“A”
“Accessory utility”means local transmission and collection lines, pipes, and conductors associated with water, sewer, gas, telephone, cable TV, or similar utilities, or with irrigation systems, and other similar facilities intended to serve a development or an individual use, including access roads and appurtenant structures necessary to facilitate the utility use.
“Act”means Shoreline Management Act of 1971, Chapter
90.58 RCW, as amended.
“Agricultural equipment” and “agricultural facilities”include, but are not limited to: (a) the following used in agricultural operations: equipment; machinery; constructed shelters, buildings, and ponds; fences; upland fin-fish-rearing facilities; water diversion, withdrawal, conveyance, and use equipment and facilities including, but not limited to, pumps, pipes, taps, canals, ditches, and drains; (b) corridors and facilities for transporting personnel, livestock, and equipment to, from, and within agricultural lands; (c) farm residences and associated equipment, lands, and facilities; and (d) roadside stands and on-farm markets for marketing fruit or vegetables.
“Agricultural land”means those specific land areas on which agriculture activities are conducted as of the date of adoption of this chapter pursuant to these guidelines as evidenced by aerial photography or other documentation.
“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 twenty years of planting; and livestock including both the animals themselves and animal products including, but not limited to, meat, upland finfish, poultry and poultry products, and dairy products.
“Animal feeding operation” or “AFO”means a lot or facility (other than an aquatic animal production facility) where the following conditions are met:
(a) Animals (other than aquatic animals) have been, are, or will be stabled or confined and fed or maintained for a total of forty-five days or more in any twelve-month period, and crops, vegetation forage growth, or post-harvest residues are not sustained in the normal growing season over any portion of the lot or facility.
“Appurtenance”means development that is necessarily connected to the use and enjoyment of single-family residences and is located landward of the OHWM and/or the perimeter of a wetland. Appurtenances include a garage, deck, driveway, utilities, fences, installation of a septic tank and drainfield and grading which do not exceed the threshold established in local SEPA or building regulations, whichever is less, and which do not involve placement of fill in any wetland, floodway, flood-plain or waterward of the ordinary high-water mark.
“Aquaculture”is the farming of aquatic organisms including fish, mollusks, crustaceans and aquatic plants. Farming implies some sort of intervention in the rearing process to enhance production, such as regular stocking, feeding, protection from predators and so forth.
“Archaeological resource/site”means archaeological and historic resources that are either recorded at the State Historic Preservation Office and/or by local jurisdictions or have been inadvertently uncovered, are located on city of Omak shorelands and including, but not limited to, submerged and submersible lands and the bed of the rivers within the state’s jurisdiction, that contain archaeological objects. Archaeological sites located both in and outside shoreline jurisdiction are subject to Chapters
27.44 (Indian Graves and Records) and
27.53 RCW (Archaeological Sites and Records) and development or uses that may impact such sites shall comply with Chapter
25-48 WAC as well as the provisions of this chapter. “Significant” is that quality in American history, architecture, archaeology, engineering, and culture that is present in districts, sites, buildings, structures, and objects that possess integrity of location, design, setting, materials, work-manship, feeling, and association, and:
(a) That are associated with events that have made a significant contribution to the broad patterns of our history; or
(b) That are associated with the lives of significant persons in our past; or
(c) That embody the distinctive characteristics of a type, period or method of construction, or that represent the work of a master, or that possess high artistic values, or that represent a significant and distinguishable entity whose components may lack individual distinction; or
(d) That have yielded, or may be likely to yield, information important in history or prehistory.
“Associated wetlands”is synonymous with “wetlands” or “wetland areas” and means wetlands that are in proximity to lakes, rivers or streams that are subject to the SMA and either influence or are influenced by such waters. Factors used to determine proximity and influence include, but are not limited to: location contiguous to a shoreline water body, formation by tidally influenced geohydraulic processes, presence of a surface connection including through a culvert or tide gate, location in part or whole within the floodplain of a shoreline, periodic inundation, and/or hydraulic continuity.
“Average grade level”means the average of 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; provided, that in the case of structures to be built over water, average grade level shall be the elevation of ordinary high water. Calculation of the average grade level shall be made by averaging the ground elevations at the center of all exterior walls of the proposed building or structure.