CCM 04/24/2017
CITY COUNCIL MEETING
CITY OF FRIDLEY
APRIL 24, 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 Varichak
Councilmember Saefke
Councilmember Bolkcom
OTHERS PRESENT:
Wally Wysopal, City Manager
Darcy Erickson, City Attorney
Scott Hickok, Community Development Director
James Kosluchar, Public Works Director
Shelly Peterson, Finance Director
Ellie Skelton, Touchstone Mental Health
Dr. Khu Tou, Touchstone Mental Health
Kathy Smith, 7350 Melody Drive
Ken McConkey, Fridley resident
Amy Denz, Wenck
PROCLAMATION:
Poppy Month – May, 2017
PRESENTATION:
Touchstone Mental Health: New Residential Program on Unity Campus
Ellie Skelton,
Executive Director, and Dr. Khu Tou, made a presentation on Touchstone Mental
Health Services.
Councilmember Barnette
asked if they dealt with Alzheimer’s or dementia.
Ms. Skelton
replied not often. They do some consulting with nursing homes because a lot of
times the symptoms are similar in terms of some thought disorder pieces. There are some
differences in terms of aging related to dementia and thought disorders related to schizophrenia.
They typically work with care providers of Minnesota and the aging community. If they have
someone experiencing dementia they typically work with one of their partners for those services.
FRIDLEY CITY COUNCIL MEETING OF APRIL 24, 2017 PAGE 2
Councilmember Saefke
stated he thinks one of the main concerns citizens would have is they
do not accept people with a violent history or psychopaths or anybody who would create
problems for neighbors. Everyone has had problems or has known someone who has needed
help psychiatrically. There has always been a stigma with that and there really should not be.
Ms. Skelton
stated sometimes symptoms do come out in agitation and irritability. Those are
common symptoms that they see, and they certainly work with people around those symptoms;
but typically, it is more uncomfortable for the individual experiencing those symptoms than for
the people around them.
Mayor Lund
asked if there are any restrictions on if the person has a criminal background or a
tendency for violence that has resulted in criminal activity.
Ms. Skelton
replied, what the State of Minnesota has done for folks who have received
sentences based on activity related to their mental illness, is they actually get categorized as “MI
and D (Mentally Ill and Dangerous)” and they have a forensic team. Folks who have that
classification are actually very highly monitored. A lot of folks are at St. Peter or, if they are in
the community, they are monitored in terms of where they are at, who they are working with.
They typically do not accept folks who meet that classification. There are some specialized
programs in town with people having that diagnosis.
Mayor Lund
asked City staff, in going into this endeavor has there been any action by the
Council or the need for action for Touchstone to be able to do this, such as a special use permit, a
zoning restriction or anything like that.
Scott Hickok,
Community Development Director, replied they have had a number of discussions
with the folks at Touchstone. They are very comfortable this fits within the spectrum of care that
is provided at the hospital. There is a special use permit for the campus where this would be
considered under that umbrella.
Mayor Lund
asked so that special use permit always carries with the property and it can change
with the renter, in this case, Touchstone.
Mr. Hickok
replied that is correct.
Ms. Skelton
stated they are also very fortunate that many of their current Touchstone employees
actually live in Fridley. They are opening these opportunities up currently for their internal
employees first.
Mayor Lund
asked who people could contact if they were interested.
Ms. Skelton
replied they have their e-mails and addresses, Dr. Tou and her are both available to
talk or come out. They are going to be having a community meeting on May 16 that is for
anyone in the neighborhood who would like to come and talk to them. She believed it was at 7
p.m. at the Unity campus.
FRIDLEY CITY COUNCIL MEETING OF APRIL 24, 2017 PAGE 3
Councilmember Bolkcom
asked how they were reaching out to the neighborhood. She knows
there have been some concerns expressed and some letters. A lot of times this stuff happens
after the fact.
Ms. Skelton
replied they did send out letters within four miles to every residential address and
did publish the date and time of the community meeting. They will be having open houses, and
job fairs. It is a community partnership moving forward. They want to be part of the
community. They are also going to reach out to some of the local churches. In Bloomington the
nearby church has been very supportive in both welcoming their tenants to be parishioners and
local AA and NA groups have been really great as well and welcoming Touchstone clients and
really being there for their clients. They will be continuing the community build from now and
for the next ten years and hopefully on. They never plan to close communication. If something
happens in four months they could have another community meeting. They are always welcome
to address any problem that may come up.
Councilmember Bolkcom
asked whether Touchstone does any training for the community itself
to deal with mental health issues. Do they have any training for police officers?
