Notice to the Public – Upcoming Meetings

TOWN OF LEROY, DODGE COUNTY WISCONSIN

PUBLIC NOTICE

 TOWN OFFICERS MAY BE IN ATTENDANCE AT THESE MEETING

NO ACTION WILL BE TAKEN BY THE BOARD AT THESE MEETINGS

 Date: March 27, 2023

Time: 7:05 PM & 7:30 PM p.m.

 Location: Dodge County Administration Building, room 1H and 1I.

Public Hearing on the application for a Conditional Use Permit for Thomas and Julie Evan to construct a US Cellular telecommunications Tower at N10441. Hearing held in Juneau WI on Monday, March 27 at 7:05 PM at the Dodge County Administration Building, room 1H and 1I.

Public Hearing on the application for a Conditional Use Permit for Garret Mittelstadt for the creation of 1.8-acre nonfarm single family residential lot at W3940 State Road 49. Hearing held in Juneau WI on Monday, March 27 at 7:30 PM at the Dodge County Administration Building, room 1H and 1I.

Dated: March 23, 2023

Linda Schraufnagel, Chairperson

Meeting notice is posted at LeRoy Town Hall & www.townleroy.com


Spring Clean-Up

Spring clean-up for Town of LeRoy residents will be held on May 6, 2023 from 8 AM to 1 PM at the LeRoy Town Hall N10725 CTY YY Lomira.


Comprehensive Plan Overview

What is a Comprehensive Plan?

The Comprehensive Planning Law was enacted in 1999 (see section 66.1001, Wis. Stats.). Sometimes referred to as the “smart growth law,” the Comprehensive Planning Law does not mandate how a community should grow, rather it leaves such decisions up to local communities.

Comprehensive Planning Law defines a comprehensive plan as containing at least nine elements:

  1. Issues and Opportunities
  2. Agricultural, Natural and Cultural Resources
  3. Economic Development
  4. Housing
  5. Intergovernmental Cooperation
  6. Transportation
  7. Land Use
  8. Utilities and Community Facilities
  9. Implementation

Consistency Requirement

Beginning on January 1, 2010, if a local governmental unit enacts or amends an official mapping, land division, or zoning ordinance, the enactment or amendment ordinance must be consistent with that community’s comprehensive plan.

Plan Update

Comprehensive plans must be updated no less than once every 10 years. However, the law does not define update. A thorough update of background information and a public participatory process to evaluate plan vision, goals, objectives, policies, and programs is recommended.

Benefits of Comprehensive Planning 

  • Understands the past and present – a plan collects useful information about the community, such as historical trends, present conditions, and (by studying trends) where it is
  • Lays out a roadmap to the future – a plan puts down on paper a community’s goals, objectives values, and aspirations – its vision for the future – and the steps needed to achieve these things.
  • Guides land use regulations – provides a rational basis for land use regulations and makes land use decisions more
  • Is proactive rather than reactive – a plan helps communities to identify and resolve issues early on, before they become conflicts.
  • Coordinates community activity – a comprehensive plan should take into account all of a community’s policies, programs, departments, initiatives, services, plans, regulations, responsibilities, and systems.
  • Saves money $$$ – a plan identifies functions within a jurisdiction or between jurisdictions that conflict, are duplicated, or could be strengthened through coordination. For example, a town and a school district could jointly own and maintain a park and playground. Several towns could share road maintenance equipment, building storage or other needs.
  • Preserves local control – the comprehensive plan promotes a bottom-up, rather than a top-down The state does not adopt or certify a local comprehensive plan. Instead, a plan must be adopted by a community’s governing body.
  • Preserves local autonomy – the Comprehensive Planning Law does not alter the legal relationship between jurisdictions. Local governments continue to have the same powers and authority over land use that they had before the law was passed.
  • Promotes property rights – the Comprehensive Planning Law makes planning more transparent and open to the public, including landowners, than prior to the law.
  • Promotes economic development – planning helps communities retain existing businesses, attract new ones, revitalize downtowns, develop housing for workers, and recommend steps to improve infrastructure capacity.
  • Promotes intergovernmental cooperation – through the required Intergovernmental Cooperation Element, communities identify existing cooperation between jurisdictions, identify existing or potential conflicts, and describe processes to resolve these conflicts.
  • Protects resources – planning helps protect the things a community treasures most, including historic buildings, forests, farmland, bluff areas, wetlands, scenic vistas, downtown main streets, lakes, rivers, village squares, etc.

