HomeMy WebLinkAboutEdition Edina March 2023Longtime Edina Community Foundation Executive Director Set to Retire
For 20 Years, Crockett Has Used His Passion for Service to Better the Community
BY BRITTANY BADER
While there are many people to thank for programs
like Connect Card, Connecting with Kids, Edina
Reads and the annual 4th of July parade, one
person in particular is longtime Edina Community
Foundation Executive Director Dick Crockett.
On March 15, Crockett will retire, ending a tenure
that has measurably shaped the Foundation and
the Edina community. His retirement day coincides
with his 20th work anniversary, bringing his
career with the Foundation full circle and much
to celebrate.
The Edina Community Foundation (originally the
Edina Foundation) was founded in 1977 as a
charitable organization for the City of Edina and
Edina Public Schools. Decades later, its name and
focus were changed to serve the wider community.
When Crockett came to the Foundation in 2003,
he was new to the part-time role, but not to the
nonprofit sector. He had previous experience
working with nonprofits by doing legal work for
higher education institutions and as board chair
for the Fargo-Moorhead Area Foundation. He
said it was through these experiences he realized
he was more motivated and challenged by service
work. So, in 2002 when he received the City’s
About Town publication that mentioned the
position, he felt called to pursue it.
At the time, Crockett said he was tasked with
developing programs to fulfill the Foundation’s
mission and increase donor support.
“I wanted to create more offerings for people
living in Edina. We didn’t have that when I started
20 years ago. We were an idea without actual
programming behind it yet,” said Crockett.
“I started with bringing my own values to the
community in terms of what would make Edina a
better community to live in and combined that with
meeting specific needs people brought to me.”
Fast-forward to today, Crockett says he has a list
of more than 400 people he has worked with
who have had a connection to the Foundation
in some way.
As the Foundation’s services have grown, so
has its mission statement. When reflecting on
highlights from his career, Crockett said one
of his favorite memories is when a group
collaborated on improving the Foundation’s
mission statement, from the original
“Strengthening our community” to “We
bring people together to serve, strengthen
and celebrate our community.”
He is very happy for the impact the words
of the mission statement have had over the
years – particularly the point of celebrating
the community. He’s most proud of the
public art contributions, starting Edina
Reads and growing the Community Impact
Program, which helps small causes raise
money and awareness.
“I am particularly proud of the way we’ve
been able to grow the Community Impact
Program because it has helped create a
much broader cultural community here than
an ordinary suburban community has,”
Crocket said. “And our partners are always
very happy to get the service and work with
us. It’s a way of serving and strengthening
the community as well as celebrating their
interests and bringing them to the attention
of the broader community.”
Like many retirees, Crockett plans to do
more traveling. Notably, in the fall, he is
looking forward
to his annual
cycling trip. He
also looks forward
to spending more
time with his family
and friends.
However, one
thing will certainly
stay the same:
his passion for
service work. He
has committed
to volunteer one
day each week to assist a new director or interim
director through June. He also plans to continue
leading the Edina Reads Committee.
“Through my time at the Foundation and being an
Edina Rotarian for 18 years, I’ve learned the value
and satisfaction of serving other people individually
and collectively. I expect that will continue. One
thing that I expect to do in retirement is to find
another organization to serve.”
To learn more about the
Edina Community Foundation, visit
EdinaCommunityFoundation.org.
In Dick Crockett’s time with the Edina Community Foundation, over $500,000 in public art has been
contributed to the City. Among the art is “Reflecting on Friendship,” a bronze piece by Nick Legeros
that Crockett and his wife, Suzie, donated. (Photo by Dan Doar)
Dick Crockett (Submitted Photo)
City of Edina EdinaMN.gov 1
Edition: Edina
MARCH 2023
Volume 10, Issue 3Strong FoundationCITY GOALS:Better TogetherReliable Service Livable City
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Middle School
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Countryside
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Grace Church
& School
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The City of Edina Development Tracker includes reconstruction or new construction projects
that have been completed in the past six months, are currently under construction, have
filed a formal application to the City or have been substantially approved.
View the Development and Construction Tracker online at EdinaMN.gov by clicking on the “Learn About Projects” button.
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Former Public
Works Site
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Maison Green
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Pentagon
Village Apartments
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1 Interlachen Country Club
Location: 6200 Interlachen Blvd.
Developer: Interlachen Country Club
Status: Under Construction
The club is expanding its boundaries by
adding a new parking lot and expanded
practice area off Waterman Avenue. The
Country Club owns two single-family homes
that will continue as single-family homes
to serve as a buffer to the homes to the
west. A gate will be constructed at the
end of Waterman, just after the homes
owned by the Country Club.
