Showing ordinances that apply to Lake Holm, WA
Lake Holm is an unincorporated community (population 3,430) in King County, Washington. Because Lake Holm is not an incorporated city, it does not have its own municipal code. Instead, King County ordinances apply directly to properties here. The snow & sidewalk clearing rules below are the ones that govern your area.
Unincorporated King County does not mandate residential sidewalk snow and ice removal. King County Road Services plows and treats county roads by priority route. Residents are encouraged but not required to clear sidewalks abutting their property.
Unlike some cities within King County (Seattle requires property owners to clear sidewalks of snow and ice within specified hours), unincorporated King County does not impose a legal duty on residents to clear snow and ice from public sidewalks abutting their property. The King County Road Services Division handles snow removal on county roads on a priority basis: arterial and primary roads first, then secondary roads; local residential streets receive lower priority and may not be plowed in light to moderate snowfalls. Road Services applies deicer (typically magnesium chloride brine or salt) on major routes as storms approach. For residents, sidewalk clearing is encouraged as a neighbor-friendly practice but is not enforced. However, Washington common law (premises liability under RCW 4.24) may still create civil exposure: property owners who create a more hazardous condition by their actions (for example, shoveling a path and letting meltwater refreeze) may face liability to an injured pedestrian. In incorporated cities like Seattle, Bellevue, Kirkland, and Redmond, local ordinances do require snow clearing, so residents should check their specific city code. For winter preparedness, King County Road Services issues storm advisories and publishes a snow and ice response plan showing priority routes. Residents are responsible for their own driveways and culverts.
No direct county enforcement action for un-cleared residential sidewalks in unincorporated King County. Civil liability may still attach under tort law if an injured pedestrian proves the property owner created or worsened the hazard. Blocking a county plow or damaging road assets (mailboxes placed too close) can trigger separate code action.
See how Lake Holm's snow & sidewalk clearing rules stack up against other locations.
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