Environment

Letter to editor: Black Diamond development will meet newest standards

Let's clear up confusion about YarrowBay plans in the city.

Letter to editor: Black Diamond development will meet newest standards
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by

BrianRoss

Let's clear up confusion about YarrowBay plans in the city.

In response to Robert McClure’s recent series of articles on development  here in Washington, I’d like to clear up some confusion about  YarrowBay’s Master Planned Communities (MPDs) in Black Diamond.

Mr. McClure used our developments as examples in stories about how the current vesting  provisions allow developers to get around land use and environmental  provisions by “vesting” under outdated and less stringent regulations.

That simply is not the case in Black Diamond. These MPD projects were  reviewed under the most recently adopted, state-of-the-art City of Black  Diamond Comprehensive Plan policies and development regulations. The  Comprehensive Plan policies and development regulations that formed the  framework for review of these MPDs are the result of almost twenty years  of legislative decisions. The City of Black Diamond culminated these  years of planning and legislative decisions by updating and amending its  Comprehensive Plan and development regulations in 2009. YarrowBay’s  MPDs are based on Growth Management Act-compliant Comprehensive Plan  policies and development regulations and the developments are not vested  to rules that are “decades old.” For these reasons, reference to the  Black Diamond MPDs within the context of these articles is misplaced.

Additionally, Mr. McClure states that the City of Black Diamond passed  an ordinance that freezes in time restrictions on polluted runoff. This  is simply not true. The Black Diamond MPDs will be built in phases over  the course of many years and the Black Diamond MPD Code clearly states:  “Vesting as to stormwater regulations shall be on a phase by phase  basis.” This means that the entirety of the MPDs is not vested to the City’s stormwater regulations as they exist today. In addition to the City’s code, the City Council imposed many conditions controlling  stormwater from the developed MPD sites.  At YarrowBay’s request, those  conditions included the commitment to incorporating specific new  treatment technologies even if the MPDs would otherwise be vested to a  lower standard. Some might call that an “anti-freeze.”

There is no “freeze” and YarrowBay is not using the state’s vesting laws  to get an unfair break. We are committed to creating responsible  developments that respect the natural environment.

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