It looks like Kitsap County’s shorelines task force is off to a
good start. All but a couple of the 20 members attended the first
official meeting of the group last Thursday. Everyone seemed happy
to be there.
Several members made a point of thanking the county for bringing
the task force together at the start of the process of updating the
Kitsap County Shorelines Master Program. Kitsap County’s planning
director, Larry Keeton, said he is not aware of another county
relying on a citizen task force to the extent that Kitsap is. Check
out the story I wrote for
Saturday’s Kitsap Sun.
One member said he was glad to be part of the process, even
though he realizes that the plan finally adopted by the county
commissioners may be different.
As a “get-to-know-you” exercise, the meeting’s facilitator,
Margaret Norton-Arnold, asked members to talk about themselves.
And, to get a snapshot of their views, she asked them to place
their names, a picture or some kind of symbol in an appropriate
spot on a long poster. On the poster, a picture of industrial
development had been drawn on the left side, with a forest scene on
the right. People who believed that development had already left
its mark were asked to place their symbol on the left, while those
who favored restoring things to a pristine condition were asked to
place their symbol on the right.
Most people placed their names/pictures close to the center. Two
or three tried to suggest ways of bringing the opposite sides
together.
Only Bob Benze of the Kitsap Alliance of Property Owners chose
not to place himself on that spectrum. He said his emphasis during
the planning process would be to make sure individual property
rights are respected and that the laws be followed.
Benze’s statement prompted Tom Nevins, a member of the Kitsap
County Planning Commission and a longtime conservation supporter,
to get up and say his focus would be on community values while
respecting people’s rights and the underlying laws. His mark went
somewhere in the middle.
Frankly, that’s exactly what I expected from those two, which is
one reason I predicted a lively debate in my
April 18 Water Ways entry.
As Norton-Arnold described it, the process of consensus-building
will allow room for all viewpoints. Where compromise cannot be
reached, she will prepare “majority” and “minority” reports to
reflect the full range of opinion.
While introducing herself, Norton-Arnold revealed her longtime
relationship to Kitsap County, and I discovered a distant and
roundabout connection between her and myself.
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