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Edina, MN
AboutTown Magazine
City of Edina
4801 West 50th Street
Edina, MN 55424
www.cityofedina.com
AUTUMN•2003
About Town
Official Magazine of the City of Edina
New Play
Structure Opens
At Edinborough
Park
Page 21
for details
***ECRWSS***
POSTAL PATRON
CAR-RT-WS
Edina
High School
To Host
Volunteer
Fair
Edina High School will host
a volunteer fair 5 to 8 p.m.
Tuesday, Oct. 28.
The volunteer fair will be
held to inform students and
the greater community
about volunteer
opportunities in the area.
Local non-profit agencies,
including hospitals, shelters
and social justice campaigns,
will be on hand to help
individuals become more
familiar with their programs
and volunteer opportunities.
Although the fair will be
targeted to students
attempting to fulfill their
community service
requirements for graduation,
letter or develop a May
Term project, there will be
opportunities for prospective
volunteers of all ages. In an
effort to reconnect citizens
with their communities, the
participating agencies will
offer a wide range of
volunteer positions,
ranging from commitments
of several hours to several
months.
For more information on
the volunteer fair, contact
Edina Community Education
Services, 952-848-3952.
Table of Contents
A Word From The Mayor ......................................................5
Edina’s Fire Department Owes Its Proud
Heritage To 1941 Volunteer Crew.........................................6
Hot Happenings In Park And Recreation...........................15
Officials Preserve A Moment In
Community’s History............................................................16
Fighting Fires Is A Family Affair For Scheerers...............18
New Play Structure Opens At
Edinborough Park.................................................................21
Edina Fire Department To Host
Annual Open House..............................................................22
Edina Art Center To Present ‘Friday
Night Live’ And‘Carnival Of Art’........................................24
Edina Student Wins 2003 Minnesota
D.A.R.E. Poster Contest.......................................................26
VEAP Announces Holiday Program...................................28
It’s Not Only Neighborly ... It’s The Law...........................29
Minnesota Chemical Health Week
To Be Celebrated In November..........................................30
City Of Edina To Complete Fall
Hydrant Flushing In October..............................................31
Middle School Students Become Local HEROs................32
‘Totally Talents & Tunes’ Wins
National Arts & Humanities Award....................................34
Wilson Begins Work As City Assessor...............................36
City Updates Bias/Hate
Crime Response Plan............................................................38
AboutTown
Volume 15, Number 4
Autumn 2003
Official Publication of the
City of Edina, Minnesota
4801 West 50th Street
Edina, Minnesota 55424
952-927-8861
Circulation 25,000
Editor:Jennifer Bennerotte
Assistant to the Editor:Jill MacPhail
Publisher:City of Edina
About Town is produced by the City of Edina.
To advertise in About Town, contact Richard Barbeau at
Barbeau Marketing Group, 612-721-1162 or 612-965-2041.
Copyright 2003 by City of Edina, 4801 West 50th Street, Edina,
MN 55424.
About Town is published quarterly by the City of Edina. The
purpose of the magazine is to keep Edina residents informed
of news, activities and programs that are important to them.
We include articles of interest about our citizens and
community history as well.
About Town is printed on recycled paper to conform to City
conservation guidelines.
www.ci.edina.mn.us or www.cityofedina.com
1•AUTUMN 2003
SUNDAYMONDAYTUESDAYWEDNESDAYTHURSDAYFRIDAYSATURDAY
12
5:30 p.m., Board of
Appeals, Edina
City Hall.
3 4
5
7 p.m., Minneapolis
Police Concert Band,
Edinborough Park.
6 7
7 p.m., HRA&City
Council, Edina
City Hall.
7 p.m., Zuhrah Shrine
Jolly Nobles,
Edinborough Park.
8910
By appointment
beginning at 8:30 a.m.,
Podiatrist
appointments with fee
charge, Edina Senior
Center.
11
1-5 p.m., Family Art
Day, Edina Art
Center.
12
7 p.m., Honeywell
Concert Band,
Edinborough Park.
1314
7 p.m., Park Board,
Edina City Hall.
7 p.m., Heritage
Preservation Board,
Edina City Hall.
7 p.m., Amy &Adams,
Edinborough Park.
15
7 a.m., Recycling and
Solid Waste
Commission, Edina
City Hall.
1718
19
7 p.m., Star of the
North Concert Band,
Edinborough Park.
2021
5-8 p.m., Skating class
registration, Braemar
Arena.
7 p.m., HRA&City
Council, Edina City
Hall.
7 p.m., Minnesota
Mandolin Orchestra,
Edinborough Park.
22
8 a.m., Senior
Advisory Council,
Edina Senior Center.
23
5 p.m., Opening
reception for “3
Painters &A Potter,”
Edina Art Center.
24
Class registration
begins for non-
members of the
Edina Art Center.
By appointment
beginning at 8:30 a.m.,
Podiatrist
appointments with
fee charge, Edina
Senior Center.
25
28
5-8 p.m., Volunteer Fair,
Edina High School.
7 p.m., Human
Relations Commission,
Edina City Hall.
7 p.m., Zuhrah Shrine
Flames, Edinborough
Park.
2726
7 p.m., First John
Philip Sousa
Memorial Band,
Edinborough Park.
About Town Calendar
OCTOBER 2003
29
7:30 p.m., Planning
Commission, Edina
City Hall.
30 31
16
Class registration
begins for members of
the Edina Art Center.
5:30 p.m., Board of
Appeals, Edina City
Hall.
2•AUTUMN 2003
SUNDAYMONDAYTUESDAYWEDNESDAYTHURSDAYFRIDAYSATURDAY
1
2
7 p.m., South of the
River Band,
Edinborough Park.
3
Edina Art Center arts
and crafts sale begins.
7 p.m., Edina HRAand
City Council, Edina
City Hall.
4
Election Day. Polls
open 7 a.m. to 8
p.m.
5
9-11 a.m., Flu Shots,
Edina Senior Center.
6
5:30 p.m., Board of
Appeals, Edina
City Hall.
7 8
9
7 p.m., Just Friends
Big Band,
Edinborough Park.
10
1:15-3 p.m., Blood
Pressure Clinic, Edina
Senior Center.
11
Veteran’s Day
observed. Most City
offices closed.
7 p.m., Hyebar
Dancers, Edinborough
Park.
12
7 p.m., Park Board,
Edina City Hall.
14
By appointment
beginning at 8:30 a.m.,
Podiatrist
appointments with fee
charge, Edina Senior
Center.
15
16
7 p.m., Brio Brass,
Edinborough Park.
17
Fall-2 classes begin at
the Edina Art Center.
18
7 p.m., Edina HRA&
City Council, Edina
City Hall.
7 p.m., Swing Train
Duo, Edinborough
Park.
19
7 a.m., Recycling and
Solid Waste
Commission, Edina
City Hall.
20
5:30 p.m., Board of
Appeals, Edina
City Hall.
2122
25
7 p.m., Human
Relations Commission,
Edina City Hall.
7 p.m., Music Staff,
Edinborough Park.
2423
7 p.m., Hopkins
Westwind Concert
Band, Edinborough
Park.
30
7 p.m., First John
Philip Sousa
Memorial Band,
Edinborough Park.
About Town Calendar
NOVEMBER 2003
26
8 a.m., Senior
Advisory Council,
Edina Senior Center.
7:30 p.m., Planning
Commission, Edina
City Hall.
27
Thanksgiving. Most
City offices closed.
28
Day after
Thanksgiving. Most
City offices closed.
10 a.m.-6 p.m., Sale,
Edina Art Center.
13
29
10 a.m.-5 p.m., Sale,
Edina Art Center.
5•AUTUMN 2003
We’ve been busy packing boxes.
I had no idea how much you could accumulate in 50 years!
We’ve been going through closets, cupboards and drawers.
We’re throwing out things that haven’t seen the light of day in
decades and no longer have a useful purpose. Along the way,
we’ve found some photos and other things we forgot we had.
We’ve called the utility companies. We’ve picked out the
carpet and a few new furnishings for the new place. We’ve
scheduled the movers.
Moving day for City Hall is nearly set.
Moving City offices is not unlike moving into a new house.
Nearly as much time has been spent planning for the move
and packing as constructing the new 57,000-square-foot
building next door. More than 1,000 boxes will make their
way into the new City Hall. Although packing has been
time-consuming and exhausting, City employees are
looking forward to working in the new building in a greatly
improved atmosphere and serving the public in a more
efficient manner.
It has been gratifying for the City Council and City staff to
watch the construction of the new building progress. And
like building a new house, it has also been emotional.
Employees will be leaving a place they have ritually come to
each weekday morning for years. A lot of memories have
been made there.
We asked City employees what they will miss about the old
building. Ironically, the only physical aspect of the building
that was mentioned was the marble lobby. One said she will
miss hearing Receptionist Patricia Dawson blow a bird
whistle, signaling the end of the workday. Another said he
will miss watching people run to Finance Director John Wallin’s
office to watch storms roll in when the skies darken. One more
said she will miss looking into Recreation Supervisor Susie
Miller’s doorless office, at the very top of the stairs from the
employee entrance where the restroom for the Fire Department
was once located, each morning.
We heard many more of those personal recollections. Some
people get nostalgic when leaving the house to which they
came home from their honeymoons. They tear up when
packing up the room where their son or daughter took his
or her first steps. They smile when for the last time they
turn off the outdoor light they had always left on for a loved
one coming home late. Our employees are experiencing the
same sort of emotions.
But for some of the same reasons people move out of
houses, we must move into a new facility. I have no doubt
that moving day will be the start of a whole new set of
memories for our employees and the rest of the City
of Edina.
And, like the superb customer service the City prides itself
in providing, some things won’t change after the move.
