“Aquifer recharge areas”means an area with a critical recharging effect on aquifers used for potable water where an aquifer that is a source of drinking water is vulnerable to contamination that would affect the potability of the water.
“Best available science”means the current scientific information used in the process to designate, protect, or restore critical areas, that is derived from a valid scientific process as defined by WAC
365-195-900 through
365-195-925; for when used within the SMP, the most current, accurate, and complete scientific and technical information available (WAC
173-26-201(2)(a)).
“Best management practices (BMPs)”means conservation practices or systems of practices and management measures that:
(1) Control soil loss and reduce water quality degradation caused by nutrients, animal waste, toxins, and sediment.
(2) Minimize adverse impacts to surface water and ground water flow, circulation pattern, and to the chemical, physical, and biological characteristics of waters, wetlands, and other fish and wildlife habitats.
(3) Control site runoff, spillage or leaks, sludge or water disposal, or drainage from raw material.
“Critical areas”include the following areas and ecosystems, as designated by the city of Omak: wetlands; areas with a critical recharging effect on aquifers used for potable water; aquatic, riparian, upland and wetland fish and wildlife habitat conservation areas; frequently flooded areas; channel migration zones; and geologically hazardous areas.
“Critical areas report”means a report prepared by a qualified professional required by the city that inventories and analyzes the development impacts of a proposed action on a critical area.
“Fish and wildlife habitat conservation areas”means the habitats of priority species, priority habitats, and habitats of local importance for fish and wildlife that include a seasonal range or habitat element with which a given species has a primary association, and which, if altered, may reduce the likelihood that the species will maintain and reproduce over the long term. These might include areas of high relative density or species richness, breeding habitat, winter range, movement corridors, and areas of limited availability or high vulnerability to alteration, such as cliffs, talus, and wetlands.
“Frequently flooded areas”means lands in the flood-plain subject to a one percent or greater chance of flooding in any given year, and includes but is not limited to streams, rivers, lakes, coastal areas, wetlands and the like.
“Function”means the beneficial roles served by critical areas including, but not limited to, water quality protection and enhancement; fish and wildlife habitat; food chain support; flood storage, conveyance and attenuation; groundwater recharge and discharge; erosion control; and aesthetic value protection and recreation.
“Geologically hazardous areas”means:
(1) Any area designated as a geologically hazardous area by the local government with jurisdiction; or
(2) Any other area that is not suited to siting commercial, residential, or industrial development consistent with public health or safety concerns, because of the area’s susceptibility to erosion, sliding, earthquake, or other geological events, including but not limited to:
(B) Erosion hazard areas: areas that contain soil types, according to Soil Conservation Service’s soil classification system, that may experience severe to very severe erosion;
(C) Landslide hazard areas: areas that have the potential of risk of mass movement resulting from a combination of geologic, topographic, and hydrologic factors;
(D) Seismic hazard areas: areas that are subject to severe risk of damage as a result of earthquake-induced ground shaking, slope failure, settlement, or soil liquefaction;
(E) Mine hazard areas: areas that are directly underlain by, adjacent to, or affected by mine workings such as adits, tunnels, drifts, or air shafts;
(F) Volcanic hazard areas: areas subject to pyroclastic flows, lava flows, and inundation by debris flows, mud flows, or related flooding resulting from volcanic activity.
“Mine hazard areas”means areas underlain by, adjacent to, or affected by, mine workings such as adits, gangways, tunnels, drifts or air shafts.
“Mitigation”means avoiding, minimizing, rectifying, reducing, compensating for, and/or monitoring an impact as defined in Washington State’s SMP rules, WAC
173-26-201(2)(e).
“Priority habitat”means a habitat type with unique or significant value to one or more species and designated as priority habitat by the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife.
“Qualified professional”means a person with experience and training in the pertinent scientific discipline, and who is a qualified scientific expert with expertise appropriate for the relevant critical area subject in accordance with WAC
365-195-905(4). A qualified professional will have obtained a B.S. or B.A. or equivalent degree in biology, engineering, environmental studies, fisheries, geomorphology or related field, and have at least two years of related work experience. A geologist must have a state license.
“Resource lands”means agricultural, mineral, and forest lands that have long-term commercial significance with regard to growing capacity, productivity, and soil composition, in consideration with the land’s proximity to population areas, and the possibility of more intense use of the land.
“Restoration”means improving, enhancing or re-establishing a once viable and now degraded critical area to a state in which its stability functions and values approach its unaltered state.
“Riparian area”means those transitional areas between terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems and are distinguished by gradients in biophysical conditions, ecological processes, and biota. They are areas through which surface and subsurface hydrology connect water bodies with their adjacent uplands. They include those portions of terrestrial ecosystems that significantly influence exchanges of energy and matter with aquatic ecosystems (i.e., a zone of influence). Riparian areas are adjacent to perennial, intermittent, and ephemeral (with existing riparian vegetation) streams, lakes, and estuarine-marine shorelines.
“Seismic hazard areas”means areas subject to severe risk of damage as a result of earthquake-induced ground shaking, slope failure, settlement, or soil liquefaction.
“Wetlands”means areas that are inundated or saturated by surface water or ground water 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 may include those artificial wetlands intentionally created from nonwetland areas to mitigate the conversion of wetlands.
(Ord. 1776 § 8, 2014)