Key Findings re Water Management
by Ted Manning, Patterson Lake Association
April, 2008
1. Multiple Laws and Jurisdictions
There are many agencies involved, Federal, Provincial regional and
local. The Provincial Agency – the Ministry of Natural
Resources has the lead in most areas relating to the management of
lake and river water. (See list of key references below)
2. Permission to make changes
Nearly all actions which can affect water quality and quantity
require a permit. That includes everything from major shoreline
alterations, anything which could pollute water, building altering or
removing any dams, weirs or channel modifications. In particular,
those which cause any damage to property up or downstream, damage
fish habitat, or significantly alter shoreline are subject to
significant fines or damage settlements.
3. Penalties and Regulations.
The history of lawsuits pertaining to damage to property due to
unauthorized actions is mixed – in Ontario and elsewhere.
There are a number of legal precedents which provide some information
on what can occur. In some cases, full restoration to the original
state is required; in others there have been a range of fines,
warnings or decisions that the changes have not violated specific
regulations. What is clear from the history in Ontario and elsewhere
is that riparian rights are complicated. The first reference below
with regard to Beaver Dam removal provides a taste of how it is
supposed to work in the case of beaver dams and how complex it can
be. The range of Acts which come into play is typical of any change,
and the values they are supposed to protect are also shown. In
particular, the prevention of damage to fish habitat and the
prevention of damage to property or use
4. Riparian rights
There is an immense literature on riparian rights for different
jurisdictions. Basically, water is a shared resource, and all those
who own property adjacent to water share in its use. The rights
include “reasonable use” (defined differently in
different jurisdictions and subject to case law interpretations)
which in layman’s terms generally means that you can use it
without causing harm to other users – whether upstream or
downstream.
Riparian
water
rights (or simply riparian rights) is a
system of allocating water among those who possess land about its
source. It has its origins in English common
law. It is used in the United
Kingdom and states in the eastern United
States and underlies Canadian law regarding water.
Under the riparian principle, all landowners whose property is
adjacent to a body of water have the right to make reasonable use of
it. If there is not enough water to satisfy all users, allotments are
generally fixed in proportion to frontage on the water source. These
rights cannot be sold or transferred other than with the adjoining
land, and water cannot be transferred out of the watershed.
All those with riparian rights have the right to reasonable use –
but not to removing the water used by others or contaminating it.
Among the rights which are protected are access to water, the right
to uncontaminated water, and the right to enjoyment of property
(which is now enshrined in the Canadian Bill of Rights.)
Essentially,
no-one has the right to take away what you have. (Such as removing a
stream, draining a lake, altering water levels, polluting a lake or
stream). Riparian rights include such things as the right to access
for swimming, boating and fishing; the right to wharf out to a point
of navigability; the right to erect structures such as docks, piers,
and boat lifts; the right to use the water for domestic purposes; the
right to accretions caused by water level fluctuations. Riparian
rights also depend upon “reasonable use” as it relates to
other riparian owners to ensure that the rights of one riparian owner
are weighed fairly and equitably with the rights of adjacent riparian
owners.
The references which follow are few of the key laws, regulations and
reference sources which pertain to lake management in Ontario –
and which will be relevant to any alterations to the lake and its
shoreline. Because these are so complex, often each jurisdiction has
difficulty interpreting which regulations are in force, whose take
precedence, and how they interact with each other; the long list of
legal cases in Ontario relating to lake and river water shows the
complexity and the ongoing development of case law in this area.
A }Beaver
Dam Removal Regulations
http://www.dfo-mpo.gc.ca/regions/central/habitat/os-eo/prov-terr/on/os-eo03_e.htm
-
removal of the
dam will not adversely affect a fishery, or recreational property
uses that depend on the dam’s existence, both upstream and
downstream, -
the removal activities are limited to removing or
breaching the beaver dam itself and do not involve channel or
shoreline modification downstream (e.g., widening, straightening,
ditching, etc.), -
individual detonations of more than one kilogram of
explosives will not be used to remove the dam (diesel fuel and
fertilizer is not to be used as a type of explosive), -
the removal
does not involve a beaver dam that is directly connected with a
culvert or bridge (removal in these situations is addressed in
Operational Statements for Culvert Maintenance and Bridge
Maintenance), and -
you
incorporate the Measures to Protect Fish and Fish Habitat when
Removing Beaver Dams listed below in this Operational Statement.
We ask
that you notify DFO, preferably 10 working days before starting your
work by filling out and sending the Ontario Operational Statement
notification form
(http://www.dfo-mpo.ca/regions/central/habitat/os-eo/prov-terr/on/os-eo20_e.htm)
to the DFO office in your area. This information is requested in
order to evaluate the effectiveness of the work carried out in
relation to this Operational Statement.
In
addition, the Ontario Ministry of Environment should be notified if
the dam removal is likely to result in discoloration of downstream
water, so that they may respond to public inquiries.
