Limited Time Offer. Become a Founder Member Now!

Council accepts petition and directs staff to pursue steps for Davis annexation initial meeting

September 11, 2025 | Monroe City, Snohomish County, Washington


This article was created by AI summarizing key points discussed. AI makes mistakes, so for full details and context, please refer to the video of the full meeting. Please report any errors so we can fix them. Report an error »

Council accepts petition and directs staff to pursue steps for Davis annexation initial meeting
Monroe City Council on Tuesday directed staff to prepare a resolution accepting a 10% annexation petition filed by the Davis family and to begin the procedural steps toward a 60% petition and annexation. The actions were unanimous.

David Toyer of Toyer Strategic Advisors, representing the Davis property owners, described the filing as a standard 60% petition process that begins with a 10% notice and initial meeting. Toyer said the Davis property has been part of Monroe’s comprehensive-plan discussions and that the applicant expects to use a development agreement and a site-specific interlocal with Snohomish County, similar to the city’s recent Monroe 30 annexation.

Council approved multiple staff directions in sequence: accept and record the 10% annexation petition; commence pre-annexation zoning review; schedule a pre-application meeting with affected city departments and Snohomish County Regional Fire & Rescue to discuss utilities, transportation and site layout; prepare and submit a pre-annexation development agreement; and coordinate with Snohomish County on a site-specific interlocal agreement covering transfer/maintenance of utilities and infrastructure. Each motion passed 7-0.

Staff advised that the petition will proceed through signature circulation (the 60% petition), development-agreement negotiations and interlocal agreement steps. The city noted it currently has no master interlocal agreement with Snohomish County for annexations and that a site-specific interlocal will be required to prevent the county from invoking boundary-review jurisdiction.

Next steps: staff will draft the resolution accepting the 10% petition, begin pre-annexation zoning review, coordinate the pre-application meeting and start development-agreement preparation with the applicants.

View full meeting

This article is based on a recent meeting—watch the full video and explore the complete transcript for deeper insights into the discussion.

View full meeting

Sponsors

Proudly supported by sponsors who keep Washington articles free in 2025

Scribe from Workplace AI
Scribe from Workplace AI