Or. Admin. Code § 350-010-0050 - Natural and Human Management Processes Do Not Affect Urban Area Boundaries
(1) The location of
an urban area boundary does not shift in response to natural processes that
occur over a long period of time, such as accretion and reliction of rivers and
streams or ordinary high water, or as a result of major sudden event, such as
an avulsion, flooding, landslide, or earthquake. The urban area boundary
remains at the location described prior to the event.
(2) The location of an urban area boundary
does not shift in response to management of the normal pool elevation behind
Bonneville and The Dalles dams. The normal pool elevation is as defined by dam
operations on November 17, 1986.
(3) The location of an urban area boundary
does not shift in response to relocation or realignment of linear features,
including but not limited to roads and highways, railroads, pipelines, or
powerlines, or their associated rights-of-way or easements. A Legal Description
that uses a linear feature means the linear feature as it existed on November
17, 1986, or as otherwise noted in the Legal Description.
(4) The location of an urban area boundary
does not shift in response to changes in land management boundaries, including,
but not limited to, municipal boundaries and approved urban growth boundaries.
A Legal Description that refers to a land management boundary means the land
management boundary as it existed on November 17, 1986, or as otherwise
described in the Legal Description.
State regulations are updated quarterly; we currently have two versions available. Below is a comparison between our most recent version and the prior quarterly release. More comparison features will be added as we have more versions to compare.
No prior version found.