Chapter 499 Oregon Laws 2001
AN ACT
SB 606
Relating to scenic
waterways; creating new provisions; amending ORS 390.835; and declaring an
emergency.
Be It Enacted by the People of the State of Oregon:
SECTION 1.
ORS 390.835 is amended to read:
390.835. (1) It is declared that the highest and best uses
of the waters within scenic waterways are recreation, fish and wildlife uses.
The free-flowing character of these waters shall be maintained in quantities
necessary for recreation, fish and wildlife uses. No dam, or reservoir, or
other water impoundment facility shall be constructed on waters within scenic
waterways. No water diversion facility shall be constructed or used except by
right previously established or as permitted by the Water Resources Commission,
upon a finding that such diversion is necessary to uses designated in ORS
536.310 (12), and in a manner consistent with the policies set forth under ORS
390.805 to 390.925. The Water Resources Commission shall administer and enforce
the provisions of this subsection.
(2) Filling of the beds or removal of material from or
other alteration of the beds or banks of scenic waterways for purposes other
than recreational prospecting not requiring a permit shall be prohibited,
except as permitted by the Director of the Division of State Lands upon a
finding that such activity would be consistent with the policies set forth
under ORS 390.805 to 390.925 for scenic waterways and in a manner consistent
with the policies set forth under ORS 196.800 to 196.825 and 196.840 to 196.870
for removal of material from the beds and banks and filling of any waters of
this state. The Director of the Division of State Lands shall administer and
enforce the provisions of this subsection.
(3)(a) Upon a finding of emergency circumstances, the
Director of the Division of State Lands may issue a temporary permit for the
removal, filling or alteration of the beds or banks within a scenic waterway.
The temporary permit shall include conditions developed after consultation with
the State Department of Fish and Wildlife and the State Parks and Recreation
Department.
(b) As used in this subsection, “emergency circumstances”
exist if prompt action is necessary to prevent irreparable harm, injury or
damage to persons or property.
(4) Any person adversely affected or aggrieved by the grant
or denial of a permit under subsection (2) or (3) of this section may appeal in
accordance with the procedure set forth in ORS 196.835.
(5) Nothing in ORS 390.805 to 390.925 affects the authority
of the State Fish and Wildlife Commission to construct facilities or make
improvements to facilitate the passage or propagation of fish or to exercise
other responsibilities in managing fish and wildlife resources. Nothing in ORS
390.805 to 390.925 affects the authority of the Water Resources Commission to
construct and maintain stream gauge stations and other facilities related to
the commission’s duties in administration of the water laws.
(6) Upon a finding of necessity under subsection (1) of
this section, the Water Resources Commission may issue a water right for human
consumption not to exceed .005 cubic feet per second per household, or
livestock consumption uses not to exceed one-tenth of one cubic foot per second
per 1,000 head of livestock, as designated in ORS 536.310 (12) within or above
a scenic waterway if the Water Resources Commission makes the following
findings:
(a) That issuing the water right does not significantly
impair the free-flowing character of these waters in quantities necessary for
recreation, fish and wildlife.
(b) That issuing the water right is consistent with
provisions pertaining to water appropriation and water rights under ORS
chapters 536 and 537 and rules adopted thereunder.
(c) That construction, operation and maintenance of the
diversion system will be carried out in a manner consistent with the purposes
set forth in ORS 390.805 to 390.925.
(d) If the water right is for human consumption, an
additional finding that:
(A) The applicant cannot reasonably obtain water from any
other source;
(B) Denial of the water right would result in loss of
reasonable expectations for use of the property; and
(C) The system installed to divert water shall include
monitoring equipment to permit water use measurement and reporting.
(e) If the water right is for livestock consumption, an
additional finding that:
(A) The right is necessary to prevent the livestock from
watering in or along the stream bed;
(B) The applicant cannot reasonably obtain water from any
other source; and
(C) The applicant has excluded livestock from the stream
and its adjacent riparian zone.
(7) In making the findings required under subsection (6) of
this section, the Water Resources Commission shall consider the existing or
potential cumulative impacts of issuing the water right.
(8) The Water Resources Commission may not allow human
consumption and livestock uses authorized under subsection (6) of this section
in excess of a combined cumulative total of one percent of the average daily
flow or one cubic foot per second, whichever is less, unless:
(a) The Water Resources Commission, the State Parks and
Recreation Department, the State Department of Fish and Wildlife, the
Department of Environmental Quality and the Division of State Lands unanimously
agree to exceed that amount; and
(b) Exceeding that amount will not significantly impair the
free-flowing character of these waters in quantities necessary for recreation,
fish and wildlife.
