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Kimberling City developer to pay for water-quality violation

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A Kimberling City developer will pay $25,000 in a settlement stemming from allegations that the company violated the Missouri Clean Water Law while clearing land for a 40-acre subdivision.

The Missouri Department of Natural Resources and Attorney General Jay Nixon’s office reached the settlement with Jedi Corp., which is building Tuscany Village on Joe Bald Road, north of Kimberling City.

According to DNR, Jedi Corp. did not have a state operating permit and did not use “best management practices” for erosion and sediment control when clearing land for the project on Table Rock Lake.

The company has agreed to pay a $15,000 civil penalty to the Stone County School Fund and reimburse the state $1,000 for investigative costs.

Jedi Corp. also will pay $4,000 to the James River Basin Partnership’s Pump A Million Septic Tank program, which provides financial assistance for homeowners to properly maintain their septic tanks.

Also included in the agreement is a $5,000 payment to the state’s Natural Resource Damages Fund. That money will be used to provide water quality monitoring equipment for the Volunteer Water Quality Monitoring Program, which collects data to establish baseline data on rarely sampled streams and locate emerging water quality problems.

This story originally appeared in SBJ’s Aug. 30 free e-news Daily Update. Click here to register.[[In-content Ad]]

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