Three potential solutions aimed at restoring water levels of White Bear Lake — two of them estimated to cost more than $600 million — are being proposed in what could be part of sweeping changes in how cities across the metro area get their drinking water.
In a draft report released Wednesday, the Metropolitan Council outlined options for augmenting White Bear Lake with water from the Mississippi River. It also spelled out ways that up to a dozen northern Ramsey County communities could shift their heavy reliance on groundwater from the overtaxed Prairie du Chien aquifer to the more abundant surface water from the Mississippi.
While the draft report focuses on the northeast metro and White Bear Lake, which has lost one-fourth of its volume over the past decade, the Met Council also has begun several other regionwide studies to explore ways to restore balance to water sources and ease pressure on the aquifers.
More than 70 percent of the region's water supply now comes from the ground, compared with about 20 percent in the 1940s and 1950s, before suburban growth. But that rate of mining is not sustainable, said Ali Elhassan, the council's water supply planning manager. As seen in White Bear Lake, it has ruinous results for the quality of life and the local economy.
"White Bear Lake is the bellwether," Elhassan said. "It's showing us what will happen elsewhere in the region if we continue current water-use practices."
The Metropolitan Council is evaluating three basic approaches to restore White Bear Lake, based on the finding that St. Paul's regional water system has 30 million gallons a day in extra capacity to supply communities to its north for the next 25 years. The cost to do that, however, grows the farther away the communities are from the system.
The proposals, and their estimated price tags:
• Expand St. Paul's water system to deliver treated water from the Mississippi River directly to northeast metro communities.