The House Local Government Committee held a
hearing Thursday on HB 2212 and HB 2213, intended to protect agricultural lands
from new restrictions imposed by growth management regulations.
Every person testifying was opposed to these bills.
The bills would require counties to approve farm plans and would allow those
farm plans to be disclosed to the public.
Farm Bureau is opposed to subjecting farm plans to county approval and
disclosure.
As an alternative to these bills, Farm Bureau asked the committee to consider
the content of HB 1931, sponsored by Rep. Brian Blake (D-Aberdeen)
The Ruckelshaus Center is a UW-WSU policy consensus center that is meant to
facilitate resolution of difficult public policy issues.
Environmental and tribal interests, many of whom are pushing for large buffers
by filing lawsuits against local governments, testified that no bill should be
passed and that the Legislature should as the Ruckelshaus Center to discuss the
matter.
Farm Bureau, Cattlemen, Dairy Federation, and others pointed out that the
threat to farms is TODAY.
In 2007 and 2008, counties and cities across the state will update their
critical areas ordinances. During that time, the opponents of protecting farms
from buffers will continue to sue local governments to intimidate them into
adopting large buffers.
Talking alone will not solve the problem.
We’ve had "talk sessions" with the State Wetlands Integration
Strategy (1991-92), the Land Use Study Commission (1996), the Agriculture,
Fish, and Water negotiations (2000-02), and the Growth Management Working Group
(2003-05).
None of those "talk sessions" has resulted in the protection of
agriculture.
However, in 2002 the Legislature adopted HB 2305 -- passed unanimously in the
House -- to protect "legally existing agricultural activities on
agricultural lands" from new regulations under the state Shoreline
Management Act. The bill was sponsored by then-Rep. Brian Hatfield (D-Raymond)
and was signed by Gov. Gary Locke.
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The language in HB 1931 is taken from that provision in the Shoreline
Management Act.
Farm Bureau suggested that the language from HB 1931 be used to replace the
language in HB 2212 and 2213, plus add some parameters for discussions at the
Ruckelshaus Center.
After pointing out that mandated buffers make farmland ineligible for federal
conservation programs, Farm Bureau suggested that the center have specific
goals to:
1. Identify current voluntary and compulsory buffers to
find out just how much is already being done and how much more is needed;
and,
2. Identify specific timelines and goals for the number
of acres reserved in buffers and develop a plan to meet those goals through
voluntary and incentive programs that do not harm the viability of family
farms.
HB 1931, supported by Farm Bureau, is
scheduled for a hearing by the House Agriculture and Natural Resources
Committee at 1:30 p.m. on Monday, Feb. 26 in House Hearing Room B.