(9)(a) The provisions of this section shall not apply to a
water right application for the use of ground water as defined in ORS 537.515,
except upon a finding by the Water Resources Director based on a preponderance
of evidence that the use of ground water will measurably reduce the surface
water flows necessary to maintain the free-flowing character of a scenic
waterway in quantities necessary for recreation, fish and wildlife.
(b) The Water Resources Department shall review every
application for the use of ground water to determine whether to make the
finding specified in paragraph (a) of this subsection. The finding shall be
based upon the application of generally accepted hydrogeologic methods using
relevant and available field information concerning the proposed use.
(c) In making the determination required by paragraph (a)
of this subsection, the Water Resources Department shall consider the timing of
projected impacts of the proposed use in relation to other factors, including
but not limited to: Changing climate, recharge, incidental precipitation,
out-of-stream appropriations and return flows.
(d) If the Water Resources Director makes the finding
specified in paragraph (a) of this subsection, the Water Resources Director
shall issue an order denying the application unless:
(A) Mitigation is provided in accordance with subsection
(10) of this section; or
(B) The applicant submits evidence to overcome the finding
under paragraph (a) of this subsection.
(e) Except as provided under subsection (13) of this
section, if the Water Resources Director does not make the finding specified in
paragraph (a) of this subsection, the Water Resources Director shall issue an
order approving the application if the application otherwise meets the
requirements of ORS 537.505 to 537.795.
(f) A protest of any order issued under this subsection may
be filed in the same manner as a protest on any application for a right to
appropriate ground water.
(g) Each water right permit and certificate for
appropriation of ground water issued after July 19, 1995, for which a source of
appropriation is within or above a scenic waterway shall be conditioned to
allow the regulation of the use if analysis of data available after the permit
or certificate is issued discloses that the appropriation will measurably
reduce the surface water flows necessary to maintain the free-flowing character
of a scenic waterway in quantities necessary for recreation, fish and wildlife
in effect as of the priority date of the right or as those quantities may be
subsequently reduced.
(h) Nothing in this subsection shall limit the use of
ground water for a use exempted under ORS 537.545.
(10) The Water Resources Commission or Water Resources
Director shall consider mitigation measures and may include mitigation measures
as conditions in any water right permit or certificate to ensure the
maintenance of the free-flowing character of the scenic waterway in quantities
necessary for recreation, fish and wildlife.
(11) The Water Resources Commission and the Water Resources
Director shall carry out their responsibilities under ORS 536.220 to 536.590
with respect to the waters within scenic waterways in conformity with the
provisions of this section.
(12) As used in this section, “measurably reduce” means
that the use authorized under subsection (9) of this section will individually
or cumulatively reduce surface water flows within the scenic waterway in excess
of a combined cumulative total of one percent of the average daily flow or one
cubic foot per second, whichever is less, unless:
(a) The Water Resources Department, the State Parks and
Recreation Department, the State Department of Fish and Wildlife, the
Department of Environmental Quality and the Division of State Lands unanimously
agree to exceed that amount; and
(b) Exceeding that amount will not significantly impair the
free-flowing character of these waters in quantities necessary for recreation,
fish and wildlife.
(13) Before authorizing an appropriation that will reduce
streamflows within a scenic waterway in amounts up to but not exceeding the
amounts described in subsection (12) of this section, the Water Resources
Director shall find:
(a) That the appropriation will not significantly impair
the free-flowing character of these waters in quantities necessary for
recreation, fish and wildlife.
(b) That the appropriation is consistent with provisions
pertaining to water appropriations and water rights under ORS chapters 536 and
537 and the rules adopted thereunder.
(c) That construction, operation and maintenance of the
appropriation will be carried out in a manner consistent with the purposes set
forth in ORS 390.805 to 390.925.
(14) No placer mining shall be permitted on waters within
scenic waterways other than recreational placer mining.
(15) No person shall be required to obtain a permit for
recreational prospecting resulting in the fill, removal or other alteration of
less than one cubic yard of material at any one individual site and,
cumulatively, not more than five cubic yards of material from within the bed or
wet perimeter of any single scenic waterway in a single year. Recreational
prospecting shall not occur at any site where fish eggs are present.
