"Alter"means to change a critical area or its buffer, including grading, filling, dredging, clearing, construction, compaction, excavation, and pollution.
"Anadromous"refers to fish that spawn and rear in freshwater and mature in saltwater.
"Applicant"means a person who applies for a development permit from the city.
"Aquifer"means a geological formation capable of yielding water to a well or spring.
"Buffer"means an area contiguous to a critical area that provides an area for related ecological functions to take place and/or separates and protects critical areas from adverse impacts associated with adjacent land uses. Buffers shall not include areas that are functionally and effectively disconnected from the wetland by a road or other substantially developed surface of sufficient width and with use characteristics such that buffer functions are not provided.
"Channel migration zone"means the lateral extent of likely movement of a stream or river during the next 100 years as evidenced by movement over the past 100 years.
"Conservation easement"means a legal agreement that the property owner enters into to restrict uses of the land in a manner that conserves natural functions.
"Critical aquifer recharge area"means an area with a critical recharging effect on aquifers used for potable water, as discussed in WAC
365-190-080(2). Within such areas, pollutants seeping into the ground are likely to contaminate the water supply.
"Development"means any land use or action that alters a critical area or its buffer, including city approvals that establish patterns of use such as subdivisions, short subdivisions, rezones, and conditional use permits.
"Fish habitat"means habitat used by fish at any life stage at any time of the year.
"Floodplain"means the land area subject to inundation by a 100-year flood.
"Floodway"means the watercourse channel and adjacent land area that must be reserved in order to discharge the 100-year flood without cumulatively increasing the water elevation more than one foot.
"Functions and values"means the benefits conferred by critical areas, including water quality protection, fish and wildlife habitat, food chain support, flood storage and conveyance, ground water recharge, erosion control, and protection from hazards. "Function" means the benefit; "value" means the magnitude of the benefit.
"Historic"means existing before the area was altered by human activity.
"Impact"means to adversely affect a natural system or increase the hazard which a natural system poses to human life and property.
"Impervious"refers to a hard surface area that retards the entry of water into the soil.
"Lowest floor"excludes unfinished enclosures usable only for parking, building access, or storage.
"Monitoring"means assessing the performance of mitigation measures by collection and analysis of data on changes in natural systems.
"Ordinary high water mark"means that mark on the bed or bank below which inundation is so common in ordinary years that the soil and/or vegetation are distinct from that of the abutting upland.
"Person"means any person, organization, or other group.
"Primary association"means a relationship between a species and a habitat area whereby the species regularly uses or otherwise needs the habitat area to thrive.
"Rill"means a small, steep-sided channel caused by erosion.
"Riparian habitat"means stream-side areas that influence the aquatic ecosystem by providing shade, debris, or insects and that provide habitat for riparian wildlife.
"Species"means a group of animals commonly classified by the scientific community as a species or subspecies.
"Substantial improvement"means any repair, reconstruction, or improvement of a structure, the cost of which exceeds 50 percent of the structure's market value before the improvement, or, if the structure was damaged, before the damage occurred.
"Watercourse"means flowing waters of the state, perennial or intermittent, excluding artificial waterways such as ditches or canals not created by human alteration of a natural watercourse.
"Wetlands"means areas that are inundated or saturated by surface water or groundwater at a frequency and duration sufficient to support, and that under normal circumstances do support, a prevalence of vegetation typically adapted for life in saturated soil conditions. Wetlands generally include swamps, marshes, bogs, and similar areas. Wetlands do not include those artificial wetlands intentionally created from nonwetland sites, including, but not limited to, irrigation and drainage ditches, grass-lined swales, canals, detention facilities, wastewater treatment facilities, farm ponds, and landscape amenities, or those wetlands created after July 1, 1990, that were unintentionally created as a result of the construction of a road, street, or highway. Wetlands include artificial wetlands created from nonwetland areas to mitigate the conversion of wetlands.
"Wetland mitigation bank"means a site where wetlands are restored, created, or enhanced to mitigate in advance authorized impacts to similar resources.
(Ord. 1592 § 1, 2004; Ord. 2002 § 5 (Exh. C § 1), 2019)