Chapter 17.71
AGRICULTURAL MITIGATION

Sections:

17.71.010    Urban/agricultural conflict mitigation.

17.71.100    Purpose.

17.71.200    Definitions.

17.71.300    Description of impacts requiring mitigation.

17.71.400    Application steps.

17.71.500    Mitigation standards.

17.71.600    Deviations.

17.71.010 Urban/agricultural conflict mitigation.

The regulations in this chapter apply to urban land in the urban growth boundary that was added from the urban reserve shown in the regional plan element of the comprehensive plan. The basis for these regulations can be found in the Greater Bear Creek Valley Regional Problem-Solving Plan (Regional Plan), Volume II, Appendix III. (Ord. 1964 §5, Exh. D (part), 2012).

17.71.100 Purpose.

The purpose of these standards is to mitigate the potential for conflict between farming activities and urban uses. These provisions implement a policy mutually adopted by the city and Jackson County in the regional plan. The mitigation provisions of this chapter seek to achieve the following objectives:

A. Minimize the impacts of urban development on agricultural production activities.

B. Minimize the potential for complaints about agricultural practices and activities.

C. Ensure the continued use of agricultural land for agricultural uses.

D. Minimize potential conflict by developing a well-defined boundary between agricultural and urban uses. The best boundary will be one that minimizes conflict in both directions. (Ord. 1964 §5, Exh. D (part), 2012).

17.71.200 Definitions.

The following definitions apply only to this chapter:

A. Agricultural Land Uses. The use of land for the cultivation and husbandry of plant and animal products, including agricultural activities permitted on land zoned exclusive farm use (EFU).

1. Classification, Agricultural.

a. Intensive Use (I). The agricultural lands in this category:

i. Are composed of Class I through IV agricultural soils; or

ii. Support existing or scheduled plantings of long-term crops with a height at maturity exceeding four feet.

b. Passive Use (P). The agricultural lands in this category:

i. Are composed of predominantly Class IV soils, can demonstrate an unbroken or essentially unbroken twenty-five-year history of agricultural inactivity or grazing use, and which have either of the following: (1) greater than fifty percent hydric soils, or (2) greater than fifty percent shallow soils (surface to bedrock) of less than two feet in depth; or

ii. Are composed of greater than fifty percent of Class VI or poorer soil; or

iii. Are outside of an irrigation district’s boundary and outside of areas suitable for future expansion of a district, as determined by the district.

B. Mitigation Area. A management zone of varying size, shape, and characteristics between different land uses that uses combinations of mitigation elements to buffer between agricultural land and urban land uses.

C. Mitigation Element. A physical or legal feature within a mitigation area that mitigates an adverse impact. A mitigation element may consist of vegetation, transportation and utility corridors, natural barriers, deed restrictions, or other natural or manmade features.

D. Spray Drift. The airborne movement of agricultural chemicals onto a nontarget area.

E. Urban Receptor, Sensitivity Of.

1. Urban Receptor, Higher-Sensitivity (H).

a. Residential use.

b. Motel, hotel, or hostel.

c. Place of worship; public meeting facility.

d. Child care center, kindergarten, school, university, or other educational institution.

e. Medical center or hospital.

f. Public or quasi-public use, such as library, park, etc.

g. Other similar uses.

2. Urban Receptor, Lower-Sensitivity (L).

a. Commercial use, except for any defined as higher-sensitivity urban receptor.

b. Industrial use.

c. All other uses not classified here. (Ord. 1964 §5, Exh. D (part), 2012).

17.71.300 Description of impacts requiring mitigation.

A. Spray Drift. Principally, spray drift is caused by agricultural chemical use, but can apply to urban use of agrochemicals. Separation between urban and agricultural uses is the preferred tool to mitigate the impact of the spray drift, employing either large setbacks or a combination of smaller setbacks and a tree buffer.

