CCM 05/08/2017
CITY COUNCIL MEETING
CITY OF FRIDLEY
MAY 8, 2017
The City Council meeting for the City of Fridley was called to order by Mayor Lund at 7:02 p.m.
ROLL CALL:
MEMBERS PRESENT:
Mayor Lund
Councilmember Barnette
Councilmember Saefke
Councilmember Varichak
Councilmember Bolkcom
OTHERS PRESENT:
Wally Wysopal, City Manager
Darcy Erickson, City Attorney
Scott Hickok, Community Development Director
Shelly Peterson, Finance Director
Don Anderson, Fridley Resident
Brad Dunham, Round Lake Commons II, LLC
PRESENTATION:
Minnesota Recreation and Parks Association
Al-Amal School
APPROVAL OF PROPOSED CONSENT AGENDA:
APPROVAL OF MINUTES:
Board of Appeal and Equalization Meeting of April 24, 2017.
APPROVED.
City Council Meeting of April 24, 2017.
APPROVED.
NEW BUSINESS:
1. Receive the Minutes from the Planning Commission Meeting of April 19, 2017.
RECEIVED.
FRIDLEY CITY COUNCIL MEETING OF MAY 8, 2017 PAGE 2
2. Claims (ACH PCard 1704; 176461 - 176640)
APPROVED.
ADOPTION OF PROPOSED CONSENT AGENDA:
MOTION
by Councilmember Barnette to adopt the proposed consent agenda. Seconded by
Councilmember Varichak.
UPON A VOICE VOTE, ALL VOTING AYE, MAYOR LUND DECLARED THE
MOTION CARRIED UNANIMOUSLY.
OPEN FORUM, VISITORS:
Don Anderson,
Fridley resident, statedthe other day his mom went out to check on people
shooting off fireworks behind where they live. They sounded probably louder than a transformer
going off.
Mayor Lund
asked if they reported this to the Police Department. He asked when it happened.
Mr. Anderson
replied a couple of days ago. The people shooting off the fireworks told his mom
to mind her own business.
Mayor Lund
asked Mr. Anderson if his mom confronted the people.
Mr. Anderson
replied she did and she was scared.
Mayor Lund
said that is probably not the safest thing to do, because they are going to probably
tell her to mind her own business.
Mr. Anderson
stated his mom called the cops and was told they have more important things to
take care of. They keep shooting off fireworks every week or every day.
Mayor Lund
asked if it was in the park and on what street.
Mr. Anderson
replied yes, on West Circle.
Mayor Lund
asked what day it happened.
Mr. Anderson
replied Saturday.
Mayor Lund
asked if anyone had talked with the park manager.
Mr. Anderson,
replied no, but he does not think the manager wants to hear about what is going
on every day.
FRIDLEY CITY COUNCIL MEETING OF MAY 8, 2017 PAGE 3
Mayor Lund
replied, it is his job to manage the park, but he will talk to the manager and have a
brief discussion with the City’s police officers. He finds that hard to believe they would say they
are too busy on more priority calls. If they have priority call(s), they have to triage them and
take them in the order of importance.
Mr. Anderson
replied he does not want to see anybody get hurt with the fireworks.
Mayor Lund
asked Mr. Anderson whether his mother called 911 or the Police Department line.
Mr. Anderson
replied 911. She felt scared.
Mayor Lund
asked Mr. Anderson to share his mother’s name and phone number with staff so he
may contact her.
ADOPTION OF AGENDA:
MOTION
by Councilmember Bolkcom to approve the agenda. Seconded by Councilmember
Saefke.
UPON A VOICE VOTE, ALL VOTING AYE, MAYOR LUND DECLARED THE
MOTION CARRIED UNANIMOUSLY.
PUBLIC HEARING:
3. Consideration of an Ordinance to Amend the City Code of the City of Fridley,
Minnesota, by Making a Change in Zoning Districts (Rezoning Request, ZOA
#17-01, by Brad Dunham with Round Lake Commons II, LLC, for 7699 Highway
65 N.E.) (Ward 2).
MOTION
by Councilmember Barnette to open the public hearing. Seconded by
Councilmember Varichak.
