HomeMy WebLinkAboutEditionEdina_January-2024_Web-v2Restaurant With Live Music Planned for 50th & France
SPARC Fund Will Reimburse Developer for Required ADA Improvements
BY DEBBIE TOWNSEND
One of the most valuable spaces at 50th
& France remains empty, but a new plan
would create a bar and restaurant with
live music.
The space, underneath the recently
opened Lululemon at 3914 W. 50th
St., has served at times as an office
and storage room.
“One of the reasons that it’s vacant
is that it’s a lower-level space that’s
inaccessible. There’s no elevator.
There’s no lift,” said Edina Economic
Development Manager Bill Neuendorf.
“That’s really constrained how that
space could be used over the decades.”
A new business would need to meet
Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA)
requirements. That’s the one roadblock
preventing Buhl Investors from pouring $1.1
million in improvements to the space and
bringing in that restaurant and music venue.
“We’ve had discussions and frankly
dreams of a music venue project at
50th & France for many, many years,”
Neuendorf said. It was even one of
the original plans of what’s now Nolan
Mains, said Pete Deanovic, CEO of Buhl
Investors, which led development of that.
The lift/elevator, bathroom remodel
and other accessibility requirements are
estimated to cost $225,000, pushing
the music venue project beyond what’s
financially reasonable. So the Housing &
Redevelopment Authority has agreed to
reimburse Buhl for those improvements,
provided they are completed and the
business stays in operation through
at least Nov. 30, 2025. The money
comes from the Special Projects and
Redevelopment Capital (SPARC) Fund.
“This is a great opportunity to use the
SPARC program that we established to
help create jobs in Edina and bring the
space to a usable condition,” Neuendorf
said. The new business would add to the
City’s tax base, and even if the business
moved out, the space would be ready to
lease again.
Deanovic sees the venue as a boon for
50th & France. “This is another way to
get people to come in and shop and
support those businesses.”
The space, which has limitations due to
the existing structure, will be divided into
three parts: bar seating, restaurant with
small stage and a kitchen area.
“It’s a small, intimate space, so it’s not a
big dance hall or nightclub,” Neuendorf
said. “The focus will be on good food,
beverages and live music.”
Noise will be mitigated by the sound
construction of the 1940s-era building,
the below-street location and additional
deadening materials.
If everything comes together, the goal is
to open the venue by next summer.
To learn more about the loan and project,
visit EdinaMN.gov/SPARC.
The existing space under Lululemon would undergo extensive renovation, including making it
accessible for those with disabilities. (Photo by Bill Neuendorf)
The new venue would include a bar area (top) and a space with a small stage and tables for
restaurant seating. (Submitted rendering)
City of Edina EdinaMN.gov 1
Edition: Edina
JANUARY 2024
Volume 11, Issue 1Strong FoundationCITY GOALS:Better TogetherReliable Service Livable City
2024-25 City Budget Prioritizes Public Safety and Quality of City Services
Twelve New Public Safety Staff Planned To Be Added Within Two Years
BY BRITTANY BADER
The City of Edina’s 2024 budget prioritizes public
safety and maintaining high-quality City services.
“The most important thing about this budget
is that it creates the stable foundation for the
quality of life and services that residents expect
and appreciate. It’s what really sets Edina apart
from other cities,” said Finance Director Alisha
McAndrews of the $189 million consolidated
City budget for 2024.
Highlights of the 2024-2025 budget approved
last month by the Edina City Council include:
•Increasing law enforcement staffing for
a robust public safety presence on the
street and additional levels of public safety
programming through the Multicultural
Advisory Committee, neighborhood
officers, traffic enforcement and mental
health response team. This includes:
• Adding four patrol officers, one mental
health response officer and one
neighborhood engagement officer
to the Edina Police Department
• Adding six paramedic/firefighters to the
Edina Fire Department coinciding with
the opening of Fire Station 2 in 2025
•Street lighting replacement to enhance
street safety and reduce energy use
•Reliable funding to provide competitive
compensation to recruit and retain talented
staff to provide best-in-class services
•$1.4 million for park improvements
throughout the city
•Adding one Utility Supervisor in Public
Works to support the utility system and
help with on-call citywide snowplowing
and ice removal duties
•Adding two Parks & Recreation
Facility Coordinators
•Updating technology systems to ensure
secure and reliable systems that protect
against threats and work during
emergencies and natural hazards
The City administered a Quality of Life survey
in 2023 to hear how residents feel about
government-provided services and their overall
experience living in Edina. One key takeaway
was that residents continue to rate the quality
of life in the city highly. With this in mind,
maintaining the quality of City services was
prioritized throughout budget development
and discussions with the City Council.
