SB900-SSA1,4,1919 (c) The property is within a municipality.
SB900-SSA1,4,2120 (d) The property is not subject to a lake bed grant or a submerged land lease
21and is not landward of the shoreline established under s. 30.2038.
SB900-SSA1,4,25 22(3) Application. (a) A record title holder for property that meets the
23requirements under sub. (2) (a) to (d) may apply to the municipality in which the
24property is located for a determination of the location of the shoreline in accordance
25with this section.
SB900-SSA1,5,1
1(b) The application shall include all of the following information:
SB900-SSA1,5,32 1. The legal description of the property and a survey map showing the proposed
3shoreline.
SB900-SSA1,5,64 2. Photographs, survey data, publicly available global positioning system
5mapping, geographic information system mapping, or other documentation that
6provide evidence that the area landward of the proposed shoreline is upland.
SB900-SSA1,5,11 7(4) Municipal approval. (a) Except as provided in sub. (5), a municipality that
8receives an application under sub. (3) shall provide public notice that the application
9has been received. No earlier than 30 days following the public notice, the
10municipality shall determine whether the shoreline proposed under sub. (3) (b) 1. is
11in the public interest as provided in par. (c) 2.
SB900-SSA1,5,1512 (b) A municipality may by ordinance adopt a proposed shoreline for multiple
13properties within the municipality that abut a Great Lakes water if the municipality
14determines that the location of the shoreline is in the public interest as provided in
15par. (c) 2.
SB900-SSA1,5,1716 (c) In making a determination under this subsection, the municipality shall
17approve the proposed shoreline if all of the following apply:
SB900-SSA1,5,1818 1. The property meets the requirements under sub. (2) (a) to (d).
SB900-SSA1,5,2419 2. The municipality determines approval of the shoreline is in the public
20interest and the proposed use will promote the interests of the public, which may
21include public rights in navigable waters, economic development or redevelopment,
22the elimination of blight, remediation of brownfields, and settling uncertainty in
23title, and shall include public access or use of the property or project area, unless the
24existing use of the property is residential.
SB900-SSA1,6,2
1(d) A municipality may by ordinance adopt criteria for processing applications
2under this subsection.
SB900-SSA1,6,8 3(5) Exception. A parcel that has been separated from the submerged bed of a
4Great Lakes water by one or more other parcels since the date provided in s. 30.122
5(1) is deemed to be not part of the lakebed of a Great Lakes water and shall be affected
6by this section in the same manner as property for which a determination is made
7that the property is held in fee title ownership and is not held in trust by the state
8for the public under sub. (9).
SB900-SSA1,6,11 9(6) Submittal to the department. Upon making a determination to approve
10a shoreline under sub. (4), the municipality shall provide the approval to the
11department for review.
SB900-SSA1,6,18 12(7) Notice. (a) No later than 30 days after receiving a request for review under
13sub. (6), the department shall provide public notice by publishing a class 2 notice
14under ch. 985 and by posting notice on the department's Internet site. The notice
15shall provide an opportunity for members of the public to provide comments and
16request a public hearing. If a public hearing is requested, notice of the public hearing
17shall be provided by publishing a class 2 notice under ch. 985 and by posting notice
18on the department's Internet site.
SB900-SSA1,6,2119 (b) No later than 60 days following public notice under par. (a), or 60 days
20following a public hearing requested under par. (a), whichever is later, the
21department shall make a determination under sub. (8) (a).
SB900-SSA1,6,25 22(8) Determinations by the department. (a) For purposes of this section, the
23department shall adopt the shoreline approved by a municipality under sub. (4) and
24determine the shoreline is consistent with the public interest as provided in sub. (4)
25(c) 2. unless the department determines any of the following:
SB900-SSA1,7,5
11. A portion of the area landward of the shoreline approved by the municipality
2under sub. (4) is not upland. If a determination under this paragraph is made, the
3department shall modify the proposed shoreline so that any portion that is not
4upland remains waterward of the shoreline and shall approve the modified
5shoreline.
SB900-SSA1,7,76 2. The determination of the municipality under sub. (4) that the proposed
7shoreline is in the public interest is not supported by substantial evidence.