UPON A VOICE VOTE, ALL VOTING AYE, MAYOR LUND DECLARED THE
MOTION CARRIED UNANIMOUSLY AND THE PUBLIC HEARING WAS OPENED
AT 7:30 P.M.
Scott Hickok,
Community Development Director, stated Mr. Dunham is requesting to rezone
the property at 7699 Highway 65 from C-3, General Shopping, to C-2, General Business. This
rezoning will allow for the redevelopment of this site with a new express car wash use.
Mr. Hickok
stated a C-2, General Business zoning district requires motor vehicle wash
establishments to obtain a special use permit. The petitioner is requesting a special use permit,
but it will be brought before Council on June 12, 2017, at the same time of the second reading of
this rezoning ordinance.
FRIDLEY CITY COUNCIL MEETING OF MAY 8, 2017 PAGE 4
Mr. Hickok
stated the current zoning is C-3, General Shopping. It imposes several requirements
that make the redevelopment of this site very difficult, not the least of which is an 80-foot
setback on all sides if there is a street, which in this case is on every side of the site. The
property is a turn-back parcel within the City and has a roadway on all sides of it.
Mr. Hickok
stated over the course of the last several years, staff has been working with property
owners of these turn back parcels to have them rezoned to C-2, General Business District, which
would allow them to be redeveloped. Oftentimes what happened is these were C-3 because the
frontage road initially was right up next to the highway itself. Over time, it was drawn back and
the parcel on the corner became severed from the larger C-3 piece. It no longer makes sense as a
C-3 parcel, especially with the 80-foot setback from every street side.
Mr. Hickok
said examples of this include SuperAmerica along Highway 65, Trav’s Outfitter,
st
and the old Citgo station on University Avenue and 61 Avenue.
Mr. Hickok
said a public hearing was held for this rezoning at the April 19 Planning
Commission meeting. The Planning Commission had a lengthy conversation related to entering
and exiting the site. The Commission felt the access point off of Osborne Road should either be
eliminated or used as an entrance only. Mr. Dunham was agreeable to the entrance only concept;
and the Commission added a stipulation to the special use permit request stating that access off
Osborne Road shall be entrance only.
Mr. Hickok
presented the site plan and said there is an entrance and exit point to the frontage
road which is the primary entrance to the site. To the north would be just an entrance. The car
wash is shaded in green. The spaces south of the queuing loop or stacking loop are vacuum
bays. Every one of the dark shaded lines over the top of what looks to be a parking line is a
vacuum cleaner. This is a self-vacuum and quite an efficient wash system.
Councilmember Bolkcom
asked Mr. Hickok to point those things out on the plan.
Mr. Hickok
stated if you were entering this site, you could either get in the wash queue or park
in one of the vacuum parking spots, and use a free vacuum. One finished you would enter into
the queue. You could also go through the wash first and then vacuum after. There is a two-way
drive in the center and a one-way loop into the car wash and then back out.
Mayor Lund
asked what the gate on the west side was used for.
Mr. Hickok
replied, it was to keep people from entering the queue at that point.
Mr. Hickok
stated the Planning Commission recommended approval after discussion on that
access point and a special use permit with an added stipulation also was discussed. That motion
carried unanimously. Planning staff recommends concurrence with the Planning Commission
and that Council hold a public hearing for the request this evening. The first reading would be
scheduled on May 22 and second reading held on June 12 along with approval of the special use
permit.
FRIDLEY CITY COUNCIL MEETING OF MAY 8, 2017 PAGE 5
Councilmember Varichak
asked what happens with the soapy water from the car wash. Does it
go into the sanitary sewer? She asked about the residue from all the dirt.
Mr. Hickok
replied the car wash is quite a complex thing, and the petitioner could tell them they
pay quite a few SACs, or sewer availability charges, to help facilitate the eventual processing of
the water.
