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9y^t <br />Dat«t <br />Mayor Peterson and Orono City Council <br />Ron Moorse* City Administrator <br />Michael P. Gaffron, Asst. Planning t Zoning Administrator <br />October 9r 1992 <br />Subjeett Formal Flexibility Requests *■ Spring Parlc^ Wayzata» <br />Tonka Bay# Minnetonka Beach, Woodland <br />Attached are formal flexibility requests from the Department of <br />Natural Resources for the above noted cities. The following table <br />provides a comparison of their requests. <br />i«« <br />Atm <br />Lot iooiiMtlal <br />M4tH DMtitr <br />tarfMo <br />toiflit <br />OOMwrod Lot# Lot <br />L#t##li#r# Loekbos fi##0 <br />S#tb##]i UlaiMe# i#tb#et <br />iprUif fork <br />fiSEriSy <br />K <br />K <br />K <br />X <br />X <br />X <br />M«Mt##k# M##fi <br />X <br />X <br />X <br />X <br />X <br />X <br />X <br />X <br />Please review the information sutmiitted with each request, <br />has forty-five days in which to respond. <br />lal <br />The City <br />You will note that a number of cities are proposing to grant excess <br />hardcover allowances in their conswrcial sones via a "Shoreland Impact <br />Flaa/Conditional Use Permit”, rather than through a variance process <br />hich would be necessary under Orono's adopted Shore land Ordinance, <br />rior to the Shoreland Ordinance, Orono's B-1, B-3, B-4, and B-5 sones <br />ere not subject to hardcover regulations. <br />he acreage and approximate impervious surface percentages of these <br />ones in Navarre are shown in the table below. Commercial <br />Ciacluding the B-2 tones) constitute approximately 1% of Orono* <br />that is subject to Shoreland Ordinances. The remaining 991 is soned <br />ingle Family Residential. Council may wish to consider whether use <br />f a Shoreland Impact Plan/COP would be more appropriate for <br />osMsrcial shoreland developswnt than the variance process, only from <br />he standpoint that DNR may object to the hardcover variances we <br />ikely will have to grant as Navarre redevelops. <br />,,;v