Critical Areas Ordinance

Close-up of creekThe Metropolitan King County Council on October 25, 2004, approved the Critical Areas package: three pieces of legislation that will help protect land in unincorporated King County from flooding and erosion coming from neighboring properties and protect groundwater and wildlife habitat, and ensure that urban areas do their part to protect water quality and wetlands.

Read the final adopted ordinances as Acrobat pdf files:

Ordinance 15051: Critical Areas [261 pgs, 679K pdf]

Attachment A: King County Basin and Shoreline Conditions Map [1.3 MB pdf]

Attachment B: King County Critical Aquifer Recharge Areas Map [2.9 MB pdf]

Ordinance 15052: Stormwater [39 pgs, 125K pdf]

Ordinance 15053: Clearing and Grading [76 pgs, 214K pdf]

Critical Areas include both hazardous areas (such as floodplains and steep slopes) and environmentally sensitive areas (like wetlands and streams). Critical areas also include areas that are important for protecting groundwater. The Stormwater Ordinance sets standards for preventing flooding and erosion that can result from new development and affect neighboring properties. It also includes requirements for preventing pollution of streams, lakes, and other water bodies. The Clearing and Grading Ordinance outlines requirements for preventing erosion from new development, land clearing, and grading. King County has had regulations dealing with critical areas, stormwater, and clearing and grading for more than a decade. These three ordinances amend existing requirements.

The Council made significant changes to the Critical Areas package that was transmitted to the Council for review in early March. Among the key amendments:

Wetland Buffers: Rather than a “one size fits all” approach that applies buffer widths based only on wetland category, the Council adopted an approach that considers both the intensity of land uses around the wetland and on-the-ground habitat conditions. The Council also amended the buffers to ensure that both urban and rural areas do their part to protect wetlands. Buffers for all areas of unincorporated King County use guidance from the Department of Ecology as a starting point. The result is that buffers in the rural area are generally smaller than under the Executive Proposal to reflect the lower density land uses in the rural area. Buffers in the urban area are larger than what is on the books today.

Wetland Mitigation Ratios: When a development impact to a wetland cannot be avoided, mitigation is required. The Council has amended the county’s wetland mitigation ratios to be consistent with guidance from federal and state agencies. This ensures that King County’s requirements are harmonized with federal and state agencies, and that applicants won’t get “caught in the middle” between regulatory agencies.

Clearing Limits: Prior to the adoption of these ordinances, limits on permanent land clearing applied in certain stream basins (including Bear, Issaquah, Soos, May Creek Basins). The Executive Proposal included application of a 35% clearing limit throughout the rural area. Under the amended ordinance adopted by the Council:



Related Information

Summary of Council Review and key changes

Critical Areas Resources

Critical Areas information from Department of Development and Environmental Services