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I <br />\ <br />I <br />t * <br />B <br />i5;2i. Orono's rural sewage policies have no minimal impact on metropolitan facilities in that <br />the rural area is self-sufficient and is intended to requires no metropolitan reserve <br />capacity. <br />1. <br />2. <br />COOPERATIVE SEWAGE TREATMENT POLICIES <br />The City of Orono will cooperate with adjoining municipalities. Lake area municipal <br />boundaries do not always follow watershed or historic development patterns: thus the <br />sewage treatment needs of isolated neighborhoods often are best and most economically <br />served by cooperative agreements between cities. Orono expects to continue the agreements <br />and working relationships established with Minnetonka Beach, Wayzata, Long Lake, <br />Plymouth, and Medina. <br />The City of Orono will cooperate with State and regional agencies in the satisfactory <br />achievement of metropolitan planning objectives. The City of Orono supports the <br />Minnesota Pollution Control Agency's plan for providing sewer service to urban areas <br />abutting Lake Minnetonka. The City of Orono supports the Minnesota DNR, the Minnehaha <br />Creek Watershed District and the Lake Minnetonka Conservation District in their goal of <br />watershed protection and water quality preseivation for Lake Minnetonka. The City of <br />Orono supports the Metropolitan Council in their quest for rational planning and efficient <br />use of public urban services in the Twin Cities Metropolitan Area. The City of Orono <br />supports the Metropolitan Waste Control Commission Council Environmental Services in <br />their need to determine ultimate capacity of regional sewer service facilities. <br />CMP 6-23