Friday, February 5, 2016



paper 1-williams
Bioregional Planning and Community Design
BIOP522 

“Truly sir, you jest….”

Medieval Comedy comes to mind when considering planning in Northwest Montana.  Like many in Goldoni’s or Shakespeare’s works, those who participate in the `planning process’ find willing analogous parts within their plays.  Much like the formative period found in comedias and dramas during the Renaissance, Planning in rural parts of Montana exist in a very primeval state, with a multitude of actors.

Montana, like most parts of the rural West, exists in a world filled with distain for rules, regulations.  A world where individuals champion their perceived rights. When interpretively appropriate; planning legislation, building codes, rules, and regulations are consciously, selectively ignored. When something occurs within one’s realm where there is disagreement, the participants invest time boning up on their “Constitution,” and liberally interpreting what rules and regulations exist, to their own benefit. Western folk have few issues sharing theirs in both public and private venues.

The stage setting in Flathead County[1], within which exist the incorporated cities of Columbia Falls, Kalispell and Whitefish. In 1979, the three Flathead Commissioners created the Flathead Regional Development Office ( FRDO, pronounced `Fir Dough’ ) The first director was Nick Verma, with Dave Greer & Tom Jentz as Planners.
Mssrs Verma, Greer and Jentz became key players in something which immediately became a farce. By law, the political entity was required to plan. Through popular sentiment, an exercise the general population did not want. Since its’ inception, FRDO has always been exposed to the ill winds generated by ultra-Conservative citizens. Like the aforementioned playwright’s characters, the rural West is graced with a broad spectrum of characters – from ultra Left wing terrorists, Ted Kaczynski, ) to ultra-Right wing anti-government libertarians, such as the `Freemen.’

When the planning office was started, along with process, all these characters and more, played roles in what planning has transpired since 1979. To date, approximately three-eighths (3/8) of the county is zoned. While planning is required to adopt zoning, much of the larger zones have been generated through a “Not In My Back Yard” (Nimby) process. Someone threatens an area, in response the neighbors club together to generate the planning and zoning documents, establishing use & parcel requirements which exceed the sizes of the current property owner’s holdings.

In 1992, the County Commissioners expanded FRDO, adding a Building Department to enforce Building Codes as adopted and interpreted by the State. . This Department attempted provide services, plan review for compliance with the 1989 ICBO Building Codes with issuance of Building Permits for residential and commercial construction. In 1993, the County Commissioners dissolved this Department following significant public negative response.

From 1979 through 1996, FRDO worked to responsibly plan Flathead County. By the mid eighties, the three incorporated cities had adopted Master Plans and implemented zoning overlays.  FRDO’s limitations came through budget. To account for process, the Cities and County established jurisdictional bounds. Columbia Falls and Whitefish’s jurisdictions split the differences between their communities, and peripheral rings of five miles extended on the remaining borders. Kalispell’s boundaries extended three miles. These boundaries outside municipal limits are referred to as `Donuts.’  Three `joint’ advisory City-County volunteer Planning Boards attended to Applications, Hearings, Planning and Zoning. Composed by equal numbers of County and City residents, they were advised by a professional FRDO planner. Applications were vetted for compliance by FRDO planners, a report was generated consisting of Summarization, Findings of Fact and Recommendations. The City-County Planning boards held the initial Public Hearings, acted and forwarded the results of their hearings to the respective political bodies. The second and only important meeting was with the governing political bodies, either the three city councils (six council members + mayor elected in non-partisan elections) or County Commission ( three commissioners elected in bi-partisan elections.) The operational pronouns here are advisory, political, non-partisan and bi-partisan.

With the Neo-conservative political movement, referred to as the `Sage Brush Revolution,’ in the 1980’s, concepts like planning and zoning came under fire as manifestations of a liberal, elitist, `big government.’ Flathead County witnessed growing acrimonious hearings. FRDO suffered significant budget cuts as farther Right Wing politicians were elected to the three part-time County Commissioner positions. The planned communities suffered as staff and administrative cut-backs lead to an attrition of qualified, experienced planners, hurried processing of applications and reduction of any and all true planning.