Mayor Lund
asked Mr. Dunham if they plan to recycle the water.
Brad Dunham
, Round Lake Commons II, LLC, replied, they use some recycling. There are at
least two large tanks this runs through. They have to pump those tanks out every so often.
Mayor Lund
stated he assumes the tanks are for sediment—dirt and sand.
Mr. Dunham
replied yes. The septic companies come out and pump them depending on usage,
etc.
Mr. Dunham
stated the exit gate is in case the wrong car gets into the queue, needs to get out, or
somebody has an issue with the wash (they do not fit, etc.). They have done a couple of these
car washes. They have one in Anoka now, and this will be better planned than that one. The
free vacuums are what really drives the public. It is a popular item. They wash cars from $6 to
$18 and it has unlimited vacuums. It has worked well for them before, and he thinks this is
going to be a really good site.
Mayor Lund
asked if the current plan was different from the earlier one he saw.
Mr. Dunham
replied, yes. It was correctly drawn to his attention that it was not safe. When
you came out of the car wash, you had to look out of the back where the curvature of the road
was. It did not work well and would have been a little dangerous.
Mayor Lund
stated so the “in only” on Osborne is in lieu of the second driveway.
Mr. Dunham
replied they always had that one in the beginning to manage traffic better.
Mayor Lund
asked if there is any concern about the queue going beyond the entrance only from
Osborne. How would they get into the queue?
Mr. Dunham
replied they have had a little discussion about that; but he thinks they will have to
manually close that off in the event that would happen. They can run the cars through pretty fast.
The pay stations they can do a car every minute. At the car wash they have now, the best they
have done is 85 cars in an hour. They have a lot of them at 60.
Councilmember Bolkcom
said with respect to the car wash on East River Road and Mississippi,
sometimes they come out and they are pretty wet. She knows there have been some ice issues
there. She asked if that would be alleviated at this car wash.
FRIDLEY CITY COUNCIL MEETING OF MAY 8, 2017 PAGE 6
Mr. Dunham
replied they have included drainage and also have de-icing equipment and
material because they do not want it to be slippery either.
Councilmember Bolkcom
asked if most of the water would stay on the property.
Mr. Dunham
replied, he thinks they are required to do that. The car wash location they have
now is heated. They also are extending that quite a bit further. They actually curved that a little
bit more so it is easier to make the corner instead of being tight.
Councilmember Varichak
asked if they have heard anything from any of the neighbors. She
asked what the hours were and how noisy it would be.
Mr. Hickok
replied, as to the neighbors, there were some people in the audience at the Planning
Commission meeting, but no one said anything. In terms of call, the only call was an
information-seeking call asking what the mailed announcement was.
Mr. Dunham
stated they are currently open 7 a.m. to 8 p.m. It will be similar. It may be longer
especially at this time of the year.
Mayor Lund
stated as to the concern about noise he cannot see there being that much as the
operation happens indoors.
Mr. Dunham
stated their Anoka car wash is off of Round Lake Road and they are next to
residential so they did some noise readings. Their wash was not as loud as Round Lake Road is
which has just a few less cars than the Fridley location would.
Councilmember Barnette
stated this is at the old Frost Top and Dr. Dahl chiropractic site. He
noticed just recently that the Wendy’s has closed. He said that additional property is not a part
of this site.
Mr. Hickok
replied correct. He said they have not heard from anyone related to the use of that
site.
MOTION
by Councilmember Varichak to close the public hearing. Seconded by
Councilmember Barnette.
UPON A VOICE VOTE, ALL VOTING AYE, MAYOR LUND DECLARED THE
MOTION CARRIED UNANIMOUSLY AND THE PUBLIC HEARING WAS CLOSED
AT 7:44 P.M.
NEW BUSINESS:
4. Resolution Declaring the Structures Located at the New Civic Campus Site as
Surplus and Authorizing their Demolition.
