"Abandon"means to terminate or remove a structure by an affirmative act, such as changing to a new use; or to cease, terminate, or vacate a use or structure through nonaction.
"Abutting"means adjoining as defined herein, but will often have the added component of joining end to end, or sharing an end border.
"Accessory dwelling unit (ADU)"means a living area that is accessory to the principal residence, located on the same lot, and that provides for sleeping quarters, kitchen, and sanitation facilities. An ADU may be internal, attached or detached.
"Accessory structure"means a structure detached from a principal building located on the same lot and which is incidental and secondary to the principal building.
"Accessory use"means use of land or of a building or portion thereof incidental and subordinate to the principal use or building and located on the same lot with the principal use.
"Acoustical engineer"means a professional engineer, licensed in Washington, with a degree in mechanical engineering and membership in the Acoustical Society of America; or a professional engineer with demonstrated education, accreditation and experience to perform and certify noise measurements, as determined by the director.
"Activity centers"in San Juan County include villages, hamlets, residential activity centers, island centers, and master planned resorts.
"Adaptive management"means a style of management which relies upon the best available information to make decisions, but implements decisions with a strategy to obtain additional information. The decisions, or their implementation, are then adapted, if necessary, based on the new information.
"Adequate capacity (adequate capital facilities)"means capital facilities and services that have the capacity available to serve development at the time of occupancy or use without decreasing levels of service (LOS) below the standards set forth in the Comprehensive Plan. "Adequate capacity" also includes a financial commitment that is in place to complete the improvements, or noncapital strategies, necessary to provide a specific level of service within six years. (See also "available capital facilities (available capacity)," "concurrency," "level of service (LOS)," and "noncapital alternative strategies.")
"Adjoining"means being in physical contact, touching at some point or along a line, having a common point or border, sharing a common boundary, being so joined or united to each other that no third object intervenes.
"Adverse"means contrary to one's interest or welfare; harmful or unfavorable circumstances.
"Adverse impacts"means a condition that creates, imposes, aggravates, or leads to inadequate, impractical, unsafe, or unhealthy conditions on a site proposed for development or an off-site property or facilities.
"Affordable housing"means housing where the occupants pay no more than 30 percent of gross household income on housing costs. Housing costs for renters are considered to include rent and utilities, or, for owners, to include the principal and interest on the mortgage plus property taxes and insurance (PITI). Utility costs include water, sewage disposal, electricity and/or gas for lighting, heating and cooking.
"Agricultural commodity"means sheep, cattle, horses, goats, pigs, llamas, alpacas, or any other animal or any distinctive type of agricultural, horticultural, viticultural, floricultural, vegetable, or animal product, such as products qualifying as organic food products under Chapter
15.86 RCW and private sector cultured aquatic products as defined in RCW
19.85.020 and other fish and fish products, either in their natural or processed state, including bees and honey and Christmas trees but not including timber or timber products.
"Agricultural composting"means composting of agricultural waste as an integral component of a system designed to improve soil health and recycling agricultural wastes. Agricultural composting is conducted on lands used for farming and is an agricultural activity. Agricultural composting can include the collection of off-site yard, landscape, or agricultural waste and other compostable materials to be processed into compost, including sales or delivery of finished composted product. Such operation shall be accessory to the primary agricultural activities of the farm operation and shall not generate traffic and/or noise uncommon to a farm operation.
"Agricultural products"includes but is not limited to horticultural, viticultural, floricultural, vegetable, fruit, berry, grain, hops, hay, straw, turf, sod, seed, and apiary products; feed or forage for livestock; Christmas trees; hybrid cottonwood and similar hardwood trees grown as crops and harvested within 20 years of planting; and livestock including both the animals themselves and animal products such as meat, upland finfish, poultry and poultry products, and dairy products (see RCW
90.58.065(2)).
"Agricultural resource lands"means lands that are primarily devoted to the commercial production of horticultural, viticultural, floricultural, dairy, apiary, vegetable, or animal products or of berries, grain, hay, straw, turf, seed, livestock, or Christmas trees not subject to the excise tax imposed by RCW
84.33.100 through
84.33.140, and have long-term commercial significance for agricultural production (RCW
36.70A.030(2)). Agricultural resource lands is also a land use designation (AG) in the Comprehensive Plan.
