HomeMy WebLinkAbout2020-01-07 City Council Minutes Regular MeetingMINUTES
OF THE REGULAR MEETING OF THE
EDINA CITY COUNCIL
HELD AT CITY HALL
JANUARY 7, 2020
7:00 P.M.
I. CALL TO ORDER
Mayor Hovland called the meeting to order at 7:00 p.m.
II. ROLLCALL
Answering rollcall were Members Anderson, Brindle, Fischer, Hovland.
Absent: Staunton.
III. PLEDGE OF ALLEGIANCE
IV. MEETING AGENDA APPROVED AS AMENDED
Member Fischer made a motion, seconded by Member Brindle, to approve the meeting
agenda as amended to reorder the agenda and consider Items VIII.C., West 72nd Street
Pedestrian Safety Assessment Engagement Report, and VIII.B., Dockless Bicycle and Scooter
Sharing Pilot Program Update, prior to Item VIII.A., Resolution No. 2019-111: Prospect Knolls
A Neighborhood Roadway Reconstruction, Improvement No. BA-458.
Ayes: Anderson, Brindle, Fischer, Hovland
Motion carried.
V.A. COMMUNITY COMMENT
Andy Brown, 5512 Park Place, addressed the Council.
Frank Lorenz, 7151 York Avenue South, addressed the Council.
V.B. CITY MANAGER'S RESPONSE TO COMMUNITY COMMENTS
Manager Neal responded to past Community Comments.
VI. CONSENT AGENDA ADOPTED AS AMENDED
Member Fischer made a motion, seconded by Member Brindle, approving the consent agenda
as revised to remove Items VI.E., Resolution No. 2020-03: Designating Official Newspaper for
2020, as follows:
VI.A. Approve minutes of the December 17, 2019, Work Session and Regular Meeting
VI.B. Approve payment claims for Check Register Claims Pre-List Dated December 19,
2019-January 2, 2020, totaling $4,382,682.32 and Electronic Payment Register Dated
December 19, 2019-January 2, 2020, totaling $308,675.67
VI.C. Adopt Ordinance No. 2020-01; Authorizing Community Health Board Grant Contract
Agreement with Minnesota Department of Health
VI.D. Adopt Resolution No. 2020-02; Authorizing Execution of Hennepin County Healthy
Tree Canopy Grant Agreement
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VI.F. Adopt Resolution No. 2020-04; Signatory Resolution
VI.G. Adopt Resolution No. 2020-05; Designation of Director and Alternate Director of
Suburban Rate Authority
VI.H. Adopt Resolution No. 2020-06; Designation of Director and Alternate Director of
LOGIS
VI.I. Adopt Resolution No. 2020-07; Designating Official Depositories
VI.J. Adopt Resolution No. 2020-08; Appointment to Edina Firefighters Relief Association
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Minutes/Edina City Council/January 7, 2020
VI.K. Adopt Resolution No. 2020-09; Authorizing Facsimile Signatures by Public Officials
VI.L. Adopt Resolution No. 2020-10; Appointing Responsible Authority and Assigning Duties
for Data Practices
VI.M. Set 2020 Date for Board of Appeal and Equalization
VI.N. Request for Purchase; awarding the bid to the recommended low bidder, Dulevo
Sweeper, Hardline Equipment, $264,119.90
VI.O. Request for Purchase; awarding the bid to the recommended low bidder, Carbon Media
Odor Control Replacement, Continental Carbon Group, Inc., $100,350.00
VI.P. Request for Purchase; awarding the bid to the recommended low bidder, Engineering
Services for Ammonia Room, AE2S, Inc., $26,650.00
VI.Q. Request for Purchase; awarding the bid to the recommended low bidder, Engineering
Services for Community Center Tower Rehabilitation, Bolton and Menk, Inc.,
$61,000.00
VI.R. Request for Purchase; awarding the bid to the recommended low bidder, Six 2020 Ford
Police Interceptor Explorer Vehicles, Tenvoorde Motor Company, $207,831.36
VI.S. Approve Certificate of Completion for Hawthorne Condos
VI.T. Approve Encroachment Agreement for 5821 Vernon Lane
VI.U. Approve Traffic Safety Report of December 3, 2019
VI.V. Approve 2020 Board and Commission Reappointments
VI.W. Approve Out-of-State Travel for Mayor Hovland
VI.X. Adopt Resolution No. 2020-12; Accepting Donations
Rollcall:
Ayes: Anderson, Brindle, Fischer, Hovland
Motion carried.
