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<br />Item No: 2 <br />Meeting Date: June 2, 2003 <br />Type of Business: Worksession <br />City of Mounds View Staff Report <br /> <br />To: Honorable Mayor and City Council <br />From: James Ericson, Acting City Administrator <br />Item Title/Subject: Pawnshop Regulation Discussion <br /> <br />Introduction: <br /> <br />The City Council adopted an Interim ordinance on February 27, 2003, which directed the <br />Planning Commission to review the licensing and zoning implications related to pawnshops <br />and to recommend applicable provisions. The Planning Commission discussed this issue at <br />meetings in March, April and May of this year, reviewing State statues, ordinances from <br />adjoining communities and ordinances from communities where pawnshops currently <br />operate. The Commission also heard testimony from representatives of the Mounds View <br />Police Department who did research on their own, discussing the potential impacts of a <br />pawnshop with other police departments. After significant discussion and input from <br />interested parties including residents and tenants from Moundsview Square, the Commission <br />adopted a resolution forwarding two ordinances on to the City Council for their consideration. <br /> <br />The Planning Commission’s resolution along with the two ordinances are attached for your <br />review. In addition, attached to this cover report is the full report drafted for the May 12, <br />2003 City Council meeting. <br /> <br />Discussion: <br /> <br />Pawnshop regulation is a contentious, emotional issue for most communities. And while <br />there have been major advancements and improvements in the pawn industry with the <br />proliferation of new Pawn Americas and other pawn chains designed to look like any other <br />retail establishment, there still remains negative connotations and images associated with <br />such businesses. <br /> <br />The adoption of ordinances to regulate such a business is imperative to protect and preserve <br />local control over the siting and operation of such a business. Without such controls, a <br />Pawnshop could operate unregulated in a city, locating in an area that would otherwise be <br />deemed inappropriate. Adoption of requirements is not an invitation for such a use, it is a <br />proactive measure as opposed to a less effective and more expensive reactive response. <br />The last point which needs to be emphasized is that the City cannot prohibit a Pawnshop <br />from locating here if there are other commercial uses present and zoned for in the City. <br /> <br />What CAN a City Do? <br /> <br />Cities can and should regulate WHERE in the community such a use would be appropriate <br />and cities can and should adopt regulations and licensing requirements to control the <br />operation and to protect the health, safety, well-being of the community. Regulations should <br />not be so unreasonable as to effectively prohibit the use, especially if it can be proven that <br />the underlying intent of the regulations is exactly that.