"Agricultural sales"means the sales of agricultural products grown, raised or harvested in San Juan County, including processed products whose defining ingredients are produced or harvested in the County. Agricultural sales can include the sale of agricultural promotional materials which shall be accessory to the sale of the primary agricultural products.
"Agricultural soils"means lands with USDA-San Juan County Soil Survey Class II, III, and IV soils or other soil classes where the land is suitable for a particular agricultural use.
"Agricultural wastes"means wastes on farms resulting from the raising or growing of plants and animals such as crop residue, manure and animal bedding, and carcasses of dead animals weighing each or collectively in excess of 15 pounds.
"Agritourism"means recreational, educational or agricultural-related activities that are accessory to the agricultural activities of the farm operation.
"Aid to navigation"means any visual or electronic device airborne or on the surface which provides point-to-point guidance information or position data to aircraft in flight.
"Aircraft accident safety zone"means an area of land that is designated in order to meet the land use compatibility direction in RCW
36.70A.510 and
36.70.547 for general aviation airports and to implement the health and safety and land use purposes of an airport overlay district, and is shown on the official maps of the overlay district. Guidance for the delineation of these safety zones is provided by the Washington State Department of Transportation, which can be modified in order to address local circumstances as part of the adoption of individual airport overlay districts.
1. "Safety zone 1: Runway protection zone" is an area that has the same dimensions as the FAA runway protection zone. It is a trapezoidally shaped area that extends from the outer boundaries of the primary surface along the extended runway centerline. Where only a portion of the runway is declared as usable (the remainder of the pavement being part of a paved "stopway"), as is the case at Orcas Island airport, the measurements for the zone begin at the threshold line on the pavement which marks the end of the declared usable runway surface.
2. "Safety zone 2: Inner safety zone" is an area that underlies the main departure/approach path. It begins at the end of the runway protection zone (zone 1) and extends out along the extension of the runway centerline.
3. "Safety zone 3: Inner turning zone" is an area where aircraft turn into the direct approach path, or turn out of the departure path. The zone begins at the primary surface and extends out at 30 degrees from both sides of the runway centerline. It connects to the centerline of the inner safety zone (zone 2) with sweeping arcs.
4. "Safety zone 4: Outer safety zone" is an area that underlies the main departure/approach path, after the inner turning zone (zone 3). It extends out from both sides of the extended runway centerline, beginning at the outer edge of the inner turning zone (zone 3) and extending to the outer boundary of zone 6 (or to outer boundary of the horizontal zone if zone 6 is not designated).
5. "Safety zone 5: Sideline safety zone/airport development zone" is an area that is immediately adjacent to the airport and runway area. The standard zone begins at the primary surface, extending out from the extended runway centerline and connecting at its ends to the inner turning zone (zone 3).
6. "Safety zone 6: Traffic pattern zone" is an area that encircles the other five safety zones. The standard area consists of a long oval that is centered longitudinally on the runway, and which envelops the other safety zones. The perimeter is constructed by swinging arcs from a point along the extended runway centerline that is 500 feet from the edge of the primary surface. The arcs are connected by line segments that are extended from the edge of safety zone 5. Zone 6 may or may not be designated for a given airport overlay district.
"Airfield"means a privately owned area of land open to general or limited public use for aircraft operations. An airfield may include related noncommercial services, aircraft maintenance, or fueling facilities.
"Airport"means an area of land or facility publicly owned and open to general public use for aircraft operations, except any airfield or airstrip as defined herein. An airport may include related services and facilities.
"Airport overlay district"means an overlay district which governs use of land in the vicinity and environs of an airport and protects public safety in the area.
"Airstrip"means a privately owned area of land, closed to the public, and restricted to use by the owner for noncommercial aircraft operations and, on an occasional basis, invited guests of the owner.
"Aliquot part"means a parcel of unplatted land which is described by record legal description as a fractional portion of a section, excluding government lots.