1996 saw election of two libertarian commissioners, whose first act was to dissolve FRDO.  To their chagrin, the State of Montana’s Attorney General issued the Opinion that the County had to have a Planning Office, to responsibly govern. The County’s response was to curtail all planning within the respective donuts, forcing the cities to create their own Planning Departments. FRDO’s staff went from a Director, four full time Planners, two part time Planners and associative staff to a Director. a planner and one staff member. Kalispell and Whitefish employ Planning Directors and a planner plus staff, Columbia Falls has one planner. The cities of Kalispell and Whitefish had provided a Building Department since 1979. With the addition of Planning Departments, both incorporated Building Offices into Planning and Building Departments[2]. Both organizations are managed by Senior Planners.

Growth in the Flathead Valley grew commensurately in the late nineties. At the turn of the century, property values in planned cities accelerated. A by-product of this growth was significantly greater growth in the respective donut areas. In the early nineties, the ratio of City to County residents was approximately forty percent City
 to sixty percent County. By 2014 that ratio had changed to thirty three percent Cities, sixty six percent County. Appendix 1 contains a spreadsheet of population trends from 2004 through 2014, corroborating this statement.

  • The significant growth in Flathead County may be attributed to several conditions:
  •  The country experienced a financial boom between 1992-2000.
  • The Canadian natural resources caused a neighboring financial boom in Alberta.
  • Domestic racial issues in more populated metropolitan areas and states led to a migration of retirees to less populated Western States.
  • A younger population, better heeled, moved into this region, taking advantage of recreational amenities (Glacier National Park, The Bob Marshall Wilderness, Whitefish and Flathead Lakes, The Big Mountain & Blacktail Mountain ski resorts, and the burgeoning communities of Bigfork and Lakeside. )



These situations created a new phenomena. A by-product of the 1990’s financial boom,  elite large scale developments started cropping up:

  • Big Sky, outside of Bozeman, Montana
  • Kimberland Meadows, outside of McCall, Idaho
  • Iron Horse, between Whitefish and the Big Mountain.
  • Harbor Village, outside Bigfork
  • Sun River, Oregon
  • Kayenta, St. George, Utah
  • Deer Valley, Utah
  • Park City West, Utah
  • Crested Butte, Colorado
  •  The Stock Ranch, Hamilton, Montana
  • Expansion of existing resort communities (Sun Valley, Idaho, Park City,Utah & Vail Colorado)


Projects on massive scale were products of outside funding never witnessed in the rural West. Prior to this period, western rural states languished due to conservative lassez-fare approach to economic growth. The economic boom in more developed states resulted in rural communities falling prey to developers who had been jaded by process and regulation in their home states. The developers and investors found opportunity and ease in communities whose state of planning existing in a medieval state of development.

“Alas, Poor Whitefish, I knew her well.”

From our balcony seat, Kalispell is in the back right, Columbia Falls to the back left, and Whitefish is center stage. Why? The adjacent city of Columbia Falls[3] has had the motivation of an industrial nature. A quasissential company town, Columbia Falls has depended on Plum Creeks’ Plywood/MDF plant ( 70 years ) and ASARCO Aluminum Plant (  60 years .) Kalispell, which is bisected by Highway 93 and festooned with marginal strip developments from the seventies, eighties and nineties. These commercial developments have bled Kalispell dry. “Old Money” has migrated from real estate to investments in a massive regional health center and banking.  Once the financial center, and former governmental center of Northwest Montana, Kalispell has enjoyed a deteriorating commercial core as development sprawled beyond its boundaries and jurisdiction.

Whitefish[4] has a sense of place. It enjoys a scenic lake, thirty-six hole golf course, neighboring Big Mountain Ski resort. It enjoys a vibrant downtown, a population on average lower than the other two communities, and an expanded art and theater scene. For comparison in Idaho, think of Whitefish as McCall, with three times the population, Glacier National Park thirty minutes to the east and Canada, an hour’s drive north. Whitefish is also a community which is “loved too much.” While Kalispell was the governmental center, Whitefish continues to enjoy the Burlington Northern Santa Fe Division point. A massive railroad yard where trains are cut up, to haul freight east, over Continental Divide – Marias Pass, and for trains heading west to be reassembled  for a less formidable route west to Spokane, Portland and Seattle. Even today, the Whitefish Depot has the highest Amtrak passenger count between Seattle and St. Paul/Minneapolis.

