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1 <br />1 <br />2 <br /> 3 <br /> 4 <br />5 <br />6 <br />7 <br />8 <br />9 <br />10 <br />11 <br />12 <br />13 <br />14 <br />15 <br />16 <br />17 <br />18 <br />19 <br />20 <br />21 <br />22 <br />23 <br />_ 24 <br />• <br />25 <br />• • 9 <br />I think a conservative recommendation is <br />that 25 days of violations at $200 per day would give a <br />civil penalty of $5,000; and tl~e staff would further <br />recommend that $4,000 would be suspender} upon completion of <br />the corrective actions by the end of nugust, which would <br />give the summer weeks ahead for the arrangements to be <br />finished by Mr. Menzee, and we could be assured that it <br />would be able t-o be done before bad weather sets in. <br />C[ll1IRMnN SULLIVnN: 'That gives him ample <br />time to do it. <br />MR. LOYE: That's correct. <br />MR. }IOt4E: Is the stream impaired in such a <br />way that there would be a considerable hazard if there were <br />a cloudburst? <br />MR. LOYE: It is, basically, extremely <br />ephemeral-type drainage most of the time except in the <br />spring. 'there were dams put right into the drainage, and <br />the diversion that was constructed, was cunstruct-ed in a <br />fairly haphazard manner and then filled in by the pad, so <br />there is no diversion. <br />So what happened, basically, was all the <br />dams filled to overtopping, not this spring, but the <br />previous wet spring. They all washed out and kicked a <br />large amount of sediment- down upun a resident by the name <br />of Larry Drown who lived bc}.ow Che site, and at that time <br />11111\S~I kI'I \IfH.\ 1\\•Iflill\ I\t <br />(~nunJ \h~~n 4en~l lf. p... i. r~ <br />1511n ( h,~,n vllr 16 ~e.1 <br />