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by the City of Long Lake with the Minnesota Municipal Board. <br />That settlement agreement is conditioned in part that the <br />City of Orono successfully completes a MUSA line amendment <br />to include this property within the MUSA boundary. The <br />agreement further stipulates that: <br />1. The City of Long Lake shall extend sewer and water <br />to the property* which shall be chargeable against <br />Long Lake's allocation for sewer and water units; <br />and <br />2. The City of Orono shall grant sufficient soning <br />approvals to allow the development of 13 <br />residential lots on the property. Such zoning <br />approval is proceeding in the form of a Planned <br />Residential Developswnt granting an area variance <br />to the 2-acre per lot density standards currently <br />in effect. <br />Parts I through XVI are depicted on Map 2 and legally <br />described in Exhibit A attached. <br />tf NaBa^Msat Plan <br />Sewer facility planning in Orono continues to be directed by <br />the philosophy and policies contained in the Community Management <br />Plan. The plan continues to call for development in both the <br />urban and rural (wrtions of the City. By limiting the density of <br />developsMnt while preserving all natural marshlands* wetlands and <br />drainageways* the quality and quantity of stormwater nutrient <br />pollution will be controlled. <br />Orono's population growth has been significantly less than <br />anticipated by forecasts in the 1980 Comprehensive Plan. The <br />1980 Plan projected an Orono population of 8*340 for 1990. The <br />1990 census population figure of 7*285 is virtually equivalent to <br />the 1980 Comp«'ehensive Plan forecast of 7*290 for 1980. The City