HomeMy WebLinkAbout706RESOLUTION NO.
A RESOLUTION of the City of Kent, Wash-
ington, adopting certain changes to the Com-
prehensive Plan of the City of Kent.
WHEREAS, certain changes to the Comprehensive Plan of
the City of Kent have been proposed, and
WHEREAS, in accorq~nce with the provisions of Chapter
35A.63 of the Revised Code of Washington hearings were held
before the Planning Commission of the City of Kent, and
WHEREAS, after said hearings the Planning Commission
recommended certain changes in the Comprehensive Plan to the
City Council, said changes being attached hereto as Exhibit A
and incorporated herein by reference as if fully set forth
herein, and
WHEREAS, the City Council considered said changes at a
public meeting on the 4th day of October, 1971, and concurred
in the recommendation of the Planning Commission, NOW, THEREFORE,
THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF KENT, WASHINGTON, DO
RESOLVE that the changes of the Comprehensive Plan of the City
of Kent attached hereto as Appendix A, be and hereby are adopted
and the Comprehensive Plan of the City of Kent be and hereby is
changed and modified accordingly, and IT IS FURTHER
RESOLVED that the changes be filed with the City Clerk and
in the offices of the Planning Department and be made available
for public inspection upon request.
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DONE in regular City Council session this 18th day of
October, 1971.
.I
ISABEL HOGAN,
ATTEST:
MARIE JENSEN, C1ty Clerk
APPROVED AS TO FORM:
DONALD E. MIRK, City Attorney
I hereby certify that this is a true copy of Resolution
No. "'Jo(a , passed by the City Council of the City of Kent,
Washington, the l ~ day of ~ , 1971.
~~
MARIE JENSE , C1ty Clerk
(SEAL)
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...
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REVISIONS TO KENT'S COMPREHENSIVE PLAN
On August 17, 1971, the Kent Planning Commission recommended
to the City Council that certain revisions be made to Kent's
Comprehensive Plan. The following pages contain these
revisions.
The Planning Commission recommended these changes at this time
primarily to update the Plan. No changes were recommended
for the land use section of the Plan.
In 1972 the Planning Staff and Planning Commission expect to
make major changes in the Plan. The schedule for this pro-
ject calls for a time element of six to eight months, begin-
ning in March.
In the meantime we feel the revisions herein contained will
suffice to make Kent's Comprehensive Plan more relevant.
PAGE 5 -LINE 11: Add the word "goals" so that line 11
reads: "However, the Plan spells out only the general goals,
objectives and policies pertaining to land use and other
elements of community development which ordinances do not."
PAGE 5 -LINE 14: Add the word "goals" so that line 14
reads: "Once agreement is reached on the goals, objectives,
and policies found in the Comprehensive Plan ..... "
PAGE 5 -LINE 17: In place of the general objectives of the
Plan it was decided to insert the goals that have been adopted
by the City Council (those goals formulated by the Civic
Betterment Committee), as follows:
"The ongoing goal of the City of Kent is to create and
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preserve a secure and
community involvement
include:
desirable environment through
of its c i t i zen s . Th i s s h a 11
a. Improve the economic climate.
b. Improve communications between City government and
citizens.
c. Improve the appearance of the City.
d. Develop the physical services and facilities of the
community to meet functional needs of the public.
e. Provide for the most desirable use of the land in
the public interest.
f. Encourage public and private development of educa-
tional, cultural and recreational facilities and
programs."
(under "e" the Commission decided to use the word
"desirable" in place of "highest and best use", for
they felt that the highest use of the land is not
always in the public interest, and the connotation of
"highest and best use" differs among individuals)
PAGE 5: Following the goals, revised General Objectives of
the Plan were inserted, as follows:
develop effective programs to effectively deal with
environmental problems.
develop community involvement programs through better
contact with the citizens
develop programs for revitalizing the central business
district and other deteriorating areas.
develop community identity
balance the interest of the individual and the community
PAGE 5 -LINE 23 (no. 3): State Enabling Legislation -
Change this to reflect the fact that the City of Kent operates
under the Optional Municipal Code RCW 35A.63.
PAGE 6 -LINE 4: Change this line to read: "In 1967 the
Planning Area contained about 37,000 people; by 1988 the pro-
jected population indicates 145,000 persons may reside in the
area."
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PAGE 7 -TABLE I: Delete the 1966 column and add a 1970
column containing 1970 U.S. Bureau of the Census data.
Under Population Projections delete the 1970 column.
PAGE 9 -TRENDS: The trend section should read as follows:
Paragraph 1. "The number of building permits issued
in 1969 and 1970 declined substantially from the 210
issued in 1968. The greatest decline in permits
occurred in residential construction. In 1968, 127
permits were issued for single family dwellings,
while 51 were issued in 1969, and only 28 in 1970.
