My WebLink
|
Help
|
About
|
Sign Out
Home
Search
04-12-2021 Council Packet
LinoLakes
>
City Council
>
City Council Meeting Packets
>
2021
>
Searchable Packets
>
04-12-2021 Council Packet
Metadata
Thumbnails
Annotations
Entry Properties
Last modified
11/4/2021 10:53:20 AM
Creation date
11/4/2021 9:06:50 AM
Metadata
Fields
Template:
City Council
Council Document Type
Council Packet
Meeting Date
04/12/2021
Council Meeting Type
Regular
There are no annotations on this page.
Document management portal powered by Laserfiche WebLink 9 © 1998-2015
Laserfiche.
All rights reserved.
/
160
PDF
Print
Pages to print
Enter page numbers and/or page ranges separated by commas. For example, 1,3,5-12.
After downloading, print the document using a PDF reader (e.g. Adobe Reader).
View images
View plain text
CITY COUNCIL WORK SESSION <br />DRAFT <br /> 1 <br />CITY OF LINO LAKES 1 <br />MINUTES 2 <br /> 3 <br />DATE : March 22, 2021 4 <br />TIME STARTED : 6:00 p.m. 5 <br />TIME ENDED : 6:25 p.m. 6 <br />MEMBERS PRESENT : Council Member Stoesz, Lyden, Ruhland, 7 <br /> Cavegn and Mayor Rafferty 8 <br />MEMBERS ABSENT : None 9 <br />Staff members present: City Administrator Sarah Cotton; Community Development 10 <br />Director Michael Grochala; Director of Public Safety John Swenson; Public Services 11 <br />Director Rick DeGardner; City Engineer Diane Hankee; City Clerk Julie Bartell 12 <br /> 13 <br />1. Blue Heron Days – Councilmember Stoesz noted interest in having a Blue Heron 14 <br />Days event this year. In lieu of a festival centered at Lino Park, he’s requesting 15 <br />discussion of organizing a parade. He suggests setting up a committee to organize and he 16 <br />is volunteering his services. He’s aware of others in the community interested in serving 17 <br />also. There could be some staff time involved but volunteers leading the effort. He has 18 <br />discussed the matter with the League of Minnesota Cities and has learned that a COVID 19 <br />restriction compliance plan would be required. He is suspecting that other cities will be 20 <br />looking at parade possibilities. 21 <br /> 22 <br />Mayor Rafferty noted that he’s been hearing from community members who are anxious 23 <br />to get out. He likes the idea of a celebration but understands that it needs to be an 24 <br />appropriate situation. Another question arose about finding a site (city land adjacent to 25 <br />the freeway?) for blow up rides, etc. Councilmember Stoesz remarked that his interest is 26 <br />only in a parade. 27 <br /> 28 <br />Councilmember Cavegn asked staff to weigh in. Administrator Cotton noted that the 29 <br />current Minnesota Executive Order has strict requirements and she struggles to see how a 30 <br />parade fits into that. However she’s heard from some other cities that are planning 31 <br />events conditioned upon what restrictions are in place. She has spoken with Public 32 <br />Services Director DeGardner about the possibility of a parade and staff time necessary; 33 <br />there is no funding budgeted to staff an event but discussion can continue. 34 <br /> 35 <br />Public Safety Director Swenson noted that his department’s role is to review the special 36 <br />event details; in his experience there are generally City resources required to execute an 37 <br />event such as a parade. He also noted that there is a neighborhood that gets “shut off” if 38 <br />the road is closed and that’s an issue that would need to be addressed as part of moving 39 <br />forward; in the past staff has sought a solution through the Target property and that was 40 <br />found to have challenges including the approval necessary from Target Corporation and 41 <br />probably expenses that would have to be covered by the City. 42 <br /> 43
The URL can be used to link to this page
Your browser does not support the video tag.