City asks state for funds to reclaim Lake Redwood

Monday, October 21, 2013

By Troy Krause
Editor Posted Oct. 21, 2013 @ 12:01 am

The reclamation of Lake Redwood has been a topic for discussion for the past several years, and the project was brought up in the Minnesota legislature once again during its 2013 session.

The proposal to use bonding dollars to dredge the reservoir, which has been described as a wide and deep spot in the Redwood River, would cost approximately $7.825 million, which is what District 16 Sen. Gary Dahms proposed in a bill he has authored.

The Senate capital investment committee, which proposes the allocations for bonding funds, was in Marshall Thursday afternoon to hear a presentation about the Lake Redwood proposal, which was one of five presentations the committee heard that day, including two from Montevideo and two from Marshall.

The capital investment committee members have been on a fact-finding tour in recent days and spent time visiting with representatives from several of the projects that have been proposed.

Approximately $3.8 billion in bonding requests have been made, and the committee is going to narrow that amount down to the bonding total as directed by the legislature during the 2014 session.

Some have speculated the bonding bill is going to be in the $850-900 million range during the second year of the two-year state biennium. This second session is one dedicated to approving a bonding bill.

“The fact that we are part of the tour is good news,”?said Dahms, adding this is one more step in the right direction.

Traditionally projects with regional significance rise to the top, and local representatives would say this is one of them.

According to Doering, the regional significance has to do with recent mandates to improve the total maximum daily load of specific items flowing into Lake Pepin.

If Lake Redwood was reclaimed and the 650,000 cubic yards of sediment re-moved, it could serve its purpose of collecting sediment that would then not end up in the Minnesota River. Click here to read the complete article!

Category: economic development