Laserfiche WebLink
• <br />• <br />• <br />AGENDA ITEM S.A. <br />STAFF ORIGINATOR: Paul Bengtson <br />P &Z MEETING DATE: June 9, 2010 <br />TOPIC: CONTINUED PUBLIC HEARING <br />Amendments to Zoning Ordinance and Subdivision <br />regulations Chapter of City Code Regarding Development <br />in Environmentally Sensitive Areas, Tree Preservation, <br />Landscaping, Planned Unit Developments, and Platting <br />BACKGROUND <br />The Environmental Board discussed the site layout, landscaping, and tree preservation <br />standards on May 4. The P & Z discussed those and the collaborative design process on May <br />12. Some revisions have occurred since those meetings. The revisions are attached to this <br />memo for discussions by the Environmental Board on June 2 and the P & Z on June 9. <br />Since the late 1990s Lino Lakes has been pursuing a more environmentally sound means of <br />handling new development. The city's Handbook for Environmental Planning and <br />Conservation Development was printed in 1999. We followed that with the 2004 Parks, <br />Natural Open Space /Greenways and Trail Plan. The I -35E Corridor Alternative Urban <br />Areawide Review in 2005 established a "conservation design framework" for all development <br />within the study area. The draft new Comprehensive Plan further promotes the conservation <br />design principles laid out in all these documents. Chapter 2 creates the Resource Management <br />System Plan, establishing an open space system that corresponds with Environmentally <br />Sensitive Areas created by plans and rules of the Rice Creek Watershed District. <br />Now the City is creating and amending official controls to implement the ideas and plans. The <br />subjects of the public hearing tonight are sections of the zoning ordinance and subdivision <br />regulations, the primary controls for regulating new development. (A new stormwater <br />management ordinance also is in the works.) All the different ordinance requirements need to <br />work together toward the goals of preserving and creating a city wide greenway system through <br />the identification and protection of Environmentally Sensitive Areas. <br />The Rice Creek Watershed District is the governmental entity that regulates wetland impacts <br />and the public drainage ditch system. Extensive environmental research by the District and <br />Lino Lakes resulted in the creation of an overall Environmentally Sensitive Areas (ESAs) map <br />for Lino Lakes. The District's new rule RMP -3 is designed to identify and protect ESAs on <br />individual development sites. The District's rules protect wetlands and include requirements <br />for stormwater design. The Lino Lakes ordinances are intended to provide standards for <br />aspects of development that are beyond the scope of the Watershed District's authorities. In <br />this way, the City and the Watershed District's actions are partners in creating the citywide <br />greenway system of ESAs. <br />