HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES |
H.B. NO. |
1848 |
THIRTIETH LEGISLATURE, 2020 |
H.D. 1 |
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STATE OF HAWAII |
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A BILL FOR AN ACT
RELATING TO THE ENVIRONMENT.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF HAWAII:
SECTION 1. The legislature finds that the coastal zone management program was established as part of the coastal zone management law under Act 188, Session Laws of Hawaii 1977. The Act declared that it is the State's objective regarding scenic and open space resources to protect, preserve, and, where desirable, restore or improve the quality of coastal scenic and open space resources; regarding coastal ecosystems, to protect valuable coastal ecosystems from disruption and minimize adverse impacts on all coastal ecosystems; regarding coastal hazards, to reduce hazards to life and property from tsunami, storm waves, stream flooding, erosion, and subsidence; and regarding managing development, to improve the development review process, communication, and public participation in the management of coastal resources and hazards.
The purpose of this Act is to amend chapter 205A, Hawaii Revised Statutes, to strengthen state policies to reduce residential exposure to coastal hazards and protect state beaches and to update language for consistency with other Hawaii Revised Statutes.
SECTION 2. Section 205A-1, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by adding two new definitions to be appropriately inserted and to read as follows:
""Beach" means a coastal
landform composed predominantly of sand from eroded rock, coral, or shell
material that is established and shaped by wave action and tidal
processes. Such coastal landform
encompasses sand deposits in nearshore submerged areas, and sand dunes or
upland beach deposits landward of the shoreline, and provides benefits for
public use and recreation, for coastal ecosystems, and as a natural buffer
against coastal hazards.
"Coastal hazards" include
tsunami, hurricanes,
wind, waves, storm surges, high tide, flooding, stream flooding, erosion, sea level
rise, subsidence, and point and nonpoint source pollution."
SECTION 3. Section 205A-2, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended to read as follows:
"§205A-2 Coastal zone management program; objectives and policies. (a) The objectives and policies in this section shall apply to all parts of this chapter.
(b)
Objectives.
(1) Recreational
resources;
(A) Provide
coastal recreational opportunities accessible to the public.
(2) Historic
resources;
(A) Protect,
preserve, and, where desirable, restore those natural and manmade historic and
prehistoric resources in the coastal zone management area that are significant
in Hawaiian and American history and culture.
(3) Scenic
and open space resources;
(A) Protect,
preserve, and, where desirable, restore or improve the quality of coastal
scenic and open space resources.
(4) Coastal
ecosystems;
(A) Protect
valuable coastal ecosystems, including reefs, beaches, and coastal dunes,
from disruption and minimize adverse impacts on all coastal ecosystems.
(5) Economic
uses;
(A) Provide
public or private facilities and improvements important to the State's economy
in suitable locations.
(6) Coastal
hazards;
(A) Reduce
hazard to life and property from [tsunami, storm waves, stream flooding,
erosion, subsidence, and pollution.] coastal hazards.
(7) Managing
development;
(A) Improve
the development review process, communication, and public participation in the
management of coastal resources and hazards.
(8) Public
participation;
(A) Stimulate
public awareness, education, and participation in coastal management.
(9) Beach
protection;
(A) Protect
beaches and coastal dunes for [public]:
(i) Public
use and recreation[.];
(ii) Benefits
of coastal ecosystems; and
(iii) Natural
buffers against coastal hazards; and
(B) Coordinate and fund beach management and protection.
(10) Marine
and coastal resources;
(A) Promote
the protection, use, and development of marine and coastal resources to assure
their sustainability.
(c) Policies.