In catching up with our planning `plot,’ libertarian `Capulets’, i.e. the County Commissioners,  have eliminated the central planning office, hamstrung what is left, by underfunding. Qualified planners have departed for Fair Portland[5], the municipalities[6], and the private sector[7].  This leads to our pre-climax as outside money and consultant assemble in Whitefish to develop:
  •  Iron Horse, funded by Texas’s Hunt Brothers.
  •  The Big Mountain, once a community owned ski resort, was collected by Bill Foley, a New York investment banker.
  • The southern shore of Whitefish Lake has been purchased by Mike Goguen, a senior partner in Sequoia Capital, who has since developed a food service business with three restaurant chains.


This built pressure on Whitefish’s newly constituted planning department and reformed City Planning Board. Pressure is brought to bear from five directions. Rampant growth has spawned the creation of:

·      Citizens for a Better Flathead, an organization promoting responsible growth, adherence to existing planning and zoning regulations.
·      A loose coalition of Whitefish Developers. Old Whitefish developers and new, these people and their representatives began meeting bi-weekly in the mid nineties, and influence planning decisions through collective appearances in planning board & city council hearings, editorial letters, threatened & real lawsuits, and traditional smoke filled room tactics.  This group is politically conservative and most successful in influencing the County Commissioners.
  • ·    The Heart of Whitefish, an organization of young business people whose vested interest is in protecting Downtown Whitefish, limiting strip development and fostering an aggressive downtown Master Plan effort. Their longevity is assured as they benefit financially due to their sponsorship of the local Tuesday evening Farmer’s Market. They invest these funds in financing long term planning of the Downtown District.
  • ·      The Whitefish Chamber of Commerce. This organization became politically active during the mid nineties, often acting as a surrogate influence on municipal planning. In the mid nineties, Jerry Hansen ( Jericho Development ) developer’s consultant was President; Mike Collins, CEO of Big Mountain’s real estate division; Greg Carter, Grouse Mountain Development; and Tim Gratten, Lion Mountain Developer collectively sat on the Chamber’s board of directors. Their mission is to promote growth and development anywhere within the City’s borders.
  • ·      ` New Montanans’ – citizens of wealth, who bring images and predisposed notions of the West with them. These are accompanied by their political and racial opinions. Due to their affluence, like the developers, their influence is effectively felt in the County Commissioner Board Room.


“Mercutio is offended by Tybalt's insolence, as well as Romeo's "vile submission,"[1] and accepts the duel on Romeo's behalf. Mercutio is fatally wounded when Romeo attempts to break up the fight. Grief-stricken and wracked with guilt, Romeo confronts and slays Tybalt.[8]

Between 1995 and 2002, the City of Whitefish assumed planning jurisdiction of the City County area, updated a fifteen year old Master Plan, and ten year old Zoning documents. Four Neighborhood plans were adopted, the Big Mountain Resort plan was amended three different times, and the Iron Horse development was added to the City’s boundaries, increasing Whitefish’s size by fifty percent (50%.) At the toll of two Planning and Zoning Directors, one Public Works Director, and one City Manager.

Not to be outdone, local developers, added and abetted by New Montanans, engaged the Flathead County Commissioners in closed door sessions. Their interest? To take back any and all City jurisdiction beyond the City’s boundaries, i.e., `the Donut.’ Their argument is that the county residents do not have a political say in how they are governed. The result is a series of lawsuits where the City prevails, loses the appeal to the County, and eventually the State of Montana’s Supreme Court sided with the County Commissioners. For a period, the five to eight miles leading into Whitefish, once planned and zoned, finds itself in limbo. During this period a modest land rush occur as speculators buy highway frontage, with the knowledge that the County Commissioners, ever protectors of an Property Rights, doing what he wants, will allow strip development in the forested frontages approaching Whitefish.

