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PDFWAC 458-30-700

Designated forest landRemovalChange in statusCompensating tax.

(1) Introduction. This rule describes what events cause removal of land from designated forest land status under chapter 84.33 RCW, the procedures followed for removal, and the resulting compensating tax.
(2) Events causing the removal of designated forest land status. The assessor must remove forest land from its designated forest land status when:
(a) The owner submits a written request to remove the land from designated forest land status;
(b) The owner sells or transfers the land to an individual or entity exempt from property tax because of that individual's or entity's ownership;
(c) The assessor determines that the land is no longer primarily devoted to and used for growing and harvesting timber;
(d) The owner has failed to comply with a final administrative or judicial order made because of the violation of the restocking, forest management, fire protection, insect and disease control and forest debris provisions of Title 76 RCW or the rules that implement Title 76 RCW;
(e) Restocking has not occurred to the extent or within the time specified in the application for designation of the land;
(f) The owner sells or transfers forest land to a new owner who has not signed a notice of continuance, except for a transfer by a transfer on death deed or a transfer to a new owner who is the heir or devisee of a deceased owner. RCW 84.33.140(5). Land may also be removed if a new owner signs the notice of continuance but the assessor determines the land does not continue to qualify in its designated status; or
(g) The assessor discovers that the land was designated under chapter 84.33 RCW in error.
(3) How to retain designated forest land status when the land is sold or transferred. When designated forest land is sold or transferred, the new owner may retain designated forest land status by filing a signed notice of continuance with the deed. The notice of continuance may be signed as part of the real estate excise tax (REET) affidavit or as a separate form if the county has decided it will require owners to submit both the REET affidavit and attach a separate notice of continuance. If multiple owners own the land, all owners or their agent(s) must sign the notice of continuance. A notice of continuance is not required for a transfer to a new owner who is an heir or devisee of a deceased owner or for a transfer by a transfer on death deed to retain designated forest land status.
(a) The owner may obtain the notice of continuance form and a real estate excise tax (REET) affidavit from the county. The county assessor's office has the notice of continuance form and the county treasurer's office has the REET affidavit.
(b) After the new owner signs the notice of continuance as part of the REET affidavit and, if required, the separate notice, the REET affidavit and notice must be submitted to the assessor for approval. The assessor may also require the owner to submit a timber management plan before approving the notice of continuance.
(i) The assessor signs the REET affidavit and indicates whether the land will or will not qualify to continue as designated forest land.
(ii) An assessor signs the REET affidavit and approves the land for continued designation if:
(A) The assessor is provided with a complete and accurate notice of continuance signed by the new owner demonstrating that the forest land will continue to qualify as designated forest land; and
(B) At the assessor's option, the new owner provides a timber management plan for the property.
(iii) The assessor is allowed up to fifteen days to confirm that the information upon the notice is complete and accurate. The assessor may use this time to confirm that the timber management plan provides:
(A) The correct legal description for the forest land;
(B) The new owner's statement that the forest land is a parcel of land that consists of five or more acres or multiple parcels that are contiguous and total five or more acres and is primarily devoted to and used to grow and harvest timber;
(C) A statement about whether the land is used to graze livestock;
(D) A brief description of the timber stands located on the land;
(E) A statement about whether the land has been used in compliance with the restocking, forest management, fire protection, insect and disease control, and forest debris provisions of Title 76 RCW; and
(F) If the land has been recently harvested or supports a growth of brush and noncommercial type timber, a description of the owner's plan to restock the forest land within three years.
A timber management plan may contain, but is not required to contain, any other information that the harvester needs for its own business purposes (i.e., a statement of goals for managing the land or identifying resource protection areas on the land, like riparian buffer areas along a stream or an unstable slope, that limit harvesting activities).
(iv) If the assessor determines that the notice of continuance or the timber management plan is not accurate or complete, the owner may resubmit the corrected information to the assessor.
(v) If the assessor determines that the land does not qualify to continue as designated forest land, the assessor removes the land upon the date of the conveyance and provides the owner with a notice of removal containing reason(s) for the removal and the amount of compensating taxes owed.