Patricia Dawson, no doubt, will continue blowing her bird
whistle. People will find a new window to watch the clouds
thicken. And I’m sure Susie Miller will almost always leave
her door open for people to peek in when walking by.
Please be sure to come and see us at the new place after
we move early this winter. Don’t worry about bringing a
house-warming gift; your smile will be more than enough!
Dennis F. Maetzold
Mayor
4•AUTUMN 2003
OTHER DATES TO REMEMBER:
Oct. 14 1:15-3 p.m., Blood Pressure Clinic,
Edina Senior Center.
Oct. 24 4 p.m., Edina Art Center Board,
Edina Art Center.
Nov. 30 Noon-5 p.m., Special sale at the Edina
Art Center.
INDOOR SKATING LESSONS
What:Braemar Arena offers ice skating lessons
throughout the year. Registration for the winter
session of lessons is held in October.
When:5 to 8 p.m. Tuesday, Oct. 21.
Where:Braemar Arena, 7501 Ikola Way.
Phone-in registrations will not be accepted.
Info:952-941-1322 or www.Braemar-Arena.com.
TASTE OF EDINA: FOOD, WINE AND
BUSINESS EXPO
What:The Edina Chamber of Commerce will hold
Taste of Edina, an annual food, wine and
business exposition to highlight area
businesses. Tickets cost $15.
When:5 to 8 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 23
Where:Southdale Center’s The District on France
Info:Edina Chamber of Commerce, 952-806-9060.
PUMPKIN FESTIVAL
What:The 50th & France Business and Professional
Association hosts Pumpkin Festival, a fall event
for children. Activities will include a pumpkin-
carving contest, costume contest and parade,
horse-drawn trolley rides and trick-or-treating.
When:10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 25
Where:Downtown Edina, 50th Street and
France Avenue.
Info:50th & France Business and Professional
Association, 952-922-1524, or
www.50thandfrance.com.
BRAEMAR GOLF DOME
What:You don’t have to put your clubs away when the
area’s golf courses close for the season. The
Braemar Golf Dome opens Nov. 1 and is one of
the largest and longest hitting in the Twin Cities
area with 46 tee areas and two levels. Golfers
can golf by the bucket on weekdays and by time
on weekends.
When:Golf-by-the-bucket, 8 a.m. to 9 p.m. Monday
through Friday. Golf-by-time, 8 a.m. to 9 p.m.
Saturday and Sunday.
Where:Braemar Golf Dome, 7420 Braemar Blvd.
Info:952-826-6744 or www.BraemarGolfDome.com.
Autumn Calendar Highlights A Word From The Mayor
3•AUTUMN 2003
SUNDAYMONDAYTUESDAYWEDNESDAYTHURSDAYFRIDAYSATURDAY
2
7 p.m., Edina HRA&
City Council, Edina
City Hall.
7 p.m. Musical
Moments with Mary
Hall, Edinborough
Park.
34
5:30 p.m., Board of
Appeals, Edina
City Hall.
56
10 a.m.-noon, Gift-
making workshop for
kids, Edina Art
Center.
1
7
7 p.m., Minneapolis
Police Concert Band,
Edinborough Park.
8
1:15-3 p.m., Blood
Pressure Clinic, Edina
Senior Center.
7 p.m., Bloomington
Medalist Band,
Edinborough Park.
9
7 p.m., Park Board,
Edina City Hall.
7 p.m., Heritage
Preservation Board,
Edina City Hall.
7 p.m., The Reunion
Band, Edinborough
Park.
10111213
10 a.m.-noon, Gift-
making workshop for
kids, Edina Art
Center.
14
7 p.m., Good News
Big Band,
Edinborough Park.
15 16
7 p.m., Edina HRA&
City Council, Edina
City Hall.
7 p.m., Roseville
Community Band,
Edinborough Park.
17
7 a.m., Recycling and
Solid Waste
Commission, Edina
City Hall.
19
By appointment
beginning at 8:30 a.m.,
Podiatrist
appointments with fee
charge, Edina Senior
Center.
20
21
7 p.m., Just Friends
Big Band,
Edinborough Park.
2223
Edina Art Center arts
and crafts sale ends.
7 p.m., Human
Relations Commission,
Edina City Hall.
24
Christmas Eve.
Most City offices
close at noon.
25
Christmas. Most
City offices closed.
2627
302928
About Town Calendar
DECEMBER 2003
31
New Year’s Eve.
Most City offices
close at noon.
18
5:30 p.m., Board of
Appeals, Edina
City Hall.
By Joe Sullivan, Freelance
Writer and Edina Resident
Back in 1941, some citizens of
what was then the Village of
Edina were concerned about fire
protection. For much of its 90-plus
years, the community had relied
on fire departments in Minneapolis
to put out its fires.
Elvira Vinson, a pioneer
Morningsideresident, recalled in an interview, “Our closest
fire station in [the early] days was in Minneapolis’ Linden Hills
neighborhood at West 43rd Street and Upton Avenue South.”
Another report on the Village’s early lack of fire protection
appeared in From the Barber’s Chair by 50th and France
barber Vern Swanson and Tom Clark. It seems that in 1925,
a small explosion rocked George Hartzell’s 50th and France
garage and started a fire. Grace Hansen, whose three
relatives would later serve as Edina firefighters,
remembered what happened, “The fire rig from 43rd and
Upton had trouble at 50th and Chowen because of swampy
conditions there. A fireman was thrown from the rig and was
either killed or injured.” Meanwhile, the garage burned to
the ground.
A history of the Edina Fire Department written by retired
Fire Chief William “Bill” Feck tells of a series of meetings
involving some 20 Edina residents who gathered in 1941 to
develop plans for an all-volunteer Village fire department.
Feck wrote that the planning group “determined the
Village public works shop at Eden and Brookside avenues,
(now the school district’s ‘bus barn,’) would be the focal
point of the new fire department. The fire [truck] would
be located in a section of the shop. Meeting rooms for
the firefighters were to be located above. A 15-horsepower
siren was to be mounted on the roof of the shop to alert
firefighters who were outside or away from their
telephones that a fire call was in progress. Fire calls
would be received at the shop and at the residence of
one of the [volunteers], who lived next door to the shop.”
The planners also recognized a need for five or more
other firefighters who lived close to the public works
shop. “These men would be available to drive the fire
7•AUTUM 20036•AUTUMN 2003
Edina’s Fire Department Owes
Its Proud Heritage To 1941
Volunteer Crew
truck to wherever it was needed. They also emphasized
the importance of having ‘men living in all sections of the
village,’ so they could respond quickly to nearby fires.”
The Edina Village Council approved the purchase of the
Village’s first fire truck in the fall of 1941 and called for
volunteers to join the new Village fire department. The
fire department opened late that year with 24 volunteer
firefighters.
The fire truck occupied two parking stalls in the public
works garage. Retired volunteer firefighter Dale Tracy
remembers the mechanics at the public works garage who
drove the fire truck. “Charles William (Bill) Cardarelle was
the daytime driver,” he said. “Matt Merfeld lived across the
street or next door to the old public works building. If he
wasn’t working in the garage, he lived close enough that
he could quickly get behind the wheel of the fire truck.
Ernie Hansen was Merfeld’s backup driver.” (Ernie’s sons
Ed and Bill were also volunteers. Bill later became a full-
time firefighter.)
Tracy added, “A lot of the Village’s public works
department employees, including my brother Wayne who
drove a road grader for the Village, served as backups for
the volunteers. Most of them had full-time day jobs, but
some worked nights and were available for daytime fires.”
Eventually a telephone alert system, known as the
grapevine, was developed to let the volunteers know when
there was a fire. “When a fire call was received, the person
receiving the call had two responsibilities,” said Feck,
describing the routine. “The siren was sounded and the
first two, three, or four [women] on the telephone list were
notified of the address … Each of these women, all wives of
volunteer firefighters, would notify a list of three to five
more firefighters.”
Fire Department Signed Mutual Aid Pact
With Other Suburbs
A 1961 Edina Sun-Current article reported that in 1947,
the fire department signed a mutual aid agreement
with Hopkins and St. Louis Park calling for mutual fire
control assistance when needed. In 1949, Edina joined the
Southwest Mutual Aid Association, which offered a similar
agreement that included the three original communities
and several other nearby suburbs. Today, the expanded
pact includes Edina and 12 surrounding communities.
(continued on next page)
Pictured outside the public works shop, which served as Edina’s
first fire station, is the department’s first fire truck (at right), a
1941 International. An American LaFrance fire truck (at left)
became the Village’s second rig in 1946.
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Thirteen members of the original Edina Volunteer Department
gathered for this early 1940s photo. Included in the picture are
Fire Chief Chris Mitzel, Matt Merfeld, Al Huber, Ernie
Hansen, Phil Bailey, Phillip Bacon and Dick Sonnenberg.
At that point, the Edina Volunteer Fire Department had 23
members. It had been determined that members of the
volunteer fire department would support the full-time staff
and that future full-time, paid firefighters would be hired
from the volunteer ranks. When a full-time opening was
announced, the highest volunteer on the seniority list could
apply for or reject it.
No Major Fires In Edina For First 20 years
In a 1961 Edina Sun-Current article, former fire chiefs
Mitzel and McNellis agreed that in 20 years they had never
encountered a really grave fire in Edina. The closest to it,
they said, was either the Biltmore Motel fire, on Vernon
Avenue in 1956, or the Edina Bowling Center fire in 1959
at 50th and France.
In June of 1961, then-Village Manager Warren Hyde
declared that he would no longer accept applications for the
volunteer firefighter openings. Mitzel later recalled, “This
was the beginning of the end for the Edina Volunteer Fire
Department.”