B. Trespass and Vandalism. Trespass and vandalism are often considered by farmers to be the most serious adverse potential impact to agricultural operations in proximity to urban areas. Climb-resistant, trespass-inhibiting fences and/or hedges in the mitigation area are the means of reducing these impacts, as is placing the buffer in individual ownership (such as larger urban lots with strict setback requirements).

C. Odor. Odor is one of the less important agriculture-related adverse impacts. Unless there are site-specific reasons why mitigation of odor is critical (such as the presence of a livestock feed lot), issues with odor are sufficiently addressed by requiring that owners of new urban development within one thousand feet of agricultural land receive notice through an explicitly worded deed declaration of the potential adverse impacts to which they will likely be exposed as a result of living within one thousand feet of agricultural land.

D. Dust, Smoke, and Ash. Like odor, this grouping of potential adverse impacts is one of the least important agriculture-related issues in the region, and, like odor, can be addressed by the use of a deed declaration.

E. Runoff. Stormwater and irrigation runoff arise from both urban and agricultural uses, and can adversely impact agricultural operations as well as urban health and livability. Impacts may be avoided or significantly reduced by employing erosion-prevention and erosion-control measures during construction, and by an adequate stormwater plan for urban development that takes into account impacts from and on the adjacent agricultural land.

F. Noise. Noise is an impact arising from agricultural operations. This chapter contains no noise mitigation requirements, but applicants are encouraged to consider community design and construction practices that provide some level of noise mitigation. Recommended methods may be found in Appendix III of the regional plan. (Ord. 1964 §5, Exh. D (part), 2012).

17.71.400 Application steps.

A. Applicability.

1. The provisions of this chapter apply to the development permit applications and their associated review procedures per Chapter 17.05, Table 17.05.1, Summary of Approvals by Type of Review Procedure, listed below where the land proposed for urban development is within the initial boundaries of urban reserve established in the regional plan element and abuts other land zoned exclusive farm use (EFU):

a. Land division (partition and subdivision tentative plans only);

b. Planned unit development;

c. Conditional use permit;

d. Site plan and architectural review.

2. A pre-application conference is required for all applications subject to the provisions of subsection (A)(1) of this section.

3. Different degrees of mitigation are required of the applicant based on the following factors: the sensitivity of the adjoining urban use to agricultural impacts, the impact being buffered, the intensity of uses on the adjacent EFU land, and whether the mitigation area is to be mid- or long-term.

4. Mitigation elements established under this chapter shall not be removed or reduced unless the adjacent EFU land changes to a nonagricultural zoning district.

B. Application--Agricultural Impact Assessment Report. As part of any land use or development application listed in subsection A of this section where the agricultural mitigation standards in Section 17.71.500 apply, an applicant shall supply the community development department with a report entitled “agricultural impact assessment report” (AIAR). The purpose of the AIAR is to provide the approving authority with sufficient evidence to determine agricultural intensity (active or passive) and to evaluate the applicant’s proposed method of complying with the provisions of this chapter.

1. Map showing the zoning of land adjacent and within two hundred feet of the property proposed for urban development.

2. A description of the type and nature of agricultural uses and farming practices, if any, which presently occur on adjacent lands zoned EFU and sources of such information. The information thus required, if applicable, shall include:

a. Method of irrigation.

b. Type of existing agricultural product produced or scheduled plantings within one year of projected development completion date.

c. Types of agricultural production and practices for the five preceding years.

d. Method of frost protection.

e. Type of agricultural equipment customarily used on the property.

3. Detailed information obtained from the Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) concerning soils which occur on adjacent lands zoned EFU, and whether the land has access to water for irrigation.

4. Wind pattern information.

5. A description of the measures proposed to comply with the requirements of subsection D of this section.

6. The persons who prepared said report and all persons, agencies, and organizations contacted during preparation of the report.

7. All statements shall be documented, sources given as reference, and any other detailed information needed to substantiate conclusions should be provided in the appendices.

