
this ordinance for making a threshold determination shall not begin to
run until payment of the fee.
(2) Environmental impact statement.
(a) When the City is the lead agency for a proposal requiring
an EIS and the responsible official determines that the EIS shall be
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prepared by employees of the City, the City may charge and collect a
reasonable fee from any applicant to cover costs incurred by the City
in preparing the EIS. The responsible official shall advise the
applicant(s) of the projected cost for the EIS prior to actual
preparation; the applicant shall post bond or otherwise ensure payment
of such costs.
(b) The responsible official may determine that the City will
contract directly with a consultant for preparation of an EIS, or a
portion of the EIS, for activities initiated by some persons or entity
other than the City and may bill such costs and expenses directly to
the applicant. The City may require the applicant to post bond or
otherwise ensure payment of such costs. Such consultants shall be
selected by mutual agreement of the City and applicant after a call
for proposals.
(c) If a proposal is modified so that an EIS is no longer
required, the responsible official shall refund any fees collected
under (a) or (b) of this subsection which remain after incurred costs
are paid.
(3) The City may collect a reasonable fee from an applicant
to cover the cost of meeting the public notice requirements of this
ordinance relating to the applicant's proposal.
(4) The City shall not collect a fee for performing its
duties as a consulted agency.
(5) The City may charge any person for copies of any document
prepared under this ordinance, and for mailing the document, in a
manner provided by Chapter 42.17 RCW.
PASSED by the City Council at a regular open public meeting
thereof and APPROVED by the Mayor of the City of Port Orchard,
Washington, this day of September, 1984.
L SLIE WEATHERILL
Mayor
ATTEST:
1
�ICL(L°l� zrrc-�_.
City Clerk
APPROVED AS TO FORM:
ttorney
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