King County Comprehensive Plan: Four to One Program
Overview
The King County Four‑to‑One Program is an innovative land use management technique authorized under the Washington State Growth Management Act[i] that seeks to create a continuous band of open space along the urban growth area boundary and prevent sprawl. Since the inception of the program, about 360 acres have been added to the urban growth area while nearly 1,400 acres of permanent open space have been conserved.
The Four‑to‑One Program is guided by policies and rigorous criteria in the Countywide Planning Policies, Comprehensive Plan, and King County Code. For properties that meet the criteria, the program allows willing land owners to voluntary apply to have their land considered, with twenty percent of the land (i.e., the "one") potentially added to the urban growth area and the remaining eighty percent (i.e., the "four") permanently added to the King County Open Space System. Four-to-One projects are approved at the discretion of the County as part of an update to the Comprehensive Plan.
Summary of Four-to-One Program
For site specific land use changes such as Four-to-One proposals, Docket Requests are referred to the second step, which is the process for obtaining a site‑specific land use amendment.[iii] A site‑specific amendment application requires a filing fee and review by the King County Hearing Examiner. The Hearing Examiner sends recommendations to the King County Council for consideration during the annual Comprehensive Plan amendment process.
Summary of Four-to-One Provisions |
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General provisions |
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Procedural Issues (and overview of the typical Four‑to‑One Process) |
Initiation
Initial Review
Docket Process
Site Specific Land Use Map Amendment
Comprehensive Plan Process
Implementation
If applicant does not pursue urban development or fails to record final plat prior to expiration of preliminary plat approval, urban properties restored to rural during next comprehensive plan update and the conservation easement is removed |
Proposed new urban lands |
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Proposed new open space lands |
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Resource Lands |
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Other |
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Property owners interested in submitting a Four‑to‑One proposal should familiarize themselves with aforementioned aspects of the program, review the enabling policies and criteria and, following this, contact the staff noted below.
For More Information, please contact:
Comprehensive Plan and Docket Process Ivan Miller, AICP Countywide Planning Performance, Strategy and Budget 206.263.8297 ivan.miller@kingcounty.gov |
Preliminary Plat Review Kim Clausen Project / Program Manager III Dept. of Permitting and Environmental Review 206.477.0329 kimberly.claussen@kingcounty.gov |
Notes:
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[i] 36.70A.090 Revised Code of Washington
[ii] Four‑to‑One proposals have also been included in the Scope of Work Motion for an update of the Comprehensive Plan by the County Council. In these cases, unless the property owners have a clearly defined proposal, the review may be at the policy‑level and focus on determining eligibility and defining County interests for when an actual proposal is developed and submitted.
These Four-to-Ones are evaluated through the Area Zoning and Land Use Study process (20.18.030.B.8) which involves departmental review, communication with proponent, notification to surrounding area residents and stakeholders, a recommendation in the Public Review Draft of the Comprehensive Plan (released in the fall), public comment period and public meetings, and a final recommendation in the Executive Recommended Plan (released in March). Then, the Council considers the requested change in the Comprehensive Plan for adoption (adopted in fall to winter). While these proposals are initiated and follow a slightly different review path, they are finalized in the same manner as a property-owner initiated Four-to-One, and require a Preliminary Formal Plat Approval, and placement of a Term Conservation Easement when the County Council approves the proposal as a Land Use amendment (with specific conditions codified as property-specific development conditions (i.e., a "P Suffix" condition) to the Comprehensive Plan.
[iii] King County Code 19A.04.260 and 19A.08.150. Note: The Four‑to‑One program requires the adjacent jurisdiction to agree to add the new urban portion of the site to its potential annexation area (CPP DP‑17a). This means the urban portion of the site may be annexed before development occurs and, if this is the case, the final plat approval will be processed by the city/town, not the County.
[iv] Primary provisions are found at Countywide Planning Policy DP‑16 and DP‑17, Comprehensive Plan Policy U‑185 to U‑190 and King County Code 20.18.170 to 20.18.180. Other sections of policy and code that reference Four to One include 20.18.030, 20.18.040, 19A.12.020, 19A.12.040
[v] The last four to one proposal was processed in 2015. Based on this process, the review involves a shared responsibility between the Regional Planning Unit in the Office of Performance, Strategy and Budget which leads the policy and intergovernmental analysis, and the Department of Permitting and Environmental Review (DPER), which leads the technical analysis of the preliminary plat. This involves coordination with other departments such as the DNRP (the Department of Natural Resources and Parks) on the open space elements of the proposal, DCHS (the Department of Community and Human Services) on any affordable housing elements of the proposal, DOT (Department of Transportation) on any transportation related elements of the proposal, and others. PSB (the Office of Performance, Strategy and Budget) also leads the policy analysis related to consistency with the Countywide Planning Policies and Comprehensive Plan, and review by the Growth Management Planning Council.
For more information please contact:
Chris JensenComprehensive Planning Manager
Performance, Strategy and Budget
206.477.0581
CompPlan@kingcounty.gov