HomeMy WebLinkAbout98-013Resolution No. 98-
RESOLUTION OF THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF PORT TOWNSEND
OPPOSING HOUSE BILL 2542 AND SENATE BILL 6619, ALLOWING RURAL
COUNTIES TO OPT-OUT OF GROWTH MANAGEMENT ACT COMPLIANCE,
AND EXPRESSING CITY SUPPORT FOR THE GOALS AND REQUIREMENTS OF
THE GROWTH MANAGEMENT ACT
The City Council of the City of Port Townsend, Washington, resolves as follows:
WHEREAS, the Washington State Legislature enacted the Growth Management Act
(GMA) in 1990, ESHB 2929, with refinements adopted in 1991, RSHB 1025. The GMA was
enacted with broad legislative and public support, as an essential effort to manage the impacts of
growth, and to require the planning and investment in public infrastructure to serve growth and
promote economic development in Washington State; and
WHEREAS, the GMA was enacted in response to demands from Washington citizens
primarily to protect tax payers and rate payers from the financial, traffic and environmental
impacts of sprawling, unplanned growth. Unplanned, sprawling growth creates unanticipated
demands upon water and waste water utilities, road systems, schools, and other public services
required to serve Washington's citizens. Given the limits of local authority and the regional
nature of growth impacts, in enacting the GMA the Legislature clearly understood that local
governments lack to tools to effectively manage growth, plan for necessary infrastructure
investments, and promote economic development, without county-wide and state-wide planning
frameworks; and
WHEREAS, like other cities and counties throughout the State of Washington, Port
Townsend and Jefferson County have been working under State-imposed GMA mandates for
nearly eight years. Port Townsend and Jefferson County have spent a significant amount of public
funds to follow State law and to grapple with the challenging issues and requirements in managing
growth; and
WHEREAS, the basic framework of the GMA recognizes that cities cannot alone plan to
accommodate population growth without the participation of county governments. An essential
component of the GMA is the requirement that cities and counties cooperatively adopt county-
wide planning policies to establish a consistent county-wide framework for city and county growth
management planning. In 1992, Port Townsend and Jefferson County jointly adopted county-wide
planning policies. Based upon a County-wide planning framework, in 1996 Port Townsend
completed its Comprehensive Plan, which has been fully implemented through development
regulations. Jefferson County is working on completion of its Comprehensive Plan, which is
scheduled for adoption in March, 1998; and
Resolution of Port Townsend
Opposing GMA Opt-Out Bills
WHEREAS, HB 2542 and SB 6619 allow "rural" counties to "opt out" of GMA
compliance, without consultation of cities located within such counties. Local governments
throughout the State are now nearly eight years into GMA compliance. With substantial tax-
payer dollars now spent upon GMA compliance, Port Townsend believes that allowing counties
to opt out of the GMA, without the consent of their constituent cities, is extremely inequitable,
amounts to a colossal waste of tax payer dollars, and will saddle cities with the obligation to plan
to accommodate urban growth and make public infrastructure expenditures in anticipation of urban
growth, without the carefully crafted county-wide planning requirements acknowledged through
the GMA as a necessary component of effective local land use and infrastructure planning; and
WHEREAS, the GMA is proving to be a powerful engine throughout the State of
Washington to encourage economic development. The GMA allows new industries and investors
who can bring jobs to communities to examine the strategies adopted by local governments to craft
a forward-looking community vision and local plans to accommodate growth. The GMA requires
local governments to carefully analyze the capacity of roads, water and sewer systems, and other
public services, to accommodate the needs of future growth, and to adopt strategies to ensure that
the infrastructure is available to serve and facilitate economic development; and
WHEREAS, with the vast majority of local governments now complying with the GMA
and beginning to see the economic, fiscal and environmental "returns" of GMA compliance, any
effort by the Legislature now to carve out new legislative exemptions for GMA compliance,
serving only the purposes of non-compliant jurisdictions, would greatly undermine the advances
made throughout the State to encourage economic development and control the negative impacts
of unmanaged and unplanned growth; and
WHEREAS, because cities and their taxpayers bear a great share of the fiscal burden for
infrastructure serving unplanned, sprawling growth outside municipal boundaries, city residents
are directly affected by decisions by counties to "opt out" of GMA compliance. Further, as cities
such as Port Townsend invest in public infrastructure to accommodate projected population
growth, if counties are not required to engage in GMA planning, there is a substantial risk that
cities will "over-invest" in public infrastructure as counties continue to permit sprawling,
unmanaged growth outside city boundaries, without necessary public services such as public water
and waste water systems, schools and roads. This pattern will perpetuate the congested roads,
over-burdened water and wastewater systems, and inadequate schools which caused the Legislature
to enact the GMA in 1990. Therefore, because cities will be directly affected by county "opt-out"
of the GMA, the elected governing bodies of cities must be permitted to consent to GMA "opt-out"
by their county governments; and
WHEREAS, with millions of dollars now expended state-wide on GMA planning
compliance, county "opt-out" of GMA compliance will penalize cities, counties and citizens who
have faithfully complied with State law; and
Resolution of Port Townsend
Opposing GMA Opt-Out Bills
NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED, by the City Council for the City of Port
Townsend that the City of Port Townsend opposes HB 2542 and SB 6619, and any further
legislation proposed during this or future legislative sessions, to allow counties to "opt out" of
compliance with the Growth Management Act without the participation and consent of cities,
approved through the elected legislative bodies of city governments.
APPROVED AND ADOPTED by the City Council of the City of Port Townsend and
signed by the Mayor on this oQ ~ ~ day of /C'e ~ra a r~ , 1998.
JulieycCulloch, 'Mayor
Attest:
Pam Kolacy, City Clerk 0
Approved as to Form: t /
~an, City Attorney
[98- ] CA\tlm§Res{gmaopt.res}
Resolution of Port Townsend
Opposing GMA Opt-Out Bills
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