Washington's Shoreline Management Act (RCW 90.58) requires Shoreline Substantial Development Permits for most construction within 200 feet of marine and freshwater shorelines statewide.
RCW 90.58 establishes that any development with fair market value over $8,504 (adjusted periodically) within 200 feet of the ordinary high water mark of marine waters, lakes 20+ acres, and streams over 20 cfs requires a Shoreline Substantial Development Permit. Cities and counties administer the program through locally-adopted Shoreline Master Programs that must be approved by the Department of Ecology. Conditional uses and variances require Ecology approval. Certain activities including normal maintenance and single-family residence construction may qualify for exemptions but still require shoreline review. The Coastal Zone Management Act federal consistency review applies to coastal counties.
Unpermitted shoreline development can result in stop-work orders, civil penalties up to $1,000 per day under RCW 90.58.210, mandatory restoration, and criminal misdemeanor charges.
Other ordinances people look up for this city. Green dot = verified primary-source excerpt.
Kennewick, WA
Industrial-source noise crossing into Kennewick residential neighborhoods is capped by WAC 173-60-040 at 60 dBA during the day and 50 dBA between 10:00 p.m. ...
Kennewick, WA
Motor vehicle noise on Kennewick streets is governed by the statewide motor vehicle noise performance standards in WAC Chapter 173-62, which set in-use sound...
Kennewick, WA
Tri-Cities Airport (KPSC) is operated by the Port of Pasco and sits across the Columbia River in Franklin County, not Kennewick. Aircraft noise in Kennewick ...
Kennewick, WA
Amplified music in Kennewick is regulated under the Kennewick Municipal Code's public-disturbance noise provisions, which treat amplified sound that is plain...
Kennewick, WA
Kennewick has not codified a gas leaf blower ban, a decibel cap specific to leaf blowers, or restricted hours of operation. Use is governed by the general pu...
Kennewick, WA
Persistent or habitual barking, howling, or other animal noise that disturbs the peace is regulated as a public-disturbance noise nuisance under the Kennewic...
See how Kennewick's coastal development rules stack up against other locations.
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