(c) Once the assessor signs the notice of continuance as part of the REET affidavit and the separate notice of continuance, if required, the notice(s) are then submitted to the treasurer. Before the treasurer can stamp the REET affidavit as approved for recording, the treasurer collects any REET due because of the sale or transfer, and collects all compensating tax if the land does not qualify for continuance as designated forest land because it was denied continuance by the assessor. The county recording clerk must not accept any deeds or other transfer documents unless the treasurer has stamped the REET affidavit.
(d) A notice of continuance is not required when the transfer of the forest land is to a new owner who is an heir or devisee of a deceased owner or is a transfer by a transfer on death deed, however, the land must continue to meet the requirements of designated forest land to avoid removal from designation. The treasurer determines that a transfer is by inheritance because the claim for the inheritance exemption is filled out on the REET affidavit with supporting documentation. The treasurer should notify the assessor when forest land has been transferred by inheritance without a notice of continuance.
(4) Assessor decisions and procedures. Before removing the land from its designated forest land status, the assessor follows certain procedures and takes into account circumstances that may delay or prevent removal.
(a) The assessor must determine:
(i) The actual area of land to be removed from forest land status;
(ii) Whether the land has been exempted from a special benefit assessment;
(iii) The true and fair value of the area being removed as of January 1st of the year of removal from designation;
(iv) Forest land value of the area to be removed as of January 1st of the year of removal from designation;
(v) The last levy rate that applied for that area; and
(vi) The amount of time the land has been designated as forest land, including the number of days up to the date of removal for the current year of removal.
(b) The assessor may require the owner to provide a legal description of the land area intended for removal when the landowner requests removal of owner's land from designated forest land status.
(c) The remaining land outside of the affected removal area continues to be designated as forest land if the owner retains a parcel of land that consists of five or more acres or multiple parcels that are contiguous and total five or more acres, primarily devoted to and used for growing and harvesting timber. If the remaining land fails to meet this requirement, it will be subject to removal.
(d) The assessor must provide the owner with a written notice and an opportunity to be heard by the assessor, or the assessor's deputy, when the assessor intends to remove the land because it is no longer primarily devoted to and used for growing and harvesting timber. RCW 84.33.140 (5)(e). Each county assessor may set his or her own procedure for giving a landowner this notice and opportunity to be heard so long as it is done in a reasonable and consistent manner that ensures due process for each owner.
(e) An assessor may not remove forest land merely because an owner subdivides the land into separate parcels, if the contiguous parcels of the subdivided land still consist of at least five acres and continues to be primarily devoted to and used for growing and harvesting timber. An assessor may ask an owner of designated forest land if the use of the land has changed when the owner subdivides a tract of designated forest land into separate parcels.
(f) If the assessor determines the land is no longer primarily devoted to and used for growing and harvesting timber, but there is a pending acquisition by an entity that would qualify for exemption from compensating tax under subsection (6)(e) of this rule, the assessor must not remove the land from its designated forest land status. RCW 84.33.140 (5)(e)(i). To prevent removal, the government entity or other qualified recipient must provide written proof to the assessor of its intent to acquire the land or documentation that demonstrates the transaction will qualify for an exemption from compensating tax under subsection (6)(e) of this rule. The entity acquiring the land must provide this written proof within sixty days of a request by the assessor. Thereafter, once a year, the governmental entity or other recipient must provide the assessor of the county in which the land is located written evidence of its intent to acquire the land. This written evidence must be provided on or before December 31st of each year or at an earlier date if the assessor makes a written request for such information. Upon the assessor's written request, the information must be provided within sixty days from the postmark date the assessor mails the request to the owner.
(g) The assessor must not remove forest land from its designation if a governmental restriction is imposed on the land that prohibits, in whole or in part, the harvesting of timber.
(i) If only a portion of the forest land is impacted by the governmental restriction, the assessor cannot use the restriction as a basis to remove the remainder of the land from its designated forest land status.
(ii) A governmental restriction includes:
(A) Any law, regulation, rule, ordinance, program, or other action adopted or taken by a federal, state, county, city, or other governmental entity; or
(B) The land's zoning or its presence within an urban growth area designated under RCW 36.70A.110.
