HomeMy WebLinkAboutEditionEdina_July_20144801 W. 50th St.
Edina, MN 55424
952-927-8861
mail@EdinaMN.gov
www.EdinaMN.gov
The City’s next online discussion is now available
at www.SpeakUpEdina.org. The discussion,
which focuses on community gardens, is
available until Aug. 31.
The City is wrapping up its second year of the
Yorktown Community Garden at York Park. In
the discussion, the City will ask whether or not
residents use a community garden; if they think
more community gardens should be added; and
where they think additional community gardens
would be beneficial in Edina.
In July, the City gathered feedback on public
spending on public art. Questions posted
ranged from whether or not the City should
purchase permanent public art, additional areas
to display public art and how much should
be spent on public art. Feedback from the
discussion will be presented to the City Council
Aug. 19.
To weigh in on this month’s discussion, visit
www.SpeakUpEdina.org.
The City of Edina
Speak Up, Edina!
JULY 2014
Volume 1, Issue 7
Legend:
Infrastructure
Commercial and Mixed-Use Redevelopment
Workforce
Communication and Engagement
Community Vision
Aviation Noise
Edi tion:
Edina To Go: The Mobile App to
Keep You Updated
Our 21st century world never stops. We are in a constant
state of updates and downloads. As we continue to
move toward a new-and-improved world filled with
technology and online competency, apps have taken
over, and the City of Edina will not fall behind.
In early June, the City launched a free mobile app,
called “Edina To Go.”
“This is a way to literally put Edina’s City government
in residents’ hands to help solve problems and issues,”
said City Manager Scott Neal.
The City hired PublicStuff to develop the app.
PublicStuff is a company specializing in both service
requests and mobile apps for municipalities. PublicStuff
has developed mobile apps for many cities, including
Philadelphia and New York City. Edina To Go was
PublicStuff’s first municipal project in Minnesota.
“This is further evidence of the City of Edina’s strong
commitment to being responsive to the needs of
their community,” said Surya Yalamanchili, CEO of
PublicStuff. “We’re excited to partner with Edina in
making it easier for residents to work together in
improving their neighborhoods.”
“This [app] will transform the way residents interact with
the City and find information,” said Communications
Coordinator Jordan Gilgenbach.
The instantaneous nature of mobile apps is a benefit
for the City in this case. This type of medium will allow
the City to keep content fresh and to provide periodic
updates.
“Edina To Go is a source for quick information for
residents,” said Gilgenbach. “Through the app,
residents can read recent news, connect with City staff
and elected officials and even make service requests,
like reporting potholes and other issues.”
Since its release, the app has been downloaded over
600 times and 38 service requests have been made
through the app. Numbers are expected to steadily
increase.
Edina To Go is available for free in both the iTunes App
Store and the Android Google Play store.
For more information on the Edina To Go mobile app,
visit www.EdinaMN.gov/edina-to-go.
With a father who was a lifetime
PGA member, new Braemar Golf
Course General Manager Joe
Abood grew up steeped in the
golfing community.
“I basically grew up in the golf
industry. … We had a family-
owned driving range … and I
used to go to golf courses that
my father worked at,” explained Abood, who started
work in Edina July 7.
Abood is originally from Maryland and helped run the
family driving range for several years. Sixteen years
ago, he began working for KemperSports and helped
manage six courses for them over that time. His first
assignment with KemperSports landed him in familiar
territory. “There was a course that [my dad] opened
up [as head pro] in 1968 and in 1998, I went back and I
started working for that course,” recalled Abood.
He spent several years there and then at another course
in Maryland before KemperSports took him to New
Jersey. Although he’s an East Coast native, he isn’t
without Minnesota connections. “The main reason we
came out here is that my wife’s family is from around
here. New Jersey is not where I wanted to raise my
family,” he explained.
Abood is anxious to revitalize Braemar and help make
his mark on the direction of the golf operations. He’s
well-suited to the task; his last assignment in New Jersey
was strikingly similar. The Union County course was a
municipally owned golf club that the county decided to
revitalize. In addition to a notable golf course, they also
boasted a learning center – much like the Braemar Golf
Dome. Abood also noted that Union County made the
difficult decision to close one of its courses – similar to
Edina’s difficult decision of closing Fred Richards Golf
Course at the end of the 2014 season.
