'Right to
plow' nears ballot spot

Measure to excuse farmers
of some land-use rules has 30,000 signatures

Reid Carleton, a
farmer, strolls in his wife Mary's flower garden Friday
on the family farm on Sunnyside Boulevard in Everett.
Carleton says he supports an initiative that exempts
farmers from some land-use regulations.
[Click
photo to enlarge]
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By Warren Cornwall
Herald Writer
from http://www.heraldnet.com/Stories/01/9/8/14344988.cfm#top
Everett, WA - 9/8/01 -An initiative to exempt Snohomish
County farmers from development regulations has garnered more
than 30,000 signatures, virtually assuring its place on the
county ballot in November.
Snohomish County Farm Bureau President John Postema delivered
the final batch of petitions to the Snohomish County auditor
Friday and predicted the measure would win at the ballot box.
"I think the issue speaks for itself," Postema said
of the measure he has dubbed the "Right to Plow"
initiative.
Backers needed nearly 18,000 valid signatures for the measure
to qualify for the ballot. Even accounting for duplicates or
signatures from people who aren't registered voters, county
elections manager Scott Konopasek said it would almost surely
clear that hurdle.
"Unofficially, they have enough signatures," he
said.
The result would be the first county initiative, Konopasek
said. It could also become a potent issue in upcoming county
council elections in two rural districts.
The county council could enact the ordinance before it goes
to voters or put a competing measure on the ballot. County
council chairman Dave Somers, who opposes the initiative, said
an alternative measure is being considered.
"We've just started talking about it in the past week
once it looked like it was going to have enough
signatures," he said.
The council must act by Sept. 21.
The petition effort had more than $21,000 in backing from the
county farm bureau, that was used to cover expenses that
included paid signature gatherers, according to state
campaign-finance records. Postema estimated paid workers
collected up to 30 percent of the signatures.
The measure would exempt commercial agricultural businesses
from requirements to get certain county land-use permits. The
exemption would include plowing, as well as more extensive work
such as digging ditches and ponds or building farm roads. A
housing developer would need a permit for much of that work.
With the economic pressures facing farmers, Postema said,
they deserve to be treated differently than developers.
"I don't think it's fair to treat farmers the same as
developers if they have to make a ditch," said Postema,
owner of Flower World, a nursery that covers 100 acres in south
Snohomish County.
The idea has won support from a number of farmers, who hail
it as an escape from troublesome red tape.
"I think we're being regulated to death. All we want is
to try to have a right to make a living," said Reid
Carleton, who runs a farm and vegetable stand near Lake Stevens.
But some in the agricultural community oppose it. Mark
Craven, a member of the Snohomish Conservation District board,
said he feared the initiative was so broad that people could
clear land under the guise of agriculture, then sell it for
subdivisions later on.
"I think if most farmers really understood the whole
issue they would probably be not so supportive of it," he
said.
County councilman Mike Ashley, a Silvana dairy farmer, has
warned the initiative could clash with state law and force a
lawsuit that would leave the county vulnerable to a strict court
ruling. He has also noted that the county executive in 2000
ruled that plowing and harvesting did not require a permit.
Ashley said he and county and state officials are drafting
regulations that would protect farmers and ensure compliance
with the Endangered Species Act.
But Postema said he and others have lost patience with the
slow pace of reform and politicians' promises. Even if a court
finds the measure illegal, the council can revise it to make
sure it will pass muster, he said.
"We're trying to force their hands," he said.
The measure has become embroiled in election-year politics as
well.
Ashley's and Somers' seats are up for election this fall. If
Ashley wins the Democratic primary, he will face former
Republican state lawmaker John Koster, an initiative supporter.
Both Republicans seeking to run against Somers, Chad Minnick and
Jeff Sax, have also endorsed the measure.
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