Laserfiche WebLink
Kittitas County Shoreline Master Program <br />Chapter 7 141 <br />March 7, 2016 <br />Kittitas County Board of County Commissioners Shoreline Master Program Adopting Ordinance <br />Kittitas County Shoreline Master Program Exhibit A | March 2016 | Page 141 of 339 <br />or damage by erosion. A normal protective bulkhead is not exempt if constructed for <br />the purpose of creating dry land. When a vertical or near vertical wall is being <br />constructed or reconstructed, not more than one (1) cubic yard of fill per one (1) foot <br />of wall may be used as backfill. When an existing bulkhead is being repaired by <br />construction of a vertical wall fronting the existing wall, it shall be constructed no <br />further waterward of the existing bulkhead than is necessary for construction of new <br />footings. When a bulkhead has deteriorated such that an OHWM has been <br />established by the presence and action of water landward of the bulkhead, then the <br />replacement bulkhead must be located at or near the actual OHWM. Bioengineered <br />erosion control projects may be considered a normal protective bulkhead when any <br />structural elements are consistent with the above requirements and when the project <br />has been approved by the Washington State Department of Fish and Wildlife. <br />d. Emergency construction necessary to protect property from damage by the <br />elements. An "emergency" is an unanticipated and imminent threat to public health, <br />safety, or the environment which requires immediate action within a time too short to <br />allow full compliance with this chapter. Emergency construction does not include <br />development of new permanent protective structures where none previously existed. <br />Where new protective structures are deemed by the Administrator to be the <br />appropriate means to address the emergency situation, upon abatement of the <br />emergency situation the new structure shall be removed or any permit which would <br />have been required, absent the emergency, obtained, pursuant to RCW Chapter <br />90.58 and this Master Program. All emergency construction shall be consistent with <br />the policies of RCW Chapter 90.58 and this Master Program. As a general matter, <br />flooding or other seasonal events that can be anticipated and may occur but that are <br />not imminent are not an emergency. <br />e. Construction and practices normal or necessary for farming, irrigation, and ranching <br />activities, including agricultural service roads and utilities on shorelands, <br />construction of a barn or similar agricultural structure, and the construction and <br />maintenance of irrigation structures including, but not limited to, head gates, <br />pumping facilities, and irrigation channels. Provided that a feedlot of any size; all <br />processing plants; other activities of a commercial nature; alteration of the contour of <br />the shorelands by leveling or filling other than that which results from normal <br />cultivation; shall not be considered normal or necessary farming or ranching <br />activities. A feedlot shall be an enclosure or facility used or capable of being used for <br />feeding livestock hay, grain, silage, or other livestock feed, but shall not include land <br />for growing crops or vegetation for livestock feeding and/or grazing, nor shall it <br />include normal livestock wintering operations. See definition of “feedlot” at Section <br />2.37. <br />f. Construction or modification of navigational aids such as channel markers and <br />anchor buoys. <br />g. Construction on shorelands by an owner, lessee or contract purchaser of a single- <br />family residence for their own use or for the use of their family, which residence does <br />not exceed a height of thirty-five (35) feet above average grade level and which <br />meets all requirements of the County, other than requirements imposed pursuant to <br />RCW Chapter 90.58. "Single-family residence" means a detached dwelling designed