Commissioners Approve GIPAC Work Plan

Resolution 20050025 Approving Work PlanWork Plan


GIPAC Survey Results

In the last week of July 2004 we sent out a survey to all addresses of property owners and residents on our mailing list. The survey is an important step in the public input process that will lead to a subarea plan for Guemes Island.

The GIPAC Survey Results are available to download in PDF format. Written comments that accompanied the surveys are also available.


Formal Recognition for Planning and Advisory Committee

County Commissioners adopt Resolution "Recognizing the Guemes Island Planning Advisory Committee as the Community-based representative for Purposes of Obtaining Funds and Initiating a Subarea Plan for Guemes Island." [Read the Resolution]


GIPAC meetings are now held every Monday at 7pm at the Church, unless cancelled.


GIPAC Members



Guemes Island Submits
Draft Sub-Area Plan July 31

Download the Guemes Island Draft Sub-Area Plan [1.1 mb PDF 7.31.7]

Modifications of May 2007 Draft Guemes Island Sub-Area Plan Based On Public Comments [80kb PDF 8.13.7]


The Guemes Island Planning Advisory Committee, GIPAC, will present the draft sub-area plan for the island at a public meeting on June 8 at 7:00 PM at the Community Hall.

The plan represents a six-year effort to develop policy and code changes needed to address Guemes Island issues. Many of the recommendations were taken from the Skagit County Comprehensive Plan and County Code and adapted to better address unique Guemes Island issues. The plan seeks to reflect the results of GIPAC’s visual preference study and opinion survey to understand how islanders want their community to look and feel in the future. Both surveys showed a strong preference for open spaces and woods, modest “non-suburban style” homes set naturally into the environment with farms and vistas, and an absence of suburban amenities or urban services.

Many of the plan recommendations focus on protecting the island’s only water supply, its sole source aquifer, from further over pumping which results in saltwater intrusion. The plan calls for stronger public education efforts to encourage the use of roof water collection systems, native plant landscaping, and other water conservation measures. It also recommends regulations barring bonus densities for new development and prohibiting the expansion of programs to reduce lot size near the Rural Intermediate Zone. Other proposed precautions include tighter controls on new wells and well systems for accessory dwellings.

To maintain fields and woodlands as open space, individuals are encouraged to enroll in the Skagit County open space program. For permanently protecting these lands, islanders are asked to work with local land trust organizations and take advantage of the tax benefits gained by conservation easements. Islanders are also encouraged to keep, and where needed, restore native plant communities on their property as another way to maintain the quality of open space and wildlife habitat.

Shorelines are a significant part of the island landscape. In addition to offering visual beauty to residents they provide valuable habitat for marine life, Guemes Island shorelines are an important part of the North Sound marine ecosystem. However, the native vegetation that supports this life is degraded on many of the island’s shorelines. For existing development, the plan encourages residents to conserve native vegetation on shorelines and to revegetate degraded sections. For new structures, protecting existing native vegetation in the water setback area is the recommended requirement. This area would also increase from 50 feet to 100 feet in most areas.

New homes replacing older small cabins may be disproportionately large, especially on smaller shoreline lots. The trend is troublesome since it appears that the shoreline is over developed in these areas. The plan recommends addressing this issue with modest increases in side yard setbacks and reductions in the bulk of upper stories.

Also, to protect shoreline banks, greater use of vegetation and other “soft” technologies are encouraged, rather than conventional rock or cement. In addition, the plan looks to prohibiting private docks and piers, mining, and large-scale commercial aquaculture.

Most of the island’s transportation concerns revolve around the ferry and associated parking issues both on the island and in Anacortes. Among the first recommendations is a request for a level of service study to determine the most cost effective and appropriate amount of ferry service for Guemes Island as a Rural Area. To reduce the demand for parking and space on the ferry, the plan seeks better transit service and the use of “flex” cars in Anacortes. On the Guemes side, it calls for increasing the number of foot passengers through education programs, improvements to the parking lot, economic incentives, and other means to encourage alternatives to cars.

The plan asks for a study of extended hour ferry service by analyzing its costs, environmental impacts, and affects on rural character. Recommendations also include a request that the County officially recognize the Ferry Committee as the island conduit for communication with the County on these issues. The major road recommendation is to realign the portion of South Shore Road that is seriously eroded.

A new organization elected by islanders, the Guemes Island Advisory Committee (GIAC), is proposed to work with the County to implement the plan recommendations. The plan requests that the County better inform the island community of either County initiated public works projects or private development proposals.

GIAC would hold community meetings on these issues to gain public input for project recommendations to the County. GIAC would also help carry out the plan’s various education programs and volunteer efforts to increase native vegetation, protect open space, and preserve the quality and quantity of the aquifer.

