Dungeness Water Rule focus of fall trial; group hopes for statewide effect

SEQUIM — A trial on the validity of the Dungeness Water Rule is set for Oct. 21 at Thurston County Superior Court.

The trial was scheduled after Judge Gary Tabor denied the Olympic Resource Protection Council’s motion for a summary judgment after it was argued before him in January but kept the issue alive for a trial on the facts and full administrative record.

“A victory in this case likely would have precedential value for all other existing and pending instream flow rules in Washington State,” said Greg McCarry, Olympic Resource Protection Council president, in an announcement dated May 9.

The nonprofit challenged the state Department of Ecology’s Dungeness Water Rule, which was adopted in early January 2013, after a failed attempt to get state officials to work with them on a “more balanced application of the rule,” McCarry said.

Managing water

State officials designed and implemented the rule as a method for managing surface and groundwaters within the Dungeness River watershed.

It seeks to ensure reliable water supplies for both drinking and to protect fish, wildlife and other in-stream resources within the watershed, which is one of 16 watersheds state officials consider “fish-critical” — basins with a shortage of water for existing needs.

The rule requires mitigation of any new groundwater withdrawals within the rule area encompassing the Sequim-Dungeness Valley and the surrounding land south of Sequim, slightly west of Bagley Creek and east toward Johnson Creek.

“About 3,600 parcels are impacted by the rule,” McCarry said.

The rule area is separated into two categories: green and yellow. Within the yellow area, only indoor domestic water use is permitted and no outdoor water mitigation is yet available.

Water bank

To help manage the water, state officials collaborate with the Washington Water Trust — a non-regulatory nonprofit — that acts as a water bank.

The water trust issues water mitigation certificates to new water users based on mitigation and available reserves established by Ecology.

As of March, the state reported 101 water mitigation certificates have been issued.

Despite the efforts to create a rule that balances the area’s varying water demands, McCarry and roughly 500 members of the Olympic Resource Protection Council don’t agree with the in-stream flows outlined and required by the rule.

Over-allocation to river

“It’s an over-allocation of water to the river,” he said.

McCarry said evidence is anecdotal but that the rule is having negative impacts on those wanting to buy or sell property within the Dungeness Water Rule area.

“People come here and say they want to buy a piece of property and if you tell them it’s in the rule area, then all kinds of questions pop up and people avoid it,” he said. “It’s just too uncertain.”

Legal arguments

The Peninsula Resource Protection Council has two main legal arguments.

Like when granting a water right, state officials should have conducted a four-part test, McCarry believes.

“When DOE grants a water right, they have to do a four-part test, and one of the legs of that test is the water has to be there,” he said.

“When they granted the water to the river of 180 cfs [cubic feet per second] at a time when the river flows at 90 cfs, they failed one of their requirements.”

Second, McCarry feels state officials should have done a net benefit analysis when establishing in-stream flow requirements for the Dungeness River and its side streams.

“They’re supposed to consider humans, fish, farming and business,” he said.

“But three of the net beneficiaries [humans, farming and business] in this case were kind of thrown aside.”

Habitat assessment

Although the four-part test is used when granting water rights, when setting in-stream flows, the department uses standardized habitat assessment models, said Tom Loranger, Ecology’s water resources program manager.

“What we’ve seen from most of these water cases is they tend to go beyond the Superior Court level and oftentimes, it goes on to the next court, which is the Court of Appeals,” Loranger said.

“Going forward, the judge is going to hear discussions about the flows, how it was set, what science was used and how it comports with the water resources laws of the state.”

Loranger noted the rich history and several years of working with the area’s stakeholders including the city of Sequim, Clallam County, three tribes, the public utilities district and irrigators to come up with a rule that leaves enough water in the river and set aside reserves for future use.

A “significant” bill (SB 6513) recently passed by the state Legislature demonstrates the reserves of water in the Dungeness River are consistent with the Legislature’s intent, Loranger said.

“We really like that because in the case of this litigation . . . [the] Legislature made it very clear that people using water out of those reserves are in good shape,” he said.

For more information on the Olympic Resource Protection Council, see www.olympicresourcepc.org.

Review the Dungeness Water Rule at http://tinyurl.com/PDN-Dungenesswaterrule.

________

Alana Linderoth is a reporter with the Olympic Peninsula News Group, which is composed of Sound Publishing newspapers Peninsula Daily News, Sequim Gazette and Forks Forum. Reach her at alinderoth@sequimgazette.com.

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