“Following Hyde’s decision, existing volunteers were kept
on, but their numbers were gradually reduced by attrition
and retirements,” said retired firefighter Steve Nelson.
Ed Hansen, who retired in 1978, was the last of the
volunteers from the original 1941 fire department. From
1978 to 1981, there were no active volunteers. In 1981, the
fire department once again needed volunteers to augment
Feck praised the agreement. “When I retired as fire chief
in 1985, the second fire engine to arrive at a fire in Edina
would almost always be an outside rig from one of our
mutual aid partners. It was the largest mutual aid system
in Minnesota and involved more than 1,000 firefighters.”
A modified Jeep was purchased in 1948 for fighting brush,
grass and rubbish fires. The four-wheel-drive vehicle was
equipped with a tank and a front-mounted pump that
sprayed water as the truck moved along. “Grassfires were
a big thing in those days because Edina was almost all open
fields,” Tracy recalled. “That’s what we did every Saturday
and Sunday in the spring—we chased the fire truck to the
next grass fire.”
In a 1999 interview, Feck said, “About all they needed
then was an aerial ladder. Their tallest ladder reached
only 35 feet—not tall enough for several new 1950s
buildings. That ladder could, for example, reach only
halfway up the highest side of Southdale.” (The
department eventually acquired a 100-foot aerial ladder
in 1969, which was replaced in 1983 with an 100-foot
pumper platform that can be extended horizontally as
well as vertically.)
A 1943 Village brochure stated, “fire insurance rates in
Edina are now quite favorable and with the continued
development of our fire control facilities, it is likely that
additional rate reductions will be made in the future.”
Today, Edina’s fire insurance rates are still low in
comparison with most other metro area suburbs,
according to current Fire Chief Marty Scheerer.
Edina’s First Real Fire Station Leads To
Organizational Change
When the current City Hall building was built in 1953,
it included Edina’s first real fire station, in addition to the
Village’s administration offices and police department.
In a major organizational change, beginning Jan. 1, 1955,
six men—all former volunteer firefighters—were hired as
the Village’s first full-time, paid firefighters. They were Fire
Chief Chris Mitzel, Assistant Fire Chief James McNellis,
Phillip Bacon, Ernest W. Hansen, A.B. Johnson and Lester
V. Miller.
8•AUTUMN 2003 9•AUTUMN 2003
(continued on next page)
Included in this photo are 10 identifiable members of the 1950
Edina Volunteer Fire Department – Assistant Chief Jim McNellis,
Chief Chris Mitzel, Phil Bailey, Phillip Bacon, Al Huber, Bud
Holter, John Cardarelle, Dick Sonnenberg, Bill Feck and
Ernie Hansen.
Edina’s first fire station was built in 1953 on the west end of
the new Village Hall at 4801 W. 50th St. It has space for six
engines, a dormitory, recreational room and complete
kitchen facilities. Its tower for drying fire hoses rose above
the building’s roof.
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A Peter Pirsch pumper truck was added to the department’s fleet
in 1958. It had a 500-gallon water tank and could pump 1,000
gallons per minute.
11•AUTUMN 2003
“He was a
visionary and had
strong ideas
about the need
for the fire
department to
offer medical
services. He
instituted
cross-training of
firefighters with
EMTs and
eventually with
the paramedics.”
Buresh, a native
of Edina, joined
the volunteer fire
department when he was an 18-year old senior at St. Louis
Park High School. He and Feck were members of Boy
Scout Troop 87, which was sponsored by the Edina
Volunteer Fire Department. This connection led them both
to join the department. It was what Buresh termed “a
natural extension of our scouting experience. As volunteer
firefighters, we received the full training course, including
fighting both inside and outside training fires.” He added,
“We were paid 50 cents an hour while on duty and got a
dollar for each weekly training session.”
In 1951, after four years of part-time work as a volunteer
firefighter, Buresh took a leave of absence from the fire
department and joined the U.S. Air Force with Feck and
two other high school friends. After his military service, he
returned to college and the volunteer fire department.
In 1957, he was offered a position as a full-time firefighter.
Faced with the impending arrival of his first child, Buresh
elected to leave college behind and accepted the job. He
was promoted to lieutenant in 1963, to captain in 1967 and
to assistant fire chief in 1968.
In his off-duty hours, he also worked toward a bachelor’s
degree in fire protection from the University of Minnesota,
which he received in 1973. Later, as a part-time member of
the U of M faculty, he taught a course on fire protection
and commuted to Tulane University in New Orleans as a
visiting lecturer on fire safety concepts and building design.
McNellis decided to retire in 1975. Along with several
applicants, Buresh threw his fireman’s hat in the ring for
the fire chief position and got the job. Edina’s police chief
Wayne Bennett became director of public safety in the early
1970s. When Bennett retired, Buresh was named as his
replacement. As director of public safety, he retained his
position as fire chief. Buresh retired in 1987.
Fire/Rescue Ambulance Service Had
Humble Beginnings
Edina’s emergency ambulance service had begun in
1960 when Smith Ambulance Co. donated an ambulance
to the City. It was a converted commercial van that
quickly became known as “the breadwagon.” First aid
training for Edina’s first EMTs began with Dr. Tinkham,
the department’s physician.
10•AUTUMN 2003
the full-time firefighters. Nelson and Scheerer were two of
the 15 volunteers who signed up in 1981.
Feck described a typical firefighter shift in the 1970s and
1980s by saying, “Each of the three shifts was composed
of a lieutenant, captain or assistant chief and three to six
firefighters. Firefighters would work 24-hour shifts for
three alternate days and then have four consecutive days
off. When you weren’t out on a fire call, daytime activity
in the fire station involved activities like cleaning the
station, truck maintenance or mowing the lawn. If you were
on a night shift, you could sleep until an emergency fire or
medical call came in and the bell went off—then everybody
had to get up, regardless of whether you ended up going
out on the call or not. Some nights they didn’t get
much sleep.”
“The years 1956-1967 were an important growth period
for the fire department,” Feck recalled. “Our first
emergency medical technicians (EMTs) were added along
with new equipment and more emphasis on training
and education.”
Robert Buresh Was Named Edina’s Fire Chief
In 1975
“Bob Buresh was a strong believer in education, training
and good equipment,” said his high school buddy Feck.
(continued on next page)
In 1965, this new Fire/rescue ambulance was purchased for
$12,000. A donation by Edina physician Dr. Owen Robbins was
matched by Village and federal funds. Firefighter/paramedic
Jim Singleton demonstrates a defibrillator.
The fire station on the west end of City Hall was vacated in 1971
and the department moved into this newly constructed station at
6250 Tracy Ave.
Firefighter training was conducted
with “controlled burns” of structures headed
for demolition like the former Tracy home
on Cahill Road south of 70th Street.
Training for Edina’s paramedics began at Hennepin County
Medical Center (HCMC) in 1975. The advanced medical
service program was the brainchild of City Manager
Warren Hyde, who first learned of the concept at a city
managers’ convention. I did some asking around and
discovered the St. Paul fire department was using [it],”
Hyde said.
A 1975 Edina Sun-Current article announced that Edina
firefighters/EMTs Dick Vernon, Terry Kehoe and Bill
Lutts had completed HCMC’s paramedic training.
Ted Paulfranz Replaced Buresh As Chief In 1986
After serving as an inspector and assistant fire chief under
chief Bob Buresh, Ted Paulfranz was named chief in 1986
when Buresh was promoted to director of public safety.
Paulfranz had joined the department as a firefighter in
1967. At the time, he was Edina’s first non-volunteer, full-
time firefighter. He moved up to inspector and on to
assistant chief in 1975.
In a 1986 Edina Sun-Current article, Paulfranz said his
boyhood desire to become a firefighter developed from
frequent visits to the Humboldt Fire Station in south
Minneapolis. The old-timers there told him the best place
to learn the firefighting business was in the Navy, so he
enlisted as a Navy firefighter in 1961 and spent the next
four years learning the trade.
In a 1999 interview Paulfranz said, “I would estimate that 80
to 85 percent of Edina’s current firefighters are also trained
paramedics. The other 15 to 20 percent are EMTs/firefighters.”
Paulfranz said that when he started with the department,
“We considered it a big year when we handled 500 to 600
fire and emergency medical runs.” When he retired in
1998, the department averaged 10 runs a day--or 3,650 a
year--most of them on the day shift.
Scheerer Succeeded Paulfranz as Fire Chief in 1999
In 1981, when the Edina Fire Department resurrected
its volunteer program, Marty Scheerer and his brothers
Dan and John joined the department as part-time
volunteers. Marty Scheerer was Edina’s first volunteer
firefighter to become a paramedic. He completed private
paramedic training at Northeast Technical College in White
Bear Lake. He returned to the department as a part-time
volunteer firefighter/paramedic and became a full-time
Edina firefighter/paramedic in September 1989. Promoted
to lieutenant in November 1996, he made captain in
February 1998.
When Ted Paulfranz retired in the fall of 1998 after
more than 30 years with the department, six internal fire
department candidates expressed interest in the fire chief
position. After a series of [tests] and interviews, Scheerer
was named chief. The promotion capped his successful
career with the department.
Scheerer is understandably proud of the fact that Edina
has the fifth busiest fire department in the state, topped
only by Minnesota’s largest cities—Minneapolis, St. Paul,
Duluth and Rochester. Today, approximately 75 percent
of the department’s calls are for emergency medical
assistance. This mix reflects the high average age of the
City’s population, which keeps the paramedics hopping
with emergency medical calls. Also, Edina’s pro-active fire
prevention campaigns keep fire calls to a minimum. Best
of all, the cost of fire protection to Edina’s citizens is less
than $10 per month for the average household, “Far less
than the monthly cost of your daily newspaper,” Scheerer
eagerly points out.