(1) Recreational resources;
(A) Improve coordination and funding of coastal recreational planning and management; and
(B) Provide adequate, accessible, and diverse recreational opportunities in the coastal zone management area by:
(i) Protecting coastal resources uniquely suited for recreational activities that cannot be provided in other areas;
(ii) Requiring [replacement]
restoration of coastal resources [having] that have
significant recreational and ecosystem value, including[,]
but not limited to coral reefs, surfing sites, fishponds, [and]
sand beaches, and coastal dunes, when [such] these resources
will be unavoidably damaged by development[;] or requiring [reasonable]
monetary compensation to the State for recreation when [replacement] restoration
is not feasible or desirable;
(iii) Providing and managing adequate public access, consistent with conservation of natural resources, to and along shorelines with recreational value;
(iv) Providing an adequate supply of shoreline parks and other recreational facilities suitable for public recreation;
(v) Ensuring public recreational uses of county, state, and federally owned or controlled shoreline lands and waters having recreational value consistent with public safety standards and conservation of natural resources;
(vi) Adopting water
quality standards and regulating point and nonpoint sources of pollution to
protect[,] and, where feasible, restore the recreational value of
coastal waters;
(vii) Developing new
shoreline recreational opportunities, where appropriate, [such as] including
but not limited to artificial lagoons, artificial beaches, and artificial
reefs for surfing and fishing; and
(viii) Encouraging
reasonable dedication of shoreline areas with recreational value for public use
as part of discretionary approvals or permits by the land use commission, board
of land and natural resources, and county authorities; and crediting [such]
this dedication against the requirements of section 46-6;
(2) Historic resources;
(A) Identify and analyze significant archaeological resources;
(B) Maximize
information retention through preservation of remains and artifacts or salvage
operations; and
(C) Support state goals for protection, restoration, interpretation, and display of historic resources;
(3) Scenic and open space resources;
(A) Identify valued scenic resources in the coastal zone management area;
(B) Ensure that new
developments are compatible with their visual environment by designing and
locating [such] these developments to minimize the alteration of
natural landforms and existing public views to and along the shoreline;
(C) Preserve, maintain, and, where desirable, improve and restore shoreline open space and scenic resources; and
(D) Encourage those developments that are not coastal dependent to locate in inland areas;
(4) Coastal ecosystems;
(A) Exercise an overall conservation ethic, and practice stewardship in the protection, use, and development of marine and coastal resources;
(B) Improve the technical basis for natural resource management;
(C) Preserve
valuable coastal ecosystems, including reefs, beaches, and coastal dunes,
of significant biological or economic importance;
(D) Minimize
disruption or degradation of coastal water ecosystems by effective regulation
of stream diversions, channelization, and similar land and water uses,
recognizing competing water needs; and
(E) Promote
water quantity and quality planning and management practices that reflect the
tolerance of fresh water and marine ecosystems and maintain and enhance water
quality through the development and implementation of point and nonpoint source
water pollution control measures;
(5) Economic uses;
(A) Concentrate coastal dependent development in appropriate areas;
(B) Ensure
[that coastal dependent development such as harbors and ports,] residential
and commercial development, transportation infrastructure, and coastal
related development [such as], including but not limited to visitor
industry facilities and energy generating facilities[, are]:
(i) Are
located, designed, and constructed to minimize exposure to coastal hazards;
and
(ii) Minimize adverse social, visual, and environmental impacts in the coastal zone management area; and
(C) Direct
the location and expansion of coastal [dependent] developments to
areas [presently] designated and used for [such] these
developments and permit reasonable long-term growth at [such] these
areas, and permit coastal [dependent] development outside of [presently]
designated areas when:
(i) Use of [presently]
designated locations is not feasible;
(ii) Adverse environmental effects and risks from coastal hazards
are minimized; and
(iii) The development is important to the State's economy;
(6) Coastal hazards;
(A) Develop and
communicate adequate information about [storm wave, tsunami, flood, erosion,
subsidence, and point and nonpoint source pollution] risks of coastal
hazards;
(B) Control
development, including planning and zoning control, in areas subject to [storm
wave, tsunami, flood, erosion, hurricane, wind, subsidence, and point and
nonpoint source pollution] coastal hazards;
(C) Ensure
that developments comply with requirements of the [Federal] National
Flood Insurance Program; and
(D) Prevent coastal flooding from inland projects;
(7) Managing development;
(A) Use, implement, and enforce existing law effectively to the maximum extent possible in managing present and future coastal zone development;
(B) Facilitate timely processing of applications for development permits and resolve overlapping or conflicting permit requirements; and
(C) Communicate the potential short and long-term impacts of proposed significant coastal developments early in their life cycle and in terms understandable to the public to facilitate public participation in the planning and review process;
(8) Public participation;
(A) Promote public involvement in coastal zone management processes;
(B) Disseminate
information on coastal management issues by means of educational materials,
published reports, staff contact, and public workshops for persons and
organizations concerned with coastal issues, developments, and government
activities; and
(C) Organize
workshops, policy dialogues, and site-specific mediations to respond to coastal
issues and conflicts;
