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Agenda - Council - 02/23/2016
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Agenda - Council - 02/23/2016
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Meetings
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Agenda
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Council
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02/23/2016
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File Location: Pbrama>HDrive>Legislativelnitiatives>2016 <br />(2) Water Supply <br />ISSUE: A clean and reliable source of water is critical to the function of any healthy community. In many <br />cases, communities utilize aquifers as their primary source of water. The City of Ramsey is located in a <br />"recharge zone" for aquifers utilized throughout the Twin Cities Metro region, known as the "Anoka County <br />Sand Plain." <br />The City of Ramsey is a developing community and anticipates significant growth over the next two <br />decades. As a result, additional water supply will be required to meet the demand of future development. <br />In 2007, the City of Ramsey explored the ability to use surface waters, such as the Mississippi River for a <br />municipal water supply as a possible benefit for regional water resources. The Minnesota DNR assisted <br />with this effort in order to identify options for preserving existing, and future, ground water supplies of <br />communities throughout the entire Twin Cities Metro region. <br />As a result, the City of Ramsey identified an option of using a surface water treatment plant sometime in <br />the future, which would draw from the Mississippi River, but only it were part of a regional solution. Under <br />a surface water option, the City would retain its ground water supply system as a back-up to a surface <br />water supply. The estimated cost of the proposed surface water treatment plant in Ramsey is significant, at <br />$36.5 million. Costs for retaining the ground water supply system will be minimal compared to the <br />treatment facility costs. For this reason, significant funding from outside the City would be required. <br />Clearly, utilization of water resources is not solely a local issue, as aquifers and "recharging zones" span <br />across the entire Twin Cities metro region. The need for the City of Ramsey to switch from a ground water <br />system to a surface water system is not a result of development in the City of Ramsey alone; it is the result <br />of demand across the entire Twin Cities metro region. <br />RECOMMENDATION: The City of Ramsey supports continued regional analysis and planning efforts to <br />utilize ground and surface water throughout the Twin Cities as a whole, rather than community -by - <br />community. The City of Ramsey opposes actions limiting the ability of Ramsey to develop in order to <br />sustain, or allow new development, in other Twin Cities communities affected by the Anoka County Sand <br />Plain "recharge zone." The City of Ramsey supports regional solutions to address regional ground water <br />supply concerns; specifically including, regional equitable funding sources. <br />TOPIC IS CONSISTENT THE FOLLOWING ORGANIZATIONS LEGISLATIVE PLATFORMS: <br />>League of Minnesota Cities: Municipal Public Water Supplies, SD -61 <br />>Metro Cities: Water Supply, 2-Q <br />>North Metro Mayor's Association, Water <br />2016 City of Ramsey Legislative Platform <br />
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