Measures to Protect Fish and
Fish Habitat when Removing Beaver Dams
1. |
Use |
2. |
While this Operational Statement does not cover the clearing of |
3. |
Whenever possible, remove beaver dams by hand. |
4. |
Beaver dam removal is preferably not done in the winter when the |
5. |
For non-emergency beaver dam removal, time |
6. |
Emergency beaver dam removal can be carried |
7. |
Install effective sediment and erosion control measures before |
8. |
Operate machinery on land (from outside of the water) and in a 8.1.Machinery is to arrive on 8.2. Wash, refuel and service 8.3. Keep an emergency spill 8.4. Restore banks to |
9. |
Remove the dam gradually to allow the water to release slowly and |
10. |
If blasting is required, individual detonations should be |
11. |
Relocate any fish that become trapped in isolated pools or |
12. |
Stabilize any waste materials removed from the work site to |
13. |
Vegetate any disturbed areas by planting and seeding preferably |
Definitions:
Ordinary
high water mark – The usual or average level to which
a body of water rises at its highest point and remains for sufficient
time so as to change the characteristics of the land. In flowing
waters (rivers, streams) this refers to the “active
channel/bank-full level” which is often the 1:2 year flood flow
return level. In inland lakes, wetlands or marine environments it
refers to those parts of the water body bed and banks that are
frequently flooded by water so as to leave a mark on the land and
where the natural vegetation changes from predominately aquatic
vegetation to terrestrial vegetation (excepting water tolerant
species). For reservoirs this refers to normal high operating levels
(Full Supply Level).
For
the Great Lakes this refers to the 80th percentile elevation above
chart datum as described in DFO’s Fish Habitat and
Determining the High Water Mark on Lakes.
B)Selected Water Management References
Beaver Control (Means and limits) References to Fisheries Habitat
Control; application of Canadian Fisheries Act., Lakes and Rivers
Improvement Act and Public Lands Act and Game and Fish Act.
Requirement to obtain permissions to destroy dams and to safeguard
any fish which may be impacted.
http://www.lrconline.com/Extension_Notes_English/pdf/bvr.pdf#search=%22beaver%20dams%20Ontario%22
Conservation Authorities Act (Ontario) which establishes Conservation
Authorities and allocates mandate (under most other Laws) to manage
river basins including:
(a)
to study and investigate the watershed and to determine a program
whereby the natural resources of the watershed may be conserved,
restored, developed and managed;
(b)
for any purpose necessary to any project under consideration or
undertaken by the authority, to enter into and upon any land and
survey and take levels of it and make such borings or sink such trial
pits as the authority considers necessary;
(c)
to acquire by purchase, lease or otherwise and to expropriate any
land that it may require, and, subject to subsection (2), to sell,
lease or otherwise dispose of land so acquired;
(d)
despite subsection (2), to lease for a term of five years or less
land acquired by the authority;
(e)
to purchase or acquire any personal property that it may require and
sell or otherwise deal therewith;
(f)
to enter into agreements for the purchase of materials, employment of
labour and other purposes as may be necessary for the due carrying
out of any project;
(g)
to enter into agreements with owners of private lands to facilitate
the due carrying out of any project;
(h)
to determine the proportion of the total benefit afforded to all the
participating municipalities that is afforded to each of them;
(i)
to erect works and structures and create reservoirs by the
construction of dams or otherwise;
(j)
to control the flow of surface waters in order to prevent floods or
pollution or to reduce the adverse effects thereof;
(k)
to alter the course of any river, canal, brook, stream or
watercourse, and divert or alter, as well temporarily as permanently,
the course of any river, stream, road, street or way, or raise or
sink its level in order to carry it over or under, on the level of or
by the side of any work built or to be built by the authority, and to
divert or alter the position of any water-pipe, gas-pipe, sewer,
drain or any telegraph, telephone or electric wire or pole;
(l)
to use lands that are owned or controlled by the authority for
purposes, not inconsistent with its objects, as it considers proper;
(m)
to use lands owned or controlled by the authority for park or other
recreational purposes, and to erect, or permit to be erected,
buildings, booths and facilities for such purposes and to make
charges for admission thereto and the use thereof;
(m.1)
to charge fees for services approved by the Minister;
(n)
to collaborate and enter into agreements with ministries and agencies
of government, municipal councils and local boards and other
organizations;
(o)
to plant and produce trees on Crown lands with the consent of the
Minister, and on other lands with the consent of the owner, for any
purpose;
(p)
to cause research to be done;
(q)
generally to do all such acts as are necessary for the due carrying
out of any project. R.S.O. 1990, c. C.27, s. 21; 1996,
c. 1, Sched. M, s. 44 (1, 2); 1998, c. 18, Sched. I,
s. 11.