(9) Beach protection;
(A) Locate new
structures inland from the shoreline setback to conserve open space, minimize
interference with natural shoreline processes, and minimize loss of
improvements [due to] because of erosion;
(B) Prohibit construction
of private [erosion-protection] shoreline hardening structures [seaward
of the shoreline, except when they result in improved aesthetic and engineering
solutions to erosion] such as seawalls and revetments, at [the]
sites [and do not] with beaches and at sites where shoreline
hardening structures interfere with existing recreational and waterline
activities;
(C) Minimize the
construction of public [erosion-protection] shoreline hardening
structures [seaward of the shoreline;], such as seawalls and revetments
at sites with beaches and at sites where shoreline hardening structures
interfere with existing recreational and waterline activities;
(D) Minimize grading of and damage to coastal dunes;
[(D)] (E)
Prohibit private property owners from creating a public nuisance
by inducing or cultivating the private property owner's vegetation in a beach
transit corridor; and
[(E)] (F)
Prohibit private property owners from creating a public nuisance
by allowing the private property owner's unmaintained vegetation to interfere
or encroach upon a beach transit corridor; and
(10) Marine and coastal resources;
(A) Ensure that the use and development of marine and coastal resources are ecologically and environmentally sound and economically beneficial;
(B) Coordinate the management of marine and coastal resources and activities to improve effectiveness and efficiency;
(C) Assert and articulate the interests of the State as a partner with federal agencies in the sound management of ocean resources within the United States exclusive economic zone;
(D) Promote research,
study, and understanding of ocean and
coastal processes,
the impacts of climate
change and sea level rise,
marine life, and other ocean resources to acquire and inventory
information necessary to understand how [ocean]
coastal development activities relate to and impact upon ocean
and coastal resources; and
(E) Encourage research and development of new, innovative technologies for exploring, using, or protecting marine and coastal resources."
SECTION 4. Section 205A-22, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by amending the definitions of "department" and "development" to read as follows:
""Department
means the planning department [in] of the counties of Kauai,
Maui, and Hawaii and the department of [land utilization] planning
and permitting in the city and county of Honolulu, or other appropriate
agency as designated by the county councils.
"Development" means any of the uses, activities, or operations on land or in or under water within a special management area that are included below:
(1) Placement or erection of any solid material or any gaseous, liquid, solid, or thermal waste;
(2) Grading, removing, dredging, mining, or extraction of any materials;
(3) Change in the density or intensity of use of land, including but not limited to the division or subdivision of land;
(4) Change in the intensity of use of water, ecology related thereto, or of access thereto; and
(5) Construction,
reconstruction, [demolition,] or alteration of the size of any
structure.
"Development" does not include the following:
(1) Construction or reconstruction of a single-family residence that is less than seven thousand five hundred square feet of floor area, is not situated on a shoreline parcel or a parcel that is impacted by waves, storm surges, high tide, or shoreline erosion, and is not part of a larger development;
(2) Repair or maintenance of roads and highways within existing rights-of-way;
(3) Routine maintenance dredging of existing streams, channels, and drainage ways;
(4) Repair and maintenance of underground utility lines, including but not limited to water, sewer, power, and telephone and minor appurtenant structures such as pad mounted transformers and sewer pump stations;
(5) Zoning variances, except for height, density, parking, and shoreline setback;
(6) Repair, maintenance, or interior alterations to existing structures;
(7) Demolition or removal of structures, except those structures located on any historic site as designated in national or state registers;
(8) Use of any land for the purpose of cultivating, planting, growing, and harvesting plants, crops, trees, and other agricultural, horticultural, or forestry products or animal husbandry, or aquaculture or mariculture of plants or animals, or other agricultural purposes;
(9) Transfer of title to land;
(10) Creation or termination of easements, covenants, or other rights in structures or land;
(11) Final subdivision approval; provided that in counties that may automatically approve tentative subdivision applications as a ministerial act within a fixed time of the submission of a preliminary plat map, unless the director takes specific action, a special management area use permit if required, shall be processed concurrently with an application for tentative subdivision approval or after tentative subdivision approval and before final subdivision approval;
(12) Subdivision of land into lots greater than twenty acres in size;
(13) Subdivision of a parcel of land into four or fewer parcels when no associated construction activities are proposed; provided that any land that is so subdivided shall not thereafter qualify for this exception with respect to any subsequent subdivision of any of the resulting parcels;
(14) Installation of underground utility lines and appurtenant aboveground fixtures less than four feet in height along existing corridors;
(15) Structural and nonstructural improvements to existing single-family residences, where otherwise permissible;
(16) Nonstructural improvements to existing commercial structures; and
(17) Construction,
installation, maintenance, repair, and replacement of emergency management
warning or signal devices and sirens[;
provided that whenever the authority finds that
any excluded use, activity, or operation may have a cumulative impact, or a
significant environmental or ecological effect on a special management area,
that use, activity, or operation shall be defined as "development"
for the purpose of this part]."
