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• <br />• <br />CERTIFICATION OF RULES <br />1, Susan Oven, Secretary of the Rice Creek Watershed District <br />Board of Managers, certify that the attached is a true and correct copy of the <br />Rules of the Rice Creek Watershed District having been properly adopted <br />by the Board of Managers of the Rice Creek Watershed District. <br />Dated: <br />GENERAL POLICY STATEMENT <br />The Rice Creek Watershed District (District) is a political subdivision of the State of Minnesota, <br />established under the Minnesota Watershed Law. The District is also a watershed management <br />organization as defined under the Minnesota Metropolitan Surface Water Management Act, and is <br />subject to the directives and authorizations in that Act. Under the Watershed Law and the <br />Metropolitan Surface Water Management Act, the District exercises a series of powers to <br />accomplish its statutory purposes. The District's general statutory purpose is to conserve natural <br />resources through development planning, flood control, and other conservation projects, based <br />upon sound scientific principles. <br />As required under the Metropolitan Surface Water Management Act, the District has adopted a <br />Watershed Management Plan, which contains the framework and guiding principles for the District <br />in carrying out its statutory purposes. It is the District's intent to implement the Plan's principles and <br />objectives in these rules. <br />Land alteration affects the rate, volume, and quality of surface water runoff which ultimately must <br />be accommodated by the existing surface water systems within the District. The watershed is <br />large, 201 square miles, and its outlet, Rice Creek, has limited capacity to carry flows. Flooding <br />problems already occur in the District's urbanized areas along lower Rice Creek and other localized <br />areas. <br />Land alteration and utilization also can degrade the quality of runoff entering the streams and <br />waterbodies of the District due to non -point source pollution. Lake and stream sedimentation from <br />ongoing erosion processes and construction activities reduces the hydraulic capacity of <br />waterbodies and degrades water quality. Water quality problems already exist in many of the lakes <br />and streams throughout the District. <br />Projects which increase the rate or volume of stormwater runoff can aggravate existing flooding <br />problems and contribute to new ones. Projects which degrade runoff quality can aggravate <br />existing water quality problems and contribute to new ones. Projects which fill floodplain or wetland <br />areas can aggravate existing flooding by reducing flood storage and hydraulic capacity of <br />waterbodies, and can degrade water quality by eliminating the filtering capacity of those areas. <br />In these rules the District seeks to protect the public health and welfare and the natural resources <br />of the District by providing reasonable regulation of the modification or alteration of the District's <br />lands and waters to reduce the severity and frequency of flooding and high water, to preserve <br />floodplain and wetland storage capacity, to improve the chemical, physical and biological quality of <br />surface water, to reduce sedimentation, to preserve waterbodies' hydraulic and navigational <br />capacity, to preserve natural wetland and shoreland features, and to minimize public expenditures <br />to avoid or correct these problems in the future. <br />DRAFT DOCUMENT <br />3 <br />