Frequently Asked Questions
Below you will find information that might help you understand how to find things or learn about information you might need to know about your city or town.
Water Protection
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Water Protection
Groundwater is rain, melting snow, and surface water that soaks into the earth. This water fills the small spaces between sand, gravel, and cracks in solid rock, known as an aquifer. How fast water moves in an aquifer depends on how much a well is pumped and what type of material the water is moving though.
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Water Protection
Wellhead protection is how we prevent drinking water from becoming polluted. The area of land that supplies water to a city well is managed for possible sources of contamination.
Wellhead protection is ongoing to ensure our drinking water is protected-today and for the future.
- The City of Farmington, in conjunction with the Minnesota Department of Health and several local and county agencies developed a wellhead protection plan.
- The overall goals of the city's wellhead protection plan are to: Prevent contamination of the aquifer and, manage the aquifer cooperatively to assure sustainable water supplies for all users.
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Water Protection
The groundwater that supplies wells, often comes from a short distance; usually only a few miles from the well. Wells become polluted when substances that are harmful to humans get into the groundwater. Water from these wells can be dangerous to drink when the level of pollution rises above health standards. Many everyday activities can cause groundwater pollution; make sure you do what you can to protect drinking water.
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Water Protection
- Practice water conservation
- Dispose of used motor oil and household chemicals properly
- Clean up spills with absorbent material
- Use hazardous products as directed
- Avoid excess use of pesticides and over-fertilization of your lawn and garden.
- Make sure any wells on your property are properly constructed and maintained
- Seal any unused, damaged, or abandoned wells on your property
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Water Protection
Wellhead protection provides an adequate supply of clean water. Preventing contamination is of extreme importance.
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Water Protection
No. They only affect the public water supply.
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Water Protection
The city is required to manage a 200-foot radius (the inner-wellhead management zone) surrounding each public well, by:
- Maintaining the isolation distance for newly installed potential sources of contamination as defined in the state Well Code (MN Rules, chapter 4725).
- Monitoring existing potential sources of contamination that do not comply with the isolation distances.
- Implementing wellhead protection measures for potential contaminant sources in the inner-wellhead management zone.
Also, the city must prepare a wellhead protection plan which includes:
- A map showing the wellhead protection areas,
- A vulnerability assessment of the well and the wellhead protection area,
- An inventory of potential sources of contamination within the wellhead protection areas based on the vulnerability assessment,
- A plan to manage and monitor existing and proposed potential sources of contamination, and
- A contingency strategy for an alternative water supply should the water supply be disrupted by contamination or mechanical failure.
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Water Protection
No. There is no requirement that the city has to own all the property within the 200-foot radius surrounding public wells.
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Water Protection
There are approximately 30,000 unused wells in Dakota County. Many of these may have been buried or forgotten. Unused wells that have not been professionally sealed can be a source of groundwater contamination that could threaten the water in the city wells, your neighbor's well, or your own.
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Water Protection
Dakota County has a grant cost share program to help well owners properly seal and abandon unused wells. Search for "seal abandoned well" at Dakota County for more information on this program.
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Water Protection
The Minnesota Department of Health has a list of certified laboratories in the State for private well owners and Dakota County can provide water testing kits and/or County personnel to sample your drinking water for a fee.
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Water Protection
- Environmental Protection Agency
- Minnesota Department of Health: 651-201-5000
- Minnesota Department of Agriculture: 651-201-6000
- Dakota County: 651-437-3191
- MN Rural Water Association: 218-685-5197
- University of Minnesota Extension Service