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34 <br />March 8, 1976 <br />The regular meeting of the Lino Lakes City Council was called to order on March 8, <br />1976, at 8:05 P.M. by Acting Mayor Zelinka. Council members present; Karth, McLean, <br />Schneider. Absent; Mayor Bohjanen due to illness. Mr. Locher was also present. <br />The minutes of February 23, 1976 were considered. Mrs. Elsie Wood, from the audience, <br />corrected the minutes of page 4, second paragraph from the bottom, as follows; <br />'delete the word "No" and add "she said all but three families had signed the pet- <br />ition and she was sure it represented more than 35 %" <br />Mr. Karth moved to approve the minutes as corrected. Seconded by Mr McLean. Motion <br />carried unanimously. <br />Acting Mayor Zelinka introduced Mr. Robert Burman, Anoka County Commissioner, who <br />had asked to attend this meeting to explain the establishing of the special service <br />district for taxing purposes. <br />Mr. Burman said this Resolution had been brought before the Board without having <br />been placed on the agenda. He had voted for the Resolution without the full knowl- <br />edge of how this would operate. After some study, Mr. Burman had made a motion to <br />recind the Resolution but had been unable to get the motion passed. At the present <br />time the Resolution is tabled until all communities have been contacted. <br />Mr. Burman introduced Mr. Ralph McGinley, Executive Secretary to the Board, to <br />