(h) If the assessor has reason to believe that forest land less than twenty acres is no longer primarily used for the growing and harvesting of timber, the assessor may require a timber management plan to assist with determining continuing eligibility.
(5) Removal proceedings. If the forest land no longer qualifies for designation, the assessor must provide timely written notice(s) to the owner. RCW 84.33.140 (5)(e) (written notice and opportunity to be heard), and RCW 84.33.140(9) (notice of removal). Upon receiving the notice that the land has been removed (notice of removal), the owner may appeal the removal and/or apply for reclassification of the land under chapter 84.34 RCW. If the owner chooses to appeal the removal, the appeal must be filed within thirty days (or up to sixty days if such a time limit has been adopted by the county legislative authority) of the postmark date the notice was mailed by the assessor, electronically transmitted by the assessor, the assessor electronically notified the owner or person responsible for payment of taxes that the notice was available to be accessed by the owner or other person, or on or before July 1st of the year of removal, whichever is later. RCW 84.40.038. If the owner chooses to apply for reclassification, they must do so within thirty days of the postmark date of the notice.
(a) When does the land get removed from designated forest land status? If the removal is a result of a sale or transfer, the assessor removes the land on the date of sale or transfer provided in the legal conveyance. If the removal is based upon a determination or discovery made about the land by the assessor or at the request of the owner, the assessor removes the land on the date shown on the notice of removal mailed to the owner.
(b) Notice of removal. The assessor uses the notice of removal to notify the owner that the land has been removed from designated forest land status. Within thirty days of removing land from designated forest land status, the assessor must mail the notice of removal to the owner with the reasons for the removal. The owner, seller, or transferor may appeal the removal to the county board of equalization.
(i) If the property is being removed because the assessor has determined the land is no longer primarily devoted to and used for growing and harvesting timber, the assessor provides two notices. First, the assessor must notify the taxpayer of his or her intent to remove the property and give the owner an opportunity to be heard. The assessor may require the owner to provide pertinent information about the land and its use in the response to the assessor's first notice. When the assessor determines that the property still does not qualify as designated forest land after the first notice is sent, the assessor mails the owner the second notice, the notice of removal, but only after:
(A) The owner declines the opportunity to be heard;
(B) The owner fails to timely respond to the first notice; or
(C) The assessor has received and considered the owner's timely response to the notice of intent to remove and nevertheless concludes that the property is no longer primarily devoted to growing and harvesting timber.
(ii) If the removal is based upon an owner's request for removal, upon receipt of a request for removal from an owner, the assessor sends the notice of removal to the owner showing the compensating tax and recording fee due.
(iii) The notice of removal provides the reason(s) for removing the land from designation and the date of the removal. The notice includes the compensating tax calculated in subsection (6) of this rule and the necessary recording fees to be paid. It also includes the due date for payment, along with the owner's rights to appeal the removal or appeal the true and fair value at the time of removal, and the owner's right to apply for the land to be reclassified under chapter 84.34 RCW. The county must use the notice of removal form provided by the department.
(iv) The assessor must also provide written notice of the removal to any local government filing a notice regarding a special benefit assessment under RCW 84.33.210 within a reasonable time after the assessor's decision to remove the land. The assessor may provide a simple statement with the legal description of the land, the name of the landowner, and the date of removal, if he or she includes a copy of the notice sent to the landowner. RCW 84.33.230.
(c) What happens when an owner chooses to appeal the removal? Unless the removal is reversed on appeal, the assessor continues the process to remove the property from designated forest land status. The assessor may choose to delay collection of the compensating tax and recording fee until the appeal is decided. However, if the assessor postpones the collection of the compensating tax and recording fee, the assessor must notify the treasurer to temporarily delay collection. The assessor must also notify the owner that if the determination to remove is upheld, then interest will be due from the date the compensating tax and recording fee were due.
(i) If the removal is reversed on appeal, the assessor must reinstate the land as designated forest land, discharge any lien placed against the land, revise any assessments made against the property during the interim, refund the recording fee paid, and refund or cancel any compensating taxes and interest paid or owing.