(16) No provision of this section shall be construed to
exempt recreational placer mining on a scenic waterway, other than recreational
prospecting not requiring a permit, from compliance with the provisions of ORS
196.800 to 196.825 and 196.840 to 196.870 or rules adopted pursuant to ORS
196.800 to 196.825 and 196.840 to 196.870.
(17) Recreational placer mining, other than recreational
prospecting not requiring a permit, shall not:
(a) Dam or divert a waterway or obstruct fish passage;
(b) Include nozzling, sluicing or digging outside the wet
perimeter of the stream, nor extend the wet perimeter;
(c) Include movement of boulders, logs, stumps or other
woody material from the wet perimeter other than movement by hand and
nonmotorized equipment;
(d) Involve the disturbance of rooted or embedded woody
plants, including trees and shrubs, regardless of their location;
(e) Include excavation from the streambank;
(f) Fail to level pits, piles, furrows or potholes outside
the main channel of the waterway upon leaving the site;
(g) Include operation of a suction dredge without a suction
dredge waste discharge permit from the Department of Environmental Quality
including, but not limited to, a prohibition against dredging during periods
when fish eggs could be in the dredging site gravel;
(h) Be conducted on federal lands except as allowed by
agencies of the federal government;
(i) Impede boating;
(j) Include operation of a dredge between the hours of 6
p.m. and 8 a.m. within 500 feet of a residence or within 500 feet of a
campground except within a federally designated recreational mining site; or
(k) Include operation of a dredge within the marked or
posted swimming area of a designated campground or day use area except within a
federally designated recreational mining site.
(18) As used in this section:
(a) “Bed” means the land within the wet perimeter and any
adjacent nonvegetated dry gravel bar.
(b) “Prospecting” means to search or explore for samples of
gold, silver or other precious minerals, using nonmotorized methods, from among
small quantities of aggregate.
(c) “Recreational placer mining” includes, but is not
limited to, the use of nonmotorized equipment and motorized surface dredges
having an intake nozzle with an inside diameter not exceeding four inches, a
motor no larger than 16 horsepower and a muffler meeting or exceeding
factory-installed noise reduction standards. “Recreational placer mining” does
not include recreational prospecting that does not require a permit.
(d) “Wet perimeter” means the area of the stream that is
underwater, or is exposed as a nonvegetated dry gravel bar island surrounded on
all sides by actively moving water at the time the activity occurs.
[(19) Notwithstanding
any other provision of this section, no permit or temporary permit for dredging
issued by the Division of State Lands for the purpose of recreational placer
mining within a scenic waterway shall be in effect after December 31, 1999, if
the review described in section 3, chapter 478, Oregon Laws 1997, has been
completed and reported to the Seventieth Legislative Assembly or, if the review
has not been completed and reported to the Seventieth Legislative Assembly, after
December 31, 2001.]
SECTION 2.
Section 3 of this 2001 Act is added to
and made a part of ORS 390.805 to 390.925.
SECTION 3.
In order to make recommendations to
better achieve the objectives and enhance the effectiveness of the Oregon
Scenic Waterways System, the State Parks and Recreation Department shall
complete a review of the system administered under ORS 390.805 to 390.925,
including a review of the studies pertaining to the effects of recreational
placer mining within scenic waterways. At the request of the State Parks and
Recreation Department, the Division of State Lands, the Water Resources
Department, the State Department of Fish and Wildlife, the State Marine Board
and the Department of Environmental Quality shall assist in the review. The
State Parks and Recreation Department may also request interested public
parties to assist in the review.
SECTION 4.
Notwithstanding ORS 390.835, a permit or
temporary permit for dredging issued by the Division of State Lands for the
purpose of recreational placer mining within a scenic waterway is not valid
after December 31, 2003, if the review described in section 3 of this 2001 Act
has been completed and reported to the Seventy-second Legislative Assembly or,
if the review has not been completed and reported to the Seventy-second
Legislative Assembly, after December 31, 2005.
SECTION 5.
This 2001 Act being necessary for the
immediate preservation of the public peace, health and safety, an emergency is
declared to exist, and this 2001 Act takes effect on its passage.
Approved by the Governor
June 21, 2001
Filed in the office of
Secretary of State June 22, 2001
Effective date June 21, 2001
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