ITEM REMOVED FROM CONSENT AGENDA
VI.E. RESOLUTION NO. 2020-03: DESIGNATING OFFICIAL NEWSPAPER FOR 2020 —ADOPTED
The Council spoke about distribution of the Edina Sun Current and if it reached enough residents to be
designated as the official newspaper. Residents were encouraged to request its delivery.
Member Brindle introduced and moved adoption of Resolution No. 2020-03: Designating
Official Newspaper for 2020. Member Fischer seconded the motion.
Ayes: Anderson, Brindle, Fischer, Hovland
Motion carried.
VII. PUBLIC HEARINGS HELD — Affidavits of Notice presented and ordered placed on file.
VII.A. HOMEWOOD SUITES LIQUOR LICENSE SUSPENSION — APPROVED
Clerk Allison stated on November 20, 2019, alcohol was sold to an under 2 I -year-old police decoy during
an alcohol compliance check by the Edina Police Department. This was Homewood Suites' second offense
within 24 months and the presumptive civil penalty was a 3-day liquor license suspension and $1,000 fine.
Staff recommended January I 0-12 for the 3-day suspension and that Homewood Suites decide how to notify
their customers of the 3-day suspension through posting notice on entry doors and where alcohol was in
plain sight of customers.
Lt. Conboy shared background on the compliance failure and answered questions related to the compliance
check. The Council noted staff informed license holders of upcoming compliance checks as a practice and
that the failure was disappointing for the hotel as well.
Mayor Hovland opened the public hearing at 7:18 p.m.
Public Testimony
Joshua Clark, Homewood Suites, addressed the Council.
Member Fischer made a motion, seconded by Member Anderson, to close the public hearing.
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Minutes/Edina City Council/January 7, 2020
Ayes: Ayes: Anderson, Brindle, Fischer, Hovland
Motion carried.
Member Fischer made a motion, seconded by Member Brindle, approving Homewood Suites,
6600 York Avenue, 3-day liquor license suspension and $1,000 fine for their second liquor
license offense within 24 months.
Ayes: Ayes: Anderson, Brindle, Fischer, Hovland
Motion carried.
VII.B. RESOLUTION NO. 2020-11 PRELIMINARY AND FINAL PLAT AND VARIANCES FOR 4625
LEXINGTON AVENUE — ADOPTED
Community Development Director Teague shared David and Jessica Lindberg were proposing to subdivide
their property at 4625 Lexington into two lots. The existing home on the lot would be torn down and two
new homes built on the new parcels with both lots accessed off Lexington Avenue. This lot was originally
platted as two lots and the applicants were proposing to restore the original plat. He outlined the requested
variances and said staff recommended approval due to the large wetland and that the request was reasonable
for the immediate neighborhood, then outlined the details of the preliminary and final plat, lot width
variances from 75 feet to 60 feet for both lots, and lot area variances from 9,306 square feet to 8,106 and
8,128 square feet.
Jessica Lindberg, proponent, shared comments regarding the request and said they felt the action would
return the lot to its intended lot size and match the character of those in the immediate neighborhood. She
thanked the neighbors for their support of the request and referenced how the action would support the
City's Comprehensive Plan.
Mayor Hovland opened the public hearing at 7:29 p.m.
Public Testimony
No one appeared.
Member Fischer made a motion, seconded by Member Brindle, to close the public hearing.
Ayes: Ayes: Anderson, Brindle, Fischer, Hovland
Motion carried.
Member Anderson introduced and moved adoption of Resolution No. 2020-11 approving
preliminary and final plats with variances for 4625 Lexington Avenue. Member Fischer seconded
the motion.
Rollcall:
Ayes: Anderson, Brindle, Fischer, Hovland
Motion carried.
VIII. REPORTS/RECOMMENDATIONS
VIII.A. RESOLUTION NO. 2019-111, PROSPECT KNOLLS A NEIGHBORHOOD ROADWAY
RECONSTRUCTION, IMPROVEMENT NO. BA-458
This item was considered following Agenda Item VIII.B.
VIII.B. DOCKLESS BICYCLE AND SCOOTER SHARING PILOT PROGRAM UPDATE
This item was considered following Agenda Item VIII.C.
