10 questions for Marc Boldt:
1. Your most frequently cited goal for the next term is to shorten the review process for developers. Why should voters care?
For homeowners or renters, an extra 30 or 60 days or longer for a permit is extra interest, which is added to a mortgage payment or rent. For business owners or those wanting a job, it is certain that your project will be turning dirt on time; that will attract you to Clark County.
2. What are your top two accomplishments on the county board?
Bringing together Columbia Basin Rail, the county’s contractor, and BYCX, our rail nonprofit group, to work together on our rail line. Working with Washington State University to get the 78th Street poor farm back into our county’s hands with no county expense.
3. You’re almost silent in many hearings and work sessions. Why don’t you have more questions?
I try to read all materials presented beforehand and do ask questions as I go along. When I ask questions, they are ones that I feel the public may want.
4. The state says the big urban expansion you supported last year wasn’t legal. If this one loses in court, will you want another?
First, it is a unelected board that said that. We are now challenging that in an elected court. If at the end we do not prevail, I would agree to wait until the next plan review.
5. Can the county afford to hire eight new sheriff’s deputies every year?
At the present time, no. But in the future, it will depend on tax revenue, annexations, and the deputies-to-population mix.
6. What’s one thing the county can do to help farmers?
Make it easier to get water, labor and services.
7. Should big rural lots have more subdivision rights?
No, unless cluster development is revisited and implemented.
8. What would the Cowlitz Tribe have to offer for you to sign a new deal with them?
For them to accept our preferred alternative to the EIS — the “economic development” (no casino) option.
9. If you could pass, change or kill one county rule, what would it be?
To require conditional use permits for a clear purpose and change the rest to permitted uses.
10. What else isn’t on the county’s radar, but should be?
Our changing demographics to a older population. Smaller homes, transportation needs, services, etc. We need a senior citizen advisory board for these solutions.
Harris’s responses:
1. Streamlining permitting and other county regulations is essential in reducing costs. I would also propose the county pre-qualify tier 3 (LEED Gold/Platinum) green builders and provide accelerated/abbreviated site plan review.
2. Clark County is uniquely positioned to be a national leader in a new green economy. Together we will create a regional plan as one region, one Clark County and we will be competitive with the rest of the world.
3. My years of experience on city council and numerous boards, including eight years on C-Tran’s board, have prepared me for the high level of communication skills that this job demands.
4. Had the commissioners waited the minimum five years between reviews, the comprehensive plan would be open next year, and we would not have spent money on planning but rather for public safety.
5. We don’t have time, and it isn’t responsible to wait — citizens deserve protection now. My opponent would rather wait until the area requiring the most service, Hazel Dell, either annexes or incorporates. [Footnote 1]
6. During the last four years farmers have asked for simple things the county can do; disclosure, right to farm and help with water rights and my opponent has not responded to the farmers’ requests. [Footnote 2]
7. Recently the Rural Lands Task Force that Commissioner Boldt developed and chairs [Footnote 3] has recommended downsizing parcels outside a UGA and implementing cluster development. This is a slippery slope to rural urbanization.
8. My approach is to work with the Cowlitz to establish an agreement that integrates the tribe as a partner into the region. We can make the relationship a win-win.
9. This issue needs more work or we will find ourselves sliding towards urbanizing rural areas, outside of rural centers, which seems to be what Commissioner Boldt would like to do and not what I would do.
10. By adopting smart growth we give everyone the option to walk, bike or use transit to access services, work, education and recreation. A comprehensive trail system is essential for the health of Clark County.
Footnotes:
[1] Boldt said he doesn’t want to wait until Hazel Dell is a city, only that the county can’t afford to make the hires now.
[2] Commissioners have asked the state Department of Ecology to strengthen farmers’ water rights.
[3] Boldt suggested the task force and helped choose its members, but he didn’t chair the group and avoided its meetings.
http://www.columbian.com/article/20081012/NEWS02/810119972