A habitat management plan is a report to provide an analysis and discussion on the project's effects on a fish and wildlife habitat conservation area and to address how the project impacts to fish and wildlife habitat conservation areas will be mitigated. The Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife Priority Habitat and Species Management Recommendations, and supplemental documents are advised to serve as guidance for this report. A habitat management plan shall contain, at a minimum, the following:
(1) The habitat management plan shall contain a detailed site plan prepared at an easily readable scale, showing:
(a) The location of the proposed development site;
(b) The relationship of the site to surrounding topographic features, water features, and cultural features;
(c) Proposed building locations and arrangements;
(d) A legend which includes a complete legal description, acreage of the parcel, scale, north arrows, and date of map revision.
(2) The habitat management plan shall also contain a report, which describes:
(a) The nature and intensity of the proposed development;
(b) An analysis of the effect of the proposed development, activity or land use change upon the wildlife species and habitat identified for protection; and
(3) Mitigation Sequencing. When an alteration to a fish and wildlife habitat conservation area or its buffer is proposed, such alteration shall be avoided, minimized, or compensated for in the following order of preference and for consistency with POMC §
20.162.026.
(a) Avoiding the impact altogether by not taking a certain action or parts of an action.
(b) Minimizing impacts by limiting the degree or magnitude of the action and its implementation, by using appropriate technology, or by taking affirmative steps to avoid or reduce impacts.
(c) Rectifying the impact by repairing, rehabilitating, or restoring the affected environment.
(d) Reducing or eliminating the impact over time by preservation and maintenance operations.
(e) Compensating for the impact by replacing, enhancing, or providing substitute resources or environments.
(f) Monitoring the required mitigation and taking remedial action where necessary. Monitoring shall occur for a minimum of five years. Certain types of habitat communities require additional time for establishment and may require monitoring for 10 or more years depending on the site-specific circumstances and the scope of the mitigation project.
(4) A plan which identifies how the applicant proposes to mitigate any adverse impacts to wildlife habitats created by the proposed development. (See mitigation plan requirements, Article
VIII of this chapter.)
(5) Possible mitigation measures to be included in the report, or required by the department, could include, but are not limited to:
(a) Establishment of buffer zones;
(b) Preservation of critically important plants and trees;
(c) Limitation of access to habitat areas;
(d) Seasonal restriction of construction activities; and
(e) Establishing phased development requirements and/or a timetable for periodic review of the plan.
(6) This plan shall be prepared by a person who has been educated in this field and has professional experience as a fish or wildlife biologist. Where this plan is required for the protection of an eagle habitat, the eagle habitat management plan shall normally be prepared by the Department of Wildlife, as required under the bald eagle management rules.
(Ord. 018-25, 11/18/2025)