VIII.C. WEST 72ND STREET PEDESTRIAN SAFETY ASSESSMENT ENGAGEMENT REPORT —
RECEIVED STAFF RECOMMENDATION APPROVED
Transportation Planner Scipioni stated staff worked with residents in the South Cornelia neighborhood to
develop a trial assessment of pedestrian safety improvements that could be implemented along West 72nd
Street. The City's public engagement followed protocols developed by the International Association for
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Minutes/Edina City Council/January 7, 2020
Public Participation. Better Together Edina, the City's online engagement platform, allowed residents to
participate in the process online the same way individuals participate at in-person meetings. In addition to
collecting resident feedback, staff collected traffic data during this assessment to compare vehicle speeds and
compliance with all-way stops on West 72nd Street. After consideration of input from residents, Edina Public
School and the collected traffic data, staff did not recommend installing permanent curb extensions at the
intersections of West 72nd Street and Cornelia Drive or Oaklawn Avenue. The data clearly showed the
measure did not have the desired impact on vehicle speeds or stop sign compliance and was generally
unsupported by the adjacent residents. He spoke about engagement on Better Together Edina and pop-up
meetings and how results lacked support to permanently install pavement markings and curb extensions as
it had negative impacts for school buses. Mr. Scipioni shared data on stop sign compliance and future
recommendations that included minimum roadway widths be implemented per the Living Streets Plan and
how facilities recommended by the Pedestrian and Bike Master Plan should be prioritized to improve safety
and consider additional engagement in the future.
Member Brindle made a motion, seconded by Member Fischer, to approve staff's
recommendation not to install permanent curb extensions at West 72nd Street and Cornelia
Drive or Oaklawn Avenue.
Ayes: Anderson, Brindle, Fischer, Hovland
Motion carried.
DOCKLESS BICYCLE AND SCOOTER SHARING PILOT PROGRAM UPDATE — RECEIVED
STAFF RECOMMENDATION APPROVED
Mr. Scipioni stated given the recent emergence of bicycle- and scooter-sharing services within the Twin
Cities, Edina conducted a two-year pilot program with the goal of understanding how such services would
function within the City. This program was implemented through Memorandums of Understanding (MOUs)
with service provider Lime that allowed use of the public right-of-way for distribution and operation of
micro-mobility devices, a combination of standard pedal-assist bicycles and electric foot scooters. At the
time this program was launched, the City understood that micro-mobility services have the potential to
significantly contribute to the City's long-term transportation goals by improving multi-modal mobility for
residents, visitors and businesses, minimizing the environmental impacts of transportation by promoting
modes that reduce greenhouse gas emissions, reducing overall dependence on and use of single-occupancy
motor vehicles, and supporting connections to transit services. Mr. Scipioni shared a summary of staff's
observations and experiences during this pilot program that included trip data of ridership decreases from
14 trips to 4 trips per day, and insufficient infrastructure to accommodate this service as scooters were not
permitted on sidewalks per Statute. He outlined complaints related to parking of vehicles in neighborhoods
and difficulty by staff to quantify the total number of complaints as well as common concerns by groups that
were safety\ related, usage and aesthetics and how the scooters were more of a novelty than an alternative
mode of transportation. He shared the Transportation Commission comments that supported staff's
recommendations to allow the MOU to expire in March.
The Council spoke about the need for training prior to riding and creating a specific age group for use and
noted while not a good fit now, they thanked staff for their work on the pilot project. The Council suggested
review of docked bikes in the future and review of fall data as well as head and other injuries in other cities
for comparison before moving forward again. Member Fischer made a motion, seconded by Member
Brindle, to approve staff recommendation to discontinue authorization of services effective
the termination date of the contract.
Ayes: Anderson, Brindle, Fischer, Hovland
Motion carried.
VIII.A. RESOLUTION NO. 2019-111, PROSPECT KNOLLS A NEIGHBORHOOD ROADWAY
RECONSTRUCTION, IMPROVEMENT NO. BA-458 — DENIED
City Engineer Director Millner stated Council tabled discussion of this item to allow staff to consider other
possible options for this neighborhood based on concerns with the initial assessment amounts. He reviewed
the options for the area of 70th Street to Dewey Hill Road and the public hearing held December 9, 2019,
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Minutes/Edina City Council/January 7. 2020
for assessments in District I of $32,900 per REU and $18,500 per REU for District 2. He said public
testimony was received from 14 property owners then reviewed six options to address roadway
improvements.
Assistant City Engineer Ditzler reviewed possible options for roadway reconstruction and adjusted
assessment amounts that ranged from the original option with modified assessments or a reduced scope and
asked how the Council wished to proceed.
