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ITEM NO. 5.1. <br /> City of <br /> Elk <br /> River <br /> MEMORANDUM <br /> TO: Planning Commission <br /> FROM: Stephen Rohlf, Building and Environmental Administrator <br /> Date: September 23, 2003 A <br /> SUBJECT: Conditional Use Permit for Mineral Excavation by Aggregate <br /> Industries/ P.H. CU 03-29 <br /> Request: Aggregate Industries is requesting to expand an existing fifty (50) acre gravel mine <br /> • to include an additional eighty (80) acres. Mining the property in question has been <br /> anticipated for a long time and was included in the City of Elk River's 1994 Environmental <br /> Impact Statement (EIS) on Mineral Excavation and is already zoned Mineral Excavation <br /> Overlay Zoning District. <br /> Attachments: Included with this memo is Aggregate Industries' application to amend their <br /> conditional use permit,which is dated August 2003. Also included is a copy of their current <br /> conditional use permit for the existing portion of this mine. Aggregate Industries' <br /> application contains a vicinity map of the property and a reclamation plan showing the <br /> proposed final contours. <br /> Background: Aggregate Industries started mining the existing fifty (50) acre pit in this area <br /> in 2001. They plan to mine the new eighty (80) acres from north to south. The two existing <br /> dwellings on the site,which the operator owns,will be removed. The eighty (80) acres in <br /> question do not contain any wetlands and, except for adjacent to houses on the site, there <br /> aren't any trees on the property. The first two seasons of mining the fifty (50) acres site <br /> were without incident. However, this year noise from that pit has become an issue. <br /> Issues: <br /> Condition number 9 in the attached CUP, titled Reclamation: <br /> As part of the City of Elk River's EIS on Mineral Excavation, a contour map of the Mining <br /> District was developed. The city did this to make sense of elevation between the various pit, <br /> • drainage patterns and future road elevations. The proposed final contour map, contained in <br /> the attached application, shows the pit floor at 1,000 feet above mean sea level. The city's <br />