8. If the applicant is requesting a deviation from the standards of this chapter, the agricultural impact assessment report shall not be deemed to be complete unless accompanied by the conflict assessment and mitigation study described in Section 17.71.600 and the recommendation of Jackson County’s agricultural buffering committee, or a letter from Jackson County indicating that no such recommendation is forthcoming.

C. Review Process.

1. Using the definitions of these classifications herein and the evidence of the AIAR, the approving authority shall determine:

a. Whether adjacent agricultural uses are intensive or passive at the time the urban development application is filed and accepted by the city; and

b. Whether the applicant’s proposed mitigation plan meets the standards of Section 17.71.500.

2. The approving authority shall approve, approve with conditions, or deny the AIAR and its proposals and conclusions.

D. Mitigation Requirements.

1. All mitigation elements will be sited on urban land unless arrangements have been made with the adjacent agricultural land owner to site some or all elements on agricultural land.

2. Mitigation for Intensive Agriculture. To minimize or mitigate the potential adverse impacts associated with the proximity of urban and agricultural land uses, the following measures shall be undertaken by the applicant when urban development is proposed adjacent to land which is in intensive agricultural use:

a. Setbacks as illustrated in Section 17.71.500, Figure 1, either alone or in conjunction with a tree buffer;

b. Tree buffer as illustrated in Figure 1 and described in Sections 17.71.500(B) and (C);

c. Screening shrubs (only in conjunction with a tree buffer) as described in Section 17.71.500(D);

d. Trespass-inhibiting hedges/fencing as described in Section 17.71.500(E);

e. Deed Declaration. All urban land proposed for development which lies within one thousand feet of an EFU zoning district boundary shall be subject to a deed declaration that requires the owners and all successors in interest to recognize and accept common, customary and accepted farming practices which may produce noise, dust, odors, and other impacts. The deed declaration shall be in a form approved by the city. After the deed declaration is signed it shall be recorded in the official records of Jackson County, and copies shall be mailed to the owners of adjacent agricultural lands zoned EFU;

f. Maintenance Program. Land adjacent to an EFU zoning district boundary shall be subject to a restrictive covenant that provides that the perpetual maintenance of mitigation-related fencing, the perpetual horticultural care and maintenance of trees, shrubs, and hedges that are used for mitigation, and the maintenance of other mitigation elements shall be solely the responsibility of the owners and all successors in interest of property subject to the covenant. The covenant shall be in a form approved by the city. After the covenant is signed it will be recorded in the official records of Jackson County;

g. Runoff. Measures appropriate to the circumstances present shall be undertaken by the applicant to mitigate adverse impacts which occur from periodic naturally occurring runoff and inadvertent agricultural irrigation runoff.

3. Mitigation for Passive Agriculture. To minimize or mitigate the potential adverse impacts associated with the proximity of urban and agricultural land uses, the following measures shall be undertaken by the applicant when urban development is proposed adjacent to land in passive agricultural use:

a. Setbacks as illustrated in Section 17.71.500(A), Figure 1, either alone or in conjunction with a tree buffer;

b. Tree buffer as illustrated in Figure 1 and described in Sections 17.71.500(B) and (C);

c. Screening shrubs (only in conjunction with a tree buffer) as described in Section 17.71.500(D);

d. Trespass-inhibiting hedges/fencing as described in Section 17.71.500(E);

e. Deed Declaration. A deed declaration as described in subsection (D)(2)(e) of this section;

f. Maintenance Program. A restrictive covenant guaranteeing perpetual maintenance as described in subsection (D)(2)(f) of this section;

g. Runoff. Measures as described in subsection (D)(2)(g) of this section.

E. Alteration or Removal of Mitigation Measures. The mitigation measures required by the approving authority may be altered or removed entirely when the zoning of the adjacent agricultural land is changed from EFU zoning. No alteration or removal of the mitigation elements shall cause the removal of fencing or landscaping which is required to meet other buffering or landscaping requirements. (Ord. 1964 §5, Exh. D (part), 2012).

