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5.4. SR 11-13-2007
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5.4. SR 11-13-2007
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REQUEST FOR ACTION <br />To Item Number <br />Ci Council <br />Agenda Section Meeting Date Prepared by <br />Worksession November 13, 2007 Bryan Adams, Elk River Utilities <br /> General Mana er <br />Item Description Reviewed by <br />Black Dirt Ordinance <br /> Reviewed by <br />Action .Requested <br />Elk River Municipal Utilities recommends City Councils direct staff to develop a black dirt ordinance to <br />foster water conservation that contains the following principals: <br />1) 4 inches of black dirt shall be tilled into the top approximate 8" of existing soil. <br />2) 4 inches of black dirt shall have the approximate following make-up by volume <br />Sand - 61 <br />Clay - 12% <br />Silt - 12% <br />Organic - 15% <br />3) Areas that naturally contain this approximate soil make-up shall be classified as meeting the <br />black dirt policy. <br />4) Inspection as part of the certificate of occupancy process by building inspections. <br />Background/Discussion <br />As Elk River continues to grow, so does the demand fox water. The attached Chart #1 reflects Elk <br />River's past and future growth trends on a daily and annual basis. Our past annual growth trend has been <br />in the 7% range, or a new water production facility every three years. We currently have seven water <br />production facilities with the eighth under construction in Twin Lakes Estates. All of our facilities utilize <br />the Mt. Simon Hinkley aquifer. The Minnesota Department of Natural Resources (DNR) recently <br />increased our ground water appropriation to 1.6 billion gallons per year and five additional wells. This <br />increase should satisfy our growth needs for the next ten years. This increase in water appropriations is <br />also contingent on continuing our water conservation efforts, which is the subject of this memo. <br />Chart #2 reflects the maximum daily and monthly water pumpage for years 2006 and 2007. Elk River's <br />domestic water need is in the 38 million gallons per month range or 1.26 million gallons per day. This is <br />approximately what the waste water plant processes daily. In the non winter months, water demand <br />drastically increases to 160 million gallons per month or 7 million gallons per day. This increase is due to <br />lawn irrigation. On an annual basis, lawn irrigation accounts for approximately 45% of our water use. Is <br />this a good use of a limited resource? <br />The attached two articles from the September 16, 2007 Star Tribune titled "Battling Tainted Water" and <br />"The Pollution That Lies Beneath" very accurately explain the water situation in the metro area. Elk <br />River uses the Mt. Simon Hinkley aquifer as a sole source water supply. As other metro communities <br />C:\Documents and Settings\jmillex\Local Settings\Tempoxary Internet Files\OLK3E\Black Dixt Action Requested.doc <br />
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