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Mounds View City Council August 22, 2005 <br />Regular Meeting Page 35 <br /> <br />severance benefit of one weeks pay for each year of service for the three employees involved, 1 <br />which is standard severance for full time employees. He stated the most-cost case for each 2 <br />employee, which will probably not be the case, would work out to $54,000. He noted that 3 <br />amount was in the Medtronic performa. 4 <br /> 5 <br />MOTION/SECOND. Gunn/Marty. To waive the reading and adopt Resolution 6585 Approving 6 <br />A Severance Package For Regular Full-Time Golf Course Employees. 7 <br /> 8 <br />City Attorney Riggs suggested adding the following: 9 <br /> 10 <br />BE IT FINALLY RESOLVED, that severance benefits only occur if the Bridges closes in 2005. 11 <br /> 12 <br />The Council agreed to make this revision. 13 <br /> 14 <br />MOTION/ Stigney. To amend Resolution 6585 to indicate: “flex time payout would be 15 <br />concurrent with the date of closing and done in cash.” 16 <br /> 17 <br />Motion died for lack of a second. 18 <br /> 19 <br /> Ayes-4 Nay-1 (Stigney) Motion carried. 20 <br /> 21 <br />N. Resolution 6608 Approving the Sufficiency of Petition in Opposition 22 <br />Ordinance 760 (Ordinance Authorizing Disposal by Sale of Real Property 23 <br />Owned by the City of Mounds View to the Mounds View Economic 24 <br />Development Authority) 25 <br /> 26 <br />City Administrator Ulrich advised that staff received a petition on Monday, August 15, 2005, 27 <br />against Ordinance 760, authorizing disposal of the Bridges. He stated the Council adopted 28 <br />Ordinance 760, which will be effective August 19, 2005. He advised that the petition names 29 <br />were put in a data base to determine eligible signatures. Staff also checked each signature on the 30 <br />Ramsey County Registered Voter Master List, which contains all registered voters in Mounds 31 <br />View. Staff then checked all determined Non-Registered voters on the Minnesota Statewide 32 <br />Voter Registration System. He stated there were some issues with legibility and three people 33 <br />looked at those signatures to determine how they fit into the eligibility list. 34 <br /> 35 <br />City Administrator Ulrich reported that 12 signatures could not be determined due to legibility 36 <br />issues for both the signature and printed name. The petition contained 1,193 signatures, 17 were 37 <br />determined invalid because residence could not be determined, 214 signatures were non-38 <br />registered voters, and 34 signatures were duplicates. The total number of registered voter 39 <br />signatures is 945. City Administrator Ulrich advised the petition needed 989 signatures to 40 <br />receive a ruling of sufficiency in accordance with Section 5.03 of the City Charter. The Charter 41 <br />requires the number of signers be at least 15% for initiative and referendum and for recall, at 42 <br />least 25% of the total number of electors who cast their votes for president at the last presidential 43 <br />election. The last presidential election was in 2004 and 6,597 residents cast their vote. 44 <br />City Administrator Ulrich advised that the City Attorney brought up an argument any person 45