"Allowable uses"means the land uses that are allowed under this title, divided into five categories, as identified in SJCC §
18.30.050 through §
18.30.055 and Tables 18.30.030 and 18.30.040. These are uses allowed outright ("Yes"), provisional ("Prov" or "P"), "P/C" (formerly referred to as discretionary ("D")), conditional ("C"), and plan amendment ("P.A.") uses.
"Allowed outright use ("Yes" use)" means a use that is allowed outright within a land use designation, and which does not require a project permit, and is identified in Tables 18.30.030 and 18.30.040 by the symbol "Yes." All "Yes" uses are subject to and must comply with all applicable development standards of this title (see Chapter 18.60 SJCC and SJCC § 18.80.070). |
"Alteration, nonconforming structures"means any change or rearrangement in the supporting members of existing buildings, such as bearing walls, columns, beams, girders, or interior partitions, as well as any changes in doors, windows, means of egress or ingress or any enlargement to or diminution of a building or structure, horizontally or vertically, or the moving of a building from one location to another. This definition excludes normal repair and maintenance, such as painting or roof replacement, but includes more substantial changes.
"Animal shelter (kennel)"means a commercial or nonprofit establishment in which animals other than livestock are temporarily housed or boarded, groomed, bred, trained, treated, or sold.
"Antenna"means any apparatus designed for transmitting and/or receiving electromagnetic waves by converting those waves from and to electrical current.
"Antenna array"means one or more antennas and their associated mounting hardware, feed lines, or other appurtenances which share a common attachment device, such as a mounting frame or support structure.
"Appeal, closed-record"means an administrative appeal on the record to the County council, following an open-record hearing on a project permit application. A closed-record appeal is on the record made before the decision maker with no or limited new evidence or information allowed to be submitted and only appeal argument allowed (RCW
36.70B.020).
"Appeal, open-record"means a hearing, conducted by the hearing examiner, that creates the County's record through testimony and submittal of evidence and information, under procedures prescribed by the County by ordinance or resolution when a timely appeal of the director's decision on a project permit application or a timely appeal of an administrative determination is filed.
"Applicant"means any person who files a permit application with the County and who is either the owner, beneficial owner, contract purchaser, or authorized agent of such owner of the land on which the proposed activity would be located.
"Approach surface"means the FAA imaginary surface that is the lower boundary of an airspace which begins at the ends of the primary surface and extends upward and outward along the extended runway centerline. The initial width of the surface coincides with the width of the primary surface, and expands outward uniformly from the primary surface.
"Approach, transitional, horizontal, and conical surfaces"means the imaginary surfaces that relate to an airport or airfield runway as defined in Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) regulations, 14 CFR Part
77, "Objects Affecting Navigable Airspace," as amended, and as shown on the approach and clear zone plan for an airport or airfield. They are so-called "imaginary" surfaces because, with the exception of the runway, they cannot be seen.
"Aquacultural equipment and facilities"includes, but is not limited to: (1) the following used in aquacultural operations: equipment; machinery; constructed shelters, buildings, and ponds; water storage facilities; water diversion, withdrawal, conveyance, and use equipment and facilities such as pumps, pipes, canals, ditches, and drains; (2) farm residences and associated equipment, lands, and facilities; and (3) roadside stands and on-farm markets for products (see RCW
90.58.065(2)).
"Aquaculture"means the culture or farming of fish, shellfish, or other aquatic plants and animals. Aquaculture does not include the harvest of wild geoduck associated with the state managed wildstock geoduck fishery (see WAC
173-26-020(6)).
"Aquaculture, noncommercial"means harvesting fish, shellfish or other aquatic animals and plants for subsistence, recreational and personal consumption, scientific research or restoration activities.
"Aquaculture processing"means the commercial preparation of fish, shellfish or other aquatic animals and plants for market including packaging and transportation.
"Aquatic designation"means all water bodies under the jurisdiction of the Shoreline Management Act of 1971 and within the boundaries of San Juan County, including the water surface together with the underlying lands and the water column such as to bays, straits, harbors, coves, estuaries, tidelands, shorelands, and lakes.
"Aquifer"means a body of permeable saturated rock material or soil capable of conducting ground water.
"Aquifer recharge areas"means lands through which precipitation and surface water infiltrate the soil and are transmitted through rocks and soil to create ground water storage.
