Tom Fix bought a riverfront home in West Lakeland Township in 2011. A Minnesota native now living near Seattle, Fix and his wife, Grace, have long dreamed of moving back to the state with their young family and into a home along the St. Croix River.
But recently, they've seen that dream dashed by zoning rules designed to shield the lower St. Croix from unhindered development. The Fixes have been locked in a clash with Washington County zoning officials ever since their plans to remodel an older home evolved into a teardown. Tom Fix is so upset, he said, that he plans to sue the county within the next few weeks.
"We've been planning on building for a long time," he said. "One big difficulty is that, as homeowners up and down the St. Croix, we really don't know what our rights are anymore."
A flurry of home teardowns and remodels along the St. Croix River that fly in the face of local zoning rules is picking up pace, contributing to a deepening clash of interests in cities along the river.
Counting the Fixes' plans, there are at least three other teardown or remodeling projects in the works, including one that goes before the Lake St. Croix Beach City Council on Monday night. That plan seeks variances that would transform a single-story, 680-square-foot home built in 1943 into a larger, two-story structure.
The state Department of Natural Resources (DNR), along with the St. Croix River Association, has lodged its objections to the plan — contending, among other things, that the project amounts to a teardown instead of a remodel with less-restrictive rules. At least one neighbor opposes the plan, but others are supportive.
"They want to protect the river, but the way they're going about it is all wrong," Fix said of a frustrating process that has kept him from pursuing what he considers a reasonable building plan, but which has now left him with a home that was ruined after broken pipes caused water damage.
Variances sail through
But advocates for the river say the dismantling of oversight authority for zoning variance decisions by the DNR in a landmark 2010 state Supreme Court decision threatens the river valley's future, potentially leading to unfettered construction that even now is changing the river's character, which is protected by federal law.