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Agenda - Parks and Recreation Commission - 02/08/2018
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Agenda - Parks and Recreation Commission - 02/08/2018
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3/25/2025 12:44:15 PM
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Meetings
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Agenda
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Parks and Recreation Commission
Document Date
02/08/2018
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increasingly popular (Outdoor Foundation, 2013). These activities may preclude the use of an area for <br />other uses, but this doesn't mean they are unacceptable within Regional Parks System lands in all <br />cases. To accommodate new recreation activities on Regional Parks System lands, the regional park <br />implementing agency must first assess how well the proposed activity meets the standards for <br />recreational activities and then incorporate any physical changes to the Regional Parks System <br />landscape through a master plan amendment process that includes significant public engagement. <br />In some instances, there may be no need for any physical change to the regional park or trail unit, but a <br />change in visitor or park management rules or policies may be necessary, such as allowing off -leash <br />dog use on a trail, for example. Another management issue might be permitting a limited controlled <br />hunt as a means of maintaining the health of a park's deer herd. In both cases, there are no physical <br />changes to the park/trail unit requiring capital improvements, simply a change in how the park/trail unit <br />is used or managed. Such park/ trail management issues should be resolved by the regional park <br />implementing agency's policy board after appropriate public input and consideration of how these <br />management changes affect the regional park's environment, users, and the adjacent property. <br />Some new recreation open -space uses may be compatible with the long-range basic mission of the <br />Regional Parks System. In some instances, new uses may enhance the viability of the regional system <br />and expand the range of opportunities available in the parks, park reserves, and trails. Other recreation <br />open -space uses may substantially reduce the ability of the regional facilities to carry out their planned <br />roles or may diminish the quality of the recreational experience. <br />Off -road vehicles (ORVs) are defined as all -terrain vehicles (ATVs), off -road motorcycles (ORMs) and <br />four -wheel -drive vehicles being used off designated roads. For the purpose of this 2040 Regional Parks <br />Policy Plan, snowmobiles are not considered to be ORVs. Snowmobiles have been permitted on <br />regional trails and in some regional parks when local ordinances and the regional park implementing <br />agency have authorized such use. Local units of government in the rural areas of the region also work <br />with the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources and snowmobile clubs to provide rights -of -way for <br />snowmobile trails that link to other trails outside the region. <br />The Council acknowledges that the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources (DNR) has statutory <br />authority under Minn. Stat. 84.03 to provide for regulated use of off -road vehicles through its <br />management of several legislatively dedicated accounts that contain license receipts and a portion of <br />Minnesota gas tax revenues from the use of these vehicles. Siting and managing an off -road vehicle <br />use area in the region that doesn't adversely affect nearby land uses and natural resources will require <br />cooperation between the affected local unit of government and the DNR. Regional park implementing <br />agencies may participate in siting an off -road vehicle use area, but the lead responsibility for siting and <br />funding the area will be provided by the DNR under the authority it is granted in statute. <br />Regional park concessioners may operate within the Regional Parks System if the appropriate <br />approvals from the regional park implementing agency have been obtained, as each agency may have <br />different policies and procedures in place. Concessioners must provide park related amenities and <br />services to park visitors without negatively impacting the natural resources of the regional park. <br />Regional park implementing agencies must contact the Council to determine whether a master plan <br />amendment is required to accommodate the concessioners. <br />
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