For 34 years, it was part of the process: If you wanted to build along the shoreline of the lower St. Croix River, the state needed to sign off on any plans that didn't strictly adhere to the rules of the federal Wild and Scenic River Act.
Those rules, covering everything from a building's size to its proximity to the water, were designed to protect the river's unique character. Requests for variances were rare, about 60 over those years, but more than 90 percent were approved by the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources (DNR), the agency charged with protecting the river.
But the DNR's role in making those decisions changed in 2010, when the state Supreme Court found that it didn't have the legal authority it presumed it had when it turned down a variance for an 8,000-square-foot home broadcasting magnate Rob Hubbard requested in Lakeland. That authority, the court said, had never been spelled out in state law.
Now, a bill before the Legislature has reopened the debate over who has ultimate control over future development along the lower St. Croix — the cities and townships lining its shores, or the DNR.
The bill, which had its first hearing Tuesday before the Senate Environment and Energy Committee, was approved by a hand vote and passed on to the State and Local Government Committee. A similar bill has also been introduced in the House.
"It's an attempt to re-establish that there be some consistent oversight of variances," said state Sen. Katie Sieben, DFL-Newport, the bill's author. It will provide needed clarity for local governments, she added, and help them make legally defensible decisions.
As was the case before the Hubbard decision, Sieben said, the DNR would review and certify local zoning ordinances and variances on the stretch of St. Croix from Taylors Falls south to where the river meets the Mississippi River at Prescott, Wis. It also would follow the previous criteria for granting variances.
Since much of the private land along the lower St. Croix is already developed, most variance requests involve razing older structures and replacing them with larger ones.