A.
This chapter is adopted for the following purposes:
1.
To promote, protect, and preserve the public interest by establishing standards for and regulating land alteration, particularly the clearing, grading, filling, and/or drainage of land in the city without preventing the reasonable use of land;
2.
To regulate land-disturbing activity for control of erosion, sedimentation, stormwater runoff, water pollution, vegetation removal, and landslide in order to minimize damage to public and private property;
4.
To promote building and site planning practices that are consistent with the city's natural topography, soils, and vegetation features;
5.
To minimize hazards to life, health, and property;
6.
To require that development of environmentally sensitive lands be accomplished in a manner which protects those areas from damage or degradation and which promotes the health, safety, and welfare of the public;
7.
To implement the goals and objectives and policies of the city's comprehensive plan and the Washington State Environmental Policy Act, the Growth Management Act, and the city ordinances adopted pursuant to these state statutes;
8.
To preserve and protect cultural, historical and anthropological artifacts from destruction when discovered on property within North Bend;
9.
To minimize indiscriminate removal or destruction of trees, shrubs and ground cover; and
10.
To show that trees and other vegetation are important elements of the physical environment. They are integral to North Bend community character and protect public health, safety and general welfare. Protecting, enhancing, and maintaining healthy trees and vegetation are key community values. The many benefits of healthy non-invasive trees and vegetation contribute to North Bend's quality of life by:
a.
Encouraging good development practices that minimize the adverse impacts of land-disturbing activities and impervious surfaces such as runoff, soil erosion, land instability, sedimentation and pollution of waterways, thus reducing the public and private costs for stormwater control/treatment and utility maintenance;
b.
Improving the air quality by absorbing air pollutants, assimilating carbon dioxide and generating oxygen;
c.
Reducing the effects of excessive noise pollution;
d.
Providing cost-effective protection from severe weather conditions with cooling effects in the summer months and insulating effects in winter;
e.
Providing visual relief and screening buffers;
f.
Providing recreational benefits;
g.
Providing habitat, cover, food supply and corridors for a diversity of fish and wildlife; and
h.
Providing economic benefit by enhancing local property values and contributing to the region's natural beauty, aesthetic character, and livability of the community.
B.
Notwithstanding the above-stated purposes, nothing in this chapter is intended to or shall be deemed to create a duty of the city to protect or promote the interests of any particular person or class of persons. Further, the existence of these regulations or any failure, refusal, or omission of the city to enforce any provision in this chapter is not intended to prevent, supplant, or affect the right of any person affected by the clearing, grading, filling, and/or drainage operations of another to invoke such private remedies as may be available against such other persons.
(Ord. 932 § 1, 1993; Ord. 1360 § 1 Exh. A (part), 2009)
