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Residents on landlocked properties question map accuracy
By Rodika Tollefson, KP News
Editor’s note: This is an installment in a series of
articles taking a look at the landlocked situation of the
residents who live off 144th Street.
In April 1923, owners of land along a
primitive Key Pen Road had their properties condemned by
the city of Tacoma, which wanted to use the land for a
power transmission project. The court determined “the said
proposed condemnation and appropriation to be for a public
use.”
Tacoma Power since then built a
transmission line stretching from Tacoma to the Cushman
Power Dam, a line that also provides power to the Key
Peninsula.
The road eventually became known by
several names including Pole Line Road and Powerline Road,
but the postal addresses designate it as 144th Road KP N.
A former resident who grew up on 144th recalled using the
road to ride horses, and said she and friends frequented a
pet cemetery that existed right off 144th.
The properties had changed hands
several times in the last eight decades, and nothing
seemed amiss until about 30 or 40 years ago, when
residents started having troubles with getting the county
to maintain the road. The troubles have compounded in
recent years, as landowners whose only access is through
that road became unable to get any county permits. In
their words, they became landlocked. Residents on the west
side of Wright-Bliss Road are not affected, as the county
owned a road there before the lawsuit, and therefore the
road remained.
Tacoma Power says the residents on
the east side of Wright-Bliss have trespassed on private
property all this time. Residents, however, believe the
lawsuit never intended to take away use of the road.
As residents scramble for answers,
they are asking questions like: How can mail be delivered
to a road that doesn’t exist? How can the county approve
easements off a road that doesn’t have public access? Why
do maps show a county road on a road the county said it
doesn’t own?
The question of maps has come up
frequently in the debate between the property owners, the
utility, and the county. Residents have pointed out “C.D.
Rowley County Road” showed up on maps dating back decades,
stretching not only on the west side of Wright-Bliss but
also for portions of the east side. Even county GIS
mapping shows an undedicated strip of land stretching east
of Wright-Bliss in between the parcels Tacoma Power owns.
Map errors
A representative for Metzker Co.,
which has produced some of the maps, said the information
comes from sources such as the county assessor, county
road departments and similar sources, but never from
private information. Some residents have county documents
for their private property showing C.D. Rowley Road on the
county map, east of Wright-Bliss. One of those residents
said, “It’s not our imagination. We were led to believe”
that was a legal road. Yet, as county Councilman Terry Lee
pointed out, “A map has no legal authority, it’s only an
illustration.”
“It is our property, I don’t care
what the maps say,” Tacoma Power Superintendent Steve
Klein said in an earlier interview. “There is no question
there’s been errors on maps.”
Tacoma Power’s Tom Anderson wrote in
an email in reply to the KP News’ question about the
apparent road right-of-way on maps: “Unfortunately, the
county’s GIS mapping is incorrect and that strip of land
does not exist other than as an error on the county’s GIS
map. Others have made the same argument to us based on the
county’s GIS map. We have brought this to the county’s
attention and they admit their map is wrong.” A county GIS
official told the KP News in August she was not aware of
the errors but would look into it.
Some residents said their title
reports showed a public road. Several property owners who
bought their homes within recent years have, in fact, gone
back to their title companies for answers. They learned
that their properties show access, and their title
companies may pursue legal action. Some believe if
successful, the suit would help everyone else.
A Ticor Title Co. agent in Tacoma,
who is not servicing the residents in question but who
spoke on condition of anonymity, said, “Title insurance
provides legal access to the property we insure… The legal
access is automatically covered.” But, he noted, “sometime
legal access is not the same as the one used.”
Next step
Residents have appealed for help from
Lee, and county officials have since been actively
discussing possible solutions with utility
representatives. Their approach so far has focused on
providing residents with legal access that doesn’t involve
using 144th. Many property owners don’t like the idea, and
continue to insist 144th should have been a county road,
or if not, the county should press Tacoma Power for an
easement. They point to discussions dating back to the
1970s when the utility considered turning the road over to
the county, in exchange for release of liability and other
conditions (see KP News, July 05). They also say they
“don’t want a beautiful road” that could costs millions of
dollars, they just want a primitive, but legal, road.
Lee said he brought the idea of a
lawsuit to county Executive John Ladenburg, a former
prosecutor. He said while Ladenburg feels the county may
have a shot at winning, Tacoma Power would turn around and
assess everyone to bring the road up to county standards.
With the county in a $650 million hole for roadway
improvements, and many higher priorities, the county
doesn’t have the funds to bring the road up to standard
either.
“Any legal remedies would come with a
price tag citizens will have to pay,” Lee said. “I’m going
to try to solve the problem with the least financial
impact to the citizens out there.”
The county staff was in the process
of determining what private and public roads could be used
to provide access, though the work has focused largely on
helping only already developed properties.
“The executive (Ladenburg) asked us
and Public Works to lay out the options,” said Planning
and Land Services Director Chuck Cleeberg. “In the past,
when we’ve taken this look, the lack of access on that
road was a real barrier.” The two departments were
researching parcel by parcel, to see what current roads
could be used or where new roads may be built.
In the meantime, the residents are
coming up on a deadline. Tacoma Power has been getting
ready to install electronic gates on the road, and giving
access to police and fire departments and to current
residents — provided the residents signed a release form.
The latest schedule estimate indicated the gates would go
up by early October. Several residents said they would not
sign the form — which may leave them without a gate key.
One resident told Lee and Tacoma
Power spokesperson Chris Gleason at a meeting: “We just
want a stinking road, a place with no gates. Our taxes
keep going up and up — what for? Where are our taxes going
to? It’s certainly not going to our road access.”
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