To read the unofficial
minutes of this meeting,
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The Boundary County Planning and Zoning
Commission held a marathon public hearing
Thursday evening over a proposed "gravel pit" on
District 2 Road and recommended approval of the
zone map amendment it would require. In the end,
despite strong opposition, they unanimously
approved both, subject to conditions and final
approval by county commissioners.
It was a complicated issue
from the beginning.
Kevin McNally, representing
his mother and five brothers and sisters, who
comprise McNally Limited Partnership, had been
taking rock off his 56-acre parcel at the end of
District 2 Road since 1998, when a mudslide took
out much of U.S. 95, District 2 Road and the
Union Pacific Rail line. As his was the only
source of rock available on that side of the
slide, and since he had been working for many
years to improve the main farming and logging
road accessing the partnership's holding, which
includes a 200+ acre parcel to the east, he
allowed the removal of over 35,000 cubic yards
of shot rock and cobble to rebuild the railroad
and District 2 Road.
In the years since, he
continued work on the road in a piecemeal
fashion, a little here, a little there, giving
most of the rock away and selling some of it
here and there when a neighbor came in with a
truck and a way to load it. In 2009, he was
informed by the Idaho Department of Lands that
even though he was building a road, to sell the
rock he had to get a surface mining permit and
file a reclamation plan, which he did, getting
approval for the "River Road Project," confined
to 2 1/2 acres. In 2010, after receiving a
complaint from another pit operator who felt the
competition was unfair, the county informed him
he needed a county special use permit to operate
a commercial pit.
Because he had no intention
of "creating a steady job for myself," he
instead decided just to give away the rock he
needed to widen the 10-foot wide road, one so
narrow and close the to the river, he said, that
if you pulled over in places, with the river on
one side and a cliff on the other, you couldn't
open the door and get out.
Then he was approached by
representatives of the Kootenai Tribe, working
on a major restoration project on the Kootenai
River, a good part of that project to take place
on McNally land. He readily agreed to give them
access through his property, the only access to
the north shore of the river along the braided
reach, where work is set to begin in August.
The problem was, they
needed a 20-foot road, and sent in engineers to
see what it would take to build it. Moving a lot
of rock, they concluded, and in a hurry. They
need the road accessible to their equipment by
August, when the project is set to begin.
Once the river restoration
project is underway, McNally will lose the easy
access to the river enjoyed since his dad bought
the land in 1963, though he will have a better
road. He'll have to put up fences for his
cattle, and drill two wells to provide them
water. What better way to offset that cost, he
thought, than to sell some of the rock the Tribe
might need for the Kootenai River Restoratioin
Project? He made application last fall for a
special use permit to operate a gravel pit.
Then came a Supreme Court
decision, based on a gravel pit approved a few
years ago on the Farm to Market Road near
Porthill. The county special use provision,
which allowed consideration of "any use not
specified as a use by right, permitted use or
conditional use," as being in violation of the
Idaho Land Use Planning Act as the county didn't
tell people what they couldn't do, and
it didn't conditionally allow a gravel
pit.
While trying to figure out
what to do about that, the application was put
on hold at McNally's request and no processing
was done, and no one thought to check the zoning
of the 56-acre parcel. In 1988, McNally well
knew, he'd applied to have a portion of the
family's land rezoned ... that rezone
application went through and allowed the
development of the French Point Subdivision,
which extends down to the north boundary of the
Union Pacific Railroad right-of-way. The south
boundary of the UP line is now the north
boundary of the 56-acre McNally family property.
Recognizing that there was
a need for gravel in the county and that it
could be awhile before the new ordinance being
developed would be adopted, county commissioners
in January amended the esixting zoning ordinance
to list gravel pits as a conditional use in the
agriculture/forestry zone district, and the way
seemed paved for finally beginning to process
the McNally application. Then came another
twist.
The 56 acre parcel on which
the road building project from which the rock
was to be sold, hence the "gravel pit," was
zoned, like the French Point subdivision, rural
residential. He could technically put 56 houses
on the property, even though the property runs
pretty much straight up and down, but not a
gravel pit.