2 Former Public Works Site
Location: 5146 Eden Ave.
Developer: Edina Housing & Redevelopment
Authority, United Properties and Jester Concepts
Status: Approved
The proposal includes a 6.5-story, 90-
unit senior cooperative (owner-occupied)
project with 173 underground parking
spaces. Ten percent of the units will be
affordable. The project will include a
two-story, 13,500-square-foot restaurant
and a 30,000-square-foot public park with
pedestrian walkways to a bridge that
would connect to the municipal parking
ramp next to the building housing Jerry’s
Foods and Jerry’s Hardware.
3 Maison Green
Location: 4917 Eden Ave.
Developer: Reuter Walton
Status: Under Construction
Reuter Walton tore down the Perkins
restaurant and office building on the site.
The developer is building a seven-story,
208-unit luxury apartment building with a
3,700-square foot restaurant/coffee shop.
Ten percent of the units are set for those
with 50 percent area median income.
4 Our Lady of Grace Expansion
Location: 5051 Eden Ave.
Status: Completed
Improvements included a new priest
residence, activity center, expansion of
the school and parish gathering space and
remodeled areas of existing buildings.
5 Valley View Row
Location: 4404 Valley View Road
Developer: City Homes
Status: Proposed
City Homes is developing the vacant site.
The new plans include construction of
two, two-unit row houses.
6 Bhatti GI Gastroenterology
Location: 6500 Barrie Road
Developer: MSP Commercial
Status: Under Construction
The applicant tore down the existing
16,032-square-foot medical office building
to build a new three-story, 24,000-square-
foot medical office and surgery center.
7 Cornelia View Apartments
Location: 4040 W. 70th St.
Developer: Ecumen and Lupe
Development Partners
Status: Under Construction
Ecumen and Lupe Development Partners
are constructing a new four-story, 118-unit
senior affordable housing project with 86
underground and 23 surface parking stalls.
8 70th & France/U.S. Bank Site
Location: 7001 and 7025 France Ave.
Developer: Orion Investments, ESG
and Mortenson
Status: Under Construction
Phase one of this project is complete
with the construction of a one-story,
6,500-square-foot U.S. Bank building with
a drive-thru. The bank opened in February.
The next phase includes a 24-story, 267-unit
apartment building with 1,500-square-
feet of retail; a six-to-seven-story,
189,430-square-foot office/retail building;
and an eight-level, freestanding 540-stall
parking ramp with a 1,300-square-foot
bike space. Demolition of the old bank
building is scheduled for this spring, with
construction of these next phases to follow.
9 The Sound on 76th
Location: 4100 W. 76th St.
Developer: The Sound on 76th / AEON
Status: Completed
After removing notable artwork, the
building that once occupied FlyteTyme
Studios and later the Minneapolis Media
Institute was demolished. A four-story
apartment building with 80 affordable
housing units and underground resident
parking was built on the site.
10 The Fred at Pentagon North
Location: 4660 77th St. W.
Developer: Solhem Companies
Status: Under Construction
The applicant tore down two office
buildings on the site and is constructing a
five- to seven-story, 408-unit market rate
apartment building.
11 Pentagon North Phase II
Location: 4620 77th Street W.
Developer: Solhem Companies
Status: Approved
The developer plans to tear down one of
the existing office buildings at Pentagon
Park and construct a seven-story, 276-unit
apartment building in its place. Ten percent
of the units would be for affordable
housing. One of the main features of the
plan is the provision of a new entrance to
Fred Richards Park on the east side of the
existing office building.
12 Pentagon Village Apartments
Location: 4911 77th St. W.
Developer: Rise Development
Status: Under Construction
A six-story, 200-unit apartment building
is planned for the southeast corner of
Pentagon South. Ten percent of the
units will be for affordable housing.
- COMPILED BY RENEE MOTTET
BY THE NUMBERS
Typical years in the
career of a police dog
8
Usual number of
calls that K-9 Gryf
handles each year
100
Weeks of training before
a K-9 can work a shift
16
The Edina Police Department’s K-9
units are certified by the U.S. Police
Canine Association in patrol and
narcotics detection. These dogs typically
respond to calls involving suspect
tracking, searching for narcotics or
searching areas or buildings. Edina’s
dogs, K-9 Blitz and K-9 Gryf, are
partnered with Patrol Officers Sean
Young and Mike Bengtson.