(ii) If the removal is upheld on an appeal and the compensating tax and recording fee have not been paid, the compensating tax and recording fee are due immediately with interest accrued from the date they were originally due. Upon receiving notice of the decision upholding the removal, the assessor must immediately notify the treasurer to collect any unpaid compensating taxes, fees, and interest on the land.
(d) What happens when an owner applies to have the land reclassified under chapter 84.34 RCW? If an application for reclassification is submitted by the owner no later than thirty days after the postmark date the notice of removal was mailed, the forest land is not removed from designation until the application for reclassification under chapter 84.34 RCW is denied or later removed from classification under RCW 84.34.108. RCW 84.33.145(1).
(i) An application for reclassification is processed in the same manner as an initial application for classification under chapter 84.34 RCW.
(ii) If an owner is reclassifying forest land under chapter 84.33 RCW into the timber land classification under chapter 84.34 RCW, a timber management plan must be filed with the county legislative authority within sixty days of the date the application for reclassification is received. The application for reclassification will be accepted, but may not be processed until this plan is received.
(A) If this plan is not received within sixty days of the date the application for reclassification is received, the application will be denied.
(B) If circumstances require it, the assessor may allow an extension of time for submitting a timber management plan when an application for reclassification is received. The applicant will be notified of this extension in writing. When the assessor extends the filing deadline for this plan, the granting authority may delay processing the application until the plan is received. If the timber management plan is not received by the date set by the assessor, the application for reclassification will be automatically denied.
(iii) When the owner sells or transfers forest land (or a portion of the forest land) while an application for reclassification under chapter 84.34 RCW is pending, the assessor may accept a notice of continuation, and allow the owner to revise the application for reclassification to reflect the name of the new owner of the forest land.
(iv) If the application for reclassification under chapter 84.34 RCW is approved, the assessor will transfer the property to its new classification. The assessed value of reclassified land will be based on the new classification as of January 1st of the assessment year following the year the reclassification application was submitted.
(v) If the application for reclassification under chapter 84.34 RCW is denied, the assessor must submit the notice of removal to the county recording authority and inform the treasurer's office to immediately begin collection of the compensating tax and the recording fee. When an application for reclassification is denied, the owner may appeal the denial in accordance with RCW 84.34.035, 84.34.037, or 84.34.041, depending on the classification applied for.
(6) Compensating tax. Compensating tax is imposed when land is removed from its designated forest land status. This tax recaptures taxes that would have been paid on the land if it had been assessed and taxed at its true and fair value instead of the forest land value.
(a) Calculating the compensating tax. The assessor uses the last levy rate extended against the land, the forest land value as of January 1st of the removal year, and the true and fair value as of January 1st of the removal year for the area to be removed from forest land status to calculate the compensating tax. The compensating tax consists of two parts: The recapture of taxes for previous years that the land was designated as forest land, up to a maximum of nine years; and the recapture of taxes from January 1st of the removal year up to the date of removal from designation. RCW 84.33.140 (10) and (11).
(i) The compensating tax for the previous years is calculated by determining the difference between the amount of taxes assessed at the forest land value for the removal area and the amount of taxes that would have been paid if the land had been valued at its true and fair value as of January 1st in the year of removal. That difference is multiplied by the number of years the land was designated as forest land up to a maximum of nine years.
For the purpose of counting the number of years land was assessed as forest land under this chapter, if the forest land being removed was once classified as timber land under chapter 84.34 RCW but is designated under this chapter because of a merger pursuant to RCW 84.34.400, the date the land was classified as timber land is considered to be the date the property was designated as forest land.
(ii) The compensating tax for the portion of the year of removal from January 1st to the date of removal is calculated by determining the difference between the amount of taxes assessed at the forest land value as of January 1st of the year of removal and the taxes that would have been paid if the land had been valued at its true and fair value as of January 1st of the year of removal.
(b) Formulas for calculating taxes after removal:
(i) Calculation of prior year's compensating tax:
True and Fair Value of Land (Jan 1st of year removed)
Less
Forest Land Value (Jan 1st of year removed)
Multiplied by
Last levy Rate Extended Against Land
Multiplied by
Years (not to exceed 9)
Equals
Compensating Tax
$
$
x
$
x
 
