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Eagle Brook Church <br />April 14, 2003 <br />page 3 <br />Centerville. Recent discussion of a professional sports stadium and related development <br />in the immediate vicinity represents an extreme case of major infrastructure <br />reconstruction. Clearly, the road capacity issue cannot be resolved by Eagle Brook <br />Church. <br />One of the purposes of an EAW is to identify possible mitigation measures. At a <br />minimum, the City of Lino Lakes, Anoka County, and the Minnesota Dept. of <br />Transportation all must cooperate to address the problem. This also should include <br />Columbus Twp., Hugo, Centerville, and Washington County because they will affect and <br />be affected by the transportation infrastructure in the immediate vicinity of the proposed <br />project. All of these jurisdictions are discussing how to address the roadway issues that <br />are known to all of them and highlighted by this EAW. <br />The proposed church project does not create this problem of inadequate infrastructure. <br />The church project is simply the first one to confront the problem. The next development <br />project will face the exact same traffic issues, but on a day -to -day basis during the week. <br />Such impacts likely would be greater than the traffic generated by the proposed church. <br />The church has proposed the temporary mitigative measure of traffic control personnel at <br />the affected locations: Main St. and 20th Ave., the freeway ramps, and the entrance to the <br />site. As part of redesigning the site plans, the City and Anoka County will work with the <br />project proposer to examine access options such as access roads rather than just <br />driveways onto 20th Ave. <br />The solution lies in a cooperative study of the land use in the area and the transportation <br />infrastructure needed to support it. The problem can be corrected through cooperative <br />infrastructure improvements by the numerous regulatory authorities involved in planning <br />the infrastructure. <br />Stormwater Management: Water quality questions are best addressed through the <br />design of stormwater facilities. In the case of the proposed church, the design <br />incorporates numerous elements known as best management practices, or BMPs. These <br />include rain gardens, overland runoff, and swales, as well as native plantings around <br />wetlands and on a large area (40+ acres) of the site intended for prairie grasses. The <br />existing woodlands along the lake will remain undisturbed. <br />The original plan was to leave the existing "ditch" underground. The EAW analysis <br />resulted in a probable redesign to bring the ditch to the surface —to "daylight" it and <br />realign it to improve the ability to maintain flow through the site. This likely will be an <br />improvement over the existing situation, and would be done according to the <br />requirements of the Rice Creek Watershed District. <br />The Watershed states that is has no significant concerns about stormwater management. <br />The grading plan and stormwater management design are subject to review by the <br />