FRIDLEY CITY COUNCIL MEETING OF MAY 8, 2017 PAGE 7
Shelly Peterson
, Finance Director, stated she is requesting Council to move forward with staff’s
request on the surplus buildings at the new civic campus. Construction is scheduled at the end of
May. There are several structures on that site that will need to be removed prior to construction,
including the Fire training facilities, the Police forfeiture building, and the Public Works
buildings.
Ms. Peterson
stated with the Fire training facility and tower was built in 1997. They also have a
donated garage on that site. The training agreement was dissolved, and the City had no interest
from surrounding communities on dismantling and using that facility somewhere else. Staff
went to great lengths to see if there was a repurpose for that building.
Ms. Peterson
stated with the Police forfeiture building, it was a pole barn building that was
erected in 2014 and paid for entirely with drug and alcohol forfeiture funds. The Police Chief
went to great lengths to see if the City could sell that property and dismantle and rebuild it
elsewhere. With pole buildings, it is generally cheaper to build new rather than try to pull the
sheet metal down and use it again. That is another facility the City will be dismantling and
recycling.
Ms. Peterson
stated and finally, with respect to the Public Works structures, there are multiple
buildings here with the first building built in 1967. The last expansion was in 2003. Demolition
on this building will occur in phases so they do not interrupt services for Public Works. They
went through several efforts of trying to sell some of the buildings. They looked at donating the
buildings, and they looked at possibly recycling some of the buildings on this site. It was
determined these buildings needed to be demolished. They included them in the bid documents
that recently went out. The contractors knew what materials they could salvage, and what would
need to be demolished, and they bid accordingly.
Ms. Peterson
stated some of the structures have not fully depreciated, so staff was anticipating
having to write a loss off on those buildings. In talking further with the City’s auditor, he does
not feel that would be necessary based on the useful life remaining on some of those facilities.
Ms. Peterson
stated staff is recommending Council declare these structures at the new civic
campus site as surplus, and authorize their demolition.
Councilmember Barnette
asked if there was an electronics tower on that site that needs to be
moved.
Mr. Hickok
replied, yes, there is a telecommunication tower that will be moved to a location on
the new campus. We have been negotiating with the telecom owner, and it looks like there is
going to be a conclusion on that and it can be moved in a timely manner. There may need to be a
cell tower on wheels providing service in a temporary location until the new tower gets
constructed.
Councilmember Barnette
asked who would pay for that.
Mr. Hickok
replied the City. That is one of the consequences of the City doing this building.
They really needed to get it out of the way rather than design around it.
FRIDLEY CITY COUNCIL MEETING OF MAY 8, 2017 PAGE 8
Mayor Lund
stated he thought staff has worked diligently in trying to repurpose those buildings.
He is just a little dismayed to find that the pole barn building is not reusable and that the salt shed
is not even resalable.
Wally Wysopal
, City Manager, stated with respect to the salt storage shed, it is problematic
because it has collapsed on several occasions, and the manufacturer is no longer making it.
Therefore, someone taking it and using it could pose the City some problems. Also, there is the
time involved in dismantling the pole barn where anybody who wants it always factors in the
cost to take it apart. Their time and energy to do that exceeds the value of the structure itself. So
it is usually somebody who wants to take it for nothing.
Mayor Lund
stated he is glad to see the City got a better bid with its primary contractor. The
amount of $6,000 is a lot better to pay for that demolition than the $32,000 that was originally
bid.
MOTION
by Councilmember Saefke to adopt Resolution No. 2017-16. Seconded by
Councilmember Bolkcom.
UPON A VOICE VOTE, ALL VOTING AYE, MAYOR LUND DECLARED THE
MOTION CARRIED UNANIMOUSLY.
5. Informal Status Report:
No reports.
ADJOURN:
MOTION
by Councilmember Barnette, seconded by Councilmember Varichak, to adjourn.
UPON A VOICE VOTE, ALL VOTING AYE, MAYOR LUND DECLARED THE
MOTION CARRIED UNANIMOUSLY AND THE MEETING ADJOURNED AT
7:55 P.M.
Respectfully submitted by,
Denise M. Johnson Scott J. Lund
Recording Secretary Mayor