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Public Works Committee <br />Meeting Date: 11/15/2022 <br />Submitted For: Len Linton, Engineering/Public Works <br />By: Len Linton, Engineering/Public Works <br />Title: <br />Update on plans for Wetland 114P Outlet <br />5. 2. <br />Purpose/Background: <br />This case was presented at the October 18 Public Works Committee meeting. Staff met with DNR staff after the <br />meeting. Results of that meeting are reported in the Observations/ Alternates Section. <br />Wetland 114P is in the southeast quadrant of the City. It is an irregular shaped wetland with a mixture of narrow <br />channels and wider basins. The northern edge of the wetland touches Alpine Drive west of Nowthen Boulevard. <br />It runs along the west edge of Ramsey Elementary, and passes under the Bridge on Sunwood Drive west of <br />Krypton Street. The wetland continues south between Krypton Street on the east and 147th Lane and Neon Street <br />on the west. The largest portion of the wetland is between Iodine Street and Potassium Street, north of 142nd <br />Avenue. The outlet for Wetland 114P is a ditch and pipe off the northeast end of Junkite Street. This ditch runs <br />parallel to 142nd Avenue and enters the storm sewer system west of the intersection of 142nd Avenue and <br />Dysprosium Street. The water stays in the pipe to the outfall to the Rum River in River's Bend Park. <br />This case is focused on the open water portion of the wetland bounded on the south by 142nd Avenue and on the <br />north by 146th Avenue and on the east by Iodine Street and on the west by Neon and Postassium Streets. The <br />properties on the southeast quadrant of the wetland were platted as Ramsey Terrace in 1972.The properties on the <br />east side of the wetland were platted as The Ponds of Ramsey in 2002. The properties on the southwest quadrant <br />were platted in several phases commencing in 1992. <br />The County Ditch Law was passed by the legislature in the late 1880s. This law allowed property owners <br />adjacent to wetlands to band together and petition to construct a ditch through the wetland to drain the wetland <br />and the adjacent properties to provide better growing conditions on the adjacent lands. County Dltch 43 was <br />created in 1908. It started in Wetland 114P where Alpine Drive touches it west of Sunfish Lake Boulevard. The <br />City obtained plans for this ditch from Anoka county. The plans run south and end south of the Sunwood Drive <br />Bridge west of Krypton Street. This is the north edge of the open water portion of Wetland 114P. There is a <br />channel with a pipe that fonns the outlet of Wetland 114P. The City does not have a record of when the channel <br />was constructed or the pipe installed. It seems reasonable that the channel would have been constructed at the <br />same time as Ditch 43 since a drainage ditch needs an outlet to be effective. The outlet pipe and channel are off <br />the north end of the Jurikite Street cul-de-sac. <br />Trunk Sanitary sewer was extended along the east and north edges of Wetland 114P in the early 1990's. The <br />construction plans did not indicate a normal water level for the wetland. Manhole rims were set to be above <br />adjacent natural grade. <br />The City has received several emails over the years from residents adjacent to Wetland 114P. The Minnesota <br />DNR has been copied on some of the emails. There were two different view points expressed in the emails. The <br />first was that the invert of the pipe was too low and the wetland was drying out. The second was that the invert of <br />the pipe was too high and there was potential for the wetland to flood basements. Pictures of the outlet from 2018 <br />and 2022 are attached. There was some water flowing through the outlet in 2018. There is no water flowing in <br />2022 since rainfall totals are below normal. <br />The City visited the site after a highwater email was received and observed that a beaver had constructed a dam <br />over the outlet. The notes from the City workers that removed the dam indicate this appeared to be a natural dam, <br />