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b. Use without water -oriented needs must be located on <br />lots or parcels without public waters frontage, or, if <br />located on lots or parcels with public waters frontage, <br />must either be setback double the normal ordinary high <br />water level setback or be substantially screened from <br />view from the water by vegetation or topography, <br />assuming summer, leaf -on conditions. <br />2. Agriculture Use Standards <br />a. General cultivation farming, grazing, nurseries, <br />horticulture, truck farming, sod farming, and wild crop <br />harvesting are permitted uses if steep slopes and shore <br />and bluff impact zones are maintained in permanent <br />vegetation or operated under an approved conservation <br />plan (Resource Management System) consistent with the <br />field office technical guides of the local soil and <br />water conservation districts or the United States Soil <br />Conservation Service, as provided by a qualified <br />individual or agency. Best Management Practices of the <br />Minnesota DNR must be used. The shore impact zone for <br />parcels with permitted agricultural land uses is equal <br />to a line parallel to and 50 feet from the ordinary <br />high water level. <br />b. Animal feedlots, as defined by the Minnesota Pollution <br />Control Agency rules, Chapter 7020.0100 - 7020.1900 for <br />compliance and permits, must meet the following <br />standards: <br />(1) new feed lots must not be located in the shoreland <br />of watercourses or in bluff impact zones and must <br />meet a minimum setback of 300 feet from the <br />ordinary high water level of all public water <br />basins; and <br />(2) modifications or expansions to existing feedlots <br />that are located within 300 feet of the ordinary <br />high water level or within a bluff impact zone are <br />allowed if they do not further encroach into the <br />existing ordinary high water level setback or <br />encroach on bluff impact zones. <br />I. Water Supply and Sewage Treatment <br />1. Water Supply. Any public or private supply of water for <br />domestic purposes must meet or exceed standards for water <br />quality of the Minnesota Department of Health and the <br />Minnesota Pollution Control Agency. Private wells must be <br />located, constructed, maintained and sealed in accordance <br />with or in a more thorough manner than the Water Well <br />Construction Code of the Minnesota Department of Health. <br />- 19 - <br />