“Wherefore art thou, Planning?”
To date, Whitefish has done well. The City has filed suit to stop the County from rezoning frontages approaching the City. The argument is that the Courts ordered the County to match previously zoned lands, with those county zoning categories which most match. This is something the Commissioners did not pursue. Their concept was a ill defined series of zones bearing little, if any resemblance. While a legal court shall settle the City’s contention, there is the Court of Public Opinion.

Whitefish is currently viewed as an resort community inhabited by liberals, over educated elites, and the extremely rich.  Most often, the community is referred to as “The People’s Republic of Whitefish.”

What is missed, is that Whitefish is responsibly planned. Thanks to responsible Planning and Zoning the community’s property values are twice those, per acre, compared to the other six Class B cities in Montana[9]. This class was are assigned the according to Montana State University’s Center for Governmental Studies, based on budget, size of government, size of city and population. This equates to increased tax revenues for both city and county, a better funded public school system, and a better funded public works program.

What hurts Whitefish? Growth in the city has averaged six percent over the past twenty years. Growth in the County is almost double that. Much of that growth occurs in the peripheral areas surrounding Kalispell and Whitefish. This leads to demands on infrastructure and services by neighbors who do no financially support the services they receive.

Communities with responsible planning and zoning account for a great many positive conditions, and few conditions less so.  Most county residents express their concerns about rising taxes and less government – a common mantra. Their arguments for elimination of the peripheral donut areas have occurred in only one jurisdiction – Whitefish. Their principal argument is the want of political representation. During this period, it should be remembered that the City Planning Board mandated at least two seats on that body. While the City Council members had to be municipal citizens, those outside the boundaries were represented by the County Commissioners. Animosity between City and County bureaucrats led to a point where the County Commissioners adamantly refused to act on behalf of the citizens in the three incorporated cities. This was in spite of the fact that a third of their constituents found residence in Cities. The apothecary’s poison? That the three Cities, due to higher property values generate the bulk of tax revenues which fund County government.  The current breakdown of taxes, exempting Special Improvement Districts, finds 52% of taxes going to the local school district, community college and county high school. 25% goes to the City, and the remaining 23% ends up in County coffers. And our tale has yet to end, be told…

The assignment asks the writer to address personal opinions.
Fair enough. I am an Architect, holding a professional degree from the University of Idaho. Unlike most members found on the citizen’s planning boards and councils & commissions, Architects are versed in Planning as course of study. This professional education is considered elitist by most. Yet, often the best observations and work has been accomplished by those with background, interest and experience. What is less appreciated is what responsible planning accomplishes for communities. Planning and Zoning :
  • ·      establishes a vision of where a community may be.
  • ·      protects existing, if not increases, property values..
  • ·      provides an clear understanding of what may occur responsibly.
  • ·      is flexible, allowing accommodating change, as the communities change.
  • ·      provides current property owners the assurance that their holdings and investment may not be jeopardized by contrary adjacent uses.
  • ·      protects the environment
  • ·      provides a means of addressing provisions & growth of public services and utilities.
  • ·      promotes higher tax revenues due to increased taxable values of property


Sure, there are `cons’ to planning. These are nominal. They include, and are not limited to:
  • ·      increased regulation and process
  • ·      cost in administration and staff .
  • ·      personal limitation of use by championing the interests of the community over those of the individual.
  • ·      may limit financial appeal due to limitations of use.
  • ·      Increases taxes due to increased values of property


