Current through Register Vol. 49, No. 13, September 23, 2024
Subpart
1.
Goals.
It is the goal of the department to limit the excavation of
materials from the beds of public waters in order to:
A. preserve the natural character of public
waters and their shorelands, in order to minimize encroachment, change, or
damage to the environment, particularly the ecosystem of the waters;
B. regulate the nature, degree, and purpose
of excavations so that excavations will be compatible with the capability of
the waters to assimilate the excavation; and
C. control the deposition of materials
excavated from public waters and protect and preserve the waters and adjacent
lands from sedimentation and other adverse physical and biological
effects.
Subp. 2.
Scope.
Excavation as used in this part includes any activity that
results in the displacement or removal of bottom materials or the widening,
deepening, straightening, realigning, or extending of public waters. It may
involve proposals for excavations landward or waterward from the ordinary high
water level.
Subp. 3.
Prohibited excavation.
Excavation is prohibited in the following cases:
A. where it is intended to gain access to
navigable water depths when such access can be reasonably attained by
alternative means which would result in less environmental impact;
B. where inland excavation is intended to
extend riparian rights to nonriparian lands, or to promote the subdivision and
development of nonriparian lands;
C. when the proposed excavation will be
detrimental to significant fish and wildlife habitat and there are no feasible,
practical, or ecologically acceptable means to mitigate the effects;
D. when the proposed excavation will take
threatened or endangered species listed in chapter 6134 without authorization
by the commissioner according to parts 6212.1800 to 6212.2300;
E. where it is intended to provide fill
materials for development purposes except as provided under part
6115.0280;
F. where the excavation
would not provide an effective solution to a problem because of recurrent
sedimentation and there are feasible and practical alternative solutions which
do not require excavation;
G.
unless the excavation project includes provisions for acceptable disposal of
excavated materials as provided in these rules; or
H. where the excavation would cause increased
seepage of water which would lower the water level of public waters and result
in subsurface drainage.
Subp.
4.
No permit required.
No permit for excavation is required for the following
activities unless prohibited in subpart 3:
A. for excavations in a public watercourse
having a total drainage area, at its mouth, of five square miles or less, if
the watercourse is not an officially designated trout stream and the excavation
will not result in:
(1) any diversions of
water from the drainage area;
(2)
any impoundment of waters by damming the watercourse; or
(3) any actions that would result in erosion
and cause sedimentation of downstream waters as determined by the county or
local soil and water conservation district;
B. to remove debris such as trees, logs,
stumps, and trash provided such removal does not alter the original alignment,
slope, or cross-section of the waters; or
C. for repair of a public drainage system
lawfully established under Minnesota Statutes, chapters 103D and 103E, and
sponsored by the public drainage authority consistent with the definition of
"repair" in Minnesota Statutes, section
103E.701, subdivision
1.
Subp. 5.
Permits required.
Permits are required for the excavation and removal of any
materials from public waters or any excavations extending into or out of public
waters, except as provided in subparts 3 and 4, and a project is subject to the
following general criteria:
A. the
project is reasonable and practical based upon geologic and hydrologic
conditions, including but not limited to:
(1)
quantity and quality of local drainage at the site;
(2) type of sediment/soil strata and
underground formations in the vicinity;
(3) life expectancy of the excavation with
respect to bedload, longshore drift, and siltation patterns in the project
vicinity; and
(4) protection of the
water body from increased seepage, pollution, and other hydrologic
impacts;
B. the disposal
of excavated materials is subject to the following requirements:
(1) the disposal of any excavated materials
containing pollutants is subject to requirements of Minnesota Statutes, chapter
115; and
(2) the most acceptable
means of disposing of clean materials, free from pollutants, that are excavated
from public waters listed in order of preference are:
(a) complete removal of excavated materials
from the waters and disposal or reuse for other purposes outside of the
floodplain;
(b) deposition in
stable on-land disposal sites located above the ordinary high water level and
outside of floodway districts established under local ordinance. Provisions
must be included for sodding, seeding, or otherwise properly stabilizing these
materials;
(c) temporary deposition
along shorelines or within floodplains by stockpiling materials for subsequent
removal to areas outside of any public waters and outside of established
floodplain districts provided that: any stockpile materials are removed within
one year of stockpiling; and the stockpile is constructed so that any materials
or waters entering or leaving the stockpile are controlled to prevent any
introduction of sediment into the environment surrounding the
stockpile;
(d) redeposition of
excavated materials, consisting of inorganic materials free from pollutants,
into public waters shall only be permitted when it will result in improvement
of natural conditions of public waters for the public benefit and will not
result in sedimentation, obstruction of navigation, or a loss of fish or
wildlife habitat. Separate permit provisions are required for redeposition of
excavated materials subject to the standards and criteria of subparts 2 to 5;
and
(e) determination of the public
benefit served by redeposition of excavated materials is based on the value to
the public of redeposited materials in order to protect shorelines from the
damaging effects of erosion due to winds and waves when there are no other
feasible, practical, and ecologically acceptable means to protect the
shoreline; or create or improve habitat areas for fish and wildlife; or
mitigate or enhance the physical and biological environment within public
waters when mitigative or enhancement measures are required as a condition of a
permitted activity within the waters involved and there are no other feasible,
practical, and ecologically acceptable mitigative measures;
C. the proposed project
represents the "minimal impact" solution to a specific need with respect to all
other reasonable alternatives and does not exceed more than a minimum
encroachment, change, or damage to the environment, particularly the ecology of
the waters;
D. the excavation is
limited to the minimum dimensions necessary for achieving the desired
purpose;
E. when excavation is
proposed in a public water that is perched on an impervious stratum, soil
borings show that the proposed excavation will not rupture the impervious
stratum;
F. the biological
character of the waters and surrounding shorelines is affected to the minimum
degree feasible and practical;
G.
adverse effects on the physical or biological character of the waters are
subject to feasible and practical measures to mitigate the effects;
H. the water supply, navigational, and
drainage characteristics of the waters is protected to ensure that the
interests of the public and of private riparian landowners are not adversely
affected by the proposed excavation;
I. the proposed excavation is consistent with
applicable floodplain, shoreland, and wild and scenic rivers management
standards and ordinances for the waters involved;
J. the proposed excavation is consistent with
plans and management programs of local and regional governments, provided that
such plans are consistent with state plans and programs; and
K. for harbors, boat slips, and other mooring
facilities, the excavation is appropriately sized to provide a single mooring
space for each riparian lot to be served. The number of mooring spaces to be
provided shall generally be the amount of natural shoreline to be served
divided by the lot requirements of the local land use control authority and the
state shoreland management standards.
Statutory Authority: MS s
103G.315;
105.415