Laserfiche WebLink
<br /> <br /> <br />Feasibility Report <br />Northeast Lino Lakes Drainage Improvement Project <br />WSB Project No. 2029-790 Page 6 <br />their site; however this is not a feasible long-term solution. The City of Hugo has stormwater <br />infrastructure and storage which serves the development along the Lino Lakes and Hugo border. <br /> <br />3.3. Receiving Waters <br /> <br />Peltier Lake has been listed as an impaired waterbody within the greater Anoka Chain of Lakes <br />since 2002 for aquatic recreation, with the main pollutant identified as excess phosphorus from <br />watershed runoff and internal loading (Minnesota Pollution Control Agency 2013). In addition, <br />the Anoka Chain of Lakes has limited flood storage capacity (Houston Engineering, Inc. 2013). <br />Any improvements to the drainage system will need to show no adverse impacts to receiving <br />waters in terms of increased phosphorus loading or flooding potential. <br /> <br />3.4. Existing Site Limitations <br /> <br />Anoka County Ditch (ACD) 55 and ACD 72 drain tiles were designed to provide drainage for <br />agricultural lands and are already at capacity, limited by the crossings under I-35E. ACD 55 and <br />ACD 72 both cross under I-35E, as shown in Appendix A, Figure 2, with a total capacity of 1.5 <br />cubic feet per second (cfs) and 0.52 cfs, respectively (RCWD 2014). The City has also identified <br />this area as being a Runoff Sensitive Area for stormwater rate and volume control given the <br />limitations of the existing ditch systems (City of Lino Lakes 2005). <br /> <br />The City of Hugo contributes 215 acres of the nearly 1,300 total acres and has an existing flow <br />rate of 50.3 cfs into the City of Lino Lakes and the ACD 55 drain tile system. The City of <br />Centerville contributes a minor amount of surface runoff to the study area, which contributes <br />directly to Peltier Lake. <br /> <br />The existing agricultural drainage system has been subject to repeated blow-outs and tile <br />ruptures in recent years. In 2014, the Rice Creek Watershed District reviewed the ACD 55 and <br />72 systems and determined the failures were recurring due to: <br /> <br /> Deterioration of the drain tile system, including sections of pipe that have pulled apart, as <br />well as portions of the system have collapsed or are clogged with sediment; and <br /> <br /> The drain tiles being undersized and unable to convey the incoming flows, resulting in a <br />surcharged system. <br /> <br />During the summer of 2015, RCWD replaced several sections of ACD 55 main trunk and the <br />ACD 72 main trunk, as well as several lateral branches. The drain tile system does not provide <br />any water quality benefits to Peltier Lake and field inlets to the system do not have adequate <br />buffers to prevent sediments from entering the system and Peltier Lake. Simple estimates <br />indicate that the existing system discharges 588 pounds of phosphorus and 1,028 tons of total <br />suspended solids to the lake on an annual basis. <br /> <br />The constraints of the drain tile system have limited landowners’ ability to develop their land <br />consistent with the City of Lino Lakes’ Comprehensive Plan. Development must meet RCWD <br />Rule C for Stormwater Management Plans, which includes water quality and rate control. <br />Because the existing drainage system is already at capacity, in some cases, new development