12•AUTUMN 2003 13•AUTUMN 2003
Members of the 1980 full-time Edina Fire Department are
pictured with the 100-foot aerial ladder fire truck. Included is
Chief Robert Buresh, who is standing behind Administrative
Assistant Ruth Schmoll. (She was a teenager when she joined the
department in 1975.) Also pictured are Assistant Chiefs Bill
Feck, Bill Hansen, Ted Paulfranz and Frank Wellman.
This 2000 photo shows some of the 15-member class of 1981
volunteer firefighters. Pictured are Ray Wolff, John Scheerer, Greg
Bretson, now-Chief Marty Scheerer, Steve Nelson, Dan Scheerer
and Tom Jenson.
Edina’s Fire Station No. 2 was built in 1998 at 7335 York Ave.
S. Before the site was selected, alternate sites were considered at
66th Street and Valley View Road, on France Avenue and 69th
Street and at Centennial Lakes.
(continued on next page)
Adult Programs
The City of Edina offers a number of athletic and recreation
programs for adults throughout the year. Several are offered
during the winter months.
The Park and Recreation Department offers B, C and D
basketball leagues for men. Teams or individuals interested
in participating should contact the department before late
October.
For adult volleyball players, the City offers mixed leagues.
Games will be held Wednesday evenings from late October
through early March. At least half the players must live or work
in Edina. Individuals interested in being placed on a team should
contact the Park and Recreation Department. Registration ends
the first week in October.
Registration for four-man adult hockey will be held the first
week in December. Designed for adults who love hockey and
miss the hassle-free pickup games of their youth, the leagues
play on local rinks that give the feeling of playing on a pond.
Goals are sealed by a goalie tutor, which has four target areas
for scoring. Leagues are divided by age and ability, with 18- to
29-year-old players in the gold division, 30- to 40-year-old former
high school or college players in the silver division and age 30
and older recreation players in the bronze divisions.
Field Trips
As in past years, the Park and Recreation Department will
plan field trips to events such as Sesame Street Live and
Disney on Ice for pre-schoolers and their families. Call
952-826-0433 to get your name on the mailing list.
Ice Skating
The City of Edina’s outdoor ice rinks will open for the season
in December.
Rinks are at Arden, Centennial Lakes, Cornelia School, Creek
Valley, Highland, Lewis, Normandale, Pamela, Strachauer,
Walnut Ridge and Weber parks. They will open as weather
permits.
Concessions stand and skate rental hours at Centennial Lakes
Park, which features a 10-acre lake, will be 4 to 9:30 p.m. school
days, 10 a.m. to 9:30 p.m. Saturdays and noon to 9:30 p.m.
Sundays and other non-school days. Holiday hours are 11 a.m. to
4 p.m. Christmas Eve, noon to 9:30 p.m. New Year’s Eve and
noon to 9:30 p.m. New Year’s Day. The Centrum will be closed
Christmas Day. Skating is free. Skate rental is $4.
Call the Park and Recreation Department at 952-826-0367
for hours at the other outdoor ice rinks.
Applications are currently being accepted for ice rink
attendants and Centennial Lakes Park warming house staff.
Call 952-826-0404 for an employment application or visit
www.cityofedina.com.
15•AUTUMN 200314•AUTUMN 2003
Average response time for fire emergencies from either
of Edina’s two strategically-located fire stations is an
amazing six minutes. The average response time for
Fire/Rescue calls is even better at five minutes—the
shortest response time among all Hennepin County
communities. According to Scheerer, more than one-third
of the Edina fire department’s operating budget is
returned to the City in the form of fees collected outside
the city by the three Emergency Medical Service
ambulance crews.
Scheerer emphasizes that the main objective of today’s
Edina Fire Department is “to cover 95 percent of all fire
and medical emergency calls using on-duty, full-time
personnel.” The other five percent of calls are handled
by off-duty, paid firefighter/paramedics, volunteer
firefighters and other fire departments that participate
in the Southwest Mutual Aid Association.
“Edina’s aggressive approach to fire prevention, quick
emergency response and ability to attack, contain and
stop fires where they start, has definitely had a positive
effect on homeowner’s insurance rates in our city,”
Scheerer said. “That saves money for every
Edina family.”
Paulfranz’s view of the Edina Fire Department’s role in
the life of our city sums it up well: “It’s all about community
service to citizens. They are who is important in this city.
The fire department’s responsibility is to respond quickly
to requests for service, to treat people well and to maintain
state-of-the-art competency.”
Background material and photographs for this article came
from the collections of the Edina Historical Society, the Edina
Fire Department and the Jerry Bacon family; personal
recollections by Robert Buresh, William Feck, Steve Nelson,
Ted Paulfranz, Marty Scheerer, Dale Tracy; and the following
publications: “From the Barber’s Chair” by Vern Swanson
and Tom Clark, “Edina Fire Department 1941-1966,” by
William B. Feck, a 1943 Village of Edina brochure, and the
Edina Sun-Current.
Hot Happenings In Park
And Recreation
With great excitement, schoolchildren Emma Chen,
Kathleen McDonald and Sydney Yesnes carefully placed a
few dozen items in a large metal box heavier than their
combined weight.
The last items they placed in the black cold rolled steel
container were their own. Each had written a letter selected
for a 2003 time capsule sealed behind the cornerstone of the
new City Hall. The girls were part of the July dedication of
the time capsule, helping City Manager Gordon Hughes fill
the container with artifacts.
City staff members selected nearly 40 items for the
time capsule to give future residents a glimpse of life in
Edina in 2003. Included in the time capsule are photos, a
cellular telephone, portable computer, Edina High School
yearbook and Fire and Police department patches, among
other things.
Also included in the time capsule were 10 letters written by
local schoolchildren describing life in Edina in 2003. Mayor
Dennis Maetzold selected the letters from dozens received
by the City in the spring. Besides Chen, McDonald and
Yesnes, the recognized letter-writers were Concord
Elementary School students Nicole Kozlak, Abigail Strefeler
and Helen Risser and Highlands Elementary School students
Colin Forker, Muriel Kay, Alan Peck and Elin Wahman.
Emma drew a colorful picture accompanied by the following
essay: “I love Edina! Because you can make so many
friends! And so many grat (great) places to go to like the
Edina pool, and the Edina Grill … and all the schools. You
learn so much! Like how to count and how to count by twos
and fives and much more! And if I love Edina, you will too!”
Eight-year-old Sydney wrote, “… One reason I like to live
in Edina is the restaurants. The restaurant I like to go to the
best is Convention Grill. I like the shakes and they are good
and thick. The French fries are long and thin. And the
grilled cheese is yummy and good. My next place I like to
go in Edina is Browndale Park. I like Browndale Park
because the … swings are very fun and when you swing
they go high. The monkey bars are long and very fun. The
last place I like to go is the Edina pool. The pool is fun and
wet. … Those are the reasons I like living in Edina. I hope
it is the same in the future.”
In her own words, Kathleen, now in third grade, wrote,
“… I also like the schools in Edina, especially Concord,
because there’s (sic) lots of nice people and you get to learn
a lot. I like when we practice fire drills because you get to
stretch your legs. My second favorite thing is gym because I
like running around and having fun. I also like Spanish
because you get to learn a new language. My last favorite
thing is reading because I like reading about stuff that I like
and stuff that’s interesting. I also like the bike shops
because I like to ride bikes. My faverote (sic) place to ride
my bike is hilen (Highland) Park because I like the big
hilles (sic) that you can go down really fast. I also like how
you can go through the woods. I like how you can go over
leaves. And the best thing I like about Hilend (Highland)
Park is the park because there is lots of fun stuff you can
do. I like how the Edina color is green and white. Edina
is so cool.”
16•AUTUMN 2003
Officials Preserve A Moment In
Community’s History
17•AUTUMN 2003
“Through these letters, people in 2053 will get an idea of the
types of places youth liked to frequent in today’s world and
the ways they had fun,” said Maetzold during the July
dedication ceremony. “These letters and the other artifacts
in the time capsule will be of great significance to future
historians.”
Maetzold predicted that in 50 years, Edina will continue to be
“the preeminent place for living, learning, raising families and
doing business.” He guessed that the housing stock will
remain mostly unchanged and that Fairview Southdale
Hospital and the greater business community will have grown
significantly. He also predicted that new technology will be
developed to eliminate many of today’s problems and hazards.
The 2003 time capsule could be opened at any time in the
future, but officials assume it will not be opened for at
least 50 years.
A time capsule from 1953 exists in the current City Hall
building. It will be opened at a public ceremony sometime
next spring before the building is razed.
For more information on the time capsules, contact
Communications Director Jennifer Bennerotte,
952-832-6063.
City Manager Gordon Hughes is assisted by Kathleen McDonald,
Sydney Yesnes and Emma Chen in filling the 2003 time capsule
at a dedication ceremony in July.
12 Years, 1000’s Served
Thank You!
Locally owned & monitored
www.edinalarm.com
By Jill MacPhail
As a favor to a family friend more than 20 years ago, four
brothers reluctantly agreed to go through training to
become volunteer firefighters. Today, the Edina Fire
Department is a sort of second home for that family.
In 1981, then Assistant Fire Chiefs Bill Hansen and Terry
Kehoe were tasked with recruiting Edina residents to start
up a volunteer firefighter program in Edina. A volunteer
program had begun in 1950, but was discontinued
sometime after.
Hansen often played golf with Bob Scheerer, an Edina
resident who had five sons and one daughter. He could
not think of a better family to approach about becoming
volunteers.
“Terry and I sat down and discussed who was eligible,”
Hansen said. “We then discussed the idea with the
Scheerer boys at their family’s house.”
