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Motion carried. Voting Yes: Vice Chair Barr, Commissioners Mobry, Troy, Fyten, Chubb, and <br />Trappen. Voting No: None. Absent: Chair Bennett <br />5. COMMISSION BUSINESS <br />5.01: Consider Converting the Oak Savanna Area Landfill from Restricted to Passive, <br />Public Use <br />Parks & Assistant Public Works Superintendent Riverblood reviewed that, following the decades <br />of the "Anoka" landfill receiving waste from garbage haulers around the Anoka County area, the <br />"dump" was closed in the 1990's under an agreement between Waste Management and the City <br />of Ramsey. The landfill was subsequently declared a Superfund Site, and the ownership <br />transferred to the Minnesota Pollution Control Agency (MPCA) — with the responsibility of <br />capping the landfill to prevent infiltration of water. Additional water wells were drilled around <br />the perimeter of the site for both monitoring and also to remove the pollutants that had already <br />made their way into the groundwater. <br />The contaminated groundwater is primarily contained to the area under the land owned by <br />MPCA. The landfill will need to be managed for near -perpetuity to maintain the systems that <br />prevent or limit pollution. This management plan is titled the Closed Landfill Use Plan, Anoka - <br />Ramsey Landfill and is attached for Commission review. The first attachment provided is titled <br />Open Space Area and is the subject of this case. <br />A unique feature of the land owned by the MPCA is the Oak Savanna area in the southwest <br />portion of MPCA's holding that is most visible from the intersections of Bunker Lake Boulevard <br />and Sunwood Drive. Under the Closed Landfill Use Plan, Anoka -Ramsey Landfill, MPCA has <br />determined that passive, public use of the Oak Savanna area would be consistent with the Closed <br />Landfill Restrictions, and not be detrimental to the MPCA charge of protecting public health and <br />safety. <br />While MPCA will not sell or bequeath the Oak Savanna to the city, they will lease the site with <br />certain conditions. The first step in considering this is to ascertain the Park and Recreation <br />Commission's position on the value to the public this site may have as unique open space, and <br />for certain, passive uses to be determined. <br />Staff recommends that the Commission recommend that City Council direct Staff to explore <br />options and partnerships in obtaining a lease for the Oak Savanna site and develop a long-term <br />plan for its management as a unique and valuable natural resource in the community. <br />Anoka County Parks has managed the area for invasive plants and this would need to be <br />continued. Mr. Riverblood mentioned some of the low impact uses that could be developed. <br />Vice Chair Barr stated it would be nice to utilize the land that would normally be not used. Mr. <br />Riverblood stated one concept he had recommended in the past would be a warming house, <br />sliding hill cross country ski trails and a couple sheets of ice at Alpine Park —the ski trail could <br />`loop' through the Oak Savanna area. <br />Park and Recreation Commission/April9, 2015 <br />Page 2 of 4 <br />