July 7 Park Board commissioners meeting highlights

PART TWO OF TWO DUE TO MAILING LIST SIZE RESTRICTIONS

This meeting was video taped for cable TV as a test run.



At 7PM, Bob Fine calls the Planning Committee to order.  There were 3
large "Study/Report" Items on the agenda.

1.  EPA report on the Gluek Park contamination with asbestos and planned
cleanup presented by Sonia R. Vega of the EPA.  Ms. Vega was clearly
experienced and no-nonsense.  In discussing the progression of the
problems at Gluek Park, she at one point left the board in stunned
silence when they misunderstood her remark about how the scope and size
of the problem had grown dramatically and how she needed to get a check
with "many zeros" (millions of dollars), taking it to mean the Park
Board needed to pay that amount perhaps.

Initially the EPA got involved with cleaning up the vermiculite
processing waste contaminated with asbestos which was given away and
used for backfill all over the city, but especially in Northeast.  The
first test of Gluek Park was negative because the soil was too wet, but
a second sample was positive.  Initially the EPA looked at removing 18
inches of soil, but the problem is so bad, they will now need to remove
8 feet of soil.  Because of this, and the location of the park on the
steep Mississippi River bank, the park will essentially be completely
destroyed -- all the many, many shrubs, gardens and trees planted by
neighborhoods around it will be removed along with just about everything
else except the pavement, which when on top of asbestos contaminated
ground, seals it adequately so that the EPA won't remove it.

Gluek Park will essentially be bulldozed and 8 feet of soil remove.  The
river bank will be regraded and rip rap will be installed.  The end
result is that the park will look nothing like it does today and the
river bank will have no resemblance to the natural river bank.

Jon Olson expresses concern that citizens don't know enough about what
is going on there and the risks, and asks Ms. Vega about contact with
the citizens.  She replies they have done extensive outreach, met with
thousands of individuals, and gives quite a few details about a rather
large amount of work she has already done in this vein.  Olson is likely
concerned because the Park Board got well criticized in the press and by
local neighborhood organizations for failing to inform park users about
its contamination.

2.  The Minnehaha Creek Watershed District makes a presentation
regarding a joint resolution and cooperative working group between the
District and all the entities directly associated with the creek itself
(cities of Minnetonka, Hopkins, St. Louis Park, Edina and Minneapolis,
the Park Board and Hennepin County) to create and work on a planning
document for the Minnehaha Creek sub-watershed (the creek itself).  This
would be a long-term vision for how the creek should be used.  There is
federal money available from the Army Corps of Engineers to help move in
the direction of whatever vision is decided upon.  Four possible models
given as examples were (1) business as usual allowing whatever changes
to occur within those constraints happen, (2) maintaining the status quo
which would seem to mean making efforts to prevent changes away from how
the creek is now, (3) maximize its recreational usability, and (4)
maximize the environmental restoration.  The proposal suggests a
technical, citizen and public official committee, with appointees to the
committee by each of the government entities, in general 2 citizens and
1 official per entity, except the District itself would appoint 9
citizens, for a total 23.

Marie Hauser immediately took issue with how much representation
"Minneapolis" got, having at minimum 4 representatives.  She asked how
long the creek was and how much was in Minneapolis.  It's 22 miles and
Watershed representatives guessed maybe one-third was in Minneapolis.
Hauser thought Minneapolis should then get a lot more representation.
She also complained that Minneapolis only had 1 (2 until recently)
representative on the Watershed board of managers, despite the fact that
the Minnehaha Watershed is a whole lot bigger than just the 6 miles of
creek in Minneapolis -- for example, it includes all of Lake Minnetonka
and 181 square miles.  [Hauser obviously does not know what a
"watershed" is, or have a clue why the  state of Minnesota passed the
Watershed District Act in 1955.

So, just to make it clear:

Total length of creek is about 22 miles.

Minnetonka has about 5 miles, or 23% and they get a minimum of 2
citizens of 23 for 9%

Hopkins has about 2.7 miles, or12% and they get a minimum of 2 citizens
of 23 for 9%

St. Louis Park:  4.2 miles / 19%, 2 of 23 = 9%

Edina: 4.6 miles / 21 %, 2 of 23 = 9%

Minneapolis: 6 miles / 27%, minimum of 4 of 23 citizens = 18%

Watershed District, 100% of the creek, 9 of 23 citizens = 39%

Hennepin County, 100% of the creek, 2 of 23 citizens = 9%

Marie Hauser thinks Minneapolis is under represented compared to the
other cities, yet clearly by the numbers, we have better representation
than all other cities except Hopkins.  Hauser has displayed this
parochial, uncooperative power-holding behavior in prior Park Board
meetings.]

7:51pm -- Annie Young MOVES that approval of this joint resolution with
the Watershed District be moved out of committee to the full board.
Motion PASSES, Hauser opposed.

3.  Tim Brown, Park Board staff, makes a presentation on the Victory
Memorial Parkway Master Plan.  The Park Board has obtained $950,000 of
federal TEA-21 funds to rebuild the bike trail and associated work along
Victory Memorial Parkway and are now in the planning process of what it
will look like when they are done.  Several public meetings have been
held to get input from residents.  The project may also be eligible for
Met Council CIP funding, because it is a designated regional corridor,
as well.  The Victory Memorial Parkway was originally designed by
Theodore Wirth, the land purchased in 1910 and 1911, and with an
interruption by World War I, construction began in 1919 and finished in
1921.  Staff plans to finish new master plan in 2004, and do trail
construction in 2005 and 2006.  They will come back to the board first
of September of this year for approval of plan.

8:15pm -- Planning Committee adjourns and Regular Meeting is called to
order.

Commissioner Walt Dziedzic arrives about this time.

Most of this meeting is perfunctory and quick, with lots of taxpayer
money spent on dozens of action items in just minutes.  However, the
discussion about the superintendent search firm selection was a bit more
interesting and not quite so quick.

John Erwin attempts to get discussion of the search firm selection
started by describing what things he liked about the Oldani Group but
ultimately gets pushed into making a motion perhaps a bit sooner than he
had intended.

Erwin MOVES that the Oldani Group be hired.  Motion is seconded and
discussion ensues.

Bob Fine wants to know where all 4 of these firms were last year during
the aborted search effort.  Fine says he likes Springsted because they
are local and have a dean from Hamline University under contract.  Fine
does not like Oldani because the principle, Jerry Oldani, did not take
the interview call [of course, Jerry Oldani might be trekking across the
Outback in Australia or laid up in a hospital at the moment; we don't know].

Marie Hauser also does not like Oldani Group, but per Jon Olson, Jerry
Oldani will be involved in the search.

Walt Dziedzic says he made up his mind last month and still prefers PDI.

The question is called and a roll call vote is taken.
Berry Graves votes Yes.
Dziedzic votes No.
Erwin votes Yes.
Fine votes No.
Hauser PASSES.
Kummer PASSES.
Young votes Yes.
Olson votes Yes.
Hauser votes No.
Kummer votes Yes.

Motion to hire Oldani Group passes with 5 Yes and 3 No votes.  (Vivian
Mason was absent.)

The Resolution to cooperate with the Minnehaha Creek Watershed District,
other cities and the county and drawing up a vision plan for the creek
is called on a roll call vote.  All 8 commissioners present vote Yes.

Question is asked when the citizen appointments will be made.  Answer is
"yesterday" or next day or so.  Result is that the commissioners will be
appointing people they already know and want to serve, rather than the
general public getting a chance to make themselves available.

Meeting adjourns at 8:30pm.



Chris Johnson, Fulton





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