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MINUTES OF THE <br /> ORONO CITY COUNCIL MEETING <br /> Monday,May 8,2017 <br /> 7:00 o'clock p.m. <br /> 16. #17-3922 CITY OF ORONO,TEXT AMENDMENT: WETLANDS REGULATIONS— <br /> ORDINANCE NO. 196,Third Series.—continued <br /> Samantha Muldoon, 1801 West Farm Road, stated her understanding is that there is scientific support and <br /> data that shows a 35-foot buffer setback is actually inadequate to protect water quality. The article from <br /> the US Fish and Wildlife Services says at 30 feet the sediment removal is minimal and at 50 feet you can <br /> maintain stream temperature,which is important for aquatic habitat enhancement and minimal nitrogen <br /> and contaminant removal. <br /> The US Fish and Wildlife Service article also said choosing a buffer width depends on the planning goals <br /> of the area. As the buffer increases, it provides greater benefits,and a 30-foot buffer provides minimal <br /> service. At 50 feet,the buffer meets minimum water quality protection recommendations and gives some <br /> aquatic habitats benefit. For effective water quality and aquatic protection, a buffer width of 100 feet is <br /> needed. <br /> Muldoon stated there is data available. Muldoon noted it is different at every lake and it is very <br /> complicated,but they know a larger setback is better. Muldoon stated the Minnehaha Creek Watershed <br /> District really provides a baseline that is regional in focus and it applies to a number of cities, such as <br /> Edina and Eden Prairie. Muldoon stated Orono is not at all like those cities and that Orono is more rural. <br /> Muldoon stated traditionally all of the cities have applied their own standards on top of the MCWD's <br /> minimum common denominator and that she does not want the City Council to believe there is no data <br /> available or that the MCWD is the overarching expert on water quality. <br /> Muldoon stated she is in support of keeping the standards the way they are currently and that she is also <br /> in favor of the desktop wetland delineation. <br /> Walsh stated he appreciates the US Fish&Wildlife Service,but his understanding is that the data is taken <br /> from a number of different lakes and streams and not just wetlands and that the Minnehaha Creek <br /> Watershed District has a narrower focus. Walsh stated in his view they are talking about apples and pears <br /> when the two are compared. <br /> Muldoon stated the Minnehaha Creek Watershed District also published an article that talks about <br /> minimum setbacks. That study talks about for sediment reduction from steep slopes or shallow slopes, all <br /> of the setbacks are over 50 feet in terms of minimal distance. Muldoon stated in her view they should not <br /> mess with what has been working. <br /> Kinve noted he is also speaking for some other residents who were not able to attend tonight's meeting. <br /> Kinve stated with regard to the Long Lake Water Association's email that went out,the data that says a <br /> bigger setback is better is from the Panama City Field Office in Panama City,Florida,and relates to how <br /> to protect large bodies of water and the salamander,which is not the situation here and is not applicable to <br /> this area. Kinve stated the other people that he has talked to also made the point that people are spreading <br /> information around that is not applicable to this region. Kinve noted they are talking about buffers again <br /> and not setbacks. <br /> Paul Muldoon noted earlier this evening he did recognize some comments that did have merit from <br /> Mr.Kinve, and one of them was how do you look at situations where someone has an encroachment and <br /> that person wants to do something in their yard, and if they do something else to mitigate what otherwise <br /> could be a detriment,they can earn the right to do it. Muldoon stated that type of thing is hard to <br /> Page 30 of 34 <br />