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g. Any area with a slope of forty percent or steeper and with a vertical relief of fifteen or more <br /> feet,except those manmade slopes created under the design and inspection of a geotechnical <br /> professional, or slopes composed of consolidated rock. <br /> h. Areas that are at risk of landslide due to high seismic hazard. <br /> i. Areas that are at risk of landslides or mass movement due to severe erosion hazards. <br /> 2. Seismic/liquefaction hazard areas: <br /> a. Those areas mapped as seismic/liquefaction hazards per the Dames and Moore Methodology <br /> for the Inventory, Classification and Designation of Geologically Hazardous Areas, City of Everett, <br /> Washington:July 1, 1991, or as revised through best available science. <br /> b. Those areas mapped as high and moderate to high liquefaction susceptibility on the <br /> Liquefaction Susceptibility Map of Snohomish County,Washington,Washington State Department <br /> of Natural Resources, Palmer, Stephen, et al., September, 2004. <br /> 3. Erosion hazard areas: <br /> a. Those areas defined as high and very high/severe risk of erosion in the Dames and Moore <br /> Methodology for the Inventory, Classification and Designation of Geologically Hazardous Areas, City <br /> of Everett,Washington:July 1, 1991, or as revised through best available science: <br /> i. High erosion hazard areas include slopes of twenty-five to forty percent in Qva and Qal <br /> geologic units; and slopes of greater than forty percent in other(not Qva or Qal)geologic units. <br /> ii. Very high/severe erosion hazard areas include slopes of greater than forty percent in Qva <br /> and Qal geologic units. <br /> b. Those areas defined as medium risk of erosion in the Dames and Moore Methodology for the <br /> Inventory, Classification and Designation of Geologically Hazardous Areas, City of Everett, <br /> Washington:July 1, 1991, or as revised through best available science,when they contain debris and <br /> mud flows,gullying or rifling, immature vegetation,or no vegetation: <br /> i. Slopes of twenty-five to forty percent in other(not Qva or Qal)geologic units. <br /> 4. Other areas which the city has reason to believe are geologically hazardous. <br /> B. Geologically Hazardous Slope Setbacks and Slope Protection' - - - '-- -••-• . <br /> 1. Geotechnical Assessment Requirements. Development proposals on or within two hundred feet of <br /> any area designated as or which, based on site-specific field investigation,the city has reason to <br /> believe are geologically hazardous areas shall submit a geological assessment as required by <br /> subsection F of this section. <br /> 2. The setback buffer requirement shall be based upon information contained in a geological <br /> assessment,and shall be measured on a horizontal plane from a vertical line established at the edge <br /> of the geologically hazardous area limits(both from the top and toe of slope). In the event that a <br /> specific setback buffer is not included in the recommendation of the geological assessment,the <br /> setback buffer shall be based upon the standards contained in Chapter 19.18 of the International <br /> Building Code (IBC), or as the IBC is updated and amended. <br /> a. If the geological assessment recommends setback buffers that are less than the standard <br /> buffers that would result from application of Chapter 19.18 of the IBC,the specific rationale and <br /> basis for the reduced buffers shall be clearly articulated in the geological assessment. <br /> b. The city may require larger setback buffer widths under any of the following circumstances: <br /> i. The land is susceptible to severe erosion and erosion control measures will not effectively <br /> prevent adverse impacts. <br /> ii. The area has a severe risk of slope failure or downslope stormwater drainage impacts. <br /> iii. The increased buffer is necessary to protect public health, safety and welfare based upon <br /> findings and recommendations of the geological assessment. <br /> Planning Commission Resolution 19-04 Page 26 <br /> Critical Areas March 19, 2019 <br />