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1 iv. For Tributary Streams, a 115-foot lot width is needed (no minimum area <br />2 for rivers/streams). <br />3 <br />4 d. Lots intended as controlled accesses to public waters or as recreation areas for use by <br />5 owners of nonriparian lots within subdivisions are peiniissible and must meet or exceed <br />6 the following standards: <br />7 1. They must meet the width and size requirements for residential lots, and be suitable <br />8 for the intended uses of controlled access lots; <br />9 <br />10 <br />11 <br />12 <br />13 <br />14 <br />15 <br />16 <br />17 <br />18 <br />19 <br />20 <br />21 <br />22 <br />23 <br />24 <br />25 <br />26 <br />27 <br />28 <br />29 <br />30 <br />31 <br />32 <br />33 <br />34 <br />35 <br />36 <br />37 <br />38 <br />39 <br />2. If docking, mooring, or over -water storage of more than six watercraft is to be <br />allowed at a controlled access lot, then the width of the lot (keeping the same lot <br />depth) must be increased by the percent of the requirements for riparian residential <br />lots for each watercraft beyond six, consistent with the following table: <br />Controlled Access Lot Frontage Requirements <br />Ratio of lake size to shore length <br />(acres/mile) <br />Required increase in frontage <br />(percent) <br />Less than 100 <br />25 <br />100-200 <br />20 <br />201-300 <br />15 <br />301-400 <br />10 <br />Greater than 400 <br />5 <br />3. They must be jointly owned by all purchasers of lots in the subdivision or by all <br />purchasers of nonriparian lots in the subdivision who are provided riparian access <br />rights on the access lot; and <br />4. Covenants or other equally effective legal instruments must be developed that <br />specify which lot owners have authority to use the access lot and what activities <br />are allowed. The activities may include watercraft launching, loading, storage, <br />beaching, mooring, or docking. They must also include other outdoor recreational <br />activities that do not significantly conflict with general public use of the public <br />water or the enjoyment of noinial property rights by adjacent property owners. <br />Examples of the non -significant conflict activities include swimming, sunbathing, <br />or picnicking. The covenants must limit the total number of vehicles allowed to be <br />parked and the total number of watercraft allowed to be continuously moored, <br />docked, or stored over water, and must require centralization of all common <br />facilities and activities in the most suitable locations on the lot to minimize <br />topographic and vegetation alterations. They must also require all parking areas, <br />storage buildings, and other facilities to be screened by vegetation or topography <br />as much as practical from view from the public water, assuming summer, leaf -on <br />conditions. <br />(C) Placement, design, and height of structures. <br />(1) Placement of structures on lots. When more than one setback applies to a site, structures and <br />facilities must be located to meet all setbacks. Where structures exist on the adjoining lots on <br />both sides of a proposed building site, structure setbacks may be altered without a variance to <br />conform to the adjoining setbacks from the ordinary high water level, provided the proposed <br />building site is not located in a shore impact zone or in a bluff impact zone. Structures shall be <br />located as follows: <br />a. Structure and on -site sewage system setbacks (in feet) from ordinary high water level*. <br />Classes of Public <br />Waters <br />Structures <br />Setbacks* <br />Unsewered <br />Sewered <br />Sewage Treatment <br />System <br />Lakes <br />Attachment A — Ordinance #23-14 <br />Page 120 of 141 <br />