K-9 Units
3City of Edina EdinaMN.gov
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EdinaMN.gov/SomaliEE
EdinaMN.gov/SpanishEE
Escanee este código para ver en español
952-927-8861 | mail@EdinaMN.govCity of Edina EdinaMN.gov4
BY DEBBIE TOWNSEND
Since the City’s Tree Protection Ordinance
first went into effect in 2015, one consistent
complaint has come from Edina residents: It
doesn’t do enough to protect trees or replace
those lost during construction.
“The biggest complaints have been that the tree
replacements are too small. They would cut down
a 100-year-old oak tree and only have to put in
a 2.5-inch diameter sapling to replace it,” said
City Forester Luther Overholt. “More trees were
being removed than replanted. Of those that were
replanted, many weren’t cared for and often died.”
That also conflicted with the City’s Climate
Action Plan goal of increasing the tree canopy to
40 percent by 2030, up from the estimated 35.9
percent in the 2021 Ground Cover Survey. Trees
are one of the most effective ways to mitigate
climate change, noted Sustainability Manager
Grace Hancock.
“Edina is lucky to have a relatively healthy urban
forest already, but there are a lot of threats,
including increased development and climate
change,” she said.
To better protect existing mature trees, preserve
the character and beauty of Edina’s tree canopy
and help mitigate the loss of trees when they
do have to be removed, the City amended the
ordinance effective in 2023. Among the changes:
•Designating larger trees as “protected” or
“heritage,” and each status requires a much
more significant replacement if removed.
•Prioritizing the critical root zone around a
tree to be undisturbed during construction.
•Requiring a 36-month financial guarantee to
ensure tree replacement rules are followed.
Residential building projects that require a
building permit are now required to obtain a
tree protection permit as well. Those include
demolition or grading permits; subdivision
applications; building permits for homes or
accessory structures such as a garage, deck or
pool; and additions.
“This applies to a resident redoing a deck
themselves or contractors building pools or
grading over 10 yards of dirt,” Overholt cited
as examples.
Any heritage tree removed must be replanted
with equivalent replacements of a minimum
size. For example, if someone cuts down a
40-foot conifer, it could be replaced by four
10-foot conifers. To ensure a replacement of this
“heritage” status tree, the financial guarantee
is 110 percent of the tree replacement value,
which is $500 a foot. So this 40-foot tree’s
escrow amount would be $22,000. Half the
escrow would be refunded upon the project’s
completion and the other half refunded three
years later if the replacement tree remains healthy.
To learn more, visit
EdinaMN.gov/TreeProtection
or contact Overholt at
LOverholt@EdinaMN.gov.
Ordinance Changes Will Help Protect Trees
From Construction
Residential Building Permits Now Require a Tree Protection Permit
UPCOMING EVENTS
Wednesday, March. 1
Women’s History Month begins
Wednesday, March 1, 11:30 a.m.
State of the Community,
Braemar Golf Course
Sunday, March 5, 6 p.m.
Brooklyn Big Band, Edinborough Park
Tuesday, March 7, 7 p.m.
City Council meeting, Edina City Hall
Wednesday, March 8
Holi
Wednesday, March 8
International Women’s Day
Thursday, March 9, 7:30 a.m.
Housing & Redevelopment Authority
meeting, Edina City Hall
Friday, March 10, 1 p.m.
Veterans resource event,
Edina Senior Center
Friday, March 10, 6:30 p.m.
Family Movie Night, “Lyle, Lyle
Crocodile,” Edinborough Park
Saturday, March 11, 10 a.m.
St. Paddy’s Craft Party, Edina Art Center
Sunday, March 12, 6 p.m.
Gypsy Mania Trio, Edinborough Park
Sunday, March 19, 6 p.m.
Westwind Big Band, Edinborough Park
Tuesday, March 21, 7 p.m.
City Council meeting, Edina City Hall
Wednesday, March 22
Ramadan begins
Thursday, March 23, 7:30 a.m.
Housing & Redevelopment Authority
meeting, Edina City Hall
Sunday, March 26, 6 p.m.
The First John Philip Sousa Memorial
Band, Edinborough Park
For a complete listing of meetings
and events, visit EdinaMN.gov.
Watch City Council, Housing &
Redevelopment Authority and Planning
Commission meetings live:
• Edina TV (Comcast Channels 813 or 16)
• Facebook.com/EdinaMN
• “Watch a Meeting” web page at
EdinaMN.gov/LiveMeetings
City Forester Luther Overholt stands inside the
fencing that protects a fir tree and its critical root
zone from pump station construction at West 72nd
Street and Oaklawn Avenue. (Photo by Tom Cornell)