Prepared by Cedar Corporation


FALL CLEAN-UP

Fall clean-up for Town of LeRoy residents will be held on Saturday, October 1, 2022, from 8 a.m. to 1 p.m.


Notice to the Public

Town Board Special Meeting

Date: July 25, 2022

Time: 5:00 p.m.

Location: Mayville City Hall, 15 S. School Street, Mayville, WI

Attend the City of Mayville Ambulance meeting.

No action will be taken at this meeting. Informational only.

Dated: July 21, 2022

Linda Schraufnagel, Chairperson

For questions regarding the agenda or to request disability accommodations to attend the meeting, please contact the Town Clerk at 920-583-0201.

Meeting agenda is posted at the Town Hall & www.townleroy.com


2021 Consumer Confidence Report Data

LEROY SANITARY DISTRICT 1, PWS ID: 11401555

Este informe contiene información importante acerca de su agua potable. Haga que alguien lo traduzca para usted, o hable con alguien que lo entienda.

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Water System Information

If you would like to know more about the information contained in this report, please contact Darwin Buck Schulz at (920) 960-9005.

Opportunity for input on decisions affecting your water quality

Contact Dale Klueger 920-948-7181

Health Information

Drinking water, including bottled water, may reasonably be expected to contain at least small amounts of some contaminants. The presence of contaminants does not necessarily indicate that water poses a health risk. More information about contaminants and potential health effects can be obtained by calling the Environmental Protection Agency’s safe drinking water hotline (800- 426-4791).

Some people may be more vulnerable to contaminants in drinking water than the general population. Immuno-compromised persons such as persons with cancer undergoing chemotherapy, persons who have undergone organ transplants, people with HIV/AIDS or other immune systems disorders, some elderly, and infants can be particularly at risk from infections. These people should seek advice about drinking water from their health care providers.

EPA/CDC guidelines on appropriate means to lessen the risk of infection by cryptosporidium and other microbial contaminants are available from the Environmental Protection Agency’s safe drinking water hotline (800-426-4791).

Source(s) of Water

Source IDSourceDepth (in feet)Status
1Groundwater1099Active

To obtain a summary of the source water assessment please contact, Darwin Buck Schulz at (920) 960-9005.

Educational Information

The sources of drinking water, both tap water and bottled water, include rivers, lakes, streams, ponds, reservoirs, springs and wells. As water travels over the surface of the land or through the ground, it dissolves naturally occurring minerals and, in some cases, radioactive material, and can pick up substances resulting from the presence of animals or from human activity.

Contaminants that may be present in source water include:

  • Microbial contaminants, such as viruses and bacteria, which may come from sewage treatment plants, septic systems, agricultural livestock operations and wildlife.
  • Inorganic contaminants, such as salts and metals, which can be naturally- occurring or result from urban stormwater runoff, industrial or domestic wastewater discharges, oil and gas production, mining or farming.
  • Pesticides and herbicides, which may come from a variety of sources such as agriculture, urban stormwater runoff and residential uses.
  • Organic chemical contaminants, including synthetic and volatile organic chemicals, which are by-products of industrial processes and petroleum production, and can also come from gas stations, urban stormwater runoff and septic systems.
  • Radioactive contaminants, which can be naturally occurring or be the result of oil and gas production and mining activities.

In order to ensure that tap water is safe to drink, EPA prescribes regulations that limit the amount of certain contaminants in water provided by public water systems. FDA regulations establish limits for contaminants in bottled water, which shall provide the same protection for public health.

