Archive for November, 2008

November 30, 2008

Politics is Hardball!

by Steve Dana

If you dont’ want to get roughed up a little, stay out of politics!

Politics is HARDBALL!
Politics is HARDBALL!

 

 What does the other guy look like?

November 30, 2008

FCC or NO FCC, that is the question!

by Steve Dana

A guest editorial in the November 29, 2008 Everett Herald by Kristin Kelly addressed the issue of Fully Contained Communities (FCC).  Ms. Kelly presented a compelling argument for at least a review of the development regulations that enable FCCs.  The fact is that existing regulations for FCCs fill ten or twelve pages in the County Development Code and are very restrictive.  The question is not “How do we regulate them?” but rather “Do we want to allow them under any circumstances?”  I don’t think council members are talking straight with us.  The decision to address FCCs could have been made a year ago or more, why now?

 

The part of the editorial that troubles me is the part that suggests that Snohomish County Council members were looking out for the rest of us when they voted for the moratorium.  My experience has been that moratoriums are used to address emergencies.  Is there an emergency here?

 

I doubt that county elected officials have much concern for our quality of life when you look at the types of development allowed by Snohomish County Zoning both inside Urban Growth Boundaries and outside.

 

Urban Zoning regulations adopted by Snohomish County facilitate the pillaging of undeveloped land inside Urban Growth Areas.  Cities at the center of the UGAs will ultimately be responsible for providing services but will not have been a part of the planning process that created the development.  The needs of the ultimate urban community will not have been factored into the plan because Snohomish County will have already filled the land with development. 

 

We originally drew Urban Growth Boundaries to focus where cities could expand as population growth came to the county.  Cities expected to plan for how the land would be used in ways that address a full range of land uses.  The overall needs of the cities would be considered in the process. 

 

In places where sewers exist inside an Urban Growth Boundary but outside city limits, Snohomish County has implemented the county plan and preferences rather than the city preferences.  Take a look at Cavalero’s Hill along East Hewitt. 

 

In places where sewers exist outside Urban Growth Boundaries, the county zoned the land for urban development and moved ahead with construction to capture the permit fees and sales tax revenue from construction in spite of the fact that no urban growth should be allowed.  Period!

 

The Seattle Hill development area is not included in any city’s UGB.  Silver Firs and all the other developments that have been popping up in that area are at a minimum in violation of the intent of growth management and possibly the letter of the law as outlined in the Growth Management Act.  Urban development should have stopped in this area when the land was not included in any Urban Growth Area.

 

Currently the city of Everett is considering expanding its UGA further east to include fully developed neighborhoods allowed by county regulations.  They aren’t doing it to be good guys, they are doing it to get a tax break from the state.  The cost of providing services to the Hilton Lake/Eastmont will be greater than the revenue they collect.  Maybe a different Comp Plan for the area might have provided a better result.  What’s there now make little sense.

 

Mill Creek is the city closest to Silver Firs, but they have no desire to take on the responsibility for providing services to the area since there is little reward and a lot of liability.  Where is the tax base that will pay for the services needed by those neighborhoods?  How do the miles of subdivisions fit into an overall plan for the area?  Where is the “comprehensive” part of the planning or do you call it something else?

 

In rural areas things are no better. The Cluster Subdivision regulations represent most of the bad characteristics of rural development.  Except for the one part where open space is preserved, clusters do nothing to preserve rural character.  Consider that the net density in areas where density bonuses are allowed is down to almost one dwelling unit per two acres rather than the one DU per five acres we normally associate with rural lands.  The Growth Management Act suggests that rural development standards should include a variety of densities, but I doubt they meant less than five acre minimum site sizes.

 

If our goal is to reduce sprawl and excessive land consumption in rural areas, the current plan does not deliver.  Add to that the urban character of the development and we find ourselves back where we began with growth management trying to rein in one and two acre building sites.

 

For the environmental community, securing large tracts of dedicated open space satisfies their needs.  For the development community, getting enhanced lot yield satisfies their needs.  How do the rest of us get what we need from our county representatives?

 

For the community of county residents left with the aftermath of development, we have increased the usage of the infrastructure through density bonus to exceed the level of service standards for rural roads and water systems but not added enough homes to spread the cost of improving the infrastructure over an economic number of payers?  Who will pick up the tab for those improvements?  Two acres per dwelling unit is the least efficient density for urban infrastructure maintenance and the property owners in the clusters are thinking they need maintenance on their arterial roadways.

 

I cannot think of one area where Snohomish County Council members have given us encouragement that they are looking out for the general population.  They certainly have pushed a strong environmental agenda, but there aren’t too many wins for the average taxpayer.  That troubles me.

