RODNEY ZEMKE, District Attorney Eau Claire County
Your predecessor requested my opinion on the questions raised by the following facts: Eau Claire County wishes to build a road crossing Black Creek, a navigable stream in the Town of Fairchild, Eau Claire County. The crossing would involve either two 30-inch culverts or one 40-inch culvert. District employes of the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources ("DNR"), charged with issuing or denying permits for bridges under sec
The Madison office of DNR expressed a different policy: If the crossing involves one or more culverts spanning less than the whole watercourse, the culvert is a "structure" within the meaning of sec.
If the question as to DNR's power to waive permit requirements is answered in the negative, we must also ask whether, and under *Page 92
what circumstances, culverts and bridges are subject to sec.
In correspondence after this question arose, the agency indicated that it does not view its interpretation as a waiver and does not seek to assert the power to exempt certain parties from obligations of the statute. Such an assertion would be improper here, as I can find nothing in either the statutes or case law which confers on DNR any power to determine, without further authority and on a case-by-case basis, that individuals who would ordinarily be subject to ch. 30 need not comply with the requirements of the chapter.
Section
"Unless a permit has been granted by the department pursuant to statute or the legislature has otherwise authorized structures or deposits in navigable waters, it is unlawful:
"(a) To deposit any material or to place any structure upon the bed of any navigable water . . ."
Under this language, DNR must decide whether "the legislature has otherwise authorized" placement of structures or deposits in waters.
The term "highway" includes bridges. Sec.
The county's authority to build highways is set out at length in ch. 83, Stats. Specifically, sec.
Reading these sections in conjunction with sec.
Section
"The department may . . . grant to any riparian owner a permit to build or maintain for his own use a structure otherwise prohibited by statute . . ." (Emphasis added.)
The county is not engaged in constructing the bridge and its supporting structures "for (its) own use," but is rather performing the governmental function of providing a highway system. The same subsection indicates that the department's permit power applies to private structures "otherwise prohibited by statute." By contrast, county highways are required and authorized by statute, and thus would not fall into the permit requirement.
Paragraphs (2) and (4) of sec.
I note further that the legislature made explicit provision to regulate municipal dams under the extensive guidelines of sec.
Section
In concluding that municipalities may build bridges, in performance of their highway-building obligations, without DNR approval under sec.
I am also aware that the legislature's delegation to the counties, as I have defined it supra, is a delegation permitting localities to impair the trust, rather than further it, under the analysis used in Menzer v. Elkhart Lake (1970),
"Legislative authority to construct and maintain a bridge carries no implication of authority to create or maintain a nuisance. (Footnote omitted.) The state has authorized only the construction and maintenance of municipal bridges that do not obstruct navigable waters. Such a delegation does not violate the state's trust of the navigable waters."
The legislature may eventually find it desirable to spell out in more detail the limits of its delegation to municipalities in this area. Until such time, municipal officials must exercise their own best judgment to assure that bridges they authorize and build are not unnecessary obstructions or hazards to navigation
For all of the foregoing reasons, it is my opinion that sec.
BCL:MVB