“Joe was chosen for his experience successfully
managing large golf operations, knowledge of the
industry and golf trends, experience providing
strong leadership and vision for the golf team and his
experience managing golf course renovation projects,”
explained Assistant Parks & Recreation Director Susan
Faus. “We are thrilled to have someone with Joe’s
talents leading our golf course operations.”
In addition to managing seven full-time employees,
Abood will oversee operations at Braemar. The course
is set on 500 acres of rolling hills and scenic lakes. It
features 27 regulation holes, a 9-hole executive course,
a pro shop, driving range, practice putting green,
indoor golf dome, banquet and meeting rooms and
other amenities. After 50 years of operation, Braemar
Golf Course has grown immensely and will continue to
be improved in the coming years.
“I think the potential is here. It’s a great golf course;
it has a lot of history. I think it just needs that little
something to bring it back to where it should be,”
said Abood. He’s looking forward to the challenge. “It
wouldn’t be as exciting if the potential wasn’t there. You
can see what it has and what it can be in the future.”
For more information, visit www.BraemarGolf.com.
Contact Abood directly at jabood@EdinaMN.gov or
952-903-5754.
Edina Is ‘Open To
Business’
Are you looking to
start a business in
Edina? The City and
the Metropolitan
Consortium of
Community Developers (MCCD) are ready to
help you get that “open” sign in the window
with the “Open to Business” program.
Endorsed by the City in 2012, “Open
to Business” provides free one-on-one
consultation and micro lending to potential
and existing business owners to promote
economic development and growth in Edina.
“I love tapping into the dreams of
entrepreneurs and helping them at least
explore and sometimes achieve them,” said
Business Advisor Rob Smolund, Edina’s
primary consultant.
The program offers free, one-on-one
confidential business consulting to help Edina
residents and existing Edina businesses
start or grow their business. With “Open to
Business advisors, they have resources to help
make strategic business decisions in areas
of technical assistance, like accounting and
record keeping, business start-up, business
plan development, strategic planning
and others. Advisors also help determine
borrowing need and access to financing.
In a 30- to 60-minute consultation, Smolund
walks clients through an exercise to visualize
10 transactions and instructs them to write a
case study on each one. “What did you charge
for the service? What do you want to charge
for the service? What did it cost you to provide
the product or service? Why did the customer
choose you over a competitor?” are some of
the questions Smolund requires entrepreneurs
to answer.
“The City is a participant in the program to
encourage Edina entrepreneurs to follow their
dreams and grow more business investment,”
said Economic Development Manager Bill
Neuendorf. “Anyone thinking about starting
a small business or expanding an emerging
business should take advantage of this great
resource.”
Smolund holds convenient two-hour walk-
in sessions 2:30-4:30 p.m. the second
Wednesday of every month in the Mill Room
of Edina City Hall, 4801 W. 50th St. He is also
available to meet any time by appointment.
For more information or to schedule a
consultation, contact Smolund at 612-789-7337
or visit www.opentobusinessmn.org.
New Braemar Golf Manager Brings His Game
Braemar Golf Course Celebrates 50 Years
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On July 23, Braemar Golf Course celebrated its 50th
anniversary. To recognize the milestone, Braemar will
host several events in September. Join the anniversary
celebration!
Thursday, Sept. 25
Junior Shoot-Out Invitational
Braemar Executive Course, 4:30 p.m. Shotgun Start
Students are invited to participate in a junior shoot-out
at Braemar Golf Course. This free event will include a
BBQ dinner.
Friday, Sept. 26
“Bellbottoms, Birdies and Beers” Golf
Tournament
Join us for a ‘70s flashback with “birdies, bellbottoms
and beers.” Wear your tie dye and bellbottoms
and toast to 50 years of Braemar Golf Course! The
tournament will be a two-person team format, $100
per twosome. Registration includes a round of golf,
a cart, prizes and a casual dinner. A cash bar will also
be available.
Saturday, Sept. 27
Drive-In Movie at Braemar
For the anniversary celebration
finale, watch the movie
“Caddyshack” under the stars.
Enjoy this classic movie from
your very own golf cart! The
movie will be shown in the parking lot beginning at 7:30
p.m. Refreshments and treats will be available.
JULY 2014
Parking and Streetscape Improvements
Under Way at 50th & France
Slow the Flow!
Future iQ Partners Selected by City to ‘Extend
the Horizon’
The City is working to provide better free parking in
downtown Edina at 50th & France.
Visitors to 50th & France may have already noticed the
parking and landscaping improvements under way.
