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Ordinance amendment could
negatively impact wetlands
By Joe
Naiman
The Alpine Sun
ALPINE — The San Diego County Board of
Supervisors approved changes to the county’s Resource Protection
Ordinance and the county’s Subdivision Ordinance.
The introduction and first reading of the ordinance
amendments took place Feb. 28, and the amendments returned to the
supervisors March 21 for a second reading and adoption. The changes
will be effective April 20.
“The proposed changes in the RPO and the Subdivision
Ordinance were really largely cleanup issues that we had,” said
Department of Planning and Land Use project manager Jeff Murphy.
The supervisors also adopted an environmental Negative
Declaration for the ordinance changes themselves, although an
Environmental Impact Report or a Mitigated Negative Declaration may be
necessary for particular projects. The Negative Declaration for the
ordinance changes was advertised for a 30-day public review period in
August and September, and county staff determined that the changes
would not have a significant effect on the environment.
Many of the relaxations to the Resource Protection Ordinance involve
the definition of a wetland for man-made water sources.
“They do not have significant habitat value,” Murphy
said.
Jack Phillips, the chair of the Valle de Oro Community
Planning Group, had a different opinion. “They’re changing the
Resource Protection Ordinance so that it no longer prohibits grading
and building structures in wetlands,” he said.
The “no touch” rule of the existing ordinance prohibits
impacts to wetlands, which are located within man-made conveyance
systems such as culverts, ditches, and agricultural ponds, even if
those wetlands are small in scale and have negligible biological
value. The no-touch rule also prohibits impacts to wetlands on lands
that have been degraded by past activities to the point where they no
longer have significant wetland-dependent species.
The amendments will eliminate the no-touch rule for
man-made systems if specific findings about their lack of biological
function and value are made, although impacts to those areas may still
require mitigation under the California Environmental Quality Act and
other state and Federal regulations. Another change exempts from the
definition of a wetland an ephemeral or perennial stream whose
substratum is predominantly non-soil with a tributary drainage area of
under 100 acres.
The current ordinance only requires wetland buffers of
an appropriate size to protect habitat resources but does not include
minimum or maximum buffer widths. The changes create width parameters
of 50 to 200 feet from the edge of a wetland based on functional
habitat values and importance in supporting the wetland and upland
biological community. The amendment also stipulates that if oak
woodland is adjacent to the wetland the entirety of the habitat, up to
200 feet in width, be part of the buffer.
Factors to be considered by county staff in determining
buffer width include existence of hydrophytic vegetation, condition of
the existing wetland, whether the wetland or buffer serves a wildlife
corridor, existence of sensitive species, and the condition of the
wetland upstream or downstream.
The new language also allows for the removal of
diseased plants, habitat restoration, and crossings for roads,
driveways, and trails and pathways. Any road crossing must meet
requirements including the lack of a feasible alternative which avoids
the wetland, location and design causing the least impact, an analysis
of whether the crossing could feasibly serve adjoining properties and
thus minimize the number of additional crossings, and mitigation of at
least three acres to every one acre impacted including a minimum 1:1
creation ratio.
That wasn’t pleasing to Phillips. “You can no longer
use the Resource Protection Ordinance to protect a wetland from having
a road built through it,” he said.
Phillips took issue with the definition of “feasible.”
“They added a whole new definition,” he said. “It can mean
economically feasible.”
Phillips explained that economic reasons could be used
as an excuse for disturbance. “Economic feasibility is now an issue in
the Resource Protection Ordinance,” he said. “If it isn’t economically
feasible then they can take the resource.”
The amendments allow for the elimination of artificial
transient water sources, such as agricultural water runoff, which
create and sustain wetlands. The current ordinance prohibits any
impact to the wetland area, but the changes allow a transient water
source to be discontinued if the impacts are mitigated at a ratio of
at least 3:1.
“This is really a serious step backwards on resource
protection,” Phillips said. “This is the kind of thing that evolves
and continues to evolve to the point where you end up with the Los
Angeles River like it is.”
Another amendment limits the definition of pre-historic
or historic sites to formally-designated sites or locally unique
cultural resources.
Enforcement authorization included under the amendments
allows the director of the Department of Planning and Land Use to
enforce all provisions and to order work to be stopped and corrections
to be made if a violation is determined to have occurred.
The amendments allow County Counsel to commence
abatement or enjoinment procedures, allow for administrative citations
and judicial injunctions of declatory relief, and allow the director
of the DPLU to impose time deadlines for restoration activities. The
maximum fine per violation is increased from $1,000 to $2,500, and
cost recovery to the county and restitution to third parties is now
authorized.
Changes to the Subdivision Ordinance language on
structural improvements for apartments converted to condominiums
include requiring that evidence be provided to show that the complex
was originally constructed with approved building permits.
Specifically-referenced codes have been replaced with a stipulation
that the structure must comply with the building, plumbing,
electrical, and mechanical codes in effect at the time of
construction.
The Subdivision Ordinance amendments also exempt from
public road standards any private road ending in a cul-de-sac and not
planned to connect to another public road if that road would serve an
average daily traffic volume of fewer than 100 vehicles; the road
easement would still be required to be at least 40 feet in width but
not subject to the right-of-way width requirements. The director of
the county’s Department of Public Works can now require that roads
meeting private road standards be dedicated for public use and
maintained by a Permanent Road Division zone.
The new ordinance also requires an analysis of the
feasibility and practicality of extending on-site roads to a
subdivision boundary so that they connect with from adjacent parcels
or existing public roads.
Phillips cited the combined effect of the extension
requirement with the Resource Protection Ordinance modification of
roads crossing wetlands. “With this requirement there will be no
stopping extending the roads to the property line because there’s a
wetland there,” he said.
Extension of public water supply facilities adequate to
serve a subdivision will be required if the subdivision is within a
water district’s sphere of influence and the main lines of the
existing potable water supply are within 500 feet of that subdivision
or if the sub-divider has proposed the use of a public water supply to
serve the subdivision.
Changes on boundary adjustment applications make the
review process consistent with other discretionary permit processes
and replace specific information requirements with a stipulation to
provide data specified by the Department of Planning and Land Use
director.
Campo resident Michael Thometz, who had expressed
concerns about the changes at Planning Commission hearings, was
supportive of the changes at the Board of Supervisors meeting. “It’s
okay. It’s not perfect, but it’s better than it was,” Thometz said.
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