Twenty eight (28) permits were issued for multi-family
buildings in 1968, while only 6 were issued in 1969
and only 6 were issued in 1970. This trend reflects the
general decline in the economy of the Puget Sound
region."
The second paragraph would be under trends at the bottom of
page 9 and would read:
"Rezoning in the 1968 -1970 period continued in
approximately the same trend as the 1960 -1968
period. Changes to industrial classifications
continue to make up almost half of the rezone
actions."
APPENDIX -TABLE A & TABLE B: These should be updated to
reflect 1969 and 1970 data.
PAGE 15 -OPEN SPACE: Since there is a need to expand more fully
the open space statement in the Comprehensive Plan it was
decided to delete the existing definition for open space on
page 9 and replace it with the following new definition:
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Open Space
"Open space can be defined as the counterpart of devel-
opment: land which is not used for buildings or structures."
On page 15 under open space leave the first and third para-
graph as is and delete the second paragraph. The sentence
"open space is an essential element in the character and
quality of the urban environment", becornes the first sentence
in paragraph one under Open Space on page 15.
The following two paragraphs become paragraph 3 and 4 under
Open Space on page 15:
"In Kent, regulatory measures provide the most basic
controls on the quality of the environment, and
since regulation does not involve compensation to
landowners, care must be taken to avoid too stringent
restrictions."
"Acquisition of full or partial rights to land by
either public agencies or private groups is the most
certain means to preserve open space. Acquisition may
be accomplished through purchase, condemnation, donation,
leaseback or purchase of easement."
PAGE 12 -OBJECTIVE #7: Add the following paragraph to Objective #7:
"The proposed Green River Green Belt provides an
opportunity for the City of Kent to preserve
meaningful open space. The cities in the Green
River Valley, along with King County, are joining
in an effort to protect the banks of the Green
River from unwise development and to provide a
recreation corridor through the Valley. The City
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of Kent is cooperating with the other affected
localities to make this green belt concept a reality."
PAGE 16 -STORM DRAINAGE: Delete the material now under
this section and add:
"The City of Kent, along with other cities in the
Green River Valley and King County, has joined in
an agreement with the King County Soil and Water
Conservation District and the U.S. Soil Conservation
Service for the implementation of Watershed Work
Plans for the Green River Valley. The plans provide
for channels, floodgates and pumps to drain storm
runoff in the valley. Construction of the main
pumping plant, at the mouth of the Black River, was
begun in 1970. However, the Army Corps of Engineers
has indicated that the addition of water from the
pumping station will necessitate raising dikes along
the Green River in order to maintain the existing
level of flood protection. This additional project
is now in the planning stage."
The new drainage system should be shown on the Public
Services and Utilities Map in the Comprehensive Plan.
PAGE 18: Delete lines 1, 2, 3 & 4.
PAGE 18 -REFUSE DISPOSAL SITES (Garbage Dumps): Delete
mention of the site at S.E. 272nd Street, as this site has
been closed down. Change the first word in paragraph one
from "four" to "three".
PUBLIC SERVICES AND UTILITIES MAP: Remove the refuse
disposal site at S.E. 272nd Street.
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PAGE 18 -LIBRARIES: Revise the first paragraph to
reflect the planned addition to the Kent Library.
PAGE 19 -SCHOOLS: Delete the material under this section
and add:
"Existing and proposed schools, as well as school
district boundary lines, arc shown on the Education
and Recreation Facilities map.
The four school districts in Kent are: Kent #415,
Federal Way #210, Highline #401, and Renton #403.
All are part of Intermediate School District #110,
which encompasses all of King County and Bainbridge
Is land.
Since public schools are an integral part of the
community, liaison should be established with all
four districts to insure that citizen participation
is on a high level and that when possible, public
school facilities are used to the greatest extent
possible by the citizens. One such possiblity is
joint use of school library facilities.
PAGE 23 -CIRCULATION: Delete the first paragraph and add:
"Recognizing the interrelationship of transportation
and patterns of land use, the circulation element of
this plan is designed to reinforce land use policies
previously expressed in this document. This section
addresses itself to the majority circulation system
and to the location of future transportation corridors;
not to the selection of specific routes. Minor
street improvements and route selection are more
appropriately treated in special engineering and
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..._.
planning studies. The circulation plan is intended
to serve as a guide for more detailed studies such
as route establishment, project programming and the
establishment of road design criteria."
Delete the second paragraph and add the subsection:
Present and Future Problems
"Travel in the Kent Planning Area can be divided into
two broad categories: Through-traffic is oriented on a
north-south axis to the Seattle and Tacoma areas.
