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referendum provision in the charter. <br />City charters provisions must be consistent with and are subject to state law. See State ex rel <br />Town of Lowell v. City of Crookston, 252 Minn. 526, 91 N.W.2d 81, 83 (1958). The Minnesota <br />Court of Appeals recently held that the procedures set forth in chapter 462 for adopting and <br />implementing laws for land use planning preempt charter provisions reserving the right of <br />referendum to voters to approve or disapprove land use ordinances. See Nordmarken v. City_of <br />Richfield, 641 N.W.2d 343 (Minn. Ct. App. 2002). In Nordmarken, a private redeveloper <br />submitted a plan to the City of Richfield that required both a rezoning and an amendment to the <br />city's comprehensive plan. The council adopted the necessary ordinances to allow the plan to go <br />forward. A group of citizens petitioned the council for referendum on the rezoning and comp <br />plan ordinances. The court of appeals held that a referendum would be in conflict with the state <br />law and that state law preempted the charter with respect to land use issues. <br />Although Nordmarken did not deal with the conveyance of property, the same rationale may be <br />applicable. Chapter 462 addresses the acquisition and disposal of property in furthering the <br />planning goals of a city. First, section 462.353, subd. 3, authorizes a municipality to enter into <br />contracts with other public or private agencies in furtherance of the planning activities authorized <br />in sections 462.351 to 462.364. Next, Minn. Stat. § 462.356 addresses the acquisition and <br />disposal of property in the context of a city's comprehensive plan: <br />After a comprehensive municipal plan ...has been recommended by the planning <br />agency and a copy filed with the governing body, no publicly owned interest in real <br />property within the municipality shall be acquired or disposed of, ...until after the <br />planning agency has reviewed the proposed acquisition, ...and reported in writing <br />to the governing body ...its findings as to compliance of the proposed acquisition, <br />disposal or improvement with the comprehensive municipal plan. <br />Section 462.356 requires that a city follow a specific process before selling property to ensure <br />that the proposed sale is in compliance with the comprehensive plan. To subject the findings <br />approving or authorizing a sale to referendum would usurp the process set forth in state statute. <br />Also, the City has complied with section 462.356. The planning commission reviewed the <br />ordinance authorizing the sale of property from the City to the EDA and reported to the City <br />Council. Because state law governs the disposal of public property and the City has complied <br />with that law, an argument can be made that the charter provision subjecting the City ordinance <br />to referendum is preempted under the court's rationale in Nordmarken. <br />Conclusion <br />The City Council has several bases upon which to deny the sufficiency of a referendum petition <br />on the sale of property from the City to the EDA. First, entering into a contract for the sale of <br />property is an administrative, not a legislative, act and therefore is not subject to referendum. <br />Second, state law authorizes the City to convey property to another governmental entity without <br />regard to city charter provisions. Although the City Council has adopted an ordinance <br />authorizing the sale, it is not prohibited from also adopting a resolution to authorize staff to <br />SJR-268835v3 <br />MiJ205-30 <br />A-5 <br />