Definitions

TermDefinition
ALAction Level: The concentration of a contaminant which, if exceeded, triggers treatment or other requirements which a water system must follow.
HALHealth Advisory Level: The concentration of a contaminant which, if exceeded, poses a health risk and may require a system to post a public notice.
Level 1 AssessmentA Level 1 assessment is a study of the water system to identify potential problems and determine, if possible, why total coliform bacteria have been found in our water system.
TermDefinition
  Level 2 AssessmentA Level 2 assessment is a very detailed study of the water system to identify potential problems and determine, if possible, why an E. coli MCL violation has occurred or why total coliform bacteria have been found in our water system, or both, on multiple occasions.
  MCLMaximum Contaminant Level: The highest level of a contaminant that is allowed in drinking water. MCLs are set as close to the MCLGs as feasible using the best available treatment technology.
  MCLGMaximum Contaminant Level Goal: The level of a contaminant in drinking water below which there is no known or expected risk to health. MCLGs allow for a margin of safety.
MFLmillion fibers per liter
  MRDLMaximum residual disinfectant level: The highest level of a disinfectant allowed in drinking water. There is convincing evidence that addition of a disinfectant is necessary for control of microbial contaminants.
  MRDLGMaximum residual disinfectant level goal: The level of a drinking water disinfectant below which there is no known or expected risk to health. MRDLGs do not reflect the benefits of the use of disinfectants to control microbial contaminants.
mrem/yearmillirems per year (a measure of radiation absorbed by the body)
NTUNephelometric Turbidity Units
pCi/lpicocuries per liter (a measure of radioactivity)
ppmparts per million, or milligrams per liter (mg/l)
ppbparts per billion, or micrograms per liter (ug/l)
pptparts per trillion, or nanograms per liter
ppqparts per quadrillion, or picograms per liter
  SMCLSecondary drinking water standards or Secondary Maximum Contaminant Levels for contaminants that affect taste, odor, or appearance of the drinking water. The SMCLs do not represent health standards.
TCRTotal Coliform Rule
TTTreatment Technique: A required process intended to reduce the level of a contaminant in drinking water.

Detected Contaminants

Your water was tested for many contaminants last year. We are allowed to monitor for some contaminants less frequently than once a year. The following tables list only those contaminants which were detected in your water. If a contaminant was detected last year, it will appear in the following tables without a sample date. If the contaminant was not monitored last year, but was detected within the last 5 years, it will appear in the tables below along with the sample date.

Disinfection Byproducts

  Contaminant (units)  Site  MCL  MCLG  Level Found  RangeSample Date (if prior to 2021)  Violation  Typical Source of Contaminant
  HAA5 (ppb)  DB1  60  60  0  0  8/13/2019  NoBy-product of drinking water chlorination
  TTHM (ppb)  DB1  80  0  11.8  11.8  8/13/2019  NoBy-product of drinking water chlorination

Inorganic Contaminants

  Contaminant (units)  Site  MCL  MCLG  Level Found  RangeSample Date (if prior to 2021)  Violation  Typical Source of Contaminant
    BARIUM (ppm)     2    2    0.083    0.083    3/23/2020    NoDischarge of drilling wastes; Discharge from metal refineries; Erosion of natural deposits
    FLUORIDE (ppm)       4      4      0.4      0.4      3/23/2020      NoErosion of natural deposits; Water additive which promotes strong teeth; Discharge from fertilizer and aluminum factories
  NITRATE (N03-N) (ppm)     10    10    0.05    0.05     NoRunoff from fertilizer use; Leaching from septic tanks, sewage; Erosion of natural deposits
    SELENIUM (ppb)     50    50    1    1    3/23/2020    NoDischarge from petroleum and metal refineries; Erosion of natural deposits; Discharge from mines
  Contaminant (units)  Site  MCL  MCLG  Level Found  RangeSample Date (if prior to 2021)  Violation  Typical Source of Contaminant
SODIUM (ppm) n/an/a12.0012.003/23/2020Non/a
  Contaminant (units)  Action Level  MCLG90th Percentile Level Found  # of ResultsSample Date (if prior to 2021)  Violation  Typical Source of Contaminant
      COPPER (ppm)      AL=1.3      1.3      0.1350  0 of 5 results were above the action level.      10/30/2020      NoCorrosion of household plumbing systems; Erosion of natural deposits; Leaching from wood preservatives
      LEAD (ppb)      AL=15      0      3.200 of 5 results were above the action level.      10/30/2020      NoCorrosion of household plumbing systems; Erosion of natural deposits

