Banner graphic including a montage of Washington State Park scenes and the agency logo

Lake Sylvia and Schafer Plan project

graphic of fishermen in hipwaders angling in the river graphic of man and child with fishing tackle on bridge overlooking lake

Washington State Parks has begun a land-use planning project for several parks, Lake Sylvia State Park in Grays Harbor County and Schafer State Park in Mason County.

The planning project, also known as Classification and Management Planning (CAMP), includes the four planning stages described below. The CAMP project will address development and management of programs and facilities as well as protection of natural and cultural resources and management of recreation activities at these parks.

The entire planning process includes a series of public workshops over about a nine-month period. Project staff will post information from the workshops for public review and comment at each stage of the process.


Stage One – Identify issues and concerns

The purpose of this stage is to understand what is important to the park community, what to change or save in the state park. This helps get a sense of the range and type of issues that need to be considered through the planning process.

FileDateSize
Stage 1 - Existing Context ReportDraft.pdf09/14/2009  666 kb
Stage 1 - Summary of issues from correspondence.pdf10/09/2009  480 kb
Stage 1 - Summary of issues from public workshop.pdf10/09/2009  174 kb
Stage 1 – Responses from questionnaires.pdf09/24/2009  405 kb

Stage Two – Exploring alternative approaches

At this stage, the planning team suggests potential alternative approaches to address the various issues and concerns raised by people in stage one. No preferred alternative is established; rather this is an opportunity to understand the range of possibilities.

FileDateSize
Stage 2 - 01-Aternatives Report.pdf11/17/2009  984 kb
Stage 2 - 02-AppendixA_LakeSylviaStatePark.pdf11/17/2009  142 kb
Stage 2 - 03-AppendixB_SchaferStatePark.pdf11/17/2009  164 kb

Stage Three – Preparing preliminary recommendations

The best ideas from the alternative approaches developed in stage two are combined into a preliminary plan in this stage. The plan includes recommendations for use and development of land, changes to property boundaries and ways to address issues raised during the planning process. Another important document completed at this stage is the SEPA checklist that describes environmental impacts of the recommendations (available for public review upon request).

Stage Four – Preparing final recommendations

At stage four, final adjustments are made to recommendations and submitted to the seven-member Parks and Recreation Commission for approval. The public is encouraged to attend the Commission meeting and provide testimony or to provide written comment.

Provide comments

We are very interested in your thoughts and comments about this project. Please provide comments on this project by:

Project lead: Brian Hovis
E-mail: LakeSylvia.Schafer.Planning@parks.wa.gov
Phone: (360) 902-8635
Fax: (360) 586-0207
Mail: P.O. Box 42650, Olympia, WA 98504-2650


Miscellaneous documents

Following are downloadable documents related to this project.

FileDateSize
Land Classification System.doc09/01/2009  103 kb