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01/08/2007 Council Packet
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01/08/2007 Council Packet
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City Council
Council Document Type
Council Packet
Meeting Date
01/08/2007
Council Meeting Type
Regular
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• <br />Anoka County Multi- Jurisdictional <br />All Hazards Mitigation Plan <br />City of Blaine <br />Blaine is located in the south central portion of Anoka County. Its longitude and latitude <br />coordinates are 45.10 N and 93,12 W. It has a land area of 33.9 square miles and an elevation <br />of 900 feet. <br />Phillip Laddy, a native of Ireland, is recognized as the first settler in Blaine. He settled near the <br />lake that now bears his name, Laddie Lake, in 1862. Laddy died shortly after his arrival and his <br />survivors moved on to Minneapolis. He was followed by Englishman George Townsend, who <br />lived for a short time in the area of Lever Street and 103rd Avenue. It was not until 1865, that <br />Blaine's first permanent resident, Green Chambers settled on the old Townsend claim. <br />Chambers was a former slave who moved north from Barron County, Kentucky, following the <br />Civil War. In 1870, George Wall, Joseph Gagner, and some others settled in the area and it <br />began to grow, <br />In 1877, Blaine separated from Anoka and organized as a Township of its own. That year, the <br />first election was held and Moses Ripley was elected as the first Chairman of the Board of <br />Supervisors. Ripley, who had come to Minnesota from Maine, persuaded his fellow Board <br />Members to name the new Township in honor of James G. Blaine, a senator and three -time <br />presidential candidate from Maine. By the year 1880, Blaine's population had reached 128. <br />While many of the other communities in Anoka County experienced growth due to farming, <br />Blaine's sandy soils and abundant wetlands discouraged would -be farmers, and it remained a <br />prime hunting area. Blaine's growth remained slow until after World War II when starter home <br />developments began to spring up in the southern part of town. <br />Blaine's population went from 1,694 in 1950 to 20,640 in 1970. As the Minneapolis /St. Paul area <br />began to enjoy rapid growth, Blaine's wide -open spaces became attractive to many people <br />looking for the suburban life style just a short distance from both downtown Minneapolis and St. <br />Paul. With the development of Interstate 35 -W, State Highway 65, and State Highway 10, <br />Blaine's accessibility to the Twin Cities was greatly improved. Blaine is one of the metro area's <br />largest suburbs. The Anoka County Airport is located in Blaine, which is the Metro Area's <br />busiest reliever airport. Blaine is also home of Minnesota's Olympic -class facility; the National <br />Sports Center (NSC), an athletic facility designed for training, competition and accommodating a <br />variety of activities and events. The NSC hosts the USA Cup, the world's fourth largest youth <br />soccer tournament each July. New to the NSC is the Schwann's Super Rink with four Olympic <br />sized ice sheets under one roof. The NSC draws over 2.6 million people to Blaine each year. <br />New in 2000 is the TPC of the Twin Cities, a private 18 -hole professional golf course, designed <br />and owned by the PGA. This course is home to the 3M Senior Classic. <br />Town of Burns <br />Burns Township is a township located in the northwest corner of Anoka County, Minnesota at <br />Latitude 45.33 N and Longitude -93.44 W and an elevation of 925 feet. The township has a <br />total area of 35.2 miles. Of this total, 33.8 miles is land and 1.4 miles water. The total area is <br />3.95% water. There are 11 lakes in Burns, with Twin Lake being the largest. As of 2000, Burns <br />Township had a total of 19,221 acres in Non - urbanized land. Wetlands consisted of 4,927 acres <br />and 14,294 acres were undeveloped /agricultural use. In 2000 there was 1,159 classified as <br />Open Water Bodies. A total of 2,063 acres were residential land use and within this number <br />439 acres were classified farmstead use. In 2000 Burns only had a total of 7 acres with Multi- <br />family use. <br />
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