Construction was planned in several phases so the work
would be done in small batches, allowing visitors to
make use of as many of the parking stalls as possible.
“We’ve stretched the project out over a longer
timeframe. … At any particular time, there should be
no more than about 80 stalls taken out of service –
that’s less than 10 percent. So, you have 80 stalls taken
out, but you’ll still have 950 parking stalls available,”
explained Economic Development Manager Bill
Neuendorf.
This project, funded by the City and area business
owners, will continue in the South Ramp through the
end of July. Improvements to the other ramps, as well
as landscape and sidewalk work, will be finished by
October.
Perhaps the most impactful portion of the
improvements will come in the form of way-finding signs
located near and in front of the ramps. The signage
will denote the parking ramps as public parking and
alert visitors when a parking ramp is full. Neuendorf
explained that the groundwork is being laid for those
signs already, but it will be a few more months before
they are erected.
“The new signage is inspired by the iconic Edina
Cinema sign,” explained Neuendorf. “This style fits with
both the history and the present.”
Part of the project also includes the replacement
of sidewalk pavers and landscape improvements.
Neuendorf explained that the pavers are roughly
25 years old and are deteriorating on the bottom.
Construction crews will replace the pavers in segments
to prevent blocking entry to several storefronts at
a time. In addition, irrigation and new plants will be
added around the area. Any dead or dying trees will be
replaced with healthy mature trees.
The final piece of the project will happen in the spring
of 2015 when an elevator will be added to the South
Ramp, making it more accessible to all patrons.
For more information, contact Economic Development
Manager Bill Neuendorf at 952-826-0407 or
bneuendorf@EdinaMN.gov.
This spring was the wettest on record, and people
across the metro area witnessed the unfortunate
effects, from flooded basements to mudslides.
There has been enough rain to inundate any landscape,
but in the urbanized metro area – with its roads,
parking lots, driveways and roofs – the effects are more
dramatic. Instead of soaking into the soil as it does in
natural areas, most rain in the metro runs off of these
hard surfaces and into storm drains, where it flows
untreated, directly to a water body.
This means that our lakes and streams are not just
taking on the rain that falls into them, but also
the rainfall that drains from hundreds of acres of
surrounding developed land. This phenomenon caused
Minnehaha Creek to jump more than a foot and a half
in a matter of hours after a heavy rain in June. These
quick spikes can cause flooding, erosion and habitat
destruction.
There are many ways you can help slow the flow from
your property:
• Direct your downspout away from hard surfaces to
let more water infiltrate into the ground.
• Install a rain barrel to collect rainwater, which can
later be used to water your lawn or garden.
• Use native plants, which have much deeper roots
than standard turf grass. They anchor the soil, filter
out pollutants and are less likely to die from high
water.
• Plant raingardens, which are bowl-shaped gardens
filled with attractive plants and flowers that collect
the rain from your property.
• Plant a native buffer along shorelines to reduce
erosion, filter stormwater runoff and deter geese.
• Use a strip of pervious pavement on your driveway,
which allows water to flow right through the
pavement!
The Minnehaha Creek Watershed District offers
grants to help pay for raingardens, shoreline
plantings, pervious pavers and other landscaping
features that protect clean water. Learn more at
www.minnehahacreek.org/cost-share.
By recognizing the importance of the past while
preparing for the future, Edina has evolved to be a
model among municipalities in the Twin Cities.
To continue this value, Edina has teamed up with Future
iQ Partners – an international visionary consulting firm
that provides an innovative, scenario-based approach
for developing community visions – to help update
the City’s strategic visionary documents. “Edina Vision
20/20” was completed in 2000 and last updated in
2003.
“It’s 2014 and time to extend the horizon,” said
Assistant City Manager Karen Kurt. “For this new plan,
we may be looking as far ahead as 2040.”
Future iQ’s role in the “Vision Edina” project will be
to assist with the process to get broad community
feedback and to consolidate it into a feasible plan that
will help City officials develop a shorter-term strategic
plan and a comprehensive plan.
“[Edina’s visioning project] is a chance for the people
who choose to make the City of Edina home, to have a
real say and input into shaping the future,” said Future
iQ Partners CEO David Beurle.
Similar to the Vision 20/20 plan, from a visionary
perspective, Vision Edina will examine where the
community has been, where it wants to go and how
it is going to get there. From a strategic planning
perspective, the plan will examine the challenges and
opportunities that have been identified as having the
highest priority within the community. Edina will use
community feedback to identify these aspects, with the
help of Future iQ.