17.71.500 Mitigation standards.

A. Illustration of Tree Buffer/Setback Combination Options.

1. Figure 1 illustrates the tree buffer/setback combination options for applicants.

a. The “tree” symbol illustrates the number of rows required under each option.

b. Minimum structure setbacks are represented by the “structure” symbol ranged along a linear scale showing distance from the urban/agricultural boundary. Setbacks apply to any structure. Setbacks do not apply to eaves or similar structural elements.

2. Figure 1 does not depict screening shrubs; however, that element is required when a tree-based buffer is used and when the tree species in the first row on the agricultural side will not provide sufficient foliage cover to ground level.

3. Key to abbreviations used in the Figure:

I

Intensive use agricultural land

P

Passive use agricultural land

H

Higher-sensitivity urban receptor

L

Lower-sensitivity urban receptor

4. The letter pairs “I/H,” “I/L,” “P/H,” and “P/L” indicate the types of agricultural/urban adjacencies that determine the extent and make-up of the tree buffer and setback elements. The options shown under each adjacency type may be used at the discretion of the applicant.

5. Where there is a mix of urban uses, the buffer design shall protect the most sensitive use among them.

B. Tree Buffers.

1. Three-Row Buffer (As Required for I/H, Option 1). Depending on the species used, the minimum possible tree buffer width is fifty feet; the maximum is one hundred feet. The buffer shall be composed of at least two different conifer species.

2. Two-Row Buffer (As Required for I/L, Option 1, and P/H, Option 1). Depending on the species used, the minimum possible planted buffer width is approximately forty feet; the maximum is approximately sixty-five feet. The buffer shall be composed of at least two different conifer species.

3. Row Spacing and Offset. The purpose of the row-by-row offset is to mitigate the effect of individual tree mortality and to compensate for the individual differences between trees.

a. Three-Row Buffer.

i. Offset. Set off the second row by one-third the spacing distance of trees (ST) in the first row; set off the third row by another third. Refer to Figure 2 for clarification.

ii. Spacing of Rows. The distance between rows will be determined using the following formula, where SR is the spacing distance between rows, D1 is the widest foliage diameter of the tree species in one row when it reaches a height of thirty feet, and D2 is the widest foliage diameter of the tree species in the next row when it reaches a height of thirty feet:

SR = 0.5(D1 + D2) + 4

b. Two-Row Buffer.

i. Offset. Set off the second row by half the spacing distance of trees (ST) in the first row. Refer to Figure 3 for clarification.

ii. Spacing of Rows. Use the same formula as for three-row buffers, above.

 

Table 1. Calculation of Tree Spacing within Rows for Narrow- and Broad-Diameter Trees

 

Higher-Intensity Buffer

Lower-Intensity Buffer

 

Narrow ST =

Broad ST =

Narrow ST =

Broad ST =

Single-Species Row

1.25D

1.1D

0.95D

0.8D

Two-Species Row

0.625(D1 + D2)

0.55(D1 + D2)

0.475(D1 + D2)

0.4(D1 + D2)

D = Typical foliar diameter of a tree species when thirty feet tall. The diameter is measured at the widest extent of a pyramidal conifer.

ST = Tree spacing within rows; calculated as a multiple of tree diameter.

Note: When planting more than two species in a row, use the two species with the widest diameters to calculate spacing.

4. Tree Spacing within Rows. Tree spacing within a row is based on the greatest foliar diameter of a given tree species when it reaches a height of thirty feet. Coniferous trees vary from narrow pyramidal forms (e.g., Atlas cedar) to broad pyramidal forms (e.g., Norway spruce), so Table 1 contains calculation methods for each.

