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Centerville 2040 Chapter 7:Water Resources <br /> • Require that the installation of all public infrastructure is designed and constructed according <br /> to City standards and specifications. <br /> • Enforce ordinance provisions which require connection of existing homes and businesses with <br /> private utilities to public utility systems, within a reasonable time after public utilities have <br /> become available. <br /> • Anoka county to enforce provisions ofMPCA Chapter 7080 for the maintenance ofprivate <br /> on-site waste treatment systems. <br /> • Establish design and construction standards for sanitary sewer installation and maintenance to <br /> minimize potential sources of inflow/infiltration in the sewer collection system. <br /> • Continue monitoring potential sources of inflow/infiltration to reduce inefficiencies in the <br /> metropolitan wastewater treatment system. <br /> • Ensure consistency with all watershed rules, especially as they relate to surface water. <br /> • Continue to implement conservation programs aimed at reducing residential water use. <br /> The city's wastewater collection system serves all but a handful of rural residential style lots and is <br /> designed and already constructed to handle the limited developable area left. All lands within the <br /> city are able to be served by simple extension of the existing sewer system, from the adjacent <br /> property. Therefore, the entire city would be considered one district. There is no need for any <br /> sort of phasing plan. The city serves a small, residential neighborhood (38 homes) in Lino Lakes <br /> at the end of LaMotte Drive and a campground in the Anoka County regional Park (in Lino Lakes). <br /> These are the only sources of intercommunity flow. There are no plans to serve additional <br /> extraterritorial areas. No homes or businesses in Centerville are served by anyone else. The city is <br /> surrounded entirely by the city of Lino Lakes and cannot (except under very special <br /> circumstances) annex any land. <br /> Map 7-1 shows the city's sanitary sewer collections system, which consists of mostly PVC mains, <br /> ranging from 8-inch to 16-inch in size. The city's system is relatively new with the oldest mains <br /> built in the 19701s. An 18-inch and 21-inch reinforced concrete pipe trunk main runs just inland of <br /> the east shore of Centerville Lake. All of the city's flow enters the Met Council's system at the <br /> MCES Lift Station in LaMotte Park. There are no future connection points to the MCES system <br /> planned. There are no wastewater treatment facilities in our community, public or private. <br /> Estimate Forecasts <br /> 2017 2020 2030 2040 <br /> Chapter 7 1 Page 2 <br /> 123 <br />