Some of the enhanced services provided to Edina
residents not always found in other cities include:
•Operating a 911 dispatch center for police,
fire and medical
•Operating Advanced Life Support (ALS)
ambulance service
•Providing public health services through a
contract with Bloomington Public Health
•Conducting rental housing inspections
•Having an Assessing Division at City Hall
that serves only city residents
•Owning three municipal liquor stores that
contribute about $1 million in revenue each
year for Parks & Recreation operations and
capital improvement projects
•Running the South Metro Public Safety
Training Facility jointly with Bloomington,
Eden Prairie and the Metropolitan
Airports Commission
“When you compare our level of service in these
areas — the 911 dispatch center that we have,
our Fire Department providing advanced life
support and our police that we have right here
— I think that combination of those services is
second to none,” said City Manager Scott Neal
during a presentation on the 2024-2025 budget.
Another Quality of Life survey finding was that
residents generally feel safe in the community,
but that feeling has decreased. Like in past years,
most of the new City of Edina tax dollars in 2024
are allocated for public safety.
“Public safety is a priority within this budget.
This budget includes additional public safety
personnel who are going to enable some
different strategies that police are developing
in terms of mental health response in the
community,” said McAndrews.
For each tax dollar Edina residents pay in 2024,
about 23 cents will go to the City of Edina local
government. The remaining 77 cents will go to
other taxing jurisdictions, like Edina Public Schools
and Hennepin County. The breakdown for how
the City will spend its tax dollars is 40% for Public
Safety, 19% for Debt Service & Capital Outlay,
16% for General Government, 15% for Public
Works and 10% for Parks and Recreation.
For 2024, the City’s tax levy – the total dollar
amount the City collects in property taxes – is
$54.4 million, an increase of 9.15% from 2023.
Most of this increase comes from salary and
benefits costs to maintain staffing levels and from
increases in the costs of contracts and supplies.
According to McAndrews, the average levy
increase for cities in Hennepin County is 10.8%.
While the tax levy typically funds about one-
third of the budget, in 2024 it will be closer
to 28%. McAndrews says this is due to
diversification of revenue sources the City is
receiving, like the addition of the local option
sales tax, more tax-increment financing and
funding from the American Rescue Plan Act.
The approved budget also includes use of
one-time revenue of $2 million from the
budget stabilization fund.
Although the City has a biennial budgeting
process, the City Council approves each year’s
operating budget and tax levy separately. The
proposed 2025 operating budget is $205 million
with a tax levy of $61.7 million, increases largely
due to debt service beginning on the new fire
station. Though budgeting for 2025 in advance
is important, the 2025 budget and levy won’t
be legally determined by the City Council until
the end of 2024.
The 2024-25 biennial budget and the City’s
most-recent Truth in Taxation document
can be found online at EdinaMN.gov/Finance.
For more information on the City’s
budgets, contact McAndrews
at AMcAndrews@EdinaMN.gov.
What will my 2024 City
property taxes pay for?
Debt Service &
Capital Outlay19%
General
Government16%
Public
Works
15%
Parks and Recreation 10%
Public Safety
40%
Change in Levy on Median Value Home (MVH)
2024 Estimated City Levy Impact
2023 2024 Difference Change
MVH $659,900 $696,600 $36,700 5.3%
Annual $1,973.23 $2,121.93 $148.71 7.5%
Monthly $164.44 $176.83 $12.39 7.5%
2
BY LAUREN SIEBENALER
No stranger to Edina, Ari Lenz will start work as
Assistant City Manager at the end of January.
“In 2012, we started our City Management
Fellowship Program. Ari was our number one
candidate and was selected for the job,” said
City Manager Scott Neal. “She came to work
for Edina because she wanted to have a career
in city management. We had a great experience
with her and she went on to do great things in
other cities.”