SECTION 5. Section 205A-26, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended to read as follows:
"§205A-26 Special management area guidelines. In implementing this part, the authority shall adopt the following guidelines for the review of developments proposed in the special management area:
(1) All development in the special management area shall be subject to reasonable terms and conditions set by the authority in order to ensure:
(A) Adequate access, by dedication or other means, to publicly owned or used beaches, recreation areas, and natural reserves is provided to the extent consistent with sound conservation principles;
(B) Adequate and properly located public recreation areas and wildlife preserves are reserved;
(C) Provisions are
made for solid and liquid waste treatment, disposition, and management [which]
that will minimize adverse effects upon special management area
resources; and
(D) Alterations to
existing land forms and vegetation, except crops, and construction of
structures shall cause minimum adverse effect to water resources, beaches, and coastal dunes,
and scenic and recreational amenities and [minimum danger of] minimize
impacts from floods, wind damage, storm surge, landslides, erosion, sea level rise, siltation, or failure in the
event of earthquake.
(2) No development shall be approved unless the authority has first found:
(A) That the
development will not have any [substantial] significant adverse environmental or ecological effect,
except as [such] any adverse effect is minimized to the extent
practicable and clearly outweighed by public health, safety, or compelling
public interests. [Such] The
adverse effects shall include[,] but not be limited to[,] the
potential cumulative impact of individual developments, each one of which taken
in itself might not have a [substantial] significant adverse effect, and the elimination of planning
options;
(B) That the development is consistent with the objectives, policies, and special management area guidelines of this chapter and any guidelines enacted by the legislature; and
(C) That the
development is consistent with the county general plan, community plan, and zoning. [Such a] A finding of
consistency does not preclude concurrent processing where a general plan, community plan, or zoning amendment may also
be required.
(3) The authority shall seek to minimize, where reasonable:
(A) Dredging, filling, or otherwise altering any bay, estuary, salt marsh, river mouth, slough, or lagoon;
(B) Any development [which]
that would reduce the size of any beach or other area usable for public
recreation;
(C) Any development [which]
that would reduce or impose restrictions upon public access to tidal and
submerged lands, beaches, or portions of rivers and streams within the
special management areas and the mean high tide line where there is no beach;
(D) Any development [which]
that would substantially interfere with or detract from the line of
sight toward the sea from the state highway nearest the coast; and
(E) Any development [which]
that would adversely affect water quality, existing areas of open water
free of visible structures, existing and potential fisheries and fishing
grounds, wildlife habitats, or potential or existing agricultural uses of
land."
SECTION 6. Section 205A-29, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by amending subsection (a) to read as follows:
"(a) The authority in each county, upon
consultation with the central coordinating agency, shall adopt rules under
chapter 91 setting the special management area use permit application
procedures, conditions under which hearings must be held, and the time periods
within which the hearing and action for special management area use permits
shall occur. The authority shall provide
for adequate notice to individuals whose property rights may be adversely affected
and to persons who have requested in writing to be notified of special
management area use permit hearings or applications. The authority shall also provide public
notice [statewide] that is at minimum circulated throughout the
county and at least twenty days in advance of the hearing. The authority may require a reasonable filing
fee which shall be used for the purposes set forth herein.
Any rule adopted by the authority shall be consistent with the objectives, policies, and special management area guidelines provided in this chapter. Action on the special management permit shall be final unless otherwise mandated by court order."
SECTION 7. Section 205A-43, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by amending subsection (a) to read as follows:
"(a) Setbacks along shorelines are established of
not less than [twenty feet and not more than] forty feet inland from the
shoreline. The department shall adopt
rules pursuant to chapter 91, and shall enforce the shoreline setbacks and
rules pertaining thereto."
