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<br /> <br />City Council 2010-02-09 7:40 p.m. <br />Minutes of Work Session <br /> <br />Present were Mayor Pro-tem Fehrenbacher, Council members Jeff Paar, Steve King, D <br />Love, and Ben Fehrenbacher. Also present were Mark Statz of Bonestroo & Assoc., City <br />Attorney Kurt Glaser, Finance Director Mike Jeziorski and Public Works Director Paul <br />Palzer. <br /> <br /> <br />1)Economic Development <br />. Paul McDowell of Northern Forest Products was <br />present to discuss tax abatement. Mr. McDowell shared an abatement calculation <br />schedule that was used for planning his building project in 2000. The schedule <br />does not match what was implemented in the development agreement. He <br />believes a mistake was made in the agreement. He indicated the reason he is <br />coming so late to discuss this is that the abatement issue did not show up until <br />about 2007 and after that, he had unsuccessfully tried to resolve this with former <br />finance director, John Meyer. City Attorney Glaser pointed out the Council <br />would be under no obligation to do anything other than what is in the agreement. <br />The Council requested that staff do more research to determine if a mistake was <br />made. <br /> <br />2)Financial Update <br />. Finance Director Mike Jeziorski presented financial reports <br />indicating anticipated results for 2010 and year-to-date activity for 2011. 2010 is <br />projected to end with a deficit (use of fund balance) of about $160,000. This was <br />mostly anticipated as the seal coating project used funds accumulated during the <br />two prior years, the skid loader purchase was moved up from 2011, and building <br />permits were substantially lower than originally planned. <br /> <br />3)2011 Goals <br />. The Council reviewed a draft of possible goals for 2011. <br />Item I.B. Council reviewed a staff report for pavement management planning. <br />The report compiled costs for street maintenance and reconstruction over the next <br />20 plus years. A street reconstruction project would be done in 2015, to bring the <br />remaining streets up to the desired design standard and to install watermain where <br />it isn’t presently available. Beginning in 2020, mill and overlay projects would be <br />scheduled about every five years with advance levies generating most of the costs <br />of the projects. The resulting tax impact would be about a 4% increase in taxes in <br />2012, followed by about 9% in 2013, with relatively stable levies following that. <br />Engineer Mark Statz suggested that the overlay cycle of 35 years may be too <br />optimistic, rather it might be needed closer to 20 years. The possibility of <br />specially assessing a flat rate of about $500 per property was considered. A <br />predictable and manageable number may be palatable to homeowners. Council <br />was concerned about the large tax increases this plan would generate, even though <br />the levy increases would fund a program that benefits every taxpayer. <br />Item II.A. The Council agreed on the need to reactivate the EDA and then <br />identify areas where its involvement could facilitate community development. <br />Item II.B. Downtown Redevelopment. Everyone agreed that the downtown <br />redevelopment will likely not materialize until substantial improvement is seen in <br />the economy. At the same time, no one wishes to abandon the goal. <br /> <br />