The Council spoke about how there was nothing different about the streets in this area in terms of lineal
foot costs compared to other areas and discussed whether to include curb and gutter and payment for that
element. Mr. Ditzler spoke about a stormwater utility fund item but noted restoration behind the curb and
gutter would be assessed costs for items such as irrigation repairs, driveways, etc.
The Council thanked staff for the alternative ways to complete this project and spoke about the need for a
task force to review potential funding sources for reconstruction projects going forward. The Council spoke
about being troubled with the process, about fairness, the need for the project to go forward at some point
in time and however it was done, the costs were ultimately levied debt, so taxpayers needed to understand
that concept. The Council spoke about differences in assessment processes and districts based on trip
generation versus lineal foot and the need to create alternative funding options. Discussion was held on
differences between the number of trips, how much infrastructure was required to be delivered to homes,
how the current process worked, that conceptually residents paid for the density of the area lived in, a
component that still had to remain, and the importance to move forward to keep the streets in good shape.
The Council spoke about how half the residents had already paid assessments so any alternative method
would affect those who had already paid.
Mr. Neal noted a process for task force creation was in place if so directed and recommended formal action
to close the process. Member Anderson made a motion, seconded by Member Brindle, to not
adopt Resolution No. 2019-111 ordering improvement for Prospect Knolls A Neighborhood
Roadway Reconstruction Improvement No. BA-458.
Rollcall:
Ayes: Anderson, Brindle, Fischer, Hovland
Motion carried.
VIII.B. DOCKLESS BICYCLE AND SCOOTER SHARING PILOT PROGRAM UPDATE
This item was considered prior to Agenda Item VIII.A.
VIII.C. WEST 72ND STREET PEDESTRIAN SAFETY ASSESSMENT ENGAGEMENT REPORT
This item was considered prior to Agenda Item VIII.B.
VIII.D. HOUSING STRATEGY TASK FORCE — APPOINTED
Mr. Neal stated the seven members of the City Council's Housing Strategy Task Force were appointed by
the City Council on June 18, 2019. In addition to appointing the task force, the Council also approved a task
force scoping document and protocol for their deliberations and operations. The Council's approved
protocol for the task force addressed the possibility of a vacancy on the task force by including a prioritized
list of names of residents to appoint in the event of a vacancy, but only if the vacancy occurred on or before
July 31, 2019. If a vacancy occurred after that date, the protocol for the task force was to leave the vacant
seat unfilled for the duration of the task force. He stated Task Force member Feroza Mehta resigned on
December I, 2019, and because there had been a significant increase to the timeline for the task force, there
was interest on the Council to amend the protocol and fill the open seat. The candidate at the top of the
prioritized list of possible replacement candidates was Steve Brown who had regularly attended meetings,
which would allow him to get up to speed quickly. Mr. Neal stated the proposed appointment methodology
was generally consistent with Council's process and recommended appointment of Mr. Brown. Member
Brindle made a motion, seconded by Member Fischer, to appoint Steve Brown to the Housing
Strategy Task Force effective January 8, 2020.
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Minutes/Edina City Council/January 7, 2020
Ayes: Anderson, Brindle, Fischer, Hovland
Motion carried.
IX. CORRESPONDENCE AND PETITIONS
IX.A. CORRESPONDENCE - Received
Mayor Hovland acknowledged the Council's receipt of various correspondence.
IX.B. MINUTES — Received
I. TRANSPORTATION COMMISSION, NOVEMBER 21, 2019
2. COMMUNITY HEALTH COMMISSION, OCTOBER 14 AND NOVEMBER 4, 2019
Informational; no action required.
X. AVIATION NOISE UPDATE — Received
XI. MAYOR AND COUNCIL COMMENTS — Received
XII. MANAGER'S COMMENTS — Received
XII.A. ORDINANCE AMENDING EDINA CITY CODE CONCERNING ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGES
X11.6. COMMENT PERIOD ON HIGHWAY 100 AND COUNTY ROAD 3 GROUNDWATER PLUME
XIII. CITY COUNCIL UPCOMING MEETINGS AND EVENTS — Received
XIV. ADJOURNMENT
There being no further business on the Council Agenda, Mayor Hovland
9:16 p.m.
the meeting adjourned at
Respectfully submitted,
Minutes approved by Edina City Council, January 22, 2020.
Video Copy of the January 7, 2020, meeting available.
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