The Minnesota Pollution Control Agency expects to take ownership of the Eden Prairie Flying Cloud landfill by the end of 2009, with plans to buy it a new $15 million cover in the next several years.
Closed in 1986, the 106-acre landfill on a bluff overlooking the Minnesota River was once a deep gravel pit. Owned over the years by BFI and Allied Waste, it is now in the hands of Republic Services.
The MPCA is in negotiations with Republic now and expects to have the property transferred to the state by the end of the year, said Peter Tiffany, engineer for the agency's closed landfill section.
MPCA Commissioner Paul Eger is expected to ask for money for the landfill's new cover in the agency's state bonding request, Tiffany said. The landfill must be owned by the state to be eligible for bond funding.
Overall, the landfill is in good shape, Tiffany told the Eden Prairie City Council last week. Monitoring wells show that volatile organic compound levels are dropping, which means the water inside the landfill is gradually getting cleaner, he said.
The cover is supposed to keep rainfall out of the landfill, allowing the garbage to dry up and preventing pollutants from leaching into the groundwater, Tiffany said.
But the landfill needs a new cover because the decomposing trash has settled, causing the existing clay-and-earth cover to crack and leaving places for water to pool instead of running off quickly, Tiffany said.
The current cover consists of 2 feet of compacted clay topped by a layer of sand, 18 inches of vegetative material and 6 inches of soil topped with growing grass. The MPCA would replace it with a synthetic liner topped by sand or a similar covering, vegetative material, soil and grass, Tiffany said.