Initially, Hansen said, the Scheerer boys were not very
excited about the opportunity. However, all of the boys
except Jeff, who was just 17 years old at the time and too
young for the program, agreed to go through training and
see what it was like, knowing they could always drop out.
Their feelings changed quickly when they began training.
Dan Scheerer, now 48, John Scheerer, now 47, and Marty
Scheerer, now 42, were three of 15 men in the volunteer
training group in 1981. Marty was just 19 years old.
“In the first few training sessions, we started to get to
know the other volunteer firefighters,” Marty said.
“We all became great friends after that. It was a good
time going to the fire station for training and seeing our
family and friends.”
The Scheerers agreed that training together was a lot of
fun, but hard work. They needed to perform at a certain
level in order to impress the paid firefighters, who were
skeptical of the volunteers from the start.
“It was fun to share the experience with our family,” said
John, Street Foreman for the City’s Public Works
Department. “There was a lot of camaraderie—it was fun
to train.”
Edina Fire Marshal Tom Jenson was part of that first
volunteer training group. He and John graduated from
Edina High School together in 1974. Jenson has become
close with the Scheerer brothers throughout their 22 years
together.
“Having three brothers make it through out of 60 or 70
guys that applied was pretty impressive,” he said. “We all
work together really well, and everyone knows what their
strengths are. We can all count on each other.”
Jenson has developed a unique relationship with Marty,
with whom he works closely today.
“There’s a great amount of trust from him to me and from
me to him,” Jenson said. “We’ve been through it all
18•AUTUMN 2003
Fighting Fires Is A Family
Affair For Scheerers
19•AUTUMN 2003
together—we had a tough start and we’ve seen a lot people
come and go over the years. With Marty, you just knew he
was going someplace with this. Once he got in that door,
you could watch the progress.”
Edina Park and Recreation Maintenance Supervisor Bob
Prestrud also started volunteering with the brothers in 1981.
“We all went through our vigorous training together and
leaned on each other for support when needed,” Prestrud
said. “The Scheerers’ parents must have instilled a good
work ethic in their children, because this is a hard-working
group of sons. The bond of working together at the Fire
Department for over 22 years will carry on long after our
retirements.”
At the time, the on-call volunteers were called up to two
or three times in one night. Fires were much more
common due to a lack of safety and prevention programs,
less effective sprinkler systems and poor building
construction. False alarm penalties and fire policies that
exist now have reduced the calls to about two or three a
week, Dan said. Volunteers now are also required to sign
up for one 24-hour shift each month in addition to being
on call by pager every day.
In 1987, Marty went to paramedic school, a requirement to
become a full-time firefighter. He was hired as a paid
member of the Department in 1989. Within 10 years, he was
the Edina Fire Chief. Dan and John stayed on as volunteers,
to be joined in 2000 by the youngest Scheerer brother, Jeff.
“If I would have known it was as fun as it is, I would have
started earlier,” Jeff said. “Half the fun is hanging out with
the guys.”
The family does worry about each other, but also realizes
that they are at less risk now than ever before. Technology
has decreased the amount of large fires that occur, as well
as made it easier for the men to fight the fires.
Four brothers are part of the Edina Fire
Department. They are Fire Chief Marty Scheerer,
Jeff Scheerer, John Scheerer and Dan Scheerer
(pictured in the driver’s seat).
Ph
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(continued on next page)
20•AUTUMN 2003 21•AUTUMN 2003
“Personal safety and accountability is what is taught,”
explained Jeff. “We are trained well, so we’re not worried.”
“It is a dangerous business,” said John. “But our chiefs
and captains really do a great job of sizing up the scene,
and they wouldn’t put us in a dangerous situation.”
The firefighting business itself, said the brothers, is more
technical than people think. The old saying was “put the
wet stuff on the red stuff.” The Scheerer brothers have
watched the department evolve from that unsophisticated
slogan. These days, certain procedures are followed to fight
fires, for safety reasons. Assignments are given to the men
before anyone rushes in. Organized groups stick together
once inside and such groups are held accountable for their
members. Thermal imaging devices are used to locate
furniture and to see through walls. A board system is used
to keep track of each person once he is inside the
structure, and each person has a radio.
To keep up with changing procedures, paid firefighters
train daily in the firehouse. Volunteers train twice a month.
Fighting fires proves to be good training as well, the
brothers agreed.
John remembered a house fire where the front door was
locked and some of the younger guys were anxious to use
the Department’s high-tech equipment to get into the
house. Minutes later, just before breaking in, they saw Dan
walking around inside the house. The back door had been
unlocked the whole time. In their excitement, the younger
guys had not thought to check. The Scheerers are glad that
their days being the “new guys” are over, but continue to
learn with each experience.
“You learn something from every fire,” said John. “It’s easy
for us to pass stuff on to our brothers that we’ve learned
the hard way. From our brothers, we can pick up general
insight that we wouldn’t normally get.” Jeff, now 40, is
studying to become a full-time firefighter, just as Dan and
John are thinking of retirement. Juggling the 3 a.m. calls
with their full-time jobs has proven to be a challenge that
continues to wear on the men.
“No matter what, you have to get up and go to your regular
job the next morning,” explained Dan, who paints houses.
The job also takes a toll on family life.
“The times I have to be away are the times my wife and
kids need me most, like during thunderstorms,” said Marty.
“It’s a 24-7 job and sometimes I have to miss holidays or
important events.”
More importantly, however, the job brings the Scheerer
family closer together.
“It’s fun to see everyone on a regular basis,” Marty said.
“We all have busy lives, and it’s an excuse to hook up.”
For more information about the Edina Fire Department,
call 952-826-0330.
New Play Structure Opens At
Edinborough Park
The gleeful sounds of children laughing echoed throughout
Edina’s Edinborough Park last month, when one of the largest
indoor play structures in the Midwest opened to the public.
Built by International Play Company, the 40-by-40-foot structure
is 37 feet tall and has a capacity of more than 300 children. The
structure incorporates more than 40 play elements including
seven slides, cargo climbs, trolley glide, suspension bridge,
mazes, clubhouse and a separate area for toddlers.
The structure is the centerpiece of the park’s new Playpark
concept, which also includes the Great Hall and tot lot
areas. These areas, which were formerly free of charge, are
now fee-based in an effort to make the park financially self-
sufficient. Performances in the park Amphitheater will
remain complimentary.
Playpark fees are $4 for residents and $5 for non-residents.
There is no charge for children under 12 months and
adults. Punch passes for 10 daily uses cost $35 for residents
and $40 for non-residents. Season passes are also available.
“As difficult as is was to have to start charging admissions
to the park, we are confident that we offer the most play
value for the dollar in the region,” said Park Manager Tom
Shirley. “We are thrilled with the response that families
have had to the new structure. It has really brought some
life back into the park.”
In addition to the new play structure, improvements at the
park include several new games and activities, including an
air bounce and tumbling equipment in the Great Hall.
The new play structure has been especially popular in
attracting birthday parties to the park. Birthday party
packages, which include admission to the Playpark can be
arranged by calling Edinborough Park, 952-832-6790.
International Play Company assembled the Edinborough Park
play structure in August. The play structure is one of the
largest in the state, towering more than three stories high.
23•AUTUMN 200322•AUTUMN 2003
Edina Fire Department To Host
Annual Open House
Residents who attend the Edina Fire Department’s
annual Open House will learn to “Get Out! Stay Out”
when fire strikes.
The Open House will be held rain or shine 1 to 4 p.m.
Sunday, Oct. 12, at Fire Station No. 1, 6250 Tracy Ave.
The Open House will incorporate the National Fire
Prevention Association’s new prevention theme,
“When Fire Strikes: Get Out! Stay Out!” to teach two
simple, but life-saving lessons: install smoke alarms
and test them regularly and develop and practice home
fire drills.
Through the end of October, Edina Fire Department
personnel are visiting local public and private schools
to teach the message behind the theme to preschoolers,
kindergartners and first- and second-graders.
The annual Open House, to be held at the conclusion of
Fire Prevention Week, will include demonstrations and
displays on home fire safety, smoke detectors, home fire
drills and escape plans, among other things.
A new demonstration this year will be the Minnesota
State Fire Marshal’s Residential Fire Sprinkler Trailer,
which shows how residential fire sprinklers work
quickly to extinguish a house fire. There will be three
demonstrations in the afternoon and a select number of
residents will be able to sit in the trailer during the
demonstrations. “This is a rare opportunity to see this
important life safety device and how it can protect you in
a fire at your residence,” said Fire Marshal Tom Jenson.
Fire extinguisher inspections will also be offered. All
Safe Fire and Security, provider of services for the City of
Edina and Edina Public Schools, will be on site to inspect
residents’ fire extinguishers. All Safe Fire and Security will
inspect any fire extinguishers brought to the Open House,
service them if needed for a nominal fee or recommend
replacement. Commercial-grade fire extinguishers will be
available for purchase. “This is a great opportunity for
home daycare providers who are required to have a fire
extinguisher to complete their annual inspections,”
Jenson said.
Fire Department demonstrations will include an automobile
extrication and a performance by the Special Operations
Team. The Department’s newest piece of paramedic
equipment, a 12-lead EKG monitor and defibrillator, will be
on display.
Children will have the opportunity to tour the Safety House
where firefighters teach home fire safety and practice a fire
escape. Children will also be able to practice putting out a
fire with a real fire hose and visit with Sparky the Fire Dog.
The event will be held rain or shine. For more information,
contact Jenson, 952-826-0378.
Firefighters/paramedics Dominic Hadzima and Todd Skatrud
demonstrate an auto extrication at a previous Open House.
Firefighter/paramedic Mike Hughes helps a young person
“practice putting out fires” with a fire hose at the 2002 Open
House. Children will have the same opportunity at this year’s event.
