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Agenda - Economic Development Authority - 01/08/2015
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Agenda - Economic Development Authority - 01/08/2015
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Meetings
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Agenda
Meeting Type
Economic Development Authority
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01/08/2015
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S TE LOCAl1 ON AND DE9CRI PTI ON <br />The Anoka -Ramsey Landfill (Landfill) is located in the city limits of Ramsey (City), Anoka County, <br />Minnesota (Appendix B). A landfill's Land Management Area (LMA) indudesthe property described in <br />the Landfill Cleanup Agreement between the M PCA and the landfill owner/operator, and may include <br />adjacent property that contains waste, adjacent buffer property (land acquired for the purpose of <br />restricting use by the public due to landfill gas or groundwater concerns), and adjacent property where <br />response action equipment is located. At a minimum, the LMA will be comprised of the property in the <br />Landfill Cleanup Agreement. In addition, the LMA isthe property that is subject to M innesota aatutes <br />1156.412, S ibd. 9 of the LCAthat requiresthe M PCA to develop a Land Use Ran for the landfill and with <br />which the LGU's land use plan must be consistent. The LMA for the Landfill consists of 267 acres <br />described in the Landfill Cleanup Agreement, additional parcels of land purchased by the M PCA and <br />lands sold through friendly condemnations are shown in Appendix C <br />The Landfill was operated as a dump from 1967 until it was permitted in 1972 and dosed in 1993. The <br />waste footprint is about 65 acres. The M PCA took over responsibility for the Landfill in 1997 when the <br />M PCA and Waste Management signed the Landfill Cleanup Agreement and the M PCP, issued the Notice <br />of Compliance. The LMA is currently owned by the M FCA. <br />GROIJN DWATER AN M ETHANE GAS AREAS OF CONCERN <br />Groundwater Area of Concern <br />The Groundwater Area of Concern (GWAOC) is defined as t he area of land surrounding a landfill where <br />the presence of activitiesthat require the use of groundwater may be impacted or precluded by <br />contamination from the landfill, or may cause the groundwater flow direction to change thereby <br />impacting the user or others nearby. The GWAOCis used to inform the public about the current and <br />potential risks to users of groundwater contaminated by the landfill. In most circumstances this area is <br />not equidistant around the site. The GWAOCis shown in Appendix D. <br />The groundwater environmental monitoring system consists of approximately 104 wells. The <br />groundwater contamination is in the Upper Sand that is part of the Anoka sand plain aquifer. There is <br />also groundwater contamination in a glacial channel where the Grantsburg Till (that lies below the <br />Upper Sand) is eroded and the Upper and Lower Sand are connected. Contaminants in groundwater that <br />exceed drinking water standards indude vinyl chloride, 1,2- dichloroethane and manganese. <br />The groundwater plume is shown in two dimensions but extends to a depth of 100 feet below the <br />ground surface. The area of concern extends east 1065 feet beyond the plume boundary to indude <br />parcelsthat are not on city water because there may be shallow ground water flow towards S.jnfish <br />Lake. The area of concern extends to the southeast 1,614 feet beyond the plume boundary because <br />there are parcels in this direction that are not on municipal water and regional flow in the shallow <br />groundwater is to the southeast. Private wells to the east and southeast are protected by the Anoka <br />M unicipal Regional Landfill groundwater extraction system and by the geology of the bedrock aquifer. In <br />addition, flow in the bedrock aquifer is to the south and southwest from the waste footprint. These <br />2 <br />
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