November 21, 2008

Focus on Farming

by Steve Dana

I attended the Focus on Farming Conference at the Lynnwood Convention Center on November 20th to get a different perspective on the efforts being made to keep farming a viable enterprise. 

 

As expected the front people were upbeat and pitched an optimistic outlook.  There were two key-note speakers that addressed the attendees. 

 

The morning speaker was Bob Gore, the acting director of the Washington State Department of Agriculture.  He gave a “state of agriculture in Washington State” report that reported some positive trends, but also some consistent themes from farmers across the state that reflect real concerns about regulatory encroachment that is slowly closing in on farmers; government regulations that range from environmental issues to availability of labor. 

 

The lunch speaker was Professor David Montgomery who spoke about how farming practices have impacted the rise and fall of different civilizations and what we can learn from them.  He was talking to farmers about farming practices.  That guy could talk a hundred miles an hour without taking a breath.  I am not sure the majority of the crowd cared too much for his presentation.  His message should not be ignored.  I was interested when he referenced upland farming but couldn’t think of too many places in our county where the government has been sensitive to preserving any.

 

I sat through an hour session that described the process that led to the installation of the crushing and drying operation for crops that can yield biodiesel grade oil.  The session raised a lot more questions than it answered.  The system is not self-sustaining as far as I could tell from the presentation.  If the county is committed to converting the county fleet over to biodiesel and intends to produce their own fuel supply from this process, they are not looking at competitive pricing for the end product.  My concern for the farmers is long term.  If they gear up to produce biofuel crops and the county pulls the plug, where does that leave them?

 

I listened to two presentations about how small scale farmers can either supplement their income or make a living growing high value consumer crops they sell direct.  In the scheme of things, neither of them related to commercial farming.

 

The end of the day for me came with a discussion from a gentleman from the Department of Ecology about Water Rights as they relate to farmers.  That guy was friendly and probably helpful to some, but his message was not encouraging.  The government views water as currency and want to control every bit of it.  The DOE will be the death of farmers.

 

In our county, we have long talked about “property rights” issues and how the government is taking them.  This Water Rights issue demonstrates the point.

 

At the end of the day, I think the survival of farmers will depend on their ability to adapt to the changing regulations rather than realistically expecting the regulators to back off.  I don’t have a sense of how much energy the industry has left in their tank.  I can think of individual farmers that are growing weary from having to deal with Mother Nature and Big Brother.  For them, the fight might be near over.

November 17, 2008

I’m sorry lady, this bus goes to Gold Bar, but not Woodinville!

by Steve Dana

One casualty of the election that hasn’t attracted much attention is the failure of the Maltby/Clearview area Public Transportation Benefit Area annexation.  Voters soundly rejected the measure 8503 NO votes to 6781 YES votes.  Why would voters reject this measure?

 

On the surface, this failure is of little consequence to most of us. 

 

For regional transit service planners, this failure presents an obstacle to developing a comprehensive East Snohomish County plan and a north/south service strategy.

 

This ballot measure asked property owners in the Maltby/Clearview area along SR9 to annex into the Public Transportation Benefit Area.  The PTBA is the area served by Community Transit.  It would have added an important neighborhood to the service area.

 

Under the current plan, the areas already in the “Benefit Area” authorize the collection of .9% Sales and Use Tax (ninety cents per one hundred dollars) on transactions within the benefit area to fund Community Transit activities. 

 

This funding enables CT to offer bus service and a number of other transit related services to our citizens.  Most of the urban parts of Snohomish County are already in the “Benefit Area” and are currently served by CT.

 

Annexing into the system would benefit residents of the designated areas by allowing transit planners to develop routes that link south central county residents to points north and south.  Considering all the discussion about congestion along the SR9 corridor, having transit service available makes good sense.

 

In the context of the larger system, adding this piece to the system would allow CT to develop routes that could start in Arlington and end at the county line at Woodinville.  From a usefulness standpoint, not having North – South service is a real impediment to many potential bus users who don’t want to have to go to Everett to get to Snohomish from Lake Stevens.

 

In the long term, it will be absolutely necessary for this area to be a part of the Community Transit system.  Any expectation that people will park their cars and take the bus will only materialize if the bus goes where people want to go.

 

I have to believe that voters were confused when they rejected this proposal.  I would recommend that the CT Board spend some time educating voters in this area about the benefits compared to the cost and after a suitable time period put it back on the ballot for another try.  This is an important issue in East Snohomish County.

 

Imagine transit service eastbound from I-5 to a transit center at SR-9 then links to King County to the south and Snohomish, Lake Stevens and Arlington to the north. 

 

Maybe a loop route following US-2 from Snohomish to Monroe, SR-522 from Monroe to Woodinville and SR-9 from Woodinville back to Snohomish.

 

Workable transit will only happen if we work to make it happen.

 

What do we need to do to get this ball rolling?