Coldwater Springs
From: patty guerrero (pattypaxicloud.com)
Date: Sun, 8 Mar 2015 11:24:08 -0700 (PDT)
Here is an updated email re. the illegal project re. Coldwater Springs being 
taken by the Metropolitan Council.   Do we really want this to happen to our 
sacred water and earth.   Think Global —Act Local

Patty

APPOINTED OFFICIALS SET TO OKAY ILLEGAL PROJECT 

Two sets of appointed officials are lined up to okay a project that explicitly 
violates the law. The Metropolitan Council is promoting sewer replacement 
construction that contravenes the Coldwater protection law by threatening the 
flow to this 10,000 year old spring.

The Minnehaha Creek Watershed District is set to permit the project with 
assurances about "contingency plans" for unforeseen circumstances, "restoring" 
Coldwater Springs after "temporary" dewatering, and orders to monitor the 
spring daily during the 2-year construction project.   

Take action. Ask that sewer construction be redesigned to the location of the 
current pipe without tearing up the north end of Minnehaha Park and threatening 
the flow to Coldwater Springs:

Adam Duininck, Chair, Metropolitan Council, 651-602-1390 or adam.duininck [at] 
metc.state.mn.us <mailto:adam.duininck [at] metc.state.mn.us> 

Lars Erdahl, Administrator, Minnehaha Creek Watershed District, 952-641-4505 or 
lerdahl [at] minnehahacreek.org <mailto:lerhahl [at] minnehahacreek.org>  

National Park Service, 651-293-8438 or http://www.nps.gov/miss 
<http://www.nps.gov/miss>, click on Coldwater and follow prompts

THE LAW
  
Section 1.  [PROTECTION OF NATURAL FLOW.] 
Neither the state, nor a unit of metropolitan government, nor a political 
subdivision of the state may take any action that may diminish the flow of 
water to or from Camp Coldwater Springs.  All projects must be reviewed under 
the Minnesota Historic Sites Act and the Minnesota Field Archaeology Act with 
regard to the flow of water to or from Camp Coldwater Springs. (passed in 2001)
 
The language of the law is specific, forbidding "any action that may diminish 
the flow." Not "temporary" dewatering, not permanent dewatering—no "action that 
may diminish."

The language of the contingency planning (below) is slippery.

Coldwater is the last major natural spring in Hennepin County, is where the 
soldiers who built Fort Snelling lived (1820-23) and where a civilian pioneer 
community gathered to service the fort. Some consider Coldwater to be the 
birthplace of Minnesota. The spring furnished water to Fort Snelling 1820-1920. 
 

THE PROJECT: Metropolitan Council Environmental Services (MCES) project 
1-MN-344 Tunnel Improvement

A sanitary sewer pipe is scheduled to be replaced at the north end of Minnehaha 
Park. It is an underground construction, about 45 to 50 feet below the surface, 
with two 18-foot diameter access shafts cut through bedrock at either end, and 
a 44 by 60-foot subsurface vault. Groundwater "will just flow around" these 
subterranean buried structures after construction planners reported at 
Minnehaha Creek Watershed District board meeting (1/29/15).   
 
A replacement 1,000-foot pipe would run horizontally below Minnehaha Creek, the 
Hiawatha Light Rail Transit line and Highway 55 to replace a 1930s-era sanitary 
sewer pipe. The project is scheduled to run for two years from this summer to 
June of 2017.   
 
Both groundwater and deep well dewatering is planned that is, pumping water out 
from above the limestone bedrock and below in the sandstone. Daily monitoring 
at Coldwater is called for. 

Assurances by experts of "no loss of flow" from the Highway 55 reroute resulted 
in the permanent loss of nearly a quarter of the flow to Coldwater. MnDOT was 
court-ordered to monitor the spring flow for 20 months post-construction. 
Despite the Coldwater protection law a permanent, daily loss of flow of 27,500 
gallons was reported.

