Laserfiche WebLink
direct illumination out across public waters. This does not <br />preclude use of navigational lights. <br />(b) Uses without water-oriented needs must be located on lots or parcels without <br />public waters frontage, or, if located on lots or parcels with public waters frontage, must <br />either be set back double the normal ordinary high water level setback or be substantially <br />screened from view from the water by vegetation or topography, assuming summer, <br />leaf-on conditions. <br />2. Agriculture Use Standards. <br />(a) General cultivation farming, grazing, nurseries, horticulture, truck farming, sod <br />farming, and wild crop harvesting are permitted uses if steep slopes and shore and <br />bluff impact zones are maintained in permanent vegetation or operated under an <br />approved conservation plan (Resource Management Systems) consistent with the <br />field office technical guides of the local soil and water conservation districts or <br />the United States Soil Conservation Service, as provided by a qualified individual <br />or agency. The shore impact zone for parcels with permitted agricultural land <br />uses is equal to a line parallel to and 50 feet from the ordinary high water level. <br />(b) Animal feedlots must meet the following standards: <br />(i) new feedlots must not be located in the shoreland of watercourses or in <br />bluff impact zones and must meet a minimum setback of 300 feet from the <br />ordinary high water level of all public waters basins; and <br />(ii) modifications or expansions to existing feedlots that are located within <br />300 feet of the ordinary high water level or within a bluff impact zone are <br />allowed if they do not further encroach into the existing ordinary high <br />water level setback or encroach on bluff impact zones. <br />3. Forest Management Standards. The harvesting of timber and associated reforestation <br />must be conducted consistent with the provisions of the Minnesota Nonpoint Source Pollution <br />Assessment-Forestry and the provisions of Water Quality in Forest Management "Best <br />Management Practices in Minnesota." <br />4. Extractive Use Standards. <br />(a) Site Development and Restoration Plan. An extractive use site development and <br />restoration plan must be developed, approved, and followed over the course of <br />operation of the site. The plan must address dust, noise, possible pollutant <br />discharges, hours and duration of operation, and anticipated vegetation and <br />topographic alterations. It must also identify actions to be taken during operation <br />to mitigate adverse environmental impacts, particularly erosion, and must clearly <br />explain how the site will be rehabilitated after extractive activities end. <br />20 <br />