Current through Register Vol. 49, No. 13, September 23, 2024
Subpart
1.
Goals.
It is the goal of the department to limit the occupation of
public waters by offshore navigational facilities, retaining walls, and other
structures in order to:
A. preserve
the natural character of public waters and their shorelands;
B. provide a balance between the protection
and utilization of public waters; and
C. encourage the removal of existing
structures which do not serve the public interest from the beds of public
waters at the earliest practicable date.
Subp. 2.
Scope.
This part applies to the placement, construction,
reconstruction, repair, relocation, abandonment, or removal of any structure
placed on or in public waters.
Subp.
3.
Prohibited placement of structures.
Placement of structures, temporary structures, and floating
structures is prohibited when the structure, temporary structure, or floating
structure:
A. will obstruct navigation
or create a water safety hazard;
B.
will be detrimental to significant fish and wildlife habitat. Construction is
prohibited in posted fish spawning areas;
C. is designed or intended to be used for
human habitation or as a boat storage structure;
D. is designed or intended to include walls,
a roof, or sewage facilities; or
E.
will take threatened or endangered species listed in chapter 6134 without
authorization by the commissioner according to parts 6212.1800 to
6212.2300.
Subp. 4.
No permit required.
No permit is required for the following activities, unless
prohibited under subpart 3:
A. to
construct, reconstruct, or install a dock, floating or temporary structure,
watercraft lift, or mooring facility if:
(1)
the structure or mooring facility will not constitute a hazard to navigation or
public health, safety, and welfare, as determined by the
commissioner;
(2) the structure
will allow the free flow of water beneath it;
(3) the structure or mooring facility is not
used or intended to be used as a marina;
(4) the structure or mooring facility is
consistent with or allowed under local land use controls, as determined by the
local government land use authority;
(5) the length of the structure is limited to
that necessary to accomplish its intended use, including reaching navigable
water depths;
(6) the structure,
other than a watercraft lift or watercraft canopy, is not more than eight feet
in width and is not combined with other similar structures so as to create a
larger structure; and
(7) docks
placed on rock filled cribs are located only on waters where the bed is
predominantly bedrock, which is incapable of accepting pilings;
B. to construct or reconstruct a
boat launching ramp if:
(1) privately owned
ramps do not exceed 12 feet in width and do not extend more than ten feet
beyond the shoreline or into water more than four feet in depth, whichever is
less. Excavations five cubic yards or less, and placement of up to five cubic
yards of crushed rock, gravel, clean sand, or small stone are allowed to
provide a stable base or maintain use of the r
(2) publicly owned ramps do not exceed 36
feet in width and do not extend more than 30 feet waterward of the shoreline or
into water more than four feet in depth, whichever is less. Excavations of 200
cubic yards or less, and placement of up to 80 cubic yards of crushed rock,
gravel, clean sand, or small stone are allowed to provide a stable base or
maintain use of the ramp. The use of coffer dams constructed of metal sheet
piling or other portable materials is allowed to construct and maintain public
boat launching ramps if all materials are completely removed from public waters
within 30 days of completion of the project;
(3) the ramp is constructed of gravel,
natural rock, concrete, steel matting, or other durable inorganic material not
exceeding seven inches in thickness; and
(4) the ramp is not located on a federally
designated wild and scenic river; or
C. to remove structures or other waterway
obstructions if:
(1) the original
cross-section and bed conditions are restored insofar as practicable;
(2) the structure is completely removed
including any footings or pilings that obstruct navigation;
(3) the structure is not located on an
officially designated trout stream; and
(4) the structure does not function as a
water level control device.
Subp. 5.
Permits required;
criteria.
Permits are required for the construction, reconstruction,
repair, or relocation of any structure or mooring facility on or in public
waters, except as provided under subparts 3 and 4, and a project must meet the
following general criteria:
A. the
proposed project must represent the minimal impact solution to a specific need
with respect to all other reasonable alternatives;
B. the project does not exceed more than a
minimum encroachment, change, or damage to the environment, particularly the
ecology of the waters;
C. the
proposed structure is consistent with applicable floodplain, shoreland, and
wild and scenic rivers management standards and ordinances for the waters
involved;
D. adverse effects on the
physical or biological character of the waters are subject to feasible and
practical measures to mitigate the effects;
E. the proposed structure is consistent with
water and related land management plans and programs of local and regional
governments, provided these plans and programs are consistent with state plans
and programs; and
F. except for
mooring facilities and boat ramps, all new structures have a title-registered
permit, unless a public agency or local governmental unit accepts
responsibility for future maintenance or removal.
Statutory Authority: MS s
103G.315;
105.415