Laserfiche WebLink
stated, in relevant part, "the temporary septic services have been <br />approve by Washington County, pending acceptance by the city and <br />a timeline for when City services will become available." <br />c. The City finds that this statement was knowingly made and <br />was false. The septic tank was not approved by Washington County <br />on November 5, 2019. <br />d. In defense, the School District has made it clear that it does <br />not regret its wording; nor does it claim a mistake. Instead, it <br />provides an e-mail from a Washington County employee, which they <br />claim supports their statement that they had approval from <br />Washington County. (See Ex. A.) <br />C. This e-mail was not provided to the City prior to the <br />revocation process and there was no evidence presented that City <br />staff were aware of the School District's claim that City staff were a <br />roadblock to approval. Even if City staff had approved the use of <br />temporary toilets and provided a timeline for extension of City sewer <br />and water (which would not have been possible at that time), the e- <br />mail itself states, "If we can get those things, we should be able to <br />move forward with the permitting ru ocess." (Ex. A, p. 2.) (emphasis <br />added). The e-mail does not mention the word "approval" or suggest <br />that if those two issues were satisfied that the tank was approved by <br />Washington County. <br />f. In addition to the fact, later admitted by the School District at <br />the Planning Commission meeting on April 13, 2020, that the septic <br />tank was not permitted or approved at that time, the April 1, 2020 <br />letter from Washington County (Ex. 21) casts significant doubt on <br />the proposition that it would ever have been approved. The County <br />noted that, "[t]his tank size is not sufficient as it does not meet the <br />requirements of MN Rule chapter 7080 or Washington County <br />Ordinance # 206 requirements." <br />g. At best, given the e-mail provided by the School District, the <br />phrasing of the sentence, purposefully made, concealed the truth that <br />the permitting process was not complete pending acceptance by the <br />City and a timeline for when City services will become available. <br />The City also finds that this statement, knowingly made, contains a <br />material omission by suggesting that approval was fait accompli. <br />h. This omission was material because the School District was <br />relying on it to convince the City to allow their use of the Property. <br />- Furthermore, the School Districtsuggestedthat"[t]he temporary <br />septic services will not be detrimental to or endanger the public, <br />health, safety, or general welfare." The purpose of permitting and <br />approval by Washington County, the entity with expertise on this <br />20 <br />