SB900-SSA1,7,98 (b) If the department does not make a determination under this subsection in
9the period required under sub. (7) (b), the proposed shoreline is deemed approved.
SB900-SSA1,7,16 10(9) Effect of determination. (a) A determination under this section
11establishes the shoreline for purposes of determining the boundary of title between
12land held in trust by the state and land held in fee title ownership. For land held in
13fee title ownership as determined under this section, this determination operates in
14the same manner as if a person were granted quiet title to the property by a court
15under s. 841.10. A determination under this section shall be recorded with the
16register of deeds and posted on the department's Internet site.
SB900-SSA1,7,1817 (b) A determination under this section does not alter the rights of any record
18title holder other than to establish the shoreline under par. (a).
SB900-SSA1,7,2019 (c) This section does does not alter the right of property owners to seek a quiet
20title action under common law.
SB900-SSA1,7 21Section 7 . 885.335 of the statutes is created to read:
SB900-SSA1,8,3 22885.335 Actions concerning real estate near Great Lakes waters or
23commercial rivers.
(1) No claim or counterclaim may be made in an action
24relating to the possession or title of any real estate if the claim or counterclaim is
25based on an assertion that the property includes portions of land that may have at

1one time been submerged beneath a Great Lakes water if such portions of land are
2upland, as defined in s. 30.2039 (1) (e), and the property is not subject to a lake bed
3grant or submerged land lease.
SB900-SSA1,8,9 4(2) No claim or counterclaim may be made in an action relating to the allowable
5use of any real estate if the claim or counterclaim is based on an assertion that the
6property includes portions of land that may have at one time been submerged
7beneath a commercial river, as defined in s. 30.01 (1h), or an assertion that the
8allowable use of the property is otherwise limited by a prior approval issued by the
9state or a local government, if s. 30.122 (2) is applicable to such portions of land.
SB900-SSA1,9 10Section 9. Nonstatutory provisions.
SB900-SSA1,8,11 11(1) Legislative findings.
SB900-SSA1,8,15 12(a) The legislature recognizes and declares that the state is the trustee of the
13public trust established under article IX, section 1, of the Wisconsin Constitution and
14that the legislature is authorized as representative of the state to exercise the
15function of the trustee of that public trust in matters of specific application.
SB900-SSA1,8,1916 (b) The legislature recognizes that title to natural lake beds as existing at
17statehood, including those in the Great Lakes, generally is held by the state. State
18v. Bleck
, 114 Wis. 2d 454 (1983); Illinois Steel Co. v. Bilot, 109 Wis. 418 (1901); State
19v. Trudeau
, 139 Wis. 2d 91 (1987).
SB900-SSA1,8,2520 (c) The legislature finds that the combination of the dynamic nature of Great
21Lakes waters and the evolution of commercial harbors, urban areas, and other
22lakeshore development has resulted in considerable changes in the lake bed
23shoreline compared to the original government survey. In many places, formerly
24submerged areas have become upland and have been used for public or private
25purposes for decades.
SB900-SSA1,9,3
1(d) The legislature finds that the historical record to determine the location of
2the shoreline at the date of statehood, and the extent of natural or artificial changes
3to lake bed areas before and after statehood, is often incomplete and inconclusive.
SB900-SSA1,9,94 (e) The legislature declares that the uncertainty of title to and the uncertainty
5associated with permissible uses of some lakefront property are a substantial
6impediment to orderly redevelopment and transfer of valuable lakefront properties,
7and it is in the public interest to promote the use of upland areas in a way that
8provides certainty and facilitates economic development, increased tax base, and
9public access.
SB900-SSA1,9,1910 (f) The legislature recognizes that courts have held that the location of the
11boundary of lake bed can change and that title to such areas can be adjusted under
12the common law doctrines of accretion and reliction through both natural processes
13and through the placement of artificial fill. De Simone v. Kramer, 77 Wis. 2d 188
14(1977); Heise v. Village of Pewaukee, 92 Wis. 2d 333 (1979); W. H. Pugh Coal Co. v.
15State
, 105 Wis. 2d 123 (1981); Doemel v. Jantz, 180 Wis. 225 (1923); Angelo v.