Lenz has a bachelor’s degree from Minnesota
State University, Mankato and a master’s degree
in public administration from the University
of Kansas. After completing her fellowship in
Edina, she worked with the City of Topeka,
Kansas, as a consultant as they navigated a
financial crisis. Then, Lenz served as the City
Administrator of Madison Lake, Minnesota,
where she had the opportunity to oversee
public works and public safety. She learned
a lot about managing infrastructure projects,
and visioning and strategic planning with a City
Council. In 2016, she became the Assistant City
Manager of Hopkins, Minnesota, where she
learned a lot about human resources, project
management through COVID-19, race and
equity and sustainability.
“She was one of the most qualified candidates
for our Assistant City Manager role by both
being a small-town Administrator and a
suburban Assistant Manager. She just had the
right combination of experiences and academic
preparation,” said Neal. “And we know her,
so there’s a high degree of comfort with what
she’s going to do here.”
Lenz will manage Edina’s Administration
Department, which includes community
engagement, race and equity and the City
Clerk’s office. She’ll also oversee most of the
City’s support departments, including Finance,
Human Resources and Information Technology.
She said her focus and priorities coming into
the job will be learning what the City Council
and community’s vision is and then working on
organizational culture within the City.
“I’m humbled to have the opportunity to fill
the shoes of previous Assistant City Managers
Karen Kurt and Lisa Schaefer, and to work
directly under City Manager Neal and with the
Executive Leadership Team,” said Lenz. “Edina
has a great team of well-respected employees,
City Council and community. I look forward to
getting to know them better and help them
accomplish their goals.”
“Edina is getting someone who brings her ‘A’
game to work every day,” said Hopkins City
Manager Mike Mornson. “Hopkins is a better
place today for her efforts to always be looking
to move the city forward. We will miss her —
especially me!”
For more information on the Edina
Administration Department,
visit EdinaMN.gov/Administration.
Ari Lenz’s first day as Edina’s Assistant City
Manager will be Jan. 22. (Photo by Jason Heuer)
Lenz Named Assistant City Manager
Once a Fellow in Edina, Lenz has Worked as Small-Town
Administrator and Suburban Assistant Manager
UPCOMING EVENTS
Monday, Jan. 1
New Year’s Day, City offices closed
Tuesday, Jan. 2, 7 p.m.
City Council meeting, Edina City Hall
Thursday, Jan. 11, 7:30 a.m.
Housing & Redevelopment Authority
meeting, Edina City Hall
Friday, Jan. 12, 5:30 p.m.
Movie Night in the Amphitheater,
“DC League of Super-Pets,”
Edinborough Park
Monday, Jan. 15
Martin Luther King Jr. Day,
City offices closed
Tuesday, Jan. 16
National Day of Racial Healing
Tuesday, Jan. 16, 7 p.m.
City Council meeting, Edina City Hall
Friday, Jan. 19, 9 a.m.-6 p.m.
Candyland Trail, Edinborough Park
Thursday, Jan. 25, 7:30 a.m.
Housing & Redevelopment Authority
meeting, Edina City Hall
Thursday, Jan. 25, 6-8 p.m.
Family Full Moon Snowshoe,
Braemar Golf Course
Sunday, Jan. 28, 6 p.m.
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” webpage at
EdinaMN.gov/LiveMeetings
BY THE NUMBERS
As temperatures drop, activities will
continue under the inflatable dome at
Braemar Field, 7509 Ikola Way, and on the
ice at Braemar Arena, 7501 Ikola Way! For
more information, visit BraemarArena.com
or BraemarField.com.
