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12-12-2019 Planning Commission Packet
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12-12-2019 Planning Commission Packet
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Watersheds <br />Little Canada is located in the Ramsey‐Washington Metro Watershed District (RWMWD). The <br />RWMWD is the local governing unit established to protect the water resources located in its <br />District. The District includes the eastern portion of Ramsey County and the western portion of <br />Washington County totaling roughly 56 square miles. The RWMWD is part of the larger <br />Mississippi River Watershed as its surface water ultimately drains to the Mississippi River. The <br />District updated and passed their Comprehensive Watershed Management Plan in 2017. The <br />City follows the RWMWD’s Management Plan. <br />The RWMWD Comprehensive Watershed Management Plan outlines the existing water <br />resources and issues in the District, and sets forth goals and policies for the District for the next <br />ten years. The main goals are: <br />1. Achieve quality surface after <br />2. Achieve healthy ecosystems <br />3. Manage risk of flooding <br />4. Support sustainable groundwater <br />5. Inform and empower communities <br />6. Manage organization effectively <br />The City will continue to work with the RWMWD to help achieve the outlined goals. <br />Lakes <br />The City of Little Canada contains a number of lakes and wetlands, and a stream. These water <br />resources play an integral role in the City’s water resource management by serving as retention <br />basins for stormwater runoff, providing natural filtration, and habitat. <br />In the late 1970s, the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources (DNR) performed a public <br />waters inventory to indicate over which lakes, wetlands and watercourses the DNR has <br />regulatory jurisdiction. This created the Public Waters Inventory, which was updated in 2017. <br />Lakes identified as public are assigned a shoreland management classification to attribute <br />appropriate development standards. Lakes are divided into the following classifications based <br />on a combination of factors: <br /> Natural Environment Lakes usually have less than 150 total acres, less than 60 acres per <br />mile of shoreline, and less than three dwellings per mile of shoreline. They may have some <br />winter kill of fish; may have shallow, swamp shoreline; and are less than 15 feet deep. <br /> Recreational Development Lakes usually have between 60 and 225 acres of water per mile <br />of shoreline, between three and 25 dwellings per mile of shoreline; and are more than 15 <br />feet deep. <br /> General Development Lakes usually have more than 225 acres of water per mile of <br />shoreline and 25 dwellings per mile of shoreline and are more than 15 feet deep. <br /> <br /> <br /> <br />City of Little Canada 4‐6 Natural Resources Plan
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