Ms. Skelton
replied they partner with the Crisis Prevention Institute in Minnesota. It is also
called the Barbara Schneider Foundation, and they have a really great training for police. She
did forward some information, and they are going to connect on that as well. The other training
that they find very helpful is a suicide prevention training called QPR (Question, Persuade, and
Refer). They would be happy to bring any of those resources and do them in partnership with
the City or County. Part of their mission is to make sure there is public engagement around
mental health awareness and how they all respond individually.
Dr. Tou
stated she would also add that at their other facilities they have relationships with the
police and fire departments because they do want to keep everybody safe, not just the community
but their residents as well. They have relationships with them so if they have a missing person,
or need to transport someone to the hospital, they are aware. They plan on doing the same thing
in Fridley--develop a relationship with the Fridley Police and Fire Department.
Councilmember Bolkcom
asked if they could share their address in Minneapolis.
th
Ms. Skelton
replied, yes, it is in the Steward Neighborhood, 2516 East 25 Street. They have
been there about 25 years.
Councilmember Barnette
asked if a person is a resident in their program, do they have the
freedom to come and go as they wish or are they locked in.
Dr. Tou
replied, they are not a locked facility; but they do keep their doors locked and they are
residents. It is their home and they have a key where they can go in and out because they want
them to go to their appointments, have family members and case managers come and meet them.
They do have that because it is a voluntary program. However, they do have 24-hour staff there.
They are required to have at minimum two staff members present at any given time. So they
have a curfew and, when people enter the program, they ask them to not leave the facility within
FRIDLEY CITY COUNCIL MEETING OF APRIL 24, 2017 PAGE 4
the first 24 hours so they can fully assess them and develop a good plan. Then they earn passes,
i.e., a two hour-pass where they can go and do things. It gradually goes up from there.
Councilmember Bolkcom
asked had to sign out when they left and when they were expected to
be back.
Dr. Tou
replied, yes. It is very structured. They have to sign out. As soon as they come in,
Touchstone collects emergency information as to how they can reach them if they do not see
them at a certain time and who else they can call if they cannot reach them.
Councilmember Saefke
asked if they had volunteer opportunities.
Ms. Skelton
replied they do. They have many opportunities for folks.
Kathy Smith
, 7350 Melody Drive, stated she lives very close to Unity Hospital which has
changed and is now a mental health campus--very similar to replacing the old Anoka State
Hospital. It is no longer a community hospital. They received a notice on Saturday and she was
very surprised because she had put a ton of money into her house, she is doing landscaping, and
now she finds out that the old nursing home (and there is probably more need for nursing home
and elder care than there is for mental health) is being turned into this center. According to their
website it is for adults with a serious mental health diagnosis who will be struggling with
substance abuse disorders.
Ms. Smith
stated she has no problem with doing some kind of residential treatment center, but
they are plopping it right into the community. Her property value will probably go down as
Unity Hospital turns into a mental health facility, and now they have this facility.
Ms. Smith
stated she is not happy. She was just notified of this on Saturday, and she is sure her
neighbors will not be happy because they are so close to that. If anyone goes out and they have
substance abuse problems, and they decide they want to use again, they can walk right into the
neighborhood, they can do anything they want to do. It is not a lock down; and the
representative made a comment there are two staff members and if something happens they can
revisit it.
Ms. Smith
stated whoever signed the special use permit, they did not talk to the residents. She is
not happy.
Mayor Lund
said they did not address her concern adequately. He suggested she attend
Touchstone’s meeting on May 12.
Ms. Smith
asked what she could do. She tried to find out what her rights are as a citizen who is
supporting Unity Hospital through her tax dollars. What rights do they have for Allina to decide
what they are going to do with their buildings? She is trying to find that out. It appears they
have no rights, and Allina can do whatever they want, like leasing this building out for ten years,
not informing anyone in the community, including the City, that they are choosing to do this.
FRIDLEY CITY COUNCIL MEETING OF APRIL 24, 2017 PAGE 5
Mayor Lund
replied, well, their rights as citizens and the Council is to, if they find there is a
reason not to issue a change in zoning for which there has not been one. He asked how long the
special use permit has been in place.
Scott Hickok,
Community Development Director, replied he believed the 1970s.
Mayor Lund
said it is zoned correctly. Their business is a legal business. They are not doing
anything illegal. They have rights, too, as to having a business; and he thinks the need is quite
great.
Ms. Smith
stated she thinks there is a need to support the elderly people in the community, too.