This flow represents about 75 percent of the total
trips for the Kent Planning Area. North-south
traffic movements are served by Pacific Highway,
Interstate -5, West Valley Road and the Valley Freeway-
East Valley Road networks. East-west traffic movements
are served by Interstate 405, Kent-DesMoines Road-
Meeker Street-Canyon Drive-256th Street, South 212th-
208th Streets, and South 240th Street.
Internal circulation is oriented on an east-west axis,
with traffic movements from residential areas on East
and West Hills to neighborhood commercial centers and
the Central Business District on the Valley floor. A
conflict exists on Meeker Street because it not only
serves through-traffic but also provides access to the
Central Business District, a major center of pedestrian
activity. The at-grade rail crossings also cause a
major disruption of East-West traffic movements. These
at-grade crossing are also a safety hazard.
Numerous studies indicate that the circulation network
as it presently exists is inadequate for traffic volumes
projected for the next twenty years. The area lacks a
balanced highway network. Existing freeways and express-
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ways can be modified to handle increased traffic volume
without the necessity of new freeway construction.
Hm·lever, extensive improvement of existing state high-
ways, county roads and city arterials will also be
Tequired."
PAGE 23 & 24-(CIRCULATION, Cont.): Under Definitions
delete the existing definitions and add:
FREEWAY - A divided, high speed, high capacity roadway
designed for through-traffic, having full access control
and separation of grade crossings.
EXPRESSWAY - A divided road1>Jay designed for through-
traffic having partial access control and grade separations
at major intersections.
~~JOR ARTERIAL - A roadway connecting major activity
centers, providing access to and from freeways or
expressways, and providing direct access to abutting
properties.
SECONDARY ARTERIAL - A roadway connecting mlnor activity
centers and facilities with intersections at-grade and
providing access to abutting properties.
COLLECTOR - A street which serves an intermediate collection
and distribution function between local access streets
and arterial streets.
LOCAL STREET - A street which serves only abutting
properties and which provides direct access to all such
properties.
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' "
SCENIC DRIVE - A roadway which provides a route for
recreation travel through corridors of scenic interest.
PAGE 24 -CIRCULATION: Prior to Needs insert the goal
statement:
"The goal for the circulation element of this Plan is
to: Provide for the safe, efficient and convenient
movement of people and goods."
PAGE 24 -CIRCULATION (Cont.): Under the Pmlicies section,
policy #7 should be changed to read:
"Elimination of at-grade crossings on main rail lines or
design of sophisticated signal devices at such crossings
shall be pursued by the City in order to reduce loss of
life, reduce traffic delays, to increase the efficiency
of railroad operations and to reduce inconvenience and
annoyance to the general public."
The Commission felt that #7 under policies should also contain
a statement about minimizing the number of spur lines across
street circulation patterns and regulating the hours of operation.
Long range plans should be developed showing how a minimum
number of spur lines can serve a maximum area.
PAGE 25 -POLICIES (no. 9):
After the word "sidewalks" in the first sentence place a comma
and add the words "overpasses-underpasses".
There is also a need for a comment to be placed somewhere
in the Plan stating the need for a pedestrian walkway
across Mill Creek Canyon.
PAGE 28 -THE COMPREHENSIVE PLAN AND ITS IMPLEMENTATION:
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. -."
Delete the first paragraph and insert the following:
"The Comprehensive Plan is a guide to future development.
An implementation program, however, makes the Comprehen-
sive Plan more than a passive guideline. It becomes a
commitment for the City to actively work toward achieve-
ment of the goals and objectives of the Plan. In order
for a plan to be meaningful it must serve as a framework
~ and guideline to decision making, it must have an action
program, and to be effective it must be implemented."
PAGE 17 -CITY HALL: Delete the material under this heading
and add:
"Kent's City Hall, completed in June, 1971, provides
a focal point within the core area of the City. The
'in city' site was selected to provide citizens con-
venient access to governmental offices."
PAGE 30 -COORDINATION BETWEEN AUTONOMOUS GOVERNMENTS
Delete mention of Valley Regional Planning Commission since
it no longer exists as an organization.
PAGE 30 -REVIEW OF POLICIES ON ANNEXATION & UTILITY EXTENSIONS
Mention should be made of the Boundary Review Board.
MAP CHANGES:
1. Place city boundaries on all maps.
2. Education and Recreation Facilities Map: Add school
district boundaries and add new schools.
3. Circulation Map:
a. Move Russell Road (between S. 228th and S. 212th
Streets) eastward so that it connects S. 212th
Street in the vicinity of the most westerly
traffic signal on S. 212th Street.
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b. Indicate an arterial street going north from
East Valley Highway to meet with a like street
coming south from Renton, which street is the
first north-south street west of the intersection
of S. 180th Street and East Valley Highway.
c. Show realignment of Reith Road.
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