Saturday, December 13, 2025
28.0°F

P&Z Commission recommends dissolving zoning ordinance

Dac Collins Staff Writer | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 9 years AGO
by Dac Collins Staff Writer
| December 1, 2016 12:00 AM

The Plannning and Zoning Commission recently voted to dissolve a Transfer of Development Rights (TDR) ordinance after the committee came to the agreement that the ordinance was not being implemented properly and therefore should be done away with.

Boundary county adopted the TDR ordinance sometime around 2012 in order to follow in accordance with the state of Idaho’s statute 67-6515A, which established procedures that would authorize landowners to voluntarily transfer the development rights to their land for use at another location.

John Moss, who serves as the zoning administrator for the Planning and Zoning Commission, believes that part of the reason the ordinance has not been implemented properly is because, as he says, “the language in the ordinance makes it hard to administer.” Moss has a point. The TDR program can be a fairly confusing and complex process, but the jist of it is as follows.

Say, for example, that a farmer owns a plot of prime bottomland bordering the Kootenai River.

If the farmer were to take advantage of a TDR program as it is outlined in Idaho statute 67-6515A, he could sell the development rights to the environmentally sensitive and agriculturally rich land. He could still live there and work the land, which would then be designated as a “sending area”. In fact, nothing about his relationship with the land would change except for his ability to build on it.

The buyer of the farmer’s development rights could then use those purchased rights in a specified “receiving area”: an area like the outskirts of downtown Bonners Ferry, which already has the infrastructure in place to allow for such development.

The TDR program allows for the development values of these receiving areas to be enhanced by allowing for new or special uses, greater density or intensity, or other regulatory flexibility that would not be permitted under standard zoning laws. The developer could, for example, build twice as many houses in the receiving area than he could have without the TDR program.

If used properly as a zoning tool, the voluntary TDR program creates incentives for both landowners and developers to protect environmentally sensitive and agricultural areas from overdevelopment while simultaneously promoting development in areas that can better handle that growth.

However, according to Tim Patton, a local natural resource planner and landscape designer, the county’s TDR ordinance that was created years ago fails to follow the original intent of statute 67-6515A.

“By allowing the receiving areas to be established almost anywhere in the county, [the ordinance] is defeating the whole purpose of the statute,” Patton says.

The Naples resident is alluding to the county’s designation of the McArthur Lake Wildlife Corridor as a receiving area. This area is a well-known migration corridor for wildlife moving from the Selkirk to the Cabinet Mountains and is by all definitions an environmentally sensitive area.

Patton spoke up during a board of commissioners meeting in November in order to explain why the current TDR program is failing, and how the county might go about enacting the program as it was originally meant to be used.

“As it is, you’re better off getting rid of it,” Patton told the board.

The Planning and Zoning Commission has recommended doing just that, and the Boundary County Board of Commissioners will most likely follow through on this recommendation.

According to Moss, who says that, “since the incorporation of the TDR verbiage to the present time, there has been no request for any activity related to TDR,” local landowners and developers will not be affected by this decision.

ARTICLES BY DAC COLLINS STAFF WRITER

February 2, 2017 midnight

City forms plan for high five grant

BONNERS FERRY — The City of Bonners Ferry is currently looking at how to best utilize the $250,000 High 5 Community Transformation Grant that was awarded in October of last year. The source of this grant money is the Blue Cross Foundation of Idaho, which works with communities around the state in order to combat childhood obesity.

Badgers tripped up at home by Kellogg Wildcats
January 26, 2017 midnight

Badgers tripped up at home by Kellogg Wildcats

The Bonners Ferry varsity boys basketball team seems caught in a slump, as they dropped their third game in a row to Kellogg on Saturday night (30-63). This is the second time the Badgers, now 3-6 overall, have lost by more than 30 points this season.

Lady Badgers come up short against Wildcats: close but no cigar
January 26, 2017 midnight

Lady Badgers come up short against Wildcats: close but no cigar

The Bonners Ferry girls varsity basketball team played the Kellogg Wildcats at home on Saturday night, and after four exciting quarters filled with nearly twice that many lead changes, the Badgers lost by two (47-49).