Radioactive Contaminants

  Contaminant (units)  Site  MCL  MCLG  Level Found  RangeSample Date (if prior to 2021)  Violation  Typical Source of Contaminant
GROSS ALPHA, EXCL. R & U (pCi/l)   15  0  5.75.1 – 6.4   NoErosion of natural deposits
RADIUM, (226 + 228) (pCi/l) 504.02.6 – 5.0 NoErosion of natural deposits
GROSS ALPHA, INCL. R & U (n/a)   n/a  n/a  5.95.2 – 6.5   NoErosion of natural deposits

Contaminants with a Health Advisory Level or a Secondary Maximum Contaminant Level

The following tables list contaminants which were detected in your water and that have either a Health Advisory Level (HAL) or a Secondary Maximum Contaminant Level (SMCL), or both. There are no violations for detections of contaminants that exceed Health Advisory Levels, Groundwater Standards or Secondary Maximum Contaminant Levels. Secondary Maximum Contaminant Levels are levels that do not present health concerns but may pose aesthetic problems such as objectionable taste, odor, or color. Health Advisory Levels are levels at which concentrations of the contaminant present a health risk.

Contaminant (units)  SiteSMCL (ppm)HAL (ppm)Level Found  RangeSample Date (if prior to 2021)Typical Source of Contaminant
CHLORIDE (ppm)   250   37.00  37.00  8/23/2017Runoff/leaching from natural deposits, road salt, water softeners
  IRON (ppm)   0.3   0.22  0.22  8/23/2017Runoff/leaching from natural deposits, industrial wastes
MANGANESE (ppm) 0.050.30.010.018/23/2017Leaching from natural deposits
SILVER (ppm) 0.10.050.000.008/23/2017Runoff from industrial wastes

Unregulated Contaminants

Unregulated contaminants are those for which EPA has not established drinking water standards. The purpose of unregulated contaminant monitoring is to assist EPA in determining the occurrence of unregulated contaminants in drinking water and whether future regulation is warranted. EPA required us to participate in this monitoring.

NA

Additional Health Information

If present, elevated levels of lead can cause serious health problems, especially for pregnant women and young children. Lead in drinking water is primarily from materials and components associated with service lines and home plumbing. Leroy Sanitary District 1 is responsible for providing high quality drinking water, but cannot control the variety of materials used in plumbing components. When your water has been sitting for several hours, you can minimize the potential for lead exposure by flushing your tap for 30 seconds to 2 minutes before using water for drinking or cooking. If you are concerned about lead in your water, you may wish to have your water tested. Information on lead in drinking water, testing methods, and steps you can take

to minimize exposure is available from the Safe Drinking Water Hotline or at www.epa.gov/safewater/lead.

Presence of Other Contaminants

None

Other Compliance

Violation of the Terms of a Variance, Exemption, or Administrative or Judicial Order

None

Noncompliance with Recordkeeping and Compliance Data

None


NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC

TOWN OF LEROY

DODGE COUNTY, WISCONSIN

NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC

 

Please take note that the LeRoy Town Board will consider executing a
contract with Crackfilling Service, Corp. for more than $5000.00 but not more
than $25,000.00 per road project for the repair of cracks on West Point Road
and North Point Road in the Town of LeRoy for 2022. This action will take place
at a meeting of the Board on May 9, 2022.