Copies of the draft sub-area plan will be available at the June 8 meeting. Presentation of the plan coincides with the American Institute of Architects’ (AIA) review of the island’s progress toward sustainability. Erica Gees, project manager for the AIA will attend to observe the process and take comments on the island’s sustainability issues. A second public meeting on will be held on June 29, 2007 at 7 pm in the Community Hall for further discussion before the end of the 30 day comment period on July 8, 2007. The revised plan from this process will be submitted to the County Commissioners who will also hold a public hearing on the plan as part of their approval process.

If you have questions, please call either Marianne Kooiman or Joost Businger at 293- 5815, or Roz Glasser at 293-0373.


Guemes Island Sustainability Report [1mb PDF]


Summary: AIA SDAT on Guemes Island

AIA On Guemes: Day 1 2 3


Participate in the AIA / GIPAC Process

Sustainable Guemes Poster


AIA Comes to Guemes Island [4.24.6]


Rapid Shoreline Inventory Report [4.8.6]


Comment on Friends of Guemes Island's Letter


Questioning the Comp Plan [4.20.6]

Comp Plan Update Comments [3.17.6]

Summary of Comprehensive Plan Update Hearing [3.28.6]

Proposed Amendments to the Comprehensive Plan for Guemes Island [3.14.6]


AIA Selects Guemes Island
to Promote Long-term Sustainability


Shipwreck Day Sale Event Fund Raiser

We had a very, very successful fundraising event at the Shipwreck Day sale. We sold over $1,000 in "junque" which was represented by a small moving van full of Guemes Islanders' contributions of "good stuff" for the sale.

I would like to thank Carol Pellett who assisted in pricing and organizing the stuff and who put up with my whining, Will Pellett, Cristina Pellett, Connie Snell and Anne Jackets who assisted in selling all the stuff and the generous Guemes Islanders who contributed everything we sold. We all done good today!

Every event and every fundraising effort brings us just that much closer to realizing our funding budget of $30,000.

GIPAC is an exempt organization under Section 501 (c) (3) of the Internal Revenue Code and, accordingly, your donation is deductible to the extent provided by law.


Successful Public Meeting for Guemes Shoreline Plan


GIPAC Requests Donations to Study Land Use


Guemes Island Shorelines 1977, 1994, 2000


Summary of Shoreline Designation Criteria [48k PDF]

Complete Shoreline Designation Criteria [108k PDF]

GIPAC Tackles Shoreline Plan

In the January Evening Star, Marianne Kooiman, representing GIPAC (Guemes Island Planning Advisory Committee), explained the efforts of this committee to prepare a workable sub-area plan addressing many areas of concern to all islanders. The survey, to which more than 500 islanders responded, was a successful attempt to gather public input on key growth-management issues. There will be more such opportunities for comment.

Currently, GIPAC’s energy is directed at developing a shoreline management plan which will become an integral part of the sub-area plan. GIPAC received a small grant for this project, which is due this December. So we are focusing our energy on the shoreline plan, while other tasks related to the sub-area plan also move forward.

We are fortunate to live on an island where opportunities still exist to appreciate the beaches and scenic views and to enjoy shoreline activities such as birding. However, shorelines are also among the most biologically important and fragile environments on earth. They are affected both by healthy habitats on the land side and the vitality of life in the water.

Loss of native vegetation along the shoreline limits nesting areas for marine-dependent birds like: peregrine falcons, eagles, herons, and kingfishers. Removing trees and brush along shorelines also reduces the shade and insect supply needed by juvenile salmon below. Soil, eroded from places like Kelly Point and deposited in tidal areas, creates new opportunities for eelgrass and marine algae to take hold. This, in turn, protects and sustains our coastal juvenile fish and shellfish resource.

Skagit County, as required by the State, adopted a Shoreline Management Plan in 1976. Recent changes in the law require local governments to update their shoreline plans; particularly, to improve fish and wildlife habitat and to protect steep, unstable slopes and floodprone shoreline areas. The Guemes Island shoreline plan will be a more detailed section of the County’s updated plan.

GIPAC will hold the first public workshop addressing shoreline management issues with our consultant, John Owen, on Saturday, April 2, at 7:30 PM in the Community Center. The major issue for discussion is shoreline designations, which, like zoning, affect density, shoreline setbacks, etc, for new construction. Other possible topics include habitat protection, public access, and saltwater intrusion. A second workshop, to address other plan issues, is being planned for late this summer.

If you have questions about the shoreline planning, please contact rozglasser@juno.com.

GIPAC meets on the 1st and 3rd Monday of each month at 7:30 in the church. All are welcome to attend.