SECTION 8. Section 205A-43.5, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by amending subsection (a) to read as follows:
"(a) Prior to action on a variance application, the authority shall hold a public hearing under chapter 91. By adoption of rules under chapter 91, the authority may delegate responsibility to the department. Public and private notice, including reasonable notice to abutting property owners and persons who have requested this notice, shall be provided, but a public hearing may be waived prior to action on a variance application for:
(1) Stabilization of shoreline erosion by the moving of sand entirely on public lands;
(2) Protection of a
legal structure [costing more than $20,000;] or a public facility, which does not fix the shoreline, under
an emergency authorization issued by the authority; provided that the
structure or public facility is at risk of immediate damage from
shoreline erosion;
(3) Other structures or activities; provided that no person or agency has requested a public hearing within twenty-five calendar days after public notice of the application; or
(4) Maintenance,
repair, reconstruction, and minor additions or alterations of legal boating,
maritime, or watersports recreational facilities, [which] that
result in little or no interference with natural shoreline processes."
SECTION 9. Section 205A-44, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by amending subsection (b) to read as follows:
"(b) Except as provided in this section, structures are prohibited in the shoreline area without a variance pursuant to this part. Structures in the shoreline area shall not need a variance if:
(1) They were completed prior to June 22, 1970;
(2) They received either a building permit, board approval, or shoreline setback variance prior to June 16, 1989;
(3) They are outside the shoreline area when they receive either a building permit or board approval;
(4) They are necessary for or ancillary to continuation of existing agriculture or aquaculture in the shoreline area on June 16, 1989;
(5) They are minor structures permitted under rules adopted by the department which do not affect beach processes or artificially fix the shoreline and do not interfere with public access or public views to and along the shoreline; or
(6) Work being done consists of maintenance, repair, reconstruction, and minor additions or alterations of legal boating, maritime, or watersports recreational facilities, which are publicly owned, and which result in little or no interference with natural shoreline processes;
provided that permitted structures may be repaired, but shall not be enlarged, rebuilt, or replaced within the shoreline area without a variance."
SECTION 10. Section 205A-46, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by amending subsection (a) to read as follows:
"(a) A variance may be granted for a structure or activity otherwise prohibited in this part if the authority finds in writing, based on the record presented, that the proposed structure or activity is necessary for or ancillary to:
(1) Cultivation of crops;
(2) Aquaculture;
(3) Landscaping; provided that the authority finds that the proposed structure or activity will not adversely affect beach processes and will not artificially fix the shoreline;
(4) Drainage;
(5) Boating, maritime, or watersports recreational facilities;
(6) Facilities or improvements by public agencies or public utilities regulated under chapter 269;
(7) Private facilities or improvements that are clearly in the public interest;
(8) Private facilities or improvements [which],
excluding seawalls and revetments, that will neither adversely affect beach
processes [nor artificially fix the shoreline;],
nor result in flanking shoreline erosion; provided that the
authority [also finds that] may consider hardship that
will result to the applicant if the facilities or improvements are not allowed
within the shoreline area;
(9) Private facilities
or improvements that may artificially fix the shoreline; provided that the authority
[also finds that shoreline erosion is likely to cause] may consider
hardship that will result to the applicant if the facilities or
improvements are not allowed within the shoreline area[, and the authority
imposes conditions to prohibit any structure seaward of the existing shoreline
unless it is clearly in the public interest]; provided further that a
variance to artificially fix the shoreline shall not be granted in areas with
sand beaches and in areas where artificially fixing the shoreline may interfere
with existing recreational and waterline activities; or
(10) Moving of sand from one location seaward of the shoreline to another location seaward of the shoreline; provided that the authority also finds that moving of sand will not adversely affect beach processes, will not diminish the size of a public beach, and will be necessary to stabilize an eroding shoreline."
SECTION 11. Statutory material to be repealed is bracketed and stricken. New statutory material is underscored.
SECTION 12. This Act shall take effect on July 1, 2050.
Report Title:
Climate Change; Sea Level Rise; Barriers; Flooding; Coastal Zone Management; Shoreline Hardening
Description:
Requires new developments to plan for the impacts of projected sea level rise and restricts development in areas significantly affected by projected sea level rise. Amends policies and objectives related to coastal zone management to reduce residential exposure to coastal hazards and protect state beaches and public shoreline access. Defines "beach" and "coastal hazards." Increases the minimum shoreline setback. Takes effect on 7/1/2050. (HD1)
The summary description
of legislation appearing on this page is for informational purposes only and is
not legislation or evidence of legislative intent.