New Look at Buffers for Critical Areas

Posted September 16, 2013 at 4:13 am by

County-LogoGrowth Board Ruling Requires New Look at Buffers for Critical Areas
The Growth Management Hearings Board says more work is needed to protect critical areas in the county. “Overall, this is a positive ruling for the county,” said Prosecuting Attorney Randall K. Gaylord. “The Growth Board upheld the County’s extraordinary public participation process, the method of identifying and designating critical areas, and the site-specific approach to calculating buffer sizes.”

“The Growth Board did find fault with buffer sizes that don’t remove enough pollutants, and so there are definitely some decisions that the County Council will need to wrestle with,” added Gaylord.

Gaylord noted that there were 90 issues before the Growth Board that were raised by Friends of the San Juans, Common Sense Alliance, P.J. Taggares Company, William Wright and San Juan Builders Association. Of all the issues, only ten issues identified by the Friends of the San Juans resulted in a ruling against the County’s Critical Area Ordinances.

“I am pleased that the Growth Board was very specific in describing what needs to be fixed on several rather narrow issues,” added Gaylord. He said he expected the challengers to be active participants as the County Council moves forward.

The Growth Board decision will require adoption of revisions to the CAO Ordinances by March 5, 2014, with a hearing on compliance with GMA on April 24, 2014. “These dates work well because the existing ordinances will become effective on March 1, 2014.”

A copy of the Growth Management Hearings Board decision is available for download here or by contacting Elizabeth Halsey at the Prosecutor’s Office at 360-378-4101 or by email at
elizabethh [@] sanjuanco [.] com.

You can support the San Juan Update by doing business with our loyal advertisers, and by making a one-time contribution or a recurring donation.


Categories: Around Here

No comments yet. Be the first!

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

By submitting a comment you grant the San Juan Update a perpetual license to reproduce your words and name/web site in attribution. Inappropriate, irrelevant and contentious comments may not be published at an admin's discretion. Your email is used for verification purposes only, it will never be shared.

Receive new post updates: Entries (RSS)
Receive followup comments updates: RSS 2.0