Breathe Easier
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demonstrations, family portraits, refreshments, handmade
gifts and free limousine rides to the Swanson Gallery.
The Carnival is part of the Twin Cities Fine Arts
Organization’s “Art on the Town,” a citywide celebration of
the arts held in museums and galleries Oct. 2 through Oct.
12. This second-annual event celebrates the cultural
contributions of the arts and aims to provide Twin Cities’
audiences first-hand access to work now being created by
leading artists in their own communities. Over a 10-day
period, audiences can experience hosted gallery receptions,
art-making demonstrations, performance art pieces, hands-
on activities, musical performances and discussions with
local artists.
Diana Hedges, Director of the Edina Art Center, said,
“Last year, the Edina Art Center celebrated its 25th
anniversary during Art on the Town. As a member of the
Twin Cities Fine Art Organization, we are happy to
participate in this area Arts celebration. It will be fun for
the entire Family!”
Initiated and organized by Kellie Rae Theiss, president of
the Twin Cities Fine Arts Organization and owner of Kellie
Rae Theiss Gallery, this energizing project includes 50
visual arts venues throughout the Twin Cities. Museum
participants include The Minneapolis Institute of Arts,
Walker Art Center, Weisman Art Museum and Minnesota
Museum of American Art, as well as more than 40 non-
profit and for-profit galleries and local art centers. Twin
Cities Fine Arts Organization and Target Corporation
Partnership sponsor Art on the Town.
“We’re delighted to come together and to celebrate the
cultural identity of the Twin Cities,” Theiss said. “This
event also lifts up the local artists of the Community.”
For more information on the Edina Art Center,
call 612-915-6600 or visit www.EdinaArtCenter.com.
For more information on Art on the Town, call Angie
Adamson or Erin Swetland, 612-423-9673.
25•AUTUMN 200324•AUTUMN 2003
By Kathleen Sovell
The Edina Art Center will present two unique programs
in October.
As a kickoff to Art on the Town, Carnival of Arts, the
Edina Art Center will present a special event dubbed
“Friday Night Live: Especially for Grandparents and their
Grandchildren” at the Edina Senior Center, 5280 Grandview
Square, 5:30 to 8 p.m. Fridays Oct. 10 and 17.
Participants will spend the two nights telling stories,
painting, drawing, making music and dancing that will
inspire them to create “Memory Books.” Grandfamilies
will share memories that can be held in a small book by
the end of the program. Participants should bring
pictures and small mementos to include in their
memory books.
Maria Genné and Elinor Anderson-Genné will lead the
event. Genné is Artistic Director of Kairos Dance Theatre,
an intergenerational dance company. Kairos’ unique
program “The Dancing Heart – Vital Elders Moving in
Community” is in high demand in senior programs in the
Twin Cities. Anderson-Genné, a recent visual art graduate
from Oberlin College, has collaborated with her mother,
Genne, for many years.
The Edina Art Center, in collaboration with the Twin Cities
Fine Arts Organization, will present the “Carnival of Art”
1 to 5 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 11. The festival will take place at
the Art Center, 4701 W. 64th St.
“Carnival of Art” is a hands-on activity event for all ages and
includes children’s art activities, clay projects, artists’
Edina Art Center To Present ‘Friday
Night Live’And ‘Carnival Of Art’
Face-painting will be part of the fun at the Edina Art Center’s
“Carnival of Arts.”
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27•AUTUMN 2003
people would remember me as a nice, honest, helpful
person. I dream of living in a peaceful world.”
Patchie’s mom, Patty O’Neil, believes that the D.A.R.E.
program is beneficial to the students, especially when it
is delivered before the children are exposed to drugs
and alcohol.
“Anything is helpful that might increase awareness and
decrease experimentation,” she said.
Patchie felt that the program was a success. Among other
things, he was taught what drugs were, what they do,
why they are bad, and various ways to say “no.”
Edina Police Officer Kris Eidem, who has been an Edina
D.A.R.E. officer since 1991, was Patchie’s classroom
D.A.R.E. officer. She said the program works to promote
the idea that children can be successful in life without
using drugs, alcohol, tobacco or violence. Much of the 10-
lesson program is taught through role-play, she said.
“We teach the understanding of the four influences
on decision-making; family, media pressure, personal
pressure, and peers,” she said. “Patchie’s enthusiasm
stood out. He had a willingness to learn and participate
and he put a bigger effort into it than many
other students.”
For more information on the D.A.R.E. program, contact
Police Officer Jeff Elasky, 952-826-1611.
26•AUTUMN 2003
By Jill MacPhail
Twelve-year-old Patrick “Patchie” O’Neil spent night after
night scouring magazines and cutting out words and
pictures. He arranged the clippings into a collage that
gave viewers the message, “Don’t Do Drugs.”
Patchie, a seventh-grader at South View Middle School,
was selected as the 2003 Minnesota Drug Abuse
Resistance Education (D.A.R.E.) poster contest winner.
His poster idea beat out hundreds of entries that were
received from students all over the state of Minnesota.
In recognition of his effort, Patchie threw out the opening
pitch at the April 6 Minnesota Twins game. He spent time
on the field with T.C. Bear, the Twins’ mascot, while the
players warmed up. Patchie also received D.A.R.E
memorabilia and a Twins’ jersey for his achievements.
Patchie was one of about 150,000 Minnesota children
who participated in the D.A.R.E. program this year.
The program is a collaborative effort between the Police
Department, schools, parents and community leaders. Its
purpose is to teach kids in the fifth and sixth grades to
recognize and resist the pressures and situations that
might lead them to experiment with drugs, alcohol, and
cigarettes. Edina Police Chief Mike Siitari praised both
the program and Patchie.
“Having positive dreams and goals for our future is a very
important motivator for children and adults,” he said.
“Patrick took this assignment to heart and spent the time
and effort to create the best poster in the state of
Minnesota. This speaks highly of Patrick’s commitment
to the lessons of D.A.R.E. and a positive future.”
Siitari presented Patchie with the Edina Police
Department’s Outstanding Achievement Award in
recognition of his hard work.
Patchie, the middle child of five boys, thought that his
unique poster idea would stand out from the other hand-
drawn posters. “Positive development,” “celebrate,”
“trust” and
“unlimited
possibility” were
some of the
phrases that he
used to describe
a drug-free
environment. The
students were also
asked to submit
an essay on the
back of their
posters.
“I would like to be
a person that
other people
respect and look
up to,” Patchie
wrote in his essay.
“I hope that
Edina Student Wins 2003
Minnesota D.A.R.E.Poster Contest
For winning the state-wide D.A.R.E poster
contest, Patrick “Patchie” O’Neil threw out
the opening pitch at the April 6 Minnesota
Twins game.
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Leaves
Keep fallen leaves out of the street to help prevent clogging
the storm sewer, which can lead to water runoff, backups
and flooding.
In the fall, three street sweepers work eight to 10 hours per day
for four to six weeks collecting leaves throughout the City. If
residents rake leaves from their yards into the streets,
the street sweeper will not be able to keep up.
Residents should compost their leaves
or contact their refuse hauler for proper
disposal. Licensed haulers in the City
are Aspen Waste, 612-884-8000; BFI,
952-941-5174; Vierkant Disposal,
612-922-2505; and Waste Management,
952-882-2300.
Edina Snow Removal Regulations
Any snow removed from your walkways,
driveways or sidewalks must remain on your
property. Do not shovel snow into the street or
onto your neighbor’s property. If you have a
sidewalk, Edina law states that you must keep it plowed
or shoveled for the safety of you and your neighbors.
If a fire hydrant is located on your property, please
remember that you need to clear snow away from it. As
soon as the snow stops falling, start to clear away the snow
so that the hydrant is visible. The few minutes it takes
provides access to a fire hydrant that might save you and
your neighbors precious time in an emergency.
Edina Snow Parking Regulations
Many Minnesotans have made the mistake of parking their cars
or trucks on the street during a snowstorm, only to find later that
their vehicles have been “buried” or “plowed in.” Seeing a parking
ticket on your windshield would only add to the frustration. You
can avoid a citation or tow by following these rules.
No vehicle may be parked on a City street, highway
or alley under the following conditions:
• When 1.5 inches or more of snow
has fallen, until it has been plowed to
the curbline.
• For six hours after the snowfall stops,
unless traffic signs specifically allow you
to do so or if you are engaged in certain
job-related activities as described in the
City Code.
• From 1 a.m. to 6 a.m. Nov. 1 to March 31.
It is extremely important for residents to keep
their vehicles off roadways during these times.
Edina’s Public Works Department has a reputation for
providing top-notch snow removing services, but staff
members need your help. Cars parked on the street make it
difficult for snowplow operators to maneuver and also
prevent the street from being thoroughly plowed. By
parking in driveways or lots, you will avoid parking tickets
and the expense and inconvenience associated with towing.
For more information, contact Public Works Coordinator
Steve Johnson, 952-826-0301.
It’s Not Only Neighborly …
It’s The Law
29•AUTUMN 2003
VEAP Announces Holiday Program
28•AUTUMN 2003
Help make the holidays brighter for area families in need
this season by making a donation to Volunteers Enlisted to
Assist People (VEAP), which serves the communities of
Edina, Bloomington and Richfield.
VEAP will distribute food to more than 1,100 families and
gifts to more than 2,500 children in the three communities.
VEAP will distribute bags of pre-packed
groceries and supermarket gift
certificates for the holidays. In
addition to the holiday meal, VEAP
will also organize a “Holiday Store”
for qualifying families. Parents will
come to the store and select donated
gifts for their children. Following are
suggested gifts to donate. The most
needed items are for children ages 8 to 18.
Riding, crib, tub, developmental and musical toys are
suggested for children ages birth to 3. Especially popular
are toy phones or cameras, wooden puzzles, electronic
learning toys and pop-up or talking books.