16Railroad Com.
, 194 Wis. 543 (1928); Jansky v. City of Two Rivers, 227 Wis. 228
17(1938). The legislature finds that the system for establishing the shoreline of Great
18Lakes waters under s. 30.2039, as created by this act, is permissible under the law
19because this system is based upon the longstanding doctrine of accretion.
SB900-SSA1,9,2420 (g) The legislature declares that the best available method to establish the
21shoreline between a Great Lakes lake bed and adjoining uplands for purposes of
22establishing ownership and allowable use of the adjoining uplands is the method
23established under s. 30.2039, as created by this act, and that this method is in the
24public interest, is consistent with the public trust doctrine, and promotes the most

1equitable method of determining the ownership and use rights applicable to
2lakefront property on the Great Lakes.
SB900-SSA1,10,143 (h) Should a reviewing court of competent jurisdiction disagree with the
4legislative finding in par. (g), the legislature finds that the system for establishing
5the shoreline of Great Lakes waters under s. 30.2039, as created by this act, is
6permissible under the law because case law allows the legislature to make certain
7limited transfers of lake bed to a private party if it is part of a larger process that is
8in the public interest. Milwaukee v. State, 193 Wis. 423 (1927). The legislature finds
9that any transfers of former lake bed to a private party under s. 30.2039, as created
10by this act, are nominal transfers and are part of a process ensuring that uses of
11waterfront property serve public interests. The department of natural resources is
12not required to prepare a report under s. 13.097 (2) with respect to the process by
13which the department may establish a shoreline under s. 30.2039, as created by this
14act.
SB900-SSA1,10,2415 (i) Should a reviewing court of competent jurisdiction disagree with the
16legislative findings in par. (g) and (h), the legislature finds that the system for
17establishing the shoreline of Great Lakes waters under s. 30.2039, as created by this
18act, is permissible under the law because this system is separately supported by the
19longstanding doctrine of adverse possession. The property subject to s. 30.2039, as
20created by this act, has been upland for more than 40 years, which is consistent with
21the doctrine of adverse possession. Multiple cases have indicated that the allowance
22for adverse possession of formerly submerged lands is constitutional. Illinois Steel
23Co. v. Bilot
, 109 Wis. 418 (1901); State v. Bednarski, 1 Wis. 2d 639 (1957); State v.
24Adelmeyer
, 221 Wis. 246 (1936).
SB900-SSA1,11,6
1(j) The legislature recognizes that in interpreting the public trust, the courts
2in Wisconsin have made a distinction between the ownership of the beds of navigable
3streams and natural lakes. For stream beds, the title is held by a fee title owner but
4this title is qualified by the rights of the public to use the water for navigation.
5Munninghoff v. Wis. Conservation Com., 255 Wis. 252 (1949); FAS, LLC v. Town of
6Bass Lake
, 2007 WI 73.
SB900-SSA1,11,147 (k) The legislature recognizes that in Muench v. Public Service Com., 261 Wis.
8492 (1952), the court held that the public trust extends only to land under the stream
9of a navigable water so long as the land constitutes part of the bed of the stream, and
10if the course of the stream is changed so that the land is no longer is part of the river
11bed, it ceases to be impressed with the public trust. The legislature recognizes that
12the state has allowed the relocation of navigable streams under s. 30.195 and, when
13such action is taken, any area that was formerly the bed of a stream is no longer
14subject to the public trust and may be used for any allowable private purpose.
SB900-SSA1,11,1715 (L) The legislature recognizes that the historic record on the extent of natural
16or artificial changes to the original riverbank and river bed is often incomplete and
17inconclusive.
SB900-SSA1,12,218 (m) The legislature finds that where riverfront properties in incorporated areas
19have been filled for an extended time, any public rights in navigable waters that
20existed in the submerged area were extinguished when that area became upland and
21pursuant to s. 30.122, as affected by this act, and riverfront properties in
22incorporated areas are no longer subject to the public trust. It is now in the public
23interest to promote the use of upland areas in a way that provides certainty and

1flexibility for property owners, facilitates economic development and redevelopment,
2and increases the local tax base.
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