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Fridley has decided to remain. <br />He reviewed the negotiations with Arden Hills, which <br />began in 1959, for an outlet through the Twin City Arsenal. <br />In July of 1960 the Engineering Committee of the N.S.S.S.D. <br />submitted a plan for drainage - -five different methods were <br />actually proposed - -we accepted the first one, that of Minneapolis <br />sewer collection. In September of 1960 the Village received a <br />preliminary report for its own sewer system within the Village. <br />In the meantime, negotiations were still going on with <br />Arden Hills hoping for some means of an outlet. We had the <br />approval for a sewage system but not the outlet. In February <br />of 1961 the Village of Mounds View requested legislation to <br />past the N.S.S.S.D. bill and it was passed in that year. This <br />gave powers to actually build an interceptor system. In Nov- <br />ember of 1962 we met with Arden Hills and Arsenal officials to <br />discuss various means of hooking onto their system. In February <br />of 1963 we made a formal request for a utility sales contract <br />with the U.S. Army requesting that we be permitted to hook onto <br />one of their sewer lines and we would pay them on a metered basis. <br />In March of 1963 we wrote the Army again asking for an answer <br />and on May 15, 1963, a letter was received by the Village of <br />Mounds View from them denying an outlet for the Arsenal system. <br />They gave as their reason a security problem. Meanwhile, we <br />- 4- <br />