Electronic, remote-controlled and building toys are
suggested for children ages 4 to 7, as are multicultural
dolls, Beanie Babies, Magna Doodle and Lite Brite toys,
play tents, sleeping bags, children’s videotapes, music
players and games and puzzles.
Most gifts are needed for children ages 8 to 18. Suggested
gift items include cosmetic bags and shaving kits, diaries
and journals, stationery, compact disc or cassette players,
cameras, telephones, bed sheets and comforters, jewelry
boxes, electronic games, calendars and daily planners,
flashlights, tool sets, remote-controlled vehicles, travel
carry-on bags, fishing poles and tackle, wallets and
billfolds, clock radios, watches, desk or novelty lamps, ice
skates, cosmetic sets, games, tackle and tool boxes,
skateboards, scooters, books and audio books.
Gift certificates for older children may also be
purchased. Suggested retailers are American Eagle;
Bath & Body Works; Bed, Bath & Beyond; Best
Buy; GAP; Kohl’s; Herberger’s; Mall of America;
Marshall’s; TJ Maxx; Old Navy; Southdale Center;
Target; Wal-Mart and local cinemas. Gift
certificates should be purchased in $15 or $20
denominations.
New unwrapped gifts must be delivered to the VEAP office,
9731 James Ave. S., Bloomington, by Dec. 15. Through the
first part of December, drop boxes will be available at
Edina City Hall, 4801 W. 50th St., and Fire Station No. 1,
6250 Tracy Ave.
Volunteers are needed to pre-sort gifts, set up the Holiday
Store, help with gift and food distribution on Dec. 17 and 18
and deliver hot meals on Christmas Day. To volunteer,
contact the VEAP office after Oct. 20.
For more information on the food or gift drives or to
volunteer, contact the VEAP office, 952-888-9616,
9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday through Friday.
To purge rust and stagnant water from the water
distribution system and identify hydrants in need of
maintenance, the Utilities Division of the City of Edina’s
Public Works Department is in the process of flushing
hydrants. Random hydrants are also flushed throughout
the year as weather and water demand allows.
Hydrant flushing began in September and takes place
8 a.m. to 6 p.m. Monday through Friday. In an attempt to
minimize the impact on residents, crews will work in one
area of the City at a time. Through Oct. 3, crews will be
flushing west of Minnesota Highway 100 and north of
Minnesota Highway 62. Oct. 6-10, crews will flush
hydrants west of Highway 100 and south of Highway 62.
Flushing will be completed the week of Oct. 13 with work
east of Highway 100 and south of Highway 62.
Due to hydrant flushing, it is inevitable that some
residents will receive rust-colored water, which can stain
laundry but is safe to drink. Residents may also receive
rust-colored water when areas adjacent to theirs are being
flushed. Residents should check that water coming into
the house is clear before doing laundry during the
flushing period.
The flushing schedule is approximate. For an up-to-date
flushing schedule, call the Public Works Hotline at
952-826-0375. For more information, contact Utilities
Superintendent Roger Glanzer, 952-826-0311, or visit
www.cityofedina.com.
31•AUTUMN 200330•AUTUMN 2003
Minnesota Chemical Health Week
To Be Celebrated In November
City Of Edina To Complete Fall
Hydrant Flushing In October
By Kathy Iverson
Chemical Health Coordinator
The approaching season of holidays and family
gatherings also ushers in the traditional celebration of
Minnesota Chemical Health Week. This year, Minnesota
Chemical Health Week will be Nov. 17 to 23. Since the
beginnings of the very first Minnesota Chemical Health
Week in 1990, Edina has joined with other statewide
groups to focus the spotlight on improving health for all
our community members.
The people and stories of substance abuse are found right
here in Edina. These are people we know and recognize.
She’s your child or mine. She’s your babysitter. He’s your
next door neighbor or pizza delivery person. They
include users of tobacco, and those whose use of alcohol
is inappropriate (anyone who is underage or anyone
whose use is excessive) as well as those who use
illegal drugs.
Even those who do not use these substances are affected.
It affects families and individuals at every income level, in
every ethnic group, and from rural communities to
suburban towns to big cities.
Local headlines from the past year reflected some of
devastating effects of alcohol, tobacco and illegal drug
use. You probably remember some of them, and no
doubt, someone in our community has been personally
touched by those incidents.
It is up to us to change attitudes and improve the health
of all our community members. Edina has chosen to be a
leader in initiatives and laws that strive for better health.
This past year, changes to the local alcohol ordinance for
the benefit of the Edina Art Fair resulted in a beer garden
that was effectively managed for the protection of
underage youth. A local middle-school youth group is
focusing on health promotion activities. A group of high
school students has formed Students Taking Action
Together (STAT) at Edina High School, with the goal of
reducing alcohol, tobacco and drug use among their
peers. Efforts are underway to include faith communities
in prevention activities. Parent groups have formed to
share ideas and strategies to support healthy child
development. Still, there is more to be done.
All of us can participate in Minnesota Chemical Health
Week. Grab one of the red ribbons around town and keep
it visible. It’s a way to say we care, we support good
health, and that we support a strong community.
A lot of great information can be accessed on the Internet.
Please refer to the City of Edina website,
www.cityofedina.com, and look for chemical health.
For more information on this campaign, please contact
Kathy Iverson, menze002@tc.umn.edu or 952-929-7627.
DO
YOU
have insurance for
sewer back-ups?
Check your policy today!
Coverage for backups of sewers and basement drains is
available, but not always included in a basic homeowner’s
insurance policy.
In addition, insurance companies that do offer the
protection have varying amounts of coverage.
Check your homeowner’s insurance policy to see if you
have coverage for backups.
If you do not have coverage, consider adding to your
policy because in most cases the City’s insurance will
not cover your damages in the event of an incident.
For moreinformation, call Edina Public Works, 952-826-0311.
33•AUTUMN 2003
Muniz and gave it “thumbs up.” The students then wrote
letters to movie producers and the media to encourage
them to create more movies and promote films that do not
glamorize drugs, alcohol and tobacco.
In May, the students personally presented plaques signed
by Mayor Dennis Maetzold to 64 smoke-free restaurants in
Edina. The plaque presentations were some of the group’s
most gratifying experiences.
“At first, we were kind of nervous about going in to the
restaurants and asking to see the owner or manager.
But a lot of them were really excited, so it made [the
presentations] fun,” Taylor said. “Everyone stood up and
clapped at American Hero. Arby’s gave us all free French
fries. Everyone was jumping up and down and clapping
at Caribou Coffee because it was the first award they
won since they opened [the franchise].”
In the spring during Alcohol Awareness Month, the
students made posters and flyers about the consequences
of drunk driving and hung them in their school. The
group stopped meeting at the end of the school year, but
several of the students assisted the Park and Recreation
Department by making presentations during the summer
Playground Program at area parks.
The students feel they are making a difference in the
community and in the lives of younger students and
siblings. “I know I’m making a difference,” Abbi said.
“When he sees movies or ads with people smoking, my
younger brother will say ‘That’s so stupid.’ Because of what
I’m doing with HERO, he is much more aware of [the
negative affects of] tobacco, drugs and alcohol.”
Alex has also been able to identify at least one person
who has been positively impacted by his work with HERO.
“I’ve heard younger kids talking after our presentations
and they say things like, ‘Wow! It’s really cool that the older
kids are telling us about not smoking.’ One kid came to our
presentation three times. We could hear him before and
after the last couple of presentations bragging about how
he had already seen the program.”
This year, the program has expanded to Valley View Middle
School. In addition, the program at both schools will be
expanded to include ninth-grade students. Students will
participate in some of the same programs they were
exposed to last year, but will do many more.
“HERO is a wonderful program,” said Molly McDonough
Schoeb, Bloomington Public Health’s Youth Health
Promotions Specialist, who concentrates on tobacco-use
prevention. “Over the years, we’ve tried to get other groups
going, but none have been as strong as HERO. It’s the best
group I’ve ever worked with. The kids took it to heart and
have a lot of passion for what they are doing.”
For more information on the HERO program, contact
Schulze at South View Middle School, 952-848-4429, or
Iverson, menze002@tc.umn.edu or 952-929-7627.
32•AUTUMN 2003
Middle School Students Become
Local HEROs
A group of local middle school students are “just saying no”
to drugs and alcohol and “yes” to leadership.
Last school year, South View Middle School Youth
Development/Youth Service Coordinator Michelle
(Wilcoxon) Schulze formed Health Educators Reaching
Out (HERO) to give students an opportunity to develop
leadership skills while they provide important peer
education about resistance to drugs, alcohol and tobacco.
The program also promotes community service.
“I have a public health background and have a real passion
for it,” Schulze said. “I developed HERO as a different kind
of after-school activity for a different group of kids. It has
been a real success.”
Schulze asked teachers at the school to nominate sixth-
through eighth-grade students for the group. The
nominated students were then invited to join HERO. Those
who joined were Abbi Butterfield, Caitlin Cunigan, Chloe
Cunigan, Cathy Day, Emily Duane, Lesley Hanson, Nadini
Hettigei, Sarah Johnson, Jenna Klein, Alex Kraus, Elizabeth
Machmeier, Courtney O’Hara, Taylor Pagitt, Staci Pierce
and Sophie Terwilliger.
“It felt really good to be nominated,” said Elizabeth, 12. “I felt
really honored to be asked to be part of such a special group.”
Jenna felt the same way. “I’ve been the leader in a small
group before, but not in a group like this,” she said. “Even
though we are supposed to be teaching younger students,
I’m learning a lot, too.”
HERO began meeting regularly in late winter. Schulze formed
relationships with City of Edina Chemical Health Coordinator
Kathy Iverson and Bloomington Public Health staff members
to develop monthly activities for the students.
