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• <br />Barton - Aschman Associates, Inc. <br />1610 South Sixth Street Minneapolis, Minnesota 55454 612- 332 -0421 <br />MEMORANDUM TO: Lino Lakes Zoning Ordinance Update Task Force and <br />Planning Commission <br />FROM: Bill Short <br />DATE: March 9, 1983 <br />SUBJECT: AIRPORT ZONING CONSIDERATIONS <br />Currently, there are two airports operating within the city limits of Lino Lakes; they <br />include: (1) Surfside Seaplane Base (and landing strip), and (2) Lino Air Park, a private <br />use airstrip. Both the Metropolitan Council and MnDOT applaud Lino Lakes' interest <br />in establishing land use safety zones for these airports. However, the individuals that I <br />talked to in the MnDOT Division of Aeronautics indicate that there is no requirement <br />for land use safety zones for either of these airports. They informed me that the only <br />time that the state recommended land use safety zoning for airports are for those <br />airports which are open to the public, owned by a public agency, and requesting <br />MnDOT's funds. Since neither Surfside nor Lino Air Park fit these requirements, then <br />the state will not require any land use safety zoning. However, the state does <br />recommend that communities do control land use around all airports in an effort to <br />provide the best land use control and safety around airport facilities. <br />As the City of Lino Lakes proceeds with some sort of land use safety zoning for <br />airports, the following should be considered. Surfside Seaplane Base currently offers a <br />landing strip which does not meet public airport standards. However, Bruce Hanson, <br />the operator of Surfside, is planning to improve the airstrip so that public use can be <br />offered. By applying the recommended land use safety zoning to Surf side's landing <br />strip, it appears that there should be no signigicant land use conflicts. This is because <br />both approaches to the landing strip are primarily routed over water. Therefore, to <br />apply the land use safety zoning standards recommended by MnDOT would not appear <br />to be a hardship to any landowners of affected property. <br />Lino Air Park, on the other hand, uses approaches which are routed over existing <br />developed and developable lands owned by others. If the city were to apply MnDOT's <br />recommended standards for these districts, they may prove to be quite restrictive to <br />those landowners. For example, land use safety zone A, which restricts uses to <br />agriculture, outdoor recreation, cemeteries, and other low intensity uses, would <br />overlay eight lots in Sunset Oaks Subdivision, five lots in Sherwood Green Subdivision, <br />and four acres of undeveloped land owned by Molin Concrete. Implementation of these <br />recommended standards would restrict those existing uses to develop no more <br />intensely than they are today (especially significant for any plans for resubdivision if <br />