“This project is unique, in my view, because Edina is a
very high-capacity community and there is a serious
commitment from key stakeholders to engage in a
meaningful, thoughtful and long-range discussion
about the future,” said Beurle. “I think this project has
the potential to have an original conversation about the
very nature of the future of City living in North America,
especially in the Midwest context.”
Future iQ has done similar work both in the United
States and abroad; these types of projects are their
specialty.
“Global and societal trends are moving so fast, that
20 years in the future, we might be living in quite a
different world. This project has the opportunity to
explore and anticipate some important future trends,
and find a unique competitive niche for the City of
Edina and its residents,” Beurle noted.
“[The City has] an aggressive goal of having 1,200
touch points with residents, businesses and other
stakeholders with respect to the plan,” said Kurt. “We
hope to have the new plan completed by early 2015.”
Initial community meetings will be held the second
week of September.
For more information, contact Kurt, 952-826-0415 or
kkurt@EdinaMN.gov.
Parking ramp construction has begun at 50th & France, though visitors should see minimal parking reductions during this time.
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Upcoming Events
6 p.m. Friday, Aug. 1
Music in the Park, Rosland Park
7 p.m. Monday, Aug. 4
City Council meeting, Edina City Hall
6 p.m. Tuesday, Aug. 5
Edina Police Department Night to Unite Party,
Rosland Park
8 p.m. Sunday, Aug. 10
Lighthouse Night, Centennial Lakes Park
Enjoy 25-cent ice cream cones, 5-cent balloons,
Model T Fords, tricks by a sleight-of-hand
magician, music by an Italian organ grinder, a
Mechanical Man, “penny farthing” bicycles and
more at the Centennial Lakes Torchlight Concert.
More than 100 Tiki Torches will burn behind the
Hughes Pavilion and the park’s special lighting
will be highlighted. Fife & Drums will perform at
7:45 p.m. At 8 p.m., there will be open boating
in the Central Pond for model yachts organized
by the Edina Model Yacht Club. The First John
Philip Sousa Memorial Band will perform in the
amphitheater at 8:30 p.m. Fireworks will cap off
the night.
7 p.m. Monday, Aug. 11
Park Board meeting, Edina City Hall
7 p.m., Monday, Aug. 11
Heritage Preservation Board meeting,
Edina City Hall
Tuesday, Aug. 12
Primary Election Day
5 p.m., Tuesday, Aug. 12
Filing period for City Council candidacy closes
7 p.m. Wednesday, Aug. 12
Planning Commission meeting, Edina City Hall
7 p.m. Tuesday, Aug. 19
City Council meeting, Edina City Hall
6 p.m. Thursday, Aug. 21
Transportation Commission meeting,
Edina City Hall
7 p.m. Tuesday, Aug. 26
Human Rights & Relations Commission meeting,
Edina City Hall
7 p.m. Wednesday, Aug. 27
Planning Commission meeting, Edina City Hall
4:30 p.m. Thursday, Aug. 28
Arts & Culture Commission meeting,
Edina City Hall
Police ‘Focus In’
on Child Safety and
Seat Belts
As a part of the 2014
“Focus In” campaign,
Edina patrol officers will
focus efforts on child
safety and seat belts
during the month of
August.
“This month’s Focus In
topic is simple,” said Sgt.
Tim Olson. “Seat belts and properly installed
child car seats save lives.”
Often the requirements, use and proper
installation of a child passenger restraint system
are not clearly understood by those transporting
children. The Edina Police Department will
enforce the use of seatbelts and encourage
residents to properly install children’s car and
booster seats.
Education will include a warning to those who
violate the statutes or codes. In extenuating
circumstances, a citation may be issued. Last
August, officers issued 10 warnings.
“Focus In” is a campaign aimed to educate the
public and gain compliance with various state
statutes and ordinances. The violations the
Police Department focuses on have seasonal
relevance, affect the quality of life in Edina or
pose safety risks to residents. All statutes are
enforced year-round, but additional attention is
paid to the focus of the month.
This year, Police have already focused on
obstructed vision, failure to signal, unsafe
equipment, failure to display headlights, bike
safety, use of phone or texting while driving and
pedestrian safety. For the following months,
police will “Focus In” on distracted driving,
speed in school zones, night and snow parking,
and the “move over” law.
For more information, contact the Edina Police
Department at 952-826-1610.