I dislike the following. However…

As an Architect, I have championed planning and zoning. This has occurred at a local and county level. I have actively participated in Whitefish’s growth, over the past twenty five years. I have:
  • ·      Served three terms on the Whitefish City–County Planning Board. (1986-1995)
  • ·      Served a term on the Whitefish City Council (1993-95)
  • ·      Chaired the municipal committee which generated Whitefish’s first architectural guidelines.
  • ·      While on the City Council enacted work to provide the first community recycling program in Flathead County; insured the Master Plan and Zoning updates in 1995, 1996 be adopted at both a City and County level.
  • ·      Lead the drive to adopt municipal public works standards for roads and parking.
  • ·      Introduced legislation to create bike paths, require sidewalks, street lighting and non vehicular circulation patterns allowing children to access schools, parks and city beach in the safest means possible.
  • ·      Negotiated and saved the Historic Whitefish Train Depot
  • ·      Negotiated and renovated the Historic Belton Train Depot in West Glacier.
  • ·      Insured the public access and participation in Public Works and Planning reviews of Applications prior to actions by the Planning Board and City Council.
  • ·      Worked to insure that rules and regulations be enforced fairly and equally.
  • ·      Chaired the Planning Board committee which lead to the development and adoption of the Highway 93 South Neighborhood Plan.
  • ·      Serve as Chairman and Commissioner of the Whitefish Government Review Committee ( 2014-2016 )
  • ·      Designed and planned, with David Greer, Planner; the New Urbanist development in Bigfork, Harbor Village.
  • ·      Hold License to practice in Montana and Idaho, formerly in Alberta, Canada.
  • ·      Invested time over the past two years working on a Masters In Architectural Science at the University of Idaho.


Much of my career has been invested in my community and region. Much of what has been written may seem critical. Architects and Planners celebrate community by bringing to the stage setting a learned approach to planning, and an appreciation for the fiscal responsibility. I have yet to find a person running for office whose platform includes higher taxes. I do believe that communities deserve a responsible level of government, with inherent services.

Over the course of the last twenty five years, I have listed my involvements, possibly accomplishments. As a professional who supports responsible planning, growth and development, I should also mention that there are costs.
The first time I was threatened was at a Sign Ordinance hearing where an attorney representing those opposed, suggested the best place for me, and my opinions was at the bottom of the Whitefish River wearing concrete overshoes.
An attempt to bribe was made the week leading up to the final vote on Iron Horse by their California Architect. To this day, I have yet to design a home in that subdivision.
My professional practice suffered as the local developer’s community disagreed with my activities promoting a new Master Plan, Zoning, and Public Works Standards. Being on the Planning Board and City Council limited my ability to support my family.
The first week I sat on the City Council, I was sued by a developer whose property had been rezoned in a update. The lawsuit was later tabled and has never been acted upon.

As Architects and Planners, we have an obligation to act in a professional manner. By virtue of the rules and regulations which govern our practices, we conduct ourselves in an ethical, responsible manner. Unfortunately, a rugged streak of individualism, coupled with the Western traditions of independence and personal rights occasionally run afoul of the intent of responsible planning. In my corner of the rural West, planning is oft times ignored, assaulted and avoided.

“It is better to ask for forgiveness, than it is to ask for permission[10].”






[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flathead_County,_Montana
[2] Columbia Falls had a building department in 1994-95. Members of the local construction industry forced its closure when the Columbia Falls City Manager took a medical leave of absence. The interim City Manager succumbed to public pressure
[3] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Columbia_Falls,_Montana
[4] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Whitefish,_Montana
[5] Ross Plambeck, Kalispell Community Development Commerical Officer and Steve Kountz, Seniro FRDO Planner
[6] Tom Jentz becomes the Senior City of Kalispell Planner
[7] Eric Mulcahy leaves FRDO for Plum Creek, later Sands Surveying when they offer planning services; Dave Greer, who freelances for the Department of Fish, Wildlifeand Parks, then Plum Creek, Northwest Montana Healthcare and Harbor Village where he and ken williams architect and develop the New Urbanist plan for Bigforks’ Harbor Village.
[8] Wikipedia contributors. "Romeo and Juliet." Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia. Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia, 25 Jan. 2016. Web. 5 Feb. 2016.

[9] Refer  Attachment 2, which  corroborates this assertion. Source MSU Government Study Center
[10] Dan Averill, Developer. Mr. Averill is the Developer who filed lawsuit. His quote is often repeated and accepted as commonly held wisdom