"Archaeological"means having to do with the scientific study of material remains of past human life and activities.
"Archaeological site"means an area of ancestral human use such as middens, burial grounds, and earthworks.
"Area"means the size of a parcel of land, as expressed in square feet or acres to two decimal places. When a public road right-of-way lies within a tract of land otherwise in contiguous ownership, area within the right-of-way may be included in gross area for the purpose of calculating maximum allowable density. When public road right-of-way abuts a tract of land, area to the centerline may be included in the gross area of the parcel for this purpose.
"Area, nominal"means the approximate area of a parcel of land, such as the aliquot part or the land area in the assessor's records.
"Area of more intensive rural development (AMIRD)"means a class of rural lands that includes village and hamlet activity centers, residential activity centers, and island centers. AMIRDs were identified and delineated according to the criteria in RCW
36.70A.070(5)(d). They consist of commercial, industrial, residential, or mixed-use areas in which the kinds, intensities, or densities of use, or the capital facilities and services available, exceed the levels normally associated with rural development. Thus, these areas recognize and provide for existing compact rural development and uses, and allow for infill in the areas to the level of existing patterns.
"Area of special flood hazard"means the land in the floodplain within a community subject to a one percent or greater chance of flooding in any given year, as indicated on the flood insurance rate maps (FIRMs).
"Artisan"means a skilled craftsperson, small-scale manufacturer, or artist who practices a trade or handicraft and who creates artisanal products in limited quantities for sale.
"Artisanal product"means art, food, and other retail goods created by an artisan on a small-scale or batch basis. Artisanal products are often made using traditional craft methods, tools and skills, or are manufactured on a small scale.
"Assembly facility"means a facility designed and used for the gathering of people, or in which they may come together in a body, such as a meeting hall, community club or center, church, etc. (See also "community club or facility" and "religious assembly facility.")
"Associated wetland"means those wetlands that are in proximity to and either influence or are influenced by tidal waters or a lake or stream that is subject to the Shoreline Management Act.
"Attached accessory dwelling unit (AADU)"means an ADU which is internal to or attached to the principal residence by (1) a common wall, or (2) a continuous roof and exterior wall enclosures, or (3) a continuous roof no less than six feet in width, the area of which is included in the living area of the ADU.
"Automotive fuel station"means any building, land area, or other premises used for the retail dispensing or sales of vehicular fuels, but at which there is no servicing or repair of automobiles.
"Automotive repair station"means any building, land area, or other premises used for the retail servicing or repair of automobiles, but at which there is no dispensing or sales of vehicular fuels.
"Automotive service station"means any building, land area, or other premises used for the retail dispensing or sales of vehicular fuels and the servicing or repair of automobiles.
"Available capital facilities (available capacity)"means capital facilities or services that are in place ("existing capacity"), or for which a financial commitment is in place to provide the facilities or services within a specified time ("planned capacity"). "Available capacity" consists of existing plus planned capacity. (See also "adequate capacity (adequate capital facilities)," "concurrency," and "level of service (LOS).")
"Average grade level"means the average or the natural or existing topography of the portion of the lot, parcel, or tract of real property which will be directly under the proposed building or structure. Calculation of the average grade level is made by averaging the ground elevations at the midpoint of all exterior walls of the proposed building or structure. In cases of structures to be built over the water, average grade level is the elevation of the ordinary high water mark.
"Average tree height"means the mean height of existing trees within a 150-foot radius of the facility site.
(Ord. 2-1998 Exh. B § 2.3; Ord. 11-2000 § 3; Ord. 14-2000 § 7(XX); Ord. 12-2001 § 3; Ord. 5-2002 § 2; Ord. 12-2002 § 1; Ord. 21-2002 § 3; Ord. 7-2005 § 2; Ord. 7-2006 § 1; Ord. 52-2008 § 1; Ord. 11-2011 § 1; Ord. 10-2012 §§ 1, 32; Ord. 25-2012 § 1; Ord. 26-2012 § 2; Ord. 2-2014 § 1; Ord. 21-2015 § 27; Ord. 1-2016 § 67; Ord. 11-2019 § 4; Ord. 2-2023 § 1)