So he had to apply for a
zone map amendment as well, even though the
record showed clearly that it was a county
mistake, undiscovered for 23 years. The deadline
to file an appeal is 20 days. Somehow, when the
description in his application was transferred
to the zoning map, the line was drawn along the
north edge of District 2 Road and then down to
the river instead of along the north boundary of
the railroad, a fair distance to the north. All
these years, McNally had been running cattle,
logging and making hay on "prime" residential
real estate, now overlooked by many beautiful
homes on what actually is prime real estate
along the Kootenai Rim.
Building a private road on
private land in Boundary County is what is
referred to as a "use by right," meaning no
county permit is required. There is nothing in
the ordinance that prevents a person from
blasting rock to cut a road, or to move that
rock to clear the road.
Because of the Kootenai
River restoration project and the permission
McNally gave to allow access through his
property, the road was going in, regardless of
McNally's application, much to the delight of
McNally and people who lease his land, who will
have a much easier job getting to and from the
work they need to do on the 200 acre parcel to
the east, and to Joleene Ries, Spokane, and
members of her family, who've owned a nice
parcel of land east of that 200 acre parcel, who
for 12 years have had to navigate a three-mile
"goat trail" to reach their property each spring
when they come to stay for the summer.
The Boundary County Zoning
and Subdivision Ordinance, until early this
year, didn't make mention of gravel pits or
quarries, as the special use provision allowed
consideration of anything a property owner might
propose, in any zone district, subject to not
one but at least two public hearings, each
requiring the zoning administrator to notify
folks what was going on by publishing a legal
notice in the Bonners Ferry Herald and by
sending all surrounding property owners within
300 feet of property lines a letter giving a
general idea of what their neighbor wanted to do
and where they could go or who they could call
to get the details.
But even with the
amendment, there was no provision for "I'm
improving a road and I need to sell the rock."
The ordinance calls that a
gravel pit. And when people hear those two
words, especially people who've worked their
lives to build a home in a quiet place with
beautiful views, they tend to get concerned, and
it showed in the volume of letters received and
number of people who showed up at Thursday's
public hearing.
What was somewhat
unexpected was that the letters received, with
the exception of one submitted by the applicant
himself attempting to explain his intent, were
unanimously and vehemently opposed, while those
who attended the hearing and got up to speak
were about equally balanced between those who
were in favor of the proposal and those who were
opposed. And by the end of a nearly five hour
public hearing, even some of those who'd written
vehement letters against recognized the logic of
the proposal and withdrew their objections.
"I was against this
proposal when I came to this hearing," one
French Point Drive resident said, "but now that
I understand what's going on, I withdraw my
objection. If this isn't going to be a gravel
pit, I have no problem with the proposal."
Some remained opposed, but
questioned the process.
"I have no opposition to
what Mr. McNally says he wants to do," another
French Point Drive resident said, "but how do we
know the limits?"
"Once he has the right to
put a gravel pit in," said another, "we'll never
have the ability to stop it."
Members of the planning and
zoning commission determined otherwise, setting
terms and conditions that, if violated, could
result in the revocation of the permit as well
as legal prosecution that could lead to as much
as six months in jail and a $1,000 fine.
"If you choose to approve
this application and don't set terms and
conditions," zoning administrator Mike Weland
advised, "their concerns are correct, there is
nothing in this application to limit what the
applicant can do. If you choose to approve this
permit, I strongly suggest that you do establish
clear and definable conditions. Once approved,
the conditional use permit becomes the
controlling document on uses allowed on this
piece of land, and violation of the terms and
conditions on this permit is a violation of the
Boundary County Zoning and Subdivision
ordinance, and subject to enforcement."
After much consideration
and discussion, the P&Z commission approved the
application with the conditions that there be no
crushing, no blasting after work on the road
right of way is complete. The pit can only
operate from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. Monday through
Friday, and excavation is limited in scope and
area to that allowed by the Idaho Department of
Lands surface mining permit for the River Road
Project, an area of about 2 1/2 acres.
Excavation is limited as well to the duration of
the Kootenai River Restoration project plus one
year, and following the end of the allowed
excavation period, sale and removal of
stockpiled material is limited to 10,000 cubic
yards until that material is gone.
In addition, copies of the
IDL permit and reclamation plan are to be
provided the administrator for inclusion as part
of the public record for this application, to be
made available for review by anyone who has a
concern.
To take effect, the zone
map amendment portion of the application must be
approved by county commissioners following
another public hearing; the date of that hearing
has yet to be scheduled.
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