5. Minimum tree height at planting: five to six feet, balled and burlapped.

6. Permitted Tree Species.

a. Applicants may use any species of conifer trees provided the tree species is resistant to or will not harbor agriculturally harmful insects or diseases.

b. A list of recommended species is available in the Regional Plan, Appendix III.

C. Transitions between Buffers of Different Intensity. The principal purpose of the tree buffer is to mitigate spray drift; spray height is the primary factor in determining whether a higher- or lower-intensity buffer is required. To lessen the amount of spray being carried past a transition between the two types of buffer, the applicant will extend the buffer seventy-five feet beyond the end of the higher-intensity buffer, as shown in Figure 4.

D. Screening Shrubs.

1. Screening shrubs are used only in conjunction with tree buffers.

2. If the first row of trees on the agricultural side of the tree buffer does not have foliage down to ground level, install screening shrubs to provide sufficient foliage cover to close the gap. If the first row of trees on the agricultural side of the buffer provides foliage down to ground level, then screening shrubs are not required.

3. The mature height of the shrubs shall be one hundred twenty-five percent of the anticipated ground-to-foliage bare space of the average mature specimen of tree species.

4. Permitted Screening Shrubs.

a. Applicants may use any species of screening shrubs provided they are resistant to or will not harbor agriculturally harmful insects or diseases.

b. A list of appropriate species is available in the Regional Plan, Appendix III.

E. Trespass-Inhibiting Hedges and Fences.

1. Hedges and fences may be used separately or in combination to inhibit trespass onto agricultural land.

2. Hedge Standards.

a. Spacing and number of rows: one or more rows, whichever is sufficient to create an eight-foot-wide buffer at maturity.

b. Spacing within rows: as appropriate to eliminate gaps within three years of planting.

c. Overall Height.

i. No less than five feet if being used solely as a trespass inhibitor.

ii. If doubling as screening shrubbery, the hedge needs to cover any bare space between the ground and the lowest branches of trees in the central portion. Mature height shall be one hundred twenty-five percent of anticipated ground-to-foliage bare space of average mature specimen of tree species being screened.

d. Permitted Trespass-Inhibiting Species. Applicants may use any species of trespass-inhibiting hedges provided they are resistant to or will not harbor agriculturally harmful insects or diseases. A list of appropriate species is available in the Regional Plan, Appendix III.

3. Fence Standards.

a. Minimum fence height: six feet.

b. Fences shall be climb-resistant.

c. Install gates only when necessary for maintenance of the mitigation area.

F. Other Design Requirements.

1. Mid-Term Mitigation Area.

a. The agricultural land being protected by a mid-term buffer may eventually be converted to urban uses; therefore, a mid-term buffer may be designed for eventual conversion to urban uses.

b. Mid-term buffer design shall be based on the following factors:

i. The most likely time period it will remain as a buffer;

ii. The specific use to which the buffer will likely be put once the agricultural land is urbanized: conversion to housing, to roads, or to recreational use for the community.

c. Alternatively, the applicant may defer development of an appropriate portion of the urbanizing land bordering agricultural land until such time as the agricultural land is no longer zoned EFU.

2. Irrigation. The establishment of an irrigation system is mandatory for vegetation buffers. Must be designed by a licensed professional, and should be site and species specific, as appropriate. The operation and maintenance of the irrigation system must be part of the buffer’s overall maintenance plan contained in the deed declaration.

3. Road Placement. It is always preferable to not bisect buffers with roads due to the wind-funneling effect they create. If a road is unavoidable, it should be as narrow as possible, not straight, and should not be oriented to the prevailing wind. It should be noted that even a road with an acceptable orientation and design will permit some degree of increased spray drift to pass through the buffer area, and will also pose a greater risk of trespass. (Ord. 1964 §5, Exh. D (part), 2012).

17.71.600 Deviations.

A. Deviations from Provisions.

1. A proposed mitigation design that deviates from the provisions may be approved by the approving authority per the following process.

