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Ordinance - #06-32 - 11/28/2006
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Ordinance - #06-32 - 11/28/2006
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3/31/2025 10:58:08 AM
Creation date
12/14/2006 10:56:26 AM
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Resolutions & Ordinances
Resolutions or Ordinances
Ordinances
Resolution or Ordinance Number
#06-32
Document Date
11/28/2006
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<br />disposal areas within the construction site. It does not include stockpiles or surcharge areas of <br />sand, gravel, concrete or bituminous. <br /> <br />Filter Strips - A vegetated section of land designed to treat runoff as overland sheet <br />flow. They may be designed in any natural vegetated form from a grassy meadow to a small <br />forest. Their dense vegetated cover facilitates pollutant removal and infiltration. <br /> <br />Final Stabilization - Means that all soil disturbing activities at the site have been <br />completed, and that a uniform perennial vegetative cover with a density of seventy-five (75) <br />percent of the cover for unpaved areas and areas not covered by permanent structures has been <br />established or equivalent permanent stabilization measures have been employed. Acceptable <br />vegetative cover practices can be found in the current version of the Minnesota Department of <br />Transportation's publication, "Supplemental Specifications to the (Year) Standard Specifications <br />for Construction." Simply sowing grass seed is not considered stabilization. <br /> <br />Hydric Soils - Soils that are saturated, flooded, or ponded long enough during the <br />growing season to develop anaerobic conditions in the upper part. <br /> <br />Hydrophytic Vegetation - Macrophytic (large enough to be observed by the naked eye) <br />plant life growing in water, soil or on a substrate that is at least periodically deficient in oxygen <br />as a result of excessive water content. <br /> <br />Impervious Surface - A constructed hard surface that either prevents or retards the entry <br />of water into the soil, and causes water to run off the surface in greater quantities and at an <br />increased rate of flow than existed prior to development. Examples include rooftops, sidewalks, <br />patios, driveways, parking lots, storage areas, and concrete, asphalt, or gravel roads. <br /> <br />Land Disturbance Activity - Any land change that may result in soil erosion from water <br />or wind and the movement of sediments into or upon waters or lands within this government's <br />jurisdiction, including clearing & grubbing, grading, excavating, transporting and filling of land. <br />Within the context of this rule, land disturbance activity does not mean: <br /> <br />A.) Minor land disturbance activities such as home gardens and an individual's home <br />landscaping, repairs, and maintenance work. <br /> <br />B.) Construction, installation, and maintenance of electric, telephone, and cable <br />television, utility lines or individual service connection to these utilities, which result in creating <br />under five hundred (500) square feet of exposed soil. <br /> <br />C.) Tilling, planting, or harvesting of agricultural, horticultural, or silvicultural crops. <br /> <br />D.) Installation offence, sign, telephone, and electric poles and other kinds of posts or <br />poles which result in creating under five hundred (500) square feet of exposed soil. <br /> <br />E.) Emergency work to protect life, limb, or property and emergency repairs, unless <br />the land disturbing activity would have otherwise required an approved erosion and sediment <br /> <br />Page 3 of21 <br />November 8, 2006 <br /> <br />Storm Water Pollution Control Ordinance <br />
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