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State regulators approve projects in Cerro Gordo, Franklin and Poweshiek County
The Iowa Natural Resources Commission approved construction projects in Franklin, Cerro Gordo, and Poweshiek County at their recent meeting.
Travis Baker of the DNR says one of the projects is replacing the lagoon wastewater treatment system at Beeds Lake State Park northwest of Hampton. “The lagoon can no longer meet discharge effluent limits, and so this project will convey wastewater to the City of Hampton by constructing a three-and-a-half mile long, four-inch PVC force main. In addition to that, work will include the construction of approximately 1,500 feet of gravity sewer and a lift station,” he says.
The lagoon system services the park office, campground, and a 39-house subdivision located on the north side of the lake. “The existing lagoons will be decommissioned. Involved in that decommissioning, the contract will be responsible for removing the sludge, treating that,” Baker says. The homes will be hooked into the system and eventually pay a rate for the sewer treatment. The project will cost around one-point-seven million dollars, and be completed in May of 2026.
The NRC approved improvements to the Clear Lake Campground in Cerro Gordo County. Baker says the campground was built in 1941 with 176 sites that were fairly close to each other. The upgrade will rebuild 61 sites. “And includes seven full hookup sites, with pull-through 50 amp electric sites and 12 back-in 50 amp electric sites. In addition, along with this project, we will have installed three new ADA-accessible concrete sites,” he says. The work is expected to be completed in September 2025.
Commissioners approved a clean-up plan for Diamond Lake in Poweshiek County. “Lake was constructed in the 1950s and had a 20,672-acre watershed. The lake suffers from periodic algae blooms that lead to poor water clarity,” Baker says. “This project will clean out approximately 32,000 cubic yards of deposited sediment to existing ponds. Well, it’s constructing a new sediment pond.” The DNR lake restoration fund will pay for 75% of the nearly $710,000 cost and the county will pay the rest.
The work is expected to be completed in September 2025.