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ARDEN HILLS CITY COUNCIL WORK SESSION — FEBRUARY 22, 2022 4 <br />Councilmember Radziej explained he supported the building height as requested. <br />Mayor Grant requested the Council speak to the maximum floor area ratio. <br />Councilmember Scott stated he was willing to allow the project to move forward with the <br />understanding the minor speed bumps would have to be worked out. <br />Mayor Grant questioned if the stormwater pond could be co -owned by the applicant in order to <br />assist with the floor area ratio. <br />Mr. Fink stated the boundary line was still being reviewed and survey work had to be completed. <br />Councilmember Holden indicated she agreed with the comments made by Councilmember Scott. <br />She suggested the property have external amenities such as a swing set because this property was <br />nowhere near a park. She recommended the development stick to 12 units per acre, so the <br />development does not require a Comprehensive Plan Amendment. <br />Mayor Grant agreed with this recommendation. <br />Mr. Fink commented he would be willing to consider more outdoor amenities. He thanked the <br />Council for the feedback and for considering his request this evening. <br />B. Speed Limit Update <br />John Morast, HR Green, stated Minnesota Statute 169.14 Speed Limits, Zones; Radar regulates <br />highway and roadway speeds in Minnesota. Subdivision 2 sets maximum speed limits on a variety <br />of within a Municipality, such as 10 mph in alleys, 30 mph in urban districts, and 25 mph on <br />residential roadways, if adopted by the road authority. In August 2019, the Minnesota Legislature <br />changed the Statutes governing speed limits on city streets. The changes allow cities to establish <br />speed on roads under the City's jurisdiction, other than the statutory limits, without conducting an <br />engineering and traffic investigation. Any speed limit changes must be implemented in a <br />consistent and understandable manner. "The city must erect appropriate signs to display the speed <br />limit. A city that uses the authority under this subdivision must develop procedures to set speed <br />limits based on the city's safety, engineering, and traffic analysis. At a minimum, the safety, <br />engineering, and traffic analysis must consider national urban speed limit guidance and studies, <br />local traffic crashes, and methods to effectively communicate the change to the public.". City <br />Council has discussed speed limit changes on various roads within the City decided to implement <br />a speed limit reduction on certain City streets from 30 MPH to 25 MPH in the spring of 2022. He <br />reported MSA roads were eligible for a speed limit change with a few caveats. He commented <br />further on how a speed limit change would be advertised to the public. He anticipated the speed <br />limit change could be implemented yet this spring. <br />Councilmember Holden asked if MSA roadways had to be posted at 35 MPH. <br />Mr. Morast reported the City currently can post these roadways at 30 MPH. <br />