Rick Gross of Estes Builders stands at the construction site of a home on Old Town Road in Dungeness. The home is the first to have a building permit issued under the Dungeness River water rule

Rick Gross of Estes Builders stands at the construction site of a home on Old Town Road in Dungeness. The home is the first to have a building permit issued under the Dungeness River water rule

First permit issued under Dungeness water rule

SEQUIM –– Estes Builders began building a home at Dungeness last week, the first under a state-imposed water rule to control flows in the Dungeness River basin.

Clallam County issued the building permit with the caveat that the home won’t be finished until the owners get a certificate to prove they are mitigating the water they are using from the Washington Water Trust.

However, the certificate — a requirement of the Dungeness water rule implemented Jan. 2 — does not yet exist.

“It would make sense to have everything required by the rule in place before making the rule,” said Rick Gross of Estes Builders.

Estes is building a home, accessory dwelling unit and garage for Peter and Heidi J. Harrington in Dungeness.

It is the first building permit issued since the water rule went into effect in the Dungeness River basin that comprises the eastern half of Water Resource Inventory Area 18 under state Department of Ecology regulations.

Water credits

The rule requires new homeowners to control domestic water use by purchasing credits through the nonprofit Washington Water Trust for new water uses.

Once those credits are purchased, the owners receive mitigation certificates.

Clallam County’s Department of Community Development issued the building permit Feb. 15 with the stipulation that the owners cannot receive a final certificate of occupancy until they obtain and file a mitigation certificate.

“But there is no certificate,” Gross said.

“And nobody’s been able to tell us what the certificate might say when it is finally finished.”

Why no certificates?

Sheila Roark Miller, Clallam community development director, said the county is still negotiating with Ecology and the Washington Water Trust on what conditions will be spelled out in the certificate.

“I missed on that guess once before,” Roark Miller said when asked when the certificates will be ready.

Roark Miller told the PDN on Feb. 5 the certificates would ready Feb. 15.

In a meeting at John Wayne Marina on Jan. 17, Amanda Cronin, project manager for the trust, said the certificates would be ready “in two weeks.”

Roark Miller said Friday that the county is trying to eliminate language in the certificate that states how much water new homeowners would be able to use.

That wording might be presented to county commissioners in a work session March 4, she said.

Certificates from the trust for indoor use were based on an average per home consumption of 150 gallons per day.

But that was not expressed as a limit on use, Roark Miller said. She said the understanding has been that those who exceed the 150-gallon-a-day limit would not be penalized unless they are using water for an unauthorized use — if they are irrigating without having purchased that right.

“So we’re working on language to express that a little better,” she said.

Cronin did not return requests for an interview Friday.

The certificates cost $1,000 and up.

A $100,000 grant from Ecology covers cost of certificates purchased through the end of June.

If not now, when?

Gross estimated that his firm would have the house built in six months and said he hoped the certificate would be ready when it’s completed.

“If we don’t have it by then, we’ve got more serious issues to deal with,” said Tom Shindler, permit center manager for Clallam.

Shindler said more applications for building permits in the water-rule area have been filed with the county.

“We’ll see if we have the certificates available by the time those go through the application process,” he said.

The water rule covers the eastern half of WRIA 18 between Bagley Creek and Sequim Bay. It covers more than 17,700 parcels in the unincorporated area outside the Sequim city limit.

Revenue from the mitigation certificates will be traded for water rights in the Dungeness Water Exchange. It also will be used to fund projects to enhance water levels within the watershed.

The newly formed Olympic Resource Protection Council, funded by the North Peninsula Building Association, mailed 2,800 postcards Wednesday to Clallam County residents to solicit donations to hire an attorney to challenge Ecology to change the rule.

________

Sequim-Dungeness Valley Editor Joe Smillie can be reached at 360-681-2390, ext. 5052, or at jsmillie@peninsuladailynews.com.

More in News

Port Angeles sends letter to governor

Requests a progressive tax code

Courtesy of Rep. Emily Randall's office
Rep. Emily Randall to hold town hall in Port Townsend

Congresswoman will field questions from constituents

Joshua Wright, program director for the Legacy Forest Defense Coalition, stands in a forest plot named "Dungeness and Dragons," which is managed by the Department of Natural Resources (DNR). Currently, the DNR is evaluating Wright's claim that there is a rare plant community in one of the units, which would qualify the parcel for automatic protection from logging. Locating rare plant communities is just one of the methods environmental activists use to protect what they call "legacy forests." (Joshua Wright)
Activists answer call to protect forests

Advocacy continues beyond timber auctions

Port of Port Angeles talks project status

Marine Trade Center work close to completion

KEITH THORPE/PENINSULA DAILY NEWS
The Rayonier #4 logging locomotive on display at Chase Street and Lauridsen Boulevard in Port Angeles, is the focus of a fundraising drive to restore the engine and further develop the site.
Locomotive viewing event scheduled for Sunday

“Restore the 4” project underway

Steve Mullensky/for Peninsula Daily News
Port Townsend High School culinary arts student Jasper Ziese, left, watches as fellow students Emil Brown sauces the dish and Raivyn Johnson, right, waits to box it up. The students prepared and served a free lunch from the program's food truck, Culinary Cruiser, for a senior project on Saturday.
Culinary Cruiser delivers practical experience for Port Townsend students

Part of Career and Technical Education culinary arts program

PC’s enrollment rates show steady growth

Numbers reverse ten-year trend

Pink House will see repairs in 2025

Siding, deck planks, support beams on list

Clallam County gets Legislative update

Property tax bills still in play

Investigators find faulty fridge cause of trailer fire

A fire inside a fifth-wheel trailer that claimed the life… Continue reading

Danielle Fodor of Irondale cavorts as a dancing tree during Saturday’s World Water Day festivities at Hollywood Beach in Port Angeles. The international event served as a call to action to advocate for sustainable management of fresh water resources and environmental conservation. In Port Angeles, the celebration included a water blessing and guided hikes on local trails in the Elwha River watershed. (Keith Thorpe/Peninsula Daily News)
World water day

Danielle Fodor of Irondale cavorts as a dancing tree during Saturday’s World… Continue reading

Opinions differ on cultural tax funds

Public engagement next step in process