A rural Anoka County city has persuaded the Metropolitan Council to forgive millions of dollars for a new sewer system designed for future growth that so far has not materialized.
Under the deal, East Bethel's liability is capped at $2 million on what could have grown to be a $28 million tab by 2040 in a worst-case scenario if no growth occurs, according to city leaders.
Both parties agreed the ambitious growth forecasts in 2010 used to justify the project are unrealistic. Initial projections figured by the city and the regional planning agency indicated the population would more than double from 11,600 in 2010 to 23,500 by 2030.
Revised numbers show that the city actually lost 35 people in the first four years, and a new forecast slashes projections to 15,400 residents by 2030.
"No one stepped forward and said, 'I burnt the biscuits.' That wasn't what we were after," said City Administrator Jack Davis, who took over the city's top office after the project was underway. "You cannot place the blame on one sole party. Everyone looked at this with blinders. We are joined at the hip on this. If we fail, Met Council fails. There was mutual recognition there was a common problem."
Met Council planners believe future growth will eventually pay for some of the project — just on a longer time frame.
"Met Council amended its policy to remedy a difficult situation for the city, and as existing contract provisions allowed," said spokeswoman Bonnie Kollodge in an e-mail.
In 2010, the East Bethel City Council sought the Met Council's help to build a wastewater treatment system with the goal of jump-starting growth. The city also issued $18 million in bonds to pay for the sewer collection system and build a water treatment plant and distribution system. Davis said the combined projects cost around $48 million.