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— February 22, 2006 <br />EDEN PRAIIltE' S MANAGER REPORT <br />Rental Inspection Program <br />Filed under: Miscellaneous — Scott Neal @ 6:16 pm <br />The City Council met last night (Tuesday, February 21) and, among many things, <br />approved a new rental housing inspection program. The new program is one aspect of a <br />four-pronged strategy to maintain and improve the overall value of our community <br />housing stock. <br />The first prong was the Council's adoption of an exterior maintenance code for all types <br />of housing. This ordinance, which was adopted in 2005, provided the City with the legal <br />basis to require property owners to maintain the buildings on their property up to certain <br />standards. This ordinance allows the City to require a homeowner, for example, to paint <br />their home if 50% of more of the exposed surface of the house has peeling paint. <br />The second prong of the overall strategy was the adoption of a new clean site ordinance. <br />This ordinance requires property owners to maintain the general outdoor conditions of <br />their land up to certain standards. This ordinance, for example, allows the City to require <br />a homeowner to clean up junk in the backyard. If the homeowner doesn't do it, the City <br />" will, and then require the homeowner to pay for it. <br />''\ <br />The final prong of the strategy is the adoption of a Point-of-Sale inspection ordinance for <br />the sale of homes. Several other cities in the Twin Cities (Minneapolis and St. Louis Park <br />are two examples) have such ordinances. The ordinances have a direct impact on the <br />condition of housing in the communities where they require sellers to maintain or repair a <br />home to a certain standard to enable it to be sold on the private market. <br />We don't see the point-of-sale inspection program anywhere soon on our planning <br />horizon, but I would expect our Council to consider it someday. <br />The City is concerned with the value of individual homes because the condition of a <br />home can positively or negatively impact the value of adjoining properties in the same <br />neighborhood. More often than not, when the City takes an action to force a homeowner <br />to comply with one of our ordinances we make that homeowner unhappy, to be sure, but <br />we also get the appreciation of every neighbor surrounding that unhappy homeowner. <br />Sometimes that's what we have to settle for in city government. <br />� � <br />