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• Emergency work to protect life, limb, or property and emergency repairs. However, <br />if the land disturbing activity would have required an approved Erosion and Sediment <br />Control Plan except for the emergency, then the land area disturbed shall be shaped and <br />stabilized in accordance with the requirement of the PWD when applicable. <br />• Outfall. The point source where a storm sewer system discharges from a pipe, ditch, <br />or other discrete conveyance to receiving waters, or to a storm sewer system owned and <br />operated by another party. <br />Permittee. A person, firm, sole proprietorship, partnership, corporation, state agency <br />or political subdivision thereof engaged in a land disturbance activity who submits an <br />application to the PWD for a permit pursuant to this ordinance. <br />• Phasing. Clearing a parcel of land in distinct phases, with the stabilization of each <br />phase before the clearing of the next. <br />Ramsey Conservation District. The Ramsey Soil and Water Conservation District. <br />• Rice Creek Watershed District. An organization which oversees the activities in the <br />Rice Creek watershed as defined by Minnesota Statutes, Sections 10313,and 103D. <br />Runoff. Rainfall, snowmelt, or irrigation water flowing over the ground surface. <br />• Sediment. Solid mineral or organic material that, in suspension, is being transported, <br />or has been moved from its original site by air, water, gravity, or ice, and has been <br />deposited at another location. <br />Sedimentation. The process or action of depositing sediment, caused by erosion. <br />• Site. The entire area of land on which the land disturbance activity is proposed in the <br />permit application. <br />• Site Plan. A plan or set of plans showing the details of any land disturbance activity of <br />a site including but not limited to the construction of: structures, open and enclosed <br />drainage facilities, stormwater management facilities, parking lots, driveways, curbs, <br />pavements, sidewalks, bike paths, recreational facilities, ground covers, plantings, and <br />landscaping. <br />• Shoreland. The land located within the following distances from protected waters: <br />• One thousand (1,000) feet from the ordinary high water mark of a lake, pond, or <br />flowage; <br />• Three hundred (300) feet from a river or stream, or the landward extent of a flood <br />plain on such rivers or streams, whichever is greater; and, <br />• The practical limits of shorelands may be less than the statutory limits where the <br />limits are designated by natural drainage divides at lesser distances, as shown on the <br />official map of the City. <br />