Bloomington city officials and residents are challenging a proposal that would make an existing landfill in Burnsville hundreds of feet taller, creating a massive butte made of garbage that would tower above the two tallest ski hills in the south metro.
Rising an estimated 362 feet above the Minnesota River, the Burnsville Sanitary Landfill would tower nearly 100 feet above the 272-foot-tall U.S. Bank Stadium.
Texas-based Waste Management, the nation's largest trash firm, wants to expand the landfill with 6 million cubic yards of trash it would accept from two nearby trash sites: Freeway Landfill and Freeway Dump. It would also expand the landfill's volume by 20 million cubic yards of future garbage while reducing its footprint from 216 to 204 acres.
On Monday night, the Burnsville Planning Commission unanimously recommended the City Council approve the concept-stage plan for the landfill's expansion, saying it opens the door for more discussion.
It now goes before the City Council on March 5.
Several Bloomington residents showed up to the meeting while others wrote e-mails in advance in protest.
"They're saying they want it to look nice … rolling into Burnsville but you're going to have a mound of garbage," said Bloomington resident Scott Peterson.
Opponents were spurred at least partly by a letter Bloomington's city manager posted on the city's website. The city manager's letter also cited numerous worries — including possible noise, odor and water pollution — due to Bloomington's proximity to the dump just across the river.