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Motion by Councilmember Riley, seconded by Councilmember Musgrove, to open the closed <br />session. <br />The Closed Session was adjourned at 6:00 p.m. <br />Attorney Shafer provided a summary that a personnel matter was discussed with the City <br />Council and pursuant to Minnesota Statutes, section 13D.05, subdivision 2(b) the meeting was <br />closed to the public. <br />Motion by Councilmember Kuzma, seconded by Councilmember Heinrich, to approve the <br />discipline of an employee and authorize the City Administrator to sign the discipline letter on <br />behalf of the City. <br />Motion carried. Voting Yes: Mayor LeTourneau, Councilmembers Heinrich, Riley, Kuzma, <br />Musgrove, and Shryock. Voting No: None. <br />7.02: Discuss Manganese Concentration Levels in Ramsey's Municipal Drinking Water <br />Ramsey Utilities Supervisor John Nelson gave a brief presentation of our water system and its <br />daily operations to the council. The presentation included well locations, and which municipal <br />wells were affected by the manganese health advisory. The health advisor has two thresholds for <br />human consumption, 100 ppb (parts per billion) for bottle-fed infants under the age of 12 months <br />and 300 ppb for the rest of the general population. Nelson informed the council that wells #5, #6 <br />and #7 were our lowest manganese producing wells and well below the 100 ppb threshold. <br />These are the only wells that we would be using to produce drinking water, until demand for <br />water increased beyond their capacity. <br />Brian Noma, from the Minnesota Department of Health, was on hand to explain the test results <br />and why manganese is present in our municipal drinking water system. Noma explained various <br />types of filtration systems that would lower our manganese concentration levels and the <br />possibility of mixing the water in our system to lower the overall concentration on manganese. <br />Noma also discussed the options on drilling additional wells and buying water from adjoining <br />communities as additional ways to lower our manganese concentration. Noma again reassured <br />the council that our drinking water met all safety standards required by the Minnesota <br />Department of Health. Only the manganese levels exceeded the health advisory recently updated <br />by the department of health. <br />Anna Arkin from the Minnesota Department of Health was on hand to present the council with <br />options for various types of communication formats that the council could use for public <br />outreach. Arkin offered to work closely with our Communications and Events Coordinator <br />Megan Thorstad to develop an information package that would be used to inform the public of <br />the new manganese health advisory for drinking water. <br />3. ADJOURNMENT <br />Closed Session Meeting/ May 07, 2019 <br />Page 2 of 3 <br />