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RES 88-015 RESOLUTION OF THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF ST. ANTHONY AUTHORIZING ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS FOR A TEMPORARY GRANULAR ACTIVATED CARBON (GAC) WATER FILTRATION SYSTEM
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RES 88-015 RESOLUTION OF THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF ST. ANTHONY AUTHORIZING ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS FOR A TEMPORARY GRANULAR ACTIVATED CARBON (GAC) WATER FILTRATION SYSTEM
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RES 1988
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RES 88-015 RESOLUTION OF THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF ST. ANTHONY AUTHORIZING ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS FOR A TEMPORARY GRANULAR ACTIVATED CARBON (GAC) WATER FILTRATION SYSTEM
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• RESOLUTION 88-015 <br /> A RESOLUTION OF THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF <br /> ST. ANTHONY AUTHORIZING ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS FOR <br /> A TEMPORARY GRANULAR ACTIVATED CARBON (GAC) <br /> WATER FILTRATION SYSTEM <br /> WHEREAS, in 1982 , certain volatile organic chemicals (VOC' s) were <br /> discovered in the municipal water system of the City of St. <br /> Anthony; and <br /> WHEREAS, these chemical contaminants include 1 ,1,2 <br /> Trichloroethylene (TCE) and other organic solvents; and <br /> WHEREAS, as a result of this contamination problem the <br /> Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and Minnesota Pollution <br /> Control Agency (MPCA) , using Superfund dollars, began a <br /> multimillion dollar study to determine the source of this <br /> contamination and to develop a remedy for the regional <br /> groundwater contamination; and <br /> WHEREAS, as part of this investigation, several hundred potential <br /> sources of the regional groundwater contamination problem were <br /> identified and then eliminated from consideration as potential <br /> • sources. As a result of this investigation, the Twin Cities Army <br /> Ammunition Plant (TCAAP) and the Trio Solvents site remain as the <br /> only possible sources of this major groundwater contamination <br /> problem; and <br /> WHEREAS, the City of St. Anthony is directly downgradient from <br /> TCAAP; and <br /> WHEREAS, levels of contamination in the City' s well #3 rose <br /> steadily from 1982, resulting in issuance of a health advisory <br /> from the Minnesota Department_ of Health (MDH) in February of <br /> 1984. In that advisory the MDH recommended that the City remove <br /> Well #3 from service. At that point, levels of TCE in well #3 <br /> were generally in the 10 to 15 parts per billion (ppb) range; and <br /> WHEREAS, because the remaining two St. Anthony municipal wells <br /> did not have sufficient water production capacity to meet <br /> expected summer water and fire protection demands, the MPCA <br /> declared an emergency and authorized the use of Superfund <br /> dollars to make an interconnection with the Roseville water <br /> system to provide a 15-20o supplement for the City' s summer water <br /> needs; and <br /> WHEREAS, the . MPCA in the fall of 1985 statistically documented <br /> an increasing trend of TCE contamination in the City of St. <br /> • Anthony' s Well #4 and recommended a feasibility study to find a <br /> long-term water supply alternative. This study resulted in <br /> choosing a granular activated carbon (GAC) water filtration <br /> system as the permanent solution to St. Anthony' s water <br />
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