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Long-Term Wastewater Service Area <br /> Concept Plan <br /> The wastewater system plan includes a specific plan to serve the region's projected 2040 <br /> growth and a general plan to serve the region's growth far beyond 2040. The wastewater <br /> system plan has a longer planning horizon than local comprehensive plans because sewers <br /> have a long useful life. <br /> The Council is updating the Twin Cities metro area Master Water Supply Plan to address the <br /> sustainability of water supply in the region, and has identified areas where groundwater aquifers <br /> may not have sufficient capacity to support long-term sewered development. The Regional <br /> Wastewater System Plan's long-term wastewater service area (Appendix F) is premised on <br /> successful development and implementation of sustainable water supply to support planned <br /> sewered development. The Council defines the long-term wastewater service areas based on: <br /> • The capacity of each treatment plant site, <br /> • The potential developable surface area that could be served by the plant, in addition to <br /> currently served areas, and <br /> • Using appropriate wastewater generation rates based on location, proximity to transit <br /> and major highways, and physical features of area. <br /> The developable area excludes lakes, rivers, wetlands, steep slopes, major highways, and <br /> parks. The area effectively available for future development is further reduced in areas where <br /> there are other significant natural resources or locations requiring more areas devoted to <br /> stormwater management, such as trout stream watersheds and/or tight soils (making infiltration <br /> of stormwater more difficult). <br /> For long-term wastewater service areas, communities shall address the staging of sewered <br /> development through 2040 as well as protection of the remaining long-term service areas for <br /> economical future sewered development in their local comprehensive plan updates, surface <br /> water management plans, and water supply plans. The regional wastewater system will be <br /> expanded as necessary to facilitate development in communities consistent with their approved <br /> comprehensive sewer plans. <br /> The long-term wastewater service area includes large"potential wastewater service areas" in <br /> Dakota and Scott Counties. The objective of this designation is to ensure low enough <br /> development density to enable future economical sewered development and preserve land for <br /> continued agricultural uses. In Carver County, the Council and the County have a memorandum <br /> of understanding whereby the County preserves low density in its agricultural area, consistent <br /> with the region's potential need for additional area for sewered development. <br /> Long-Term Service Area of Existing Treatment Plants <br /> Blue Lake. Previously wastewater service to Loretto, northwest Medina, and southwest <br /> Corcoran was planned through the Elm Creek Interceptor. The revised plan is to serve this area <br /> from the Blue Lake Plant via Maple Plain and the downstream interceptor system. <br /> Metropolitan. Three areas (northeast Andover, southeast Nowthen, and northeast Ramsey) <br /> have previously been identified as study areas for potential future wastewater service. These <br /> 34 <br />