For
the purposes of accomplishing its objects, an authority has power,
(a)
to study and investigate the watershed and to determine a program
whereby the natural resources of the watershed may be conserved,
restored, developed and managed;
(b)
for any purpose necessary to any project under consideration or
undertaken by the authority, to enter into and upon any land and
survey and take levels of it and make such borings or sink such trial
pits as the authority considers necessary;
(c)
to acquire by purchase, lease or otherwise and to expropriate any
land that it may require, and, subject to subsection (2), to sell,
lease or otherwise dispose of land so acquired;
(d)
despite subsection (2), to lease for a term of five years or less
land acquired by the authority;
(e)
to purchase or acquire any personal property that it may require and
sell or otherwise deal therewith;
(f)
to enter into agreements for the purchase of materials, employment of
labour and other purposes as may be necessary for the due carrying
out of any project;
(g)
to enter into agreements with owners of private lands to facilitate
the due carrying out of any project;
(h)
to determine the proportion of the total benefit afforded to all the
participating municipalities that is afforded to each of them;
(i)
to erect works and structures and create reservoirs by the
construction of dams or otherwise;
(j)
to control the flow of surface waters in order to prevent floods or
pollution or to reduce the adverse effects thereof;
(k)
to alter the course of any river, canal, brook, stream or
watercourse, and divert or alter, as well temporarily as permanently,
the course of any river, stream, road, street or way, or raise or
sink its level in order to carry it over or under, on the level of or
by the side of any work built or to be built by the authority, and to
divert or alter the position of any water-pipe, gas-pipe, sewer,
drain or any telegraph, telephone or electric wire or pole;
(l)
to use lands that are owned or controlled by the authority for
purposes, not inconsistent with its objects, as it considers proper;
(m)
to use lands owned or controlled by the authority for park or other
recreational purposes, and to erect, or permit to be erected,
buildings, booths and facilities for such purposes and to make
charges for admission thereto and the use thereof;
(m.1)
to charge fees for services approved by the Minister;
(n)
to collaborate and enter into agreements with ministries and agencies
of government, municipal councils and local boards and other
organizations;
(o)
to plant and produce trees on Crown lands with the consent of the
Minister, and on other lands with the consent of the owner, for any
purpose;
(p)
to cause research to be done;
(q)
generally to do all such acts as are necessary for the due carrying
out of any project. R.S.O. 1990, c. C.27, s. 21; 1996,
c. 1, Sched. M, s. 44 (1, 2); 1998, c. 18, Sched. I,
s. 11.
http://www.e-laws.gov.on.ca/html/statutes/english/elaws_statutes_90c27_e.htm
Clean Water Act (Ontario) which primarily deals with the protection
of drinking water quality
http://www.ene.gov.on.ca/en/water/cleanwater/index.php
Dock Encroachment Laws (Summary from Cottage Life)
http://www.cottagelife.com/index.cfm/ci_id/2436/la_id/1.htm
Lakes
and Rivers Improvement Act (Ontario) which generally covers any water
control structures such as dams, weirs and channel alterations
http://www.e-laws.gov.on.ca/html/statutes/english/elaws_statutes_90l03_e.htm
Mississippi
Lakes Water Management Plan
http://www.lakemississippi.ca/mrwmplan.html
Mississippi Valley Conservation Authority –
home website for information on conservation in the valley.
http://www.mvc.on.ca/
See also sections on regulations applying to development on shores
and waters http://www.mvc.on.ca/planning/regs.html
and waterfront development
http://www.mvc.on.ca/planning/waterfront.html
Ontario Ministry of Natural Resources –
Regulations and Laws , including those applying to water, fish and
wildlife and development.
http://www.mnr.gov.on.ca/en/STEL02_168320.html
(see also the Lakes and Rivers Improvement Act,
the Ontario Water Resources Act, the Planning Act (Ontario),
Safeguarding and Sustaining Ontario’s Water Act, The Clean
Water Act, Emergency Management and Civil Protection Act and the
Federal Fisheries Act, all of which pertain to resource management
and water. )
Ontario Water Resources Act which controls water
(quality, quantity and taking), wells, sewage works and environmental
impacts of the above.
http://www.e-laws.gov.on.ca/html/statutes/english/elaws_statutes_90o40_e.htm
Ontario Wetland Evaluation System – key wetland values and
wetland conservation resources
http://www.mnr.gov.on.ca/en/Business/Biodiversity/2ColumnSubPage/STEL02_176756.html
Ontario Conservation Act (Lake Simcoe example – complete text
with local application.
http://www.e-laws.gov.on.ca/html/source/regs/english/2006/elaws_src_regs_r06179_e.htm
Public Lands Act (Ontario) which in the case of water, controls
access, easements, travel on beaches, and road crossings of
watercourses.
http://www.e-laws.gov.on.ca/html/statutes/english/elaws_statutes_90p43_e.htm
Riparian Rights (from Environment Probe) rights of
those whose water is polluted by someone else (KVP case)
http://www.environmentprobe.org/enviroprobe/pubs/ev525.htm
Lakes and Rivers Improvement Act (case from
Glengarry County denying right to cut oxbow and alter river –
establishing rights of those on lakes and rivers regarding
alterations to streams and dams and clarifying criteria and
procedures)
http://publicdocs.mnr.gov.on.ca/View.asp?Document_ID=9236&Attachment_ID=17899%20
Safeguarding
and Sustaining Ontario’s Water Act – pertaining to
maintaining clean water supply for all Ontarians and controlling any
alterations to quality and quantity of water.
http://www.e-laws.gov.on.ca/html/source/statutes/english/2007/elaws_src_s07012_e.htm
Watershed
watch – Mississippi and Rideau
http://www.lrconline.com/lrc/programs/www_newsletter.pdf
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