Before Highway 55 reroute construction the flow to Coldwater was measured at 
about 130,000 gallons a day. Now the flow rate is about 84,000 gallons daily. 
Adding the 27,500 daily dewatering lost to Coldwater to the current flow of 
84,000—there is a mystery loss of more than 18,000 gallons

CONTINGENCY PLANS FOR PROBLEMS
 
Consultants at the Minnehaha Creek Watershed District meeting admitted that the 
"contingency plans" are unknown, that conditions are "unforeseeable," that an 
observer will be on site to come up with "reasonable solutions." 
 
--A 10 to 20 percent variation in the flow at Coldwater is "hard to tell."
 
--There is a "low risk of permanent impact to the flow." Planners are 
"confident" about "restoring" the spring. 

During Highway 55 reroute construction a grit chamber was cut into limestone 
bedrock at Minnehaha Park at 50th Street, one mile north of Coldwater. The 
result was dewatering at a rate of 500 gallons per minute for several months. 
There was a "measureable reduction of flow to the spring." 
 
That grit chamber cut intercepted a main limestone fracture that leads to 
Coldwater. The proposed sewer bedrock cuts are just 1.5 miles north of 
Coldwater, a half mile north of the great dewatering cut during Highway 55 
reroute construction. 
 
 ANCIENT SACRED LANDSCAPE

Sacred landscape is a reality not common in the dominate world. So it was not 
surprising when Minnehaha Creek Watershed District board managers wondered why 
the Coldwater protection law was written so narrowly.

The National Park Service (NPS), the agency that claims to "own" Coldwater 
Springs, acknowledges Coldwater as a "sacred site" by virtue of paper work 
submitted by a federally recognized Dakota band. Outside the legal recognition 
process Anishinabe (Ojibwa) spiritual elders also consider the spring sacred.

Many ceremonies have been held at the spring. The NPS actually called in an 
armed guard during a Dakota pipe ceremony September 1, 2012 for lack of a 
"special use permit." Those permits were not being issued at the time because 
the land was "fragile."  

Based on recommendations in the 2006 Ethnographic Study contracted by NPS, 
Coldwater would be a Dakota Tribal Sacred Site and a Traditional Cultural 
Property. NPS rejected the study's findings. One official explaining the 
dismissal said "they didn't write down their stories"—a bizarre critique of an 
oral culture.       
 
"Traditional Cultural Property" is a landscape that is not limited in 
importance to one Native American tribe or one time period, it is generically 
special land. Coldwater is considered to be at least 10,000 years old and is 
the first big spring north of the dramatic Mississippi-Minnesota confluence. 

Dakota people were the latest Native nation living here in 1803 when the U.S. 
concluded the Louisiana Purchase. People have been in the confluence area since 
the glaciers melted. A 9,000-year old bison spear point was found at the Sibley 
House archaeological dig in Mendota (1996). The site was a backwater of the 
confluence where a bison, twice the size of today's buffaloes, got stuck in the 
muck, speared and eaten.
 
Dakota teachers say Un K'te Hi, a powerful spirit of water and the underworld, 
dwells at Coldwater. It is not just any spring but the spring linked to Taku 
Wakan Tipi (Something Sacred Dwells Here) a traditional Dakota burial mound at 
the Veteran's Administration pushed up by Un K'te Hi from an underground water 
passage (such as a limestone fracture) between Coldwater and the hill.  
 
Religious mythology typically includes a geographic place and a story. Bounties 
on Indian scalps were paid by the state of Minnesota into the 20th century. The 
Indian wars are not over and we are entering the period of the water wars. 
 
THE ALTERNATIVE
 
The alternative of replacing the sewer pipe in situ was dismissed as too hard 
to get to, too expensive. It would involve temporary rerouting of the sewage 
for the construction period. 

In 2005 Minnehaha watershed engineer Mike Panzer said "There is an appearance 
of a gradual downward trend in flow over the past 6 or 7 years." This is what 
concerns Coldwater supporters, a constant degradation of the spring. With every 
cut Coldwater bleeds water. 
 
What is Coldwater worth? It was used as an emergency drinking water supply for 
south Minneapolis in the summer of 1976 when city water was putrid with algae. 
What happens to the water happens to the people.
 
 
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