2. A mitigation design does not deviate when existing elements consistent with the purpose of the buffer are incorporated, as described following:

a. For mitigation without tree buffers the requirements of linear distance can be achieved by elements such as the following:

i. Manmade or natural features such as infrastructure rights-of-way, roads, watercourses, wetlands, rock outcrops, forested areas, and steep slopes;

ii. Nonfarmable areas of the agricultural land being buffered (including yards, storage areas, roads, and all structures);

iii. Publicly owned land without consistent present or projected public use (as determined by the public entity owner);

iv. An easement on agricultural land purchased by the applicant;

v. Other open areas (except undeveloped rural residential, commercial, or industrial parcels) that are considered appropriate to the purpose of the buffer.

b. For mitigation with tree buffers the approving authority may allow the requirements to be partially or fully satisfied by existing areas of trees and shrubs, as long as their mitigation effect is essentially the same as that intended by the requirements in Section 17.71.400(D). If the characteristics of the existing vegetation do not meet the requirements in Section 17.71.400(D), and cannot substitute in full or in part for an adequate tree buffer, then the area can either be incorporated into the design at half its mitigation value (for example, a twenty-foot-wide riparian area would be calculated as ten feet of tree buffer) or it can be left out of the tree buffer and be calculated at its original width (twenty feet of existing vegetation would be considered as twenty feet of bare land).

3. When an applicant proposes a mitigation design that deviates from the minimum standards in this chapter, the applicant is responsible for the preparation of a conflict assessment and mitigation study (CAMS), which shall be evaluated by an agricultural buffering committee appointed by the Jackson County board of commissioners. The committee will make a recommendation to the city’s approving authority regarding the acceptability of the deviation.

4. Conflict Assessment and Mitigation Study (CAMS).

a. The CAMS shall:

i. Determine the present and likely future agricultural land uses, practices, and activities with the potential to cause adverse impacts to adjacent urban development. Base the determination of likely agricultural practices on factors such as soil type; topography; parcel size, shape, and location; infrastructure; microclimatic conditions; regional agricultural practices and crops; and the farming history of the adjacent agricultural land and surrounding similar parcels.

ii. Determine how the proposed urban development would likely impact the management and operation of nearby agricultural lands. All owners of EFU-zoned land within one thousand feet of the land proposed for development shall be asked for an interview, and the findings of those interviews will be included in the CAMS.

iii. Identify the land uses, practices, and activities that may cause adverse impacts and the extent of the impacts, from both the urban use as well as from the agricultural land. Quantify the impacts, where possible, in terms of frequency and duration of activities to determine the impacts. As part of this evaluation, the CAMS shall consider the likely future uses determined in subsection (A)(4)(a)(i) of this section. The buffering mechanisms that are proposed shall be sufficient to accommodate these potential future uses. The current financial viability of a particular crop will not be considered an important limiting factor in determining potential future use.

iv. Propose a set of buffering measures that will achieve acceptable buffering outcomes, which may include, but are not limited to, the siting of residences, size and geometry of lots, separation distances, communal open space, vegetation, natural landscape features, acoustic features, and so forth.

v. Propose the means by which the proposed buffering measures will be monitored and maintained. This includes responsibility for implementing and maintaining specific features of the buffer areas to ensure continued effectiveness. Acknowledgment of the authority responsible for ensuring compliance with any agreement will be plainly cited.

vi. Establish a timeline for the development that establishes when the buffer will be installed.

b. The recommendations of the agricultural buffering committee, if any, shall be included in the application. The application shall not be considered complete without such recommendations or a letter from Jackson County indicating that no such recommendations are forthcoming.

5. The approving authority may accept the recommendation of the agricultural buffering committee in whole or in part and make findings for its acceptance, partial acceptance, or rejection.

6. Any approval of a deviation does not create a precedent for any subsequent requests for deviations from the standards of Section 17.71.500. (Ord. 1964 §5, Exh. D (part), 2012).