=
$
(ii) Calculation of current year's taxes to date of removal:
 
 
÷
365
=
 
 
No. of days designated as forest land in the year of removal
 
No. of days in year
 
Proration factor
(To items (A) and (B))
(A)
$ _____
x
_____
x
_____
=
$ _____
 
True and Fair Value of Land (Jan 1st of year removed)
Last Levy Rate Extended Against Land
Proration factor
(B)
$ _____
x
_____
x
_____
=
$ _____
 
Forest Land Value (Jan 1st of year removed)
Last Levy Rate Extended Against Land
Proration factor
(C)
Amount of compensating tax for current year ((A) minus (B))
=
$_____
(c) The assessor notifies the treasurer of the amount of compensating tax and the due date for the tax by providing the treasurer a copy of the removal notice. Compensating tax is due and payable to the county treasurer thirty days after the owner is notified of the amount due. The treasurer will mail a notice to the owner of the amount of compensating tax owed and the due date on which this amount must be paid. RCW 84.33.140(11). However, when property is sold or transferred, any compensating tax owed must be paid to the county treasurer before recording the conveyance. The county recording authority will not accept any instrument transferring the land, unless the compensating tax was paid or was not owed.
(d) What happens if the compensating tax is not paid on the due date? If the compensating tax is not paid by the due date, the tax is considered delinquent. Interest, set at the statutory rate for delinquent property taxes specified in RCW 84.56.020, will accrue against the amount of the unpaid compensating tax from the due date until the entire amount owing is paid. Unpaid compensating tax and interest becomes a lien on the land. RCW 84.60.020.
(i) This lien attaches at the time the forest land is removed from designation.
(ii) The lien has priority over any recognizance, mortgage, judgment, debt, obligation, or responsibility against the land.
(iii) This lien must be fully paid before any other recognizance, mortgage, judgment, debt, obligation, or responsibility may be charged against the land.
(iv) The lien can be foreclosed upon expiration of the same period after delinquency and in the same manner as liens for delinquent real property taxes are foreclosed under RCW 84.64.050. RCW 84.33.140(12).
(e) Compensating tax is not imposed on land removed from forest land designation if the removal resulted solely from any of the following:
(i) A transfer to a government entity in exchange for other forest land within Washington state;
(ii) A transfer under either the power of eminent domain or upon the threat of eminent domain by an entity with the power of eminent domain that intends to exercise this power. The entity must threaten to exercise eminent domain in writing or demonstrate this threat by some other official action;
(iii) A donation of fee title, development rights, or the right to harvest timber in order to protect, preserve, maintain, improve, restore, limit the future use, or conserve the property for public use or enjoyment (RCW 84.34.210 and 64.04.130), provided, this donation is made to a:
(A) State agency;
(B) Federal agency;
(C) County;
(D) City;
(E) Town;
(F) Metropolitan park district (see RCW 35.61.010);
(G) Metropolitan municipal corporation (see RCW 35.58.020);
(H) Nonprofit historic preservation corporation as defined in RCW 64.04.130;
(I) Nonprofit nature conservancy corporation or association as defined in RCW 84.34.250; or
(J) Federally recognized Indian tribe.
However, when the land is no longer being used for one of the purposes listed in RCW 84.34.210 or 64.04.130, compensating tax will be imposed on the owner of the land at that time;
(iv) The sale or transfer of fee title to a government entity (see the governmental entities listed in subsection (6)(e)(iii) of this rule) or a nonprofit nature conservancy corporation as defined in RCW 64.04.130 exclusively for the protection and conservation of lands recommended for state natural area preserve purposes by the natural heritage advisory council under its established natural heritage plan as defined in chapter 79.70 RCW (natural area preserves) or approved for state natural resources conservation area purposes as defined in chapter 79.71 RCW, or for acquisition and management as a community forest trust as defined in chapter 79.155 RCW. However, if the land is no longer used for these purposes, compensating tax will be imposed on the owner of the land at that time;
(v) A sale or transfer of fee title to the state's parks and recreations commission for park and recreation purposes;
(vi) An official action of an agency of the state of Washington or the county or city in which the land is located disallowing the present use of the land. "Official action" includes city ordinances, zoning restrictions, the Growth Management Act, the Shoreline Management Act, and the Environmental Policy Act;
(vii) The creation, sale, or transfer of forestry riparian easements under RCW 76.13.120;
(viii) The creation, sale, or transfer of a conservation easement of private forest lands within unconfined channel migration zones or containing critical habitat for threatened or endangered species under RCW 76.09.040;
(ix) The sale or transfer of forest land within two years after the death of an owner who held at least a fifty percent interest in the land if:
(A) The individual(s) or entity(s) who received the land from the deceased owner is selling or transferring the land; and
(B) The land has been continuously assessed and valued as classified forest land, designated as forest land under chapter 84.33 RCW or classified under chapter 84.34 RCW since 1993. The date of death shown on the death certificate begins the two-year period for sale or transfer. For example, an owner who holds at least a fifty percent interest in designated forest land dies on March 1, 2012. The land was designated on January 1, 1989, and is still designated on the date of death of the owner. The heir (new owner) does not want to continue growing and harvesting timber and sells the land on January 20, 2014. At the time of sale, the buyer does not sign the notice of continuance because they will not be using the land for growing and harvesting timber. The assessor will remove the land at the time of sale and the removal would not be subject to compensating tax;
(x) The occurrence of a natural disaster such as a flood, windstorm, earthquake, wildfire, or other such calamity that changes the use of the property, rather than by virtue of an act by the landowner changing the use of the property;
(xi) The assessor discovers that the land was designated under chapter 84.33 RCW in error through no fault of the owner;
(A) For purposes of this subsection, "fault" means a knowingly false or misleading statement, or other act or omission not in good faith, that contributed to the approval of the application for designation or the failure of the assessor to remove the land from designation;
(B) This exception does not apply if an independent basis for removal exists. An example of an independent basis for removal includes the land is no longer devoted primarily to and used for the growing and harvesting of timber; or
(xii) In a county with a population of more than six hundred thousand inhabitants or in a county with a population of at least two hundred forty-five thousand inhabitants that borders Puget Sound as defined in RCW 90.71.010, the compensating tax will not be imposed if there is a transfer of a property interest to a government entity, or to a nonprofit historic preservation corporation or nonprofit nature conservancy corporation (as these corporations are defined in RCW 64.04.130) and the property interest being transferred is to:
(A) Protect or enhance public resources; or
(B) Preserve, maintain, improve, restore, limit the future use of, or otherwise to conserve the land for public use or enjoyment. When the land is no longer being used for any of these purposes, the owner of the land at the time will be required to pay compensating tax.
(7) When will the land be assessed at its true and fair value and the taxes become payable? The land will be assessed at its true and fair value on the date it is removed from forest land status. The assessor revalues the land removed from designated forest land status with reference to its true and fair value on January 1st in the year of removal. RCW 84.33.140(10). The property tax for the remainder of the year following the date of removal is based on land's true and fair value as of January 1st of the removal year.
(a) To calculate the increase the assessor must determine the number of days remaining in the year from the date of removal. The increase in property tax is due on the same due dates as all other property taxes are due for the year (April 30th and October 31st of the current year). RCW 84.56.020.
(b) Formula for calculating the increase in property taxes for the remainder of the year in which the land is being removed:
(i)
 
