Boundary County
Commissioners on Monday reconvened a public
hearing to give final consideration to a
document six years in the making, taking
just half an hour and accepting no additional
public comment to approve and adopt a new
Boundary County Zoning and Subdivision Ordinance
and map, laying out land use law for the decade
ahead. That ordinance will go into effect
November 3 on legal publication in the Bonners
Ferry Herald.
In November, 2005,
responding to public concerns that developers
were running rough-shod over residents in the
wake of a land boom, Commissioners directed
their Planning and Zoning Commission to review
the County Comprehensive Plan, and with the
assistance of more than 100 Boundary County
residents, they wrought a complete revision
which was adopted in 2008, charting land use
goals the county should aspire to.
Since then, work has been
on-going on the development of ordinances to
establish a set of laws by which to attain those
goals; a process that has been, from the outset,
fraught with contention.
“This is a county
established by people who relied on themselves
and their own sacrifices and efforts to earn a
living off the land by which to raise their
families, and who endured a lot of hardship and
toil to do that,” said zoning administrator Mike
Weland. “But in the past 30 years, this has also
become somewhat of a retirement community, a
place where people who’ve earned their living
elsewhere and can afford a place in the country
to build the home of their dreams come to settle
down, at least until their first hard snow
flies, and where making a living off the natural
resources of this county has become more and
more difficult. Trying to establish a set of
land use rules to please all the disparate
interests in this county is an impossibility,
and I have no false hopes that commissioners
accomplished the impossible tonight, but I
think, based on my 14 years in trying to find a
balance as administrator, that this represents a
big step in the right direction.”
Weland said that even
before the ordinance was approved Monday there
were already faults pointed out and lawsuits
threatened, even though the new ordinance is, as
yet, untested.
“We’ve been listening to
anyone who would make a comment on land use in
this county since 2005,” Weland said. “The three
people we elected as our county commissioners
and all the members they’ve appointed since 2005
to serve on this county’s planning and zoning
commission have heard from and considered the
many voices on all sides of every issue that’s
been raised, often over and over again. As
administrator, I’ve had the easy job, just
putting what I hear into words. This ordinance
by no means pleases everybody on any side of the
issues that have been raised, but I think we've
reached a good compromise that will work if, at
base, we all remember that we're neighbors first
and foremost.
"While it’s not always been
fun, I’m very grateful to have had the privilege
to work with a group of people able to look
beyond any particular interest or point of view
to consider and take into account what will best
benefit us all, and actually provide a service.
“I am absolutely convinced
that, in practice, this new ordinance will serve
this community well. Give this ordinance and
comp plan a chance to work, and it’s my thought
that even those who feel that their concerns
were ignored will recognize that their voices
were heard, and taken into account.”
The new zoning ordinance
and zone map will take effect Thursday, November
3, on legal publication in the Bonners Ferry
Herald.
The Boundary County Zoning
and Subdivision ordinance is now available
on-line on the county website as is the initial
draft of the zone map, which has been approved
but has yet to be finished and signed by
commissioners. You can read the zoning and
subdivision ordinance by
clicking here; you can view the
unadorned zoning map by
clicking here.
At the time of publication,
the map has no legend, compass rose or signature
block. Weland is working with county GIS
specialist Gary Falcon to have a final map
ready, signed and on-line by the time the
ordinance goes into effect.
That map and the new
ordinance, are available for review in the
Planning and Zoning Office, Room 16 at the
Boundary Courthouse during regular office hours,
and the administrator is available to address
any person or group regarding what the new
ordinance means and how it affects what people
in the county can do with their land, and what
steps are needed.
To find out more, call Weland at (208) 267-7212
or email
planning@boundarycountyid.org.
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