Braemar
Arena & Field $5
Entry fee for most drop-in
activities at Braemar Field,
including Family Night,
Open Dome and Tot Time
Participants in Snowplow
Sam skating classes yearly
700+
500,000+
Total annual visitors at
Braemar Ice Arena
Edina residents use
the indoor walking
track annually
4,200
- COMPILED BY MATT CORDS
3City of Edina EdinaMN.gov
Iskaan-garee koodhkan oo ku fiiri soomaali
EdinaMN.gov/SomaliEE
EdinaMN.gov/SpanishEE
Escanee este código para ver en español
952-927-8861 | mail@EdinaMN.govCity of Edina EdinaMN.gov4
Council Approves Street Reconstruction in
Two Neighborhoods
Concord B&C and Southdale B Neighborhoods To Get New Roads,
Pedestrian and Bicycle Improvements
City of Edina Directory
City Council
Jim Hovland Mayor 612-874-8551
Kate Agnew Council Member 952-833-9556
Carolyn Jackson Council Member 952-833-9547
James Pierce Council Member 952-833-9548
Julie Risser Council Member 952-833-9557
City Staff
Scott Neal City Manager 952-826-0401
Ari Lenz Assistant City 952-826-0416
Manager
Jennifer Communications 952-833-9520
Bennerotte Director
Ryan Browning I.T. Director 952-826-0434
Kelly Curtin Human Resources 952-826-0402
Director
Alisha Finance Director 952-826-0419
McAndrews
Todd Milburn Police Chief 952-826-0487
Chad Millner Engineering Director 952-826-0318
Brian Olson Public Works 952-826-0311
Director
Andrew Slama Fire Chief 952-826-0332
Cary Teague Community 952-826-0460
Development Director
Perry Vetter Parks & 952-826-0430
Recreation Director
Call 952-927-8861 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
Monday through Friday for general
information. 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.
Streets in the Concord and Southdale
neighborhoods will be reconstructed later
this year.
The City Council approved the Concord B&C
and Southdale B neighborhood roadway
reconstruction project last month.
As part of the Concord B&C project, Ashcroft
Avenue, Ashcroft Lane, Concord Avenue,
Garrison Lane, Millers Lane, Nancy Lane,
Rose Court, St. Johns Avenue, Virginia Lane,
Wooddale Avenue, West 62nd Street, West
63rd Street and West 64th Street would
be reconstructed. The project also includes
some new pedestrian and bicycling facilities,
including a concrete sidewalk and on-street
bike boulevard on Wooddale, a concrete
shared-use path on West 64th that transitions
from on- to off-street and a concrete shared-
use path on Concord. The estimated project
cost is $12.9 million.
As part of the $5.1 million Southdale B
project, Barrie Road, Heritage Drive and West
65th Street will be reconstructed. Concrete
sidewalks would be added on all three streets.
Both projects would be paid for with a
combination of special assessments, the
City’s Utility Fund, Pedestrian and Cycling
Safety Fund and property taxes.
Construction is expected to begin in the spring
following Council approval of the contractor bids.
In other business last month, the Council:
•Presented the 2023 Tom Oye Human Rights
Award to Terrie Rose.
•Provided non-binding feedback on initial
concepts for a new Southdale Library and Art
Center, calling sketch plans both “thoughtful”
and “sensitive.” Hennepin County plans to tear
down the existing building at 7001 York Ave.
to build a new library building, which would
include space for the Art Center as a tenant.
The library would comprise roughly 45,000
square feet and the Art Center 19,000. The
building would be located on the north half
of the 7.75-acre site. The south half would
include green space that provides outdoor
education space and opportunities, a trailhead
connector for Nine Mile Creek and Three
Rivers Park District, and stormwater treatment.
The front of the building would face the
green space to the south and York Avenue
to the west. Vehicle access would be off
of 70th Street and the existing access off
of York Avenue would close. Underground
parking is planned, along with a surface
lot along 70th.
The County is expected to file a formal
application for the project, which will
require a Site Plan Review and conditional-
use permit and variance for building height.
Another variance might be necessary for
parking stalls, as well.
If approved, demolition and construction
is anticipated for 2025. The new building
would likely open in the summer of 2027.
•Denied requests for a proposed
redevelopment of 6016 Vernon Ave.
GreenDrop proposed redeveloping the
former Kevin Kee’s Auto Service building
for a donation center.
•Began discussing legislative priorities for 2024.
The Council will continue talking about the
priorities at meetings later this month.
The Council will next meet 7 p.m.
Jan. 2 and 16. For more information,
visit EdinaMN.gov.
– COMPILED BY JENNIFER BENNEROTTE
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