One of the group’s first assignments was participating in
the national “Thumbs Up, Thumbs Down” program. As
part of the program, students watch a movie and count
the number of references to substance use and abuse. The
Edina students watched “Big Fat Liar” starring Frankie
HERO leaders explain the dangers of smoking at a Playground
Program presentation. Through HERO, students focus on a
different topic each month and share the dangers of substance
use and abuse with their peers.
35•AUTUMN 2003
AR&LE is planning a new production for 2005. Auditions
and rehearsals will begin next fall.
Join the cast and crew of “Totally Talents & Tunes” to
celebrate the award and view the show! The party will be
held 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. Tuesday, Nov. 18, at the
Bloomington Art Center, 1800 West Old Shakopee Road.
For more information on the play or any of AR&LE’s
activities or to RSVP for the
party, call 952-826-0433.
34•AUTUMN 2003
‘Totally Talents & Tunes’
Wins National Arts &
Humanities Award
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The Adaptive Recreation &
Learning Exchange (AR&LE)
has been named winner of the
2003 National Recreation and
Park Association Dorothy
Mullen Arts & Humanities
Award for its production of
“Totally Talents and Tunes.”
The prestigious award will be presented Oct. 23
at the association’s Congress & Exposition. The award will
be presented locally in the coming months at the
Minnesota Recreation and Park Association conference.
AR&LE, a cooperative of the cities of Edina, Bloomington,
Eden Prairie and Richfield, presented the hour-long musical
“Totally Talents & Tunes,” adapted from Barbara Redlin’s
“Talents and Tunes Together,” in March 2002. The musical
follows a group of people who encounter conflict when they
decide to enter a talent show. They can’t decide if
performing is “all about me” or “all about us.” The conflict
comes to a head when one of the “me” people realizes he
needs help.
The actors in the play were not your typical stars. More
than 30 principal actors in “Totally Talents & Tunes”
were adults with developmental disabilities. Other actors
included Richfield High School students.
“‘Totally Talents & Tunes’’’ focused on the actors’ abilities,
not disabilities,” said Edina Recreation Supervisor Susie
Miller. “Many of our actors had never had the opportunity
to perform in front of an audience. Some might have worked
behind the scenes on a production, but had never been in
the spotlight like they were for “Totally Talents & Tunes.” It
was extremely gratifying to watch them blossom on stage.”
The goal of the musical was not only to provide adults with
disabilities the opportunity to participate in a theatrical
production, but to increase self-esteem, promote teamwork
of people with and without disabilities, increase
participants’ artistic expression, heighten community
awareness of the talents of adults with disabilities and
enhance participants’ knowledge of the arts.
For meeting those goals, NRPA selected AR&LE for the
Dorothy Mullen Arts & Humanities Award out of eight
entries submitted by organizations representing a
population of 25,000 to 74,999 people.
The Dorothy Mullen Arts and Humanities Award Program,
named for a pioneer in the field of recreation and parks and its
diversified application, selects national winners from five
population classes. The program aims not only to recognize
those who demonstrate excellence in art and humanities, but
also to inspire others who may be interested in developing
similar programs. Judges weighed content, innovation,
contribution to the community served and expansion of interest
in the arts and humanities when making their selection.
“The smiles after our performances was the award we were
looking for,” Miller said. “But it is satisfying to receive
national recognition for a program we are so very proud to
have offered our residents with and without disabilities.”
37•AUTUMN 200336•AUTUMN 2003
Wilson Begins Work As City Assessor
During heartfelt conversations, Robert Wilson’s wife
would sometimes ask, “If you could work for any city,
which would be it be?” In a matter-of-fact sort of tone, he
would answer, “Edina.”
That dream came true for Wilson in August when he began
work as Edina’s City Assessor.
Wilson, a Certified Assessment Evaluator, had worked as
Assessor for the City of Hopkins for 15 years. Prior to that,
he worked as a residential appraiser for St. Louis Park and
appraisal assistant for Hennepin County.
“We are fortunate to have a person of Bob’s caliber on
our staff,” said Edina City Manager Gordon Hughes. “He
brings a wealth of experience to the position. We look
forward to a long and enjoyable working relationship.”
The Edina Assessing Department is responsible for
estimating the market value and determining the
classification of each piece of property (parcel) in the City
of Edina for property tax purposes.
Valuations must meet the standards established by
Minnesota Statutes and the Minnesota Department of
Revenue. The Assessing Department appraises all
property at actual market value, determines the current
classification/use of the property, informs property owners
of their estimated value, conducts Board of Review
meetings to discuss those values, applies appropriate
classification rates and compiles taxable values for each
taxing authority.
Wilson was first exposed to the property appraisal process
during his college years. He completed field data
collections for the Hopkins Assessing Department during
summer breaks from the private college he attended in
Wisconsin. Wilson especially liked working outside and
talking one-on-one with property owners.
After college, Wilson took a job with Musicland Group, but
after a short time realized that he preferred the sort of work
he had been doing with the City of Hopkins. He began work
to become certified and was eventually hired by Hennepin
County where he started his career in assessing.
Wilson is very excited about his new position with the City
of Edina. “I have always really liked Edina,” he said. “I like
the small town feel here and the size of the community.
Edina is just the right size for me to get to know people in
the community and to be able to interact a lot with other
City departments.”
Much of his work will be similar to his position in Hopkins.
However, Hopkins does not have as many “Class A” office
buildings or a regional shopping mall to appraise.
“I’ve been really impressed with the management of the
City of Edina,” Wilson further explained. “There is a strong
focus on customer service here. The Assessing
Department spends a lot of time working one-on-one with
people. I am excited to work in this environment.”
Wilson holds bachelor’s degrees in business/economics
and English. He is a member of the International
Association of Assessing Officers and the Minnesota
Association of Assessing Officers (MAAO). Last year, he
served as MAAO president. In addition, he is an associate
member of the Appraisal Institute and often teaching
continuing education courses for appraisers. Wilson is
married and the father of four.
Minneapolis Assessor Scott Renne, who worked with
Wilson at the City of Hopkins, said Edina could not have
found a better Assessor. “Bob is a wonderful colleague and
good friend,” he said. “He was the best choice for the job
and will do well working with the residents and property
owners of Edina.”
For more information on Edina’s Assessing Department,
call 952-826-0365.
Robert Wilson began work in August as City Assessor.
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recommend any necessary amendments to the
City Council.
The complete Bias/Hate Crime Response and Prevention
Plan is available online at www.cityofedina.com. For more
information on the plan, contact Heiberg, 952-826-0403.
39•AUTUMN 200338•AUTUMN 2003
City Updates Bias/Hate Crime
Response Plan
What is a hate crime? What should I do if I think I am
a victim of a hate crime? How can I report a hate crime?
Where I can I go for help? What can I do to stop
hate crimes?
The Edina City Council recently adopted an updated
Bias/Hate Crime Response And Prevention Plan that
answers those questions and provides a strategy for dealing
with those types of intolerable incidents should they occur
in the community.
A hate crime, as defined by State law, is a criminal act
committed against a person, institution or property of
which the primary motivation is the victim’s race, color,
religion, gender, sexual orientation, age, disability or
national origin. Criminal acts include arson, assault,
vandalism, threats, harassment and physical acts of
violence. A recent change in the law allows for the
perception of either the victim or the police officer
regarding the bias motivation of the crime to cause it to be
categorized as a hate crime. Convictions resulting from
hate crimes carry enhanced penalties.
Hate crimes are different from discrimination complaints.
Although discrimination is against the law, it is not a crime,
but rather a civil matter.
The Edina City Council first adopted a Bias/Hate Crime
Response Plan developed by the Human Relations
Commission in 1997. Although there had never been an
incident, the Commission updated the plan and presented it
to the Council for approval earlier this year.
The updated plan outlines a procedure for appropriate and
timely local response to bias/hate crimes or incidents,
raises awareness of the issue within the community and
establishes a network of community resources that can be
activated as needed.
“It is not the role of the Human Relations Commission to
investigate such crimes. The Commission does not
interfere with the Police Department’s investigation in any
way,” said Human Services Coordinator Susan Heiberg,
who serves as staff liaison to the Commission. “Rather, the
Commission provides support to victims of such crimes and
leadership in the community in the prevention of bias and
hate crimes through education and collaborative
community actions against prejudice and bigotry.”
Under the plan, the Edina Police Department will notify
City staff and the Human Relations Commission
Chairperson of a bias or hate crime or incident as soon as
possible after a complaint has been investigated and
determined to be valid. Together, the Police Department
and other City staff members and the Commission
Chairperson will determine the appropriate level of
response, including any necessary public statements. The
Mayor or Commission Chairperson will promptly contact
the victim to offer support and determine what further
response may be appropriate. The Commission
Chairperson will call upon members of its “Community
Resources network” as needed for support.
Heiberg said the Commission plans to review the Response
and Prevention Plan on an annual basis and will
DIAL9-1-1To:
•Report an incident that requires a Police
Officer at the scene (assaults, burglaries,
domestic disputes, accidents, etc.)
•Summon a paramedic or ambulance.
• Report a fire.
• Report suspicious, criminal activity (alarms,
shots fired, shouts for help, sounds of breaking
glass, unfamiliar person carrying items from
a house, etc.).
• Report a sewer backup or other Public Works
emergency that requires immediate attention.
Call 952-927-8861 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
Monday through Friday for general infor-
mation. If you have a situation after hours
or on weekends, but do not require
immediate response from a paramedic,
firefighter, police officer or Public Works
crew, call the Police Department’s non-
emergency number, 952-826-1610.
When in doubt or unsure of
any situation, call 9-1-1 and
the dispatcher will assist you.