÷
365
=
 
 
No. of days from date of removal to the end of the year
 
No. of days in year
 
Proration factor for true and fair land value
(ii)
$ _____
x
_____
x
_____
=
$ _____
 
True and Fair Value of Land (Jan 1st of year removed)
Last Levy Rate Extended Against Land
Proration factor
(iii)
$ _____
x
_____
x
_____
=
$ _____
 
Forest Land Value (Jan 1st of year removed)
Last Levy Rate Extended Against Land
Proration factor
(iv)
Total amount of increased taxes for current year ((ii) minus (iii))
=
$ _____
(c) If the taxes for the year of removal have not yet been billed, the tax should be recalculated based on the true and fair value of the land removed as of January 1st of the removal year.
(d) An owner may appeal the true and fair value of the land which is used to calculate the compensating tax and the increase in the remaining current year's taxes in accordance with RCW 84.40.038.
(8) What happens when forest land reclassified under chapter 84.34 RCW is later removed from that classification before ten years have passed? If reclassified forest land is later removed under chapter 84.34 RCW, a combination of compensating tax and additional tax will be imposed unless the basis for removal is one of the circumstances listed as exempt from additional tax under RCW 84.34.108(6).
(a) The amount of compensating tax is equal to the difference, if any, between the amount of property tax last levied on the land as designated forest land and an amount equal to the true and fair value as of January 1st of the year the land is removed from classification under RCW 84.34.108, multiplied by the last property tax levy rate extended against the land, multiplied by
(b) A number equal to:
(i) The number of years the land was designated as forest land under chapter 84.33 RCW, if the total number of years the land was designated under chapter 84.33 RCW and classified under chapter 84.34 RCW is less than ten; or
(ii) Ten minus the number of years the land was classified under chapter 84.34 RCW, if the total number of years the land was designated under chapter 84.33 RCW and classified under chapter 84.34 RCW is at least ten.
[Statutory Authority: RCW 84.08.010, 84.08.070, and 84.34.141. WSR 18-02-109, § 458-30-700, filed 1/3/18, effective 2/3/18. Statutory Authority: RCW 84.08.010, 84.08.070, 84.08.080, 84.34.141, 84.34.360. WSR 15-03-017, § 458-30-700, filed 1/8/15, effective 2/8/15. Statutory Authority: RCW 84.08.070, 84.34.141, 84.36.865, 84.52.0502. WSR 09-19-010, § 458-30-700, filed 9/3/09, effective 10/4/09. Statutory Authority: RCW 84.33.140, 84.34.055, 84.34.108, 84.34.141, and 84.08.070. WSR 07-21-097, § 458-30-700, filed 10/18/07, effective 11/18/07. Statutory Authority: RCW 84.34.141, 84.34.020, and 84.34.030. WSR 02-20-041, § 458-30-700, filed 9/24/02, effective 10/25/02. Statutory Authority: RCW 82.32.300, 84.33.096, and 84.33.140. WSR 02-05-043, § 458-30-700, filed 2/13/02, effective 3/16/02.]
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