Laserfiche WebLink
General Government <br />ensure that water supply remains adequate and sustainable across the region, we must <br />understand how much water can be sustainably drawn from the aquifers and what effect <br />increases in re -use, conservation and recharge can have on the sustainability and availability of <br />both groundwater and surface water. Many of these strategies cross agency jurisdictions and <br />will require improved coordination and cooperation. <br />Municipal water suppliers have made significant infrastructure investments in their systems <br />based on calculated water availability and DNR permits. Proposals to reduce the reliance on <br />groundwater by switching municipal water systems from groundwater to surface water <br />supplies will come with significant costs that could place excessive burdens on local resources. <br />The outcomes and benefits of re -balancing the mix of groundwater and surface water use for <br />specific municipalities and the region must be identifiable before any projects are undertaken. <br />The sustainability of our water supply is an issue of regional and statewide significance and <br />the expense of any necessary projects that benefit the region should not fall on individual <br />cities. Any attempts to address water supply sustainability must also take into account all <br />water users, including municipal water suppliers, industry, private wells, agriculture and <br />contamination containment. <br />The metropolitan region must consider the effects of groundwater use beyond the borders of <br />the metropolitan area on the region's groundwater availability and the cost of treating <br />contaminants in surface water that comes into the metropolitan area for use. <br />Metro Cities supports the removal of barriers to wastewater and storm water re -use, <br />improved inter -agency coordination, clarifying the appropriate roles of local, regional <br />and state governments with respect to water, streamlining and consolidating permit <br />approval processes and the availability of statewide resources to plan for and ensure the <br />future sustainability of water supply in the metropolitan area. Metro Cities also <br />encourages the Metropolitan Council, in consultation with municipalities, to find ways <br />to re -use wastewater and to develop other strategies to improve conservation. <br />Metro Cities supports state funding for costs associated with converting water supply from <br />groundwater to surface water and funds to encourage and promote water conservation as <br />a strategy to improve water sustainability and to improve and protect water quality. <br />2-R Regulation of Massage Therapists <br />In the absence of statewide regulation for massage therapy practitioners, many cities have <br />enacted local ordinances that require massage therapists to obtain a local professional license <br />to assist law enforcement in differentiating between legitimate providers and illegitimate <br />businesses fronting as massage therapy establishments. <br />Metro Cities supports statewide registration or licensure of massage therapists to aid <br />local law enforcement efforts in this area. Metro Cities supports cities' ability to <br />continue to license massage therapy businesses. <br />2018 Legislative Policies <br />18 <br />