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• <br />• <br />• <br />CITY OF LINO LAKES <br />RESOLUTION NO. 15-39 <br />A RESOLUTION RELATING TO THE PROFFERED SETTLEMENT AGREEMENT BY <br />THE WHITE BEAR LAKE RESTORATION ASSOCIATION RELATING TO <br />REGIONALIZATION OF MUNICIPAL DRINKING WATER SUPPLIES <br />WHEREAS, the White Bear Lake Restoration Association launched a lawsuit against the <br />Minnesota Department of Resources (DNR) asserting complaints about the water Level in White <br />Bear Lake and claiming that the DNR violated the Minnesota Environmental Rights Act (MERA) <br />and the Public Trust Doctrine, among other allegations; and <br />WHEREAS, the lawsuit contained claims that the DNR allowed thirteen local communities to use <br />too much groundwater for their public water supply, including drinking water. This, the lawsuit <br />claimed. affected recreational uses in White Bear Lake. Plaintiffs and their hired representatives <br />thus demanded constriction of groundwater uses by neighboring cities, including the termination of <br />municipal water wells (in a manner to be determined by the DNR) because pumping of municipal <br />drinking water resulted in a recent decline in water levels of White Bear Lake; and <br />WHEREAS, DNR denied those allegations and responded by pointing out that the claimed recent <br />reduction in water levels in White Bear Lake was: <br />• a cyclical decline which occurs at varying years over the long existence of the lake and then <br />reverses; and <br />• that it was related to climate patterns; and <br />• that it was also (and more obviously) related to cessation of a long-standing practice of <br />directly pumping water into the lake to maintain its levels; and <br />• that despite the claims of Plaintiffs paid experts, even independent studies did not plainly <br />establish a Zink between drinking water pumping and the depth of water in White Bear Lake, <br />and that additional study and consideration was needed to understand this complex inquiry; <br />and <br />• that, ultimately, the entire matter was a complex inquiry more aptly suited to be explored <br />and resolved by dispassionate scientific inquiry rather than to be determined by the claims of <br />Plaintiffs paid advocates through lawsuits; and <br />WHEREAS, well before the lawsuit cities encouraged and developed mechanisms for recapturing <br />and conserving surface water and surface water runoff for use to replace or supplement ground <br />water use; and <br />WHEREAS, Plaintiffs and the DNR have agreed to a settlement, as follows: <br />