Dated: April 26, 2022

Linda Schraufnagel, Chairperson


Notice Roof Bid

Town of LeRoy

Dodge County, Wisconsin

Notice is hereby given that the LeRoy Town Board will accept sealed bids marked “Roof Bid” for the replacement of the Town Hall roof located at N10725 CTY YY, Lomira WI 53048

The following are the roof replacement specifications

  1. Remove all existing roofing and insulation down to sound solid deck.
  • Remove all existing sheet metal flashing and recycle all materials
  • Remove roof flashings, concrete and perimeter wood blocking down to structural decking and dispose of debris in a legal manner.
  • Remove all non-functioning roof penetrations and cover all openings with steel plating.
  • Raise all existing penetrations to a minimum height of 8’ above the finished roof surface.
  • Install new perimeter wood blocking to a matching height of the proposed insulation
  • Install one layer of 1.5” isocyanurate insulation over the tapered EPS insulation. Insulation should have an R value of R-27.
  • Furnish and install tapered 1.25# Expanded polystyrene (EPS) roof insulation, sloping at 3/16” of 1” per foot and laid to provide positive drainage to the gutter edge.
  •  All existing roof drains/downspouts through the soffit will be eliminated.
  1. All insulation will be secured down with manufacture’s approved foam adhesive.
  1. Furnish and install a new 60 mil EPDM rubber adhered roof system (Carlisle or equal) per manufacturers specifications.
  1. Install new 24-gauge pre-finished fascia, gutters, downspouts, edge flashing and counter flashing.
  1. Provide a 20 Year manufactures warranty to cover all materials and workmanship.

Sealed bids should be mailed to Linda Schraufnagel, N10057 Cty YY, Mayville, WI 53050 by no later than 5:00 p.m. May 6, 2022.

Sealed bids will be opened and awarded on Monday, May 9, 2022 at 6:00 PM. at the LeRoy Town Hall located at N10725 Hwy YY, Lomira, WI 53048. 

The Town of LeRoy reserves the right to reject any or all bids and to accept any bid which, in the judgement of the Town Board may be most advantageous to the Town of LeRoy.

Dated: April 20, 2022

Linda Schraufnagel, Chairperson


Notice Roof Bid

Town of LeRoy

Dodge County, Wisconsin

Notice is hereby given that the LeRoy Town Board will accept sealed bids marked “Roof Bid” for the replacement of the Town Hall roof located at N10725 CTY YY, Lomira WI 53048

The following are the roof replacement specifications

  1. Remove all existing roofing and insulation down to sound solid deck.
  • Remove all existing sheet metal flashing and recycle all materials
  • Remove roof flashings, concrete and perimeter wood blocking down to structural decking and dispose of debris in a legal manner.
  • Remove all non-functioning roof penetrations and cover all openings with steel plating.
  • Raise all existing penetrations to a minimum height of 8’ above the finished roof surface.
  • Install new perimeter wood blocking to a matching height of the proposed insulation
  • Install one layer of 1.5” isocyanurate insulation over the tapered EPS insulation. Insulation should have an R value of R-27.
  • Furnish and install tapered 1.25# Expanded polystyrene (EPS) roof insulation, sloping at 3/16” of 1” per foot and laid to provide positive drainage to the gutter edge.
  •  All existing roof drains/downspouts through the soffit will be eliminated.
  1. All insulation will be secured down with manufacture’s approved foam adhesive.
  1. Furnish and install a new 60 mil EPDM rubber adhered roof system (Carlisle or equal) per manufacturers specifications.
  1. Install new 24-gauge pre-finished fascia, gutters, downspouts, edge flashing and counter flashing.
  1. Provide a 20 Year manufactures warranty to cover all materials and workmanship.

Sealed bids should be mailed to Linda Schraufnagel, N10057 Cty YY, Mayville, WI 53050 by no later than 5:00 p.m. May 6, 2022.

Sealed bids will be opened and awarded on Monday, May 9, 2022 at 6:00 PM. at the LeRoy Town Hall located at N10725 Hwy YY, Lomira, WI 53048. 

The Town of LeRoy reserves the right to reject any or all bids and to accept any bid which, in the judgement of the Town Board may be most advantageous to the Town of LeRoy.

Dated: April 20, 2022

Linda Schraufnagel, Chairperson