The question is has the Council looked at the crime rate since Unity Hospital has changed their
campus to be more mental health? Last Tuesday she went to a Health Partners meeting at the
Unity Educational Building, and the presenter from Health Partners said the police with the dogs
were there, and they put someone in handcuffs. Is crime going up in the area because of how the
hospital is operating?
Ms. Smith
stated she just put a ton of money into her house, and she should have just sold and
moved into another community that was not as close to an Allina system that can do whatever
they want to do.
Mayor Lund
stated she still has the very nice benefit of having a full hospital. The only thing
they have taken away from Unity Hospital is the baby unit.
Ms. Smith
stated she supports a team of nurse anesthetists. They are going to have a very small
emergency room. Their same day surgery center is minimizing and is moving to Mercy. It is
going to have a mental health focus.
Councilmember Barnette
read for Ms. Smith, “Unity campus will remain committed to
working closely with the community it serves to provide the healthcare needs of the area well
into the future. The hospital and staff will continue to provide a variety of health services on the
campus, including emergency services, inpatient, outpatient medical and surgical care and
outpatient services, such as labs, therapy, and radiology.”
Ms. Smith
stated they are making it smaller. The campus is changing.
Councilmember Barnette
stated as one of the largest hospitals in the Twin Cities area, the
Unity campus serves more than 150,000 patients yearly.
Ms. Smith
stated if you go into Unity Hospital right now you will see that it has definitely
changed.
Councilmember Saefke
said the building he is talking about, half of it was for addiction and the
other half was for mental illness; and it had been for quite a while, at least 12, 15 years - ever
since it was an old folks home.
FRIDLEY CITY COUNCIL MEETING OF APRIL 24, 2017 PAGE 6
Ms. Smith
replied, but before then it was an old folks home and Unity ran it. She knows all
about Unity as her dad was on the Unity board for years and years. He was one of the founders
of the hospital. What bothers her as a citizen is this was just dumped on them. It was not Unity
saying we are going to lease this building to someone with severe mental illnesses. They are
right; everyone has a family member that has a severe mental illness. She gets that but this was
just dropped on them, and she probably would not have put the money into her home knowing
this.
Councilmember Saefke
stated to Ms. Smith, if her next door neighbor rented out their home,
she would not have a say in who they rented it to, would she?
Ms. Smith
replied, she would have to look at the laws about renting a house and what her rights
were to have a renter next to her; and she thinks there are some rules around that.
Councilmember Saefke
replied, he does not think so.
Mayor Lund
replied they would have to have a license to rent.
Councilmember Saefke
said Fridley is home to the largest Alcoholics Anonymous group in the
entire state. He lives in that neighborhood and it has not influenced his property values one bit.
Ms. Smith
replied,the AA group is one group and they have moved buildings, and she is aware
of that. She has lived in Fridley a long time. Her great-grandfather was one of the first residents.
Mayor Lund
stated it is a little soon but he is going to ask the Police Department about crime
rates in that neighborhood.
Councilmember Bolkcom
suggested to Ms. Smith she go out to one of Touchstone’s other
facilities and see what it is like.
APPROVAL OF PROPOSED CONSENT AGENDA:
APPROVAL OF MINUTES:
City Council Meeting of March 27, 2017
APPROVED.
NEW BUSINESS:
1. Resolution Requesting a Variance from State-Aid Rule 8820.280, Subpart 2A, for
Project ST2016-01 (MnDOT SAP 127-050-021).
Wally Wysopal
, City Manager, stated this is to allow for a retroactive project start date for the
2016 Street Reconstruction Project. This allows the City to go backwards to get the funding for
that project from State Aid.
FRIDLEY CITY COUNCIL MEETING OF APRIL 24, 2017 PAGE 7
THIS ITEM WAS REMOVED FROM THE CONSENT AGENDA AND PLACED ON
THE REGULAR AGENDA.
st
2. Receive Bids and Award Contract for 71 Avenue Water Main Project No. 513
(Ward 1).
Mr. Wysopal
stated this is to award the contract to Land Pride Construction in the amount
$243,026.50.
APPROVED.
3. Approve Joint Powers Agreement between the City of Fridley and Anoka County
for a Traffic Signal Reconstruction at County State Aid Highway 1 (East River
Road) and County State Aid Highway 6 (Mississippi Street) (Ward 3).
Mr. Wysopal
stated the City’s proportional share is projected to be $193,000 based on the
engineer’s estimate; and it is determined by State Aid policy as a formula. The County is the
lead on this project and will know the City’s contribution following those bids.
THIS ITEM WAS REMOVED FROM THE CONSENT AGENDA AND PLACED ON
THE REGULAR AGENDA.
4. Approve 2017-2018 Liquor License Renewals.
APPROVED.
5. Licenses.
APPROVED.
6. Claims (176150 – 176460).
Councilmember Bolkcom
asked what the $19,000 sign for Springbrook was for.
Mr. Wysopal
replied that is the sign at Springbrook. The donations were provided by Financial
One Credit Union. That covers the cost of the sign and then some.
Councilmember Bolkcom
asked as to office/warehouse lease deposit what did they lease for
$3,225. The vendor is Ellis SPE.
Mr. Wysopal
replied that is for temporary storage of Public Works equipment as a part of the
City’s reconstruction project.
James Kosluchar
, Public Works Director, replied the City has a lease for 4,200 square feet of
interior space for material storage to be moved out as part of the demolition for the Municipal
Center. They had to put a deposit down to secure the location.
FRIDLEY CITY COUNCIL MEETING OF APRIL 24, 2017 PAGE 8
Councilmember Bolkcom
asked what the canine agility equipment for $11,000 was for.
Mr. Wysopal
replied his best guess would be it is for the supply and equipment they use to train
the new canine the City just purchased. He said he would verify that with Chief Weierke.
APPROVED.
ADOPTION OF PROPOSED CONSENT AGENDA:
Councilmember Bolkcom
requested that Item Nos. 1 and 3 be removed and placed on the
regular agenda.
MOTION
by Councilmember Barnette to adopt the proposed consent agenda with the removal
of Item Nos. 1 and 3. Seconded by Councilmember Varichak.
UPON A VOICE VOTE, ALL VOTING AYE, MAYOR LUND DECLARED THE
MOTION CARRIED UNANIMOUSLY.
OPEN FORUM, VISITORS:
Ken McConkey,
Fridley resident, said he was there to be a statistic. It is getting to be some
difficult times out there. He lives really close to the dog shooting that occurred last Friday. The
block he lives on is infested with little kids. You shoot a gun, bullets bounce. He said he was a
ranger in Vietnam. The way things are politically and nationally, it is going to be a long hot
summer. People are thinking they are going to take things into their own hands.
Mr. McConkey
stated regardless of what laws are on the books, it always comes down to this
capricious word, policy. What is Fridley’s policy about when somebody gets stopped? Are the
police allowed to ask them where they are from? Let me see your ID? Are you here legally?
Do you have gang tattoos all up and down your body and, if so, we are going to kind of check
you out. Or, is it, well, we cannot do that?
Mayor Lund
replied his first discussion should be with the Police Department and the Chief in
particular. He does not know without looking at a policy manual exactly what is the policy.
Every situation is different. Fridley’s Police Department for the last year and a half has been on
a really good track to be more engaged with the public. The police officers have really engaged
the public in a number of different ways. In fact, they were sitting in their conference meeting
earlier tonight getting an update from the Chief of Police.
Mr. McConkey
stated to Mayor Lund his opinion is the Police are serious about it and are on
the right track.
Mayor Lund
replied there is no doubt about it. Our officers are excellent and they are very
serious. They talk about de-escalation and other use of force equipment that is newer technology
rather than using an actual gun. Every time they touch a person they have to complete a Use of
FRIDLEY CITY COUNCIL MEETING OF APRIL 24, 2017 PAGE 9
Force form so everything is documented very heavily. He asked Mr. McConkey if he wanted to
know if the police could ask if someone was an illegal alien.
Mr. McConkey
asked if they are allowed to ask that in Fridley?
Mayor Lund
replied they do not ask that by policy. There is a lot of discussion at the State
Legislature right now.
Mr. McConkey
said so Fridley is a sanctuary city.
Mayor Lund
replied, no, it was not. There was a lot of discussion about Real ID and one of the
reasons why Minnesota has been a hold-out state, and there have been 46 or 48 states who have
already accepted Real ID, is because there have a been a number of illegal people here who do
not have the green card and they do not want to exclude those people all the time with ID. They
do require they have ID to find out who they are dealing with. They will ask if you are an illegal
alien only if it is appropriate for the situation.
Mr. McConkey
asked what an appropriate situation would be.
Mayor Lund
replied his first conversation should be with the Police Department.
Attorney Erickson
stated because it is a policy-driven type question and they do not have a
manual in front of them, it is a conversation that is probably appropriate with Chief Weierke who
has current policies.
Mr. McConkey
asked if the City Council controlled the attitude. He is fully aware that
nowadays you cannot say anything about anybody because, if they belong to any group, if you
point out the attitude of one person, you are indicting the entire group.
Mr. Wysopal
asked Mr. McConkey he could leave his name and number with Mr. Hickok and
they can have Chief Weierke in touch with him.
ADOPTION OF AGENDA:
MOTION
by Councilmember Bolkcom to approve the agenda with the addition of Item Nos. 1
and 3. Seconded by Councilmember Saefke.
UPON A VOICE VOTE, ALL VOTING AYE, MAYOR LUND DECLARED THE
MOTION CARRIED UNANIMOUSLY.
NEW BUSINESS:
7. Receive Bids and Award Contract for the 2017 Street Improvement Project No.
ST2017-01.
FRIDLEY CITY COUNCIL MEETING OF APRIL 24, 2017 PAGE 10
Jim Kosluchar
, Public Works Director,stated this includes 1.9 centerline miles of street
rehabilitation. About a quarter of a mile is full reconstruction, and the remainder is largely mill
and overlay because of some very thick pavements.
Mr. Kosluchar
stated this is just north of 694, east of Highway 65, and west of Matterhorn. The
mill and overlay is a 2-inch section and 6-8 inches of reclaim with 3.5 inches of asphalt. That is
typical with the City’s street projects. Watermain is on Hackmann, Fillmore, and Regis. They
will have area-wide hydrant replacement as part of this project. Utility manhole and valve
adjustment, storm sewer catch basin replacement, CenterPoint gas main replacement in certain
segments, and a construction completion date of September 30.
Mr. Kosluchar
stated the project budget was $1.39 million. The final engineer’s estimate was
$1.037 million. They had a bid letting on April 19. They received four bids, and all four were
below the estimate. The low bid was provided by Northwest Asphalt for $809,277. They did a
back calculation on the assessment, and they are estimating a reduction of roughly $300 per
single-family residential assessment or about 15 percent below their projections.
Mr. Kosluchar
stated Northwest Asphalt in Shakopee, Minnesota, has performed well as the
general contractor on several recent street projects, including the 2016 street rehabilitation
project in the Plymouth neighborhood. They did very well and finished on time even with some
inclement weather that slowed them down a little bit.
Mr. Kosluchar
stated the sewer main and manhole spot repairs will be performed by City staff.
In addition to the contractor’s work, they will have some storm water quality upgrades that the
City will be investigating and working on into the future. There is a treatment system in the
middle of the project, and the City has begun a feasibility analysis with some Rice Creek
Watershed District funding. They may have some ash tree removal under the EAB plan. They
want to do that prior to the last pavement going down where they can. They will not include the
Safe Routes to School improvements although they have laid those out and planned for them.
Mr. Kosluchar
stated staff recommends Council move to receive the bids for the street project
and award it to Northwest Asphalt of Shakopee. If approved, staff will secure contracts with
Northwest Asphalt after signature and obtain the necessary paperwork, hold a pre-construction
meeting, and the property owners in the project area will be notified of the intended schedule.
Some work was begun by CenterPoint this morning. Staff will be mailing out notice tomorrow
with their initial notice of award on the project.
Mayor Lund
asked if this is the contractor from about five or six years ago the City had
problems with.
Mr. Kosluchar
replied, no, it is not.
MOTION
by Councilmember Varichak to receive bids and award contract for the 2017 Street
Improvement Project No. ST2017-01 to Northwest Asphalt, Shakopee, Minnesota, in the amount
of $809,277.39. Seconded by Councilmember Barnette.
FRIDLEY CITY COUNCIL MEETING OF APRIL 24, 2017 PAGE 11
UPON A VOICE VOTE, ALL VOTING AYE, MAYOR LUND DECLARED THE
MOTION CARRIED UNANIMOUSLY.
8. Resolution Ordering a Negative Declaration on the Columbia Arena Area
Redevelopment Environmental Assessment Worksheet (EAW).
Scott Hickok
, Community Development Director,the resolution is a decision of record on the
EAW. The EAW is an Environmental Worksheet the City has prepared on the Locke Park
Pointe development or the former Columbia Arena site. Through the analysis, a determination
was made that the Environmental Worksheet would be adequate and that an Environmental
Impact Statement (EIS) would not be required.
Mr. Hickok
stated the City is the responsible governmental unit and is responsible that the
environmental elements of this project have been thoroughly considered, that they follow the
State rules, and that it makes sure that if there is any sort of environmental impact on this
development, the City does what is necessary to mitigate the impact.
Mr. Hickok
stated the City has had help from Amy Denz, from Wenck. With the City being the
RGU, they wanted to bring on other experts to provide an objective view of the environmental
issues on this site, and Ms. Denz has done that for the City.
Mr. Hickok
stated Council received a complete summary of the questions that were asked and
also the answers the City provided which essentially draws to the conclusion that the
environmental impacts on this site were not great enough to cause an EIS to move forward.
Mr. Hickok
stated originally they were talking about 1,142 residential units and maybe having
units and selling air space above City Hall and Public Works and having a much more dense
development. With that would come more trips. Traffic would have a different picture. Once
the City had scaled back and understood better what the site would be in terms of an ultimate
development layout, staff went back and revisited the EAW, giving the public another
opportunity to make comments. Through that process, they contacted the EPA, the MPCA, the
Army Corps of Engineers, and the Historical Society. They advertised and encouraged residents
to respond and certainly answer any questions they have.
Mr. Hickok
stated there is a letter in the Council’s packet from the Minnesota Historical Society
that had asked about the City doing a survey. Jon Lennander, Assistant Public Works Director,
did a phenomenal job of shepherding this EAW through the process and working closely with
Ms. Denz. He wrote a letter in response to the Minnesota Historical Society’s letter. Today Mr.
Lennander received a letter from the Minnesota Historical Society, which should be received into
the record. The letter says that after further analysis, they determined that a historical survey is
not necessary. The ground was disturbed not once, but twice, since its origin, so artifacts that
might have been there likely would not exist today.
Mr. Hickok
stated the Resolution essentially says that the EAW and findings of fact related to
this documentation and process point to the fact that the findings, based on the Rules 4410.1700,
the City of Fridley finds that the proposed Columbia Arena redevelopment does not have the
FRIDLEY CITY COUNCIL MEETING OF APRIL 24, 2017 PAGE 12
potential for significant environmental impacts; consequently, the City of Fridley issues a
negative declaration on the Environmental Assessment Worksheet and does not require
preparation of an Environmental Impact Statement for the Columbia Arena Area Redevelopment
Project. Attached also they have comment letters, the City’s responses back, Council meeting
minutes, and the resolution for their consideration.
Amy Denz
, Wenck Associates, stated she has enjoyed working with the City staff. They did a
thorough job because of the exchange of information. They were able to update the first EAW
with traffic studies and new information and put it back out for public review and address
comments they received the first time around in the second EAW. That helped minimize
comments from the public the second time around.
Councilmember Bolkcom
said in the third paragraph of the Historical Society’s letter, it says
“Please note this comment letter does not address the requirements of Section 106 of the
National Historic Preservation.” The City is not asking for any federal financial assistance, so
this is not an issue.
Mr. Hickok
replied that is correct.
MOTION
by Councilmember Saefke to receive the letter from the Minnesota Historical Society
dated April 20, 2017. Seconded by Councilmember Varichak.
UPON A VOICE VOTE, ALL VOTING AYE, MAYOR LUND DECLARED THE
MOTION CARRIED UNANIMOUSLY.
Councilmember Bolkcom
asked, as to page 81, the City is continuing to look at transportation
facilities. They are addressing things here but know there is still a lot up in the air.
Mr. Kosluchar
replied there are a number of things to be addressed but they can all be
addressed through permitting and then coordination. For example, transportation with the Met
Council comment about bus service. How that works out depends entirely on what the private
development is going to be and will really drive the need for Met Council coordination.
Ms. Denz
stated the EAW is essentially kind of the City’s first step. It is an informative
document to provide information to the decision makers. Once they have decided this is
adequate with the resolution presented tonight, the next step would be working with the agencies
on all the permitting. That is where all of the specific items are going to be sorted out.
Councilmember Bolkcom
asked once this resolution is passed, is there anyone who would
come back and say, no, you guys are wrong and you need to do more?
Mr. Hickok
replied, from here what happens is the City will notify the Environmental Quality
Board that Council has acted with this declaration and that they would publish. Somebody could
upon publication, come back and ask questions on the EAW; but the point of this whole process
was to enable the public to come in to speak and get their comments not only on record but have
a solid response to it and recognition that, as they have said, this is a start to the process. After
FRIDLEY CITY COUNCIL MEETING OF APRIL 24, 2017 PAGE 13
this declaration has been published, that puts an end to the environmental study in terms of the
study itself and then allows them to move forward with some of the other land use actions that
are pending. According to State law, the City cannot move ahead with something like the plat
until they have done the declaration and until Council has made a decision on the EIS.
MOTION
by Councilmember Barnette to adopt Resolution No. 2017-14. Seconded by
Councilmember Varichak.
UPON A VOICE VOTE, ALL VOTING AYE, MAYOR LUND DECLARED THE
MOTION CARRIED UNANIMOUSLY.
9. Resolution Regarding the Acceptance of Property from the Fridley Housing and
Redevelopment Authority.
Scott Hickok,
Community Development Director,stated this is also related to Locke Park
Pointe. It is the approval of the land transfer from the Fridley HRA to the City Council. It is the
intention of the HRA through this action to give the City’s portion to the City. The new city hall
will be built on property that the City currently owns and land will accommodate private
development as well.
Mr. Hickok
stated in order to facilitate new construction and allow the future transfer of
property, the City is going to replat the property into seven parcels. The new plat will carve out
the lot needed for the municipal campus, the storm pond amenity, parkway, and areas to
accommodate private development.
Mr. Hickok
stated it is staff’s recommendation to have Council adopt the resolution accepting
the parcel from the HRA. It facilitates platting to create lots needed by the HRA for
development, and allows the City to break ground in May.
MOTION
by Councilmember Saefke Adopting Resolution No. 2017-15. Seconded by
Councilmember Bolkcom.
UPON A VOICE VOTE, ALL VOTING AYE, MAYOR LUND DECLARED THE
MOTION CARRIED UNANIMOUSLY.
1. Resolution Requesting a Variance from State-Aid Rule 8820.280, Subpart 2A, for
Project ST2016-01 (MnDOT SAP 127-050-021).
Councilmember Bolkcom
asked if there was any chance MnDOT would not approve this
resolution and, if so, what happens?
Walter Wysopal,
City Manager,replied this is MnDOT’s proposal so he would assume this is
moving forward based on their policies.
Jim Kosluchar,
Public Works Director, said this was requested by MnDOT and the language
was already submitted to them in draft form.
FRIDLEY CITY COUNCIL MEETING OF APRIL 24, 2017 PAGE 14
MOTION
by Councilmember Bolkcom to adopt Resolution No. 2017-13. Seconded by
Councilmember Saefke.
UPON A VOICE VOTE, ALL VOTING AYE, MAYOR LUND DECLARED THE
MOTION CARRIED UNANIMOUSLY.
3. Approve Joint Powers Agreement between the City of Fridley and Anoka County
for a Traffic Signal Reconstruction at County State Aid Highway 1 (East River
Road) and County State Aid Highway 6 (Mississippi Street) (Ward 3).
Councilmember Bolkcom
asked if there will be a flashing left turn.
Mr. Kosluchar
replied he believed so. He anticipated her question but he was unable to reach
someone who reads the electrical blueprints better than he can. He does see something in there
that indicates it. He will get back to Council and let them know.
Councilmember Bolkcom
said this is an ongoing question people have. When they look at the
number of cars that can get through there going both directions, it is one thing, she knows they
always want to move the traffic on East River Road, but there still is that backlog of people.
They have talked to the County engineers about stacking there and like two cars can get through
and then two or three others go through after its red. Maybe they could also look at a traffic
count when they are doing this.
Councilmember Bolkcom
referred to page 16. As to the second paragraph from the bottom, she
asked whether this could go higher than $208,430?
Mr. Kosluchar
replied, yes, the project will be bid. They are hoping it will be bid below
estimate and, in that case, their capital improvement allocation would be whole. The
contingency there is our piece of the improvements is State Aid eligible. If it came in at
$300,000 staff would have enough concern for rebidding and would encourage the County to do
that and probably come back to Council for some recommendation or resolution to compel that.
However, if it is a few thousand dollars over $200,000, the City can allocate State Aid allotment
for the excess.
Councilmember Bolkcom
asked when this would happen and how long will it take.
Mr. Kosluchar
replied he thought it would take ten weeks, and they would start around June 1
or mid-June.
Councilmember Bolkcom
asked if there would be lane closures.
Mayor Lund
stated this is a county road north and south, and it is a county road, Mississippi, to
the east. He assumed that is a city street to the west of that intersection. He said the City cost
share is almost 50 percent. He asked why it was not less.
FRIDLEY CITY COUNCIL MEETING OF APRIL 24, 2017 PAGE 15
Mr. Kosluchar
replied, it is actually a County policy, a County cost-share agreement. This is a
long-standing policy, and he can tell him this has not been revamped in his tenure with the
exception of maybe some language to clarify; but it is basically the same as it has been. He
cannot tell him when it absolutely originated. He does not think it is atypical. He knows other
cities have to abide with this policy as well.
Mayor Lund
stated unless the policy gets changed it is not really fair.
Mr. Kosluchar
replied, correct. One of the confusing things is if you have an intersection, 25
percent, it makes sense; but he reverts back to the County’s policy where the local pays half the
cost of each leg of the intersection regardless of whose jurisdiction it is and then the full cost of
its own. He believed the reason for that is the County Road can survive without intersections,
without the cross streets. Generally those are initiated by the cities. He kind of understands it
but he likens it to a driveway. The driveway is the cost of the property owner, not the cost of the
City; and the driveway apron and the curb cut and everything else that goes into creating a
driveway that is an off-street access.
Mr. Wysopal
stated the formula for concrete curb and gutter is 50/50 between the County and
the City and probably the majority of County roadways are rural. We, in southern part of Anoka
County need to pay for curb and gutter that is not our road. However, because we are more of an
urban environment that requires storm sewers, we have to pay for that curb and gutter. You can
question that policy at the County level he believed.
MOTION
by Councilmember Bolkcom to approve the Joint Powers Agreement between the
City of Fridley and Anoka County for a Traffic Signal Reconstruction at County State Aid
Highway 1 (East River Road) and County State Aid Highway 6 (Mississippi Street) (Ward 3).
Seconded by Councilmember Saefke.
UPON A VOICE VOTE, ALL VOTING AYE, MAYOR LUND DECLARED THE
MOTION CARRIED UNANIMOUSLY.
9. Informal Status Reports.
st
Councilmember Saefke
stated on 41 Avenue and East River Road going south someone is
laying pipe. He asked whose pipe it was?
Mr. Kosluchar
replied that is CenterPoint doing work. They must lay new pipe to get out of the
way for new Met Council pipe. They will have a fourth Met Council project in fewer than four
years and in probably two years that will be running a new 96-inch interceptor in front of
Minneapolis Waterworks and along East River Road.
Councilmember Bolkcom
asked Mr. Kosluchar to update them on the project with Met
Council.
Mr. Kosluchar
replied the NEI5 project is the one over at Community Park, and the contractor
should be mobilizing right now to get the final grading/seeding down. Basically clean up the
FRIDLEY CITY COUNCIL MEETING OF APRIL 24, 2017 PAGE 16
fencing, take down temporary traffic control, and pave the Anoka County pathway around the
pond.
th
Mr. Kosluchar
stated as to the project on 69 Avenue, that is wrapping up as well. They have a
little more final repair work to do and take down their bypass piping, etc.
Mr. Kosluchar
stated largely the Springbrook project is done in Fridley. The majority of that
project is in Coon Rapids and he does not know their status.
Mr. Kosluchar
stated the work on I-94 is also associated with the Community Park project.
They will be bypassing for a while there. That piece probably will not be completed until mid-
summer.
Mr. Kosluchar
stated people can go to the Met Council website for more current updates.
Councilmember Saefke
stated he sees they have started to build the bridge on I-694 and Main
Street. He asked Mr. Kosluchar if he had a timetable for when that will be complete?
Mr. Kosluchar
replied they had a lane reduction on westbound 694. They expect that to flip
over to the eastbound lanes next week. They need to do that for their crane to drive piles. The
piles should be completed on the north side as of today. There is some additional work they
have to do with pouring, etc. but the noisiest work on that north side will be done. The bridge
setting itself is scheduled for approximately mid-July; and there will likely be an overnight, over
the weekend, closure that will be a small portion of a day. It will be coordinated with the I-94
project which was not necessarily contemplated with this project. MnDOT is aware of it.
Mr. Kosluchar
stated he did get word Anoka County will be doing some paving on East River
Road, north of Fridley, generally. It actually will encroach Fridley a little bit. You can also get
construction updates from Anoka County’s website. They will also try and post something on
Fridley’s website.
ADJOURN:
MOTION
by Councilmember Barnette to adjourn. Seconded by Councilmember Varichak.
UPON A VOICE VOTE, ALL VOTING AYE, MAYOR LUND DECLARED THE
MOTION CARRIED UNANIMOUSLY AND THE MEETING ADJOURNED AT
8:47 P.M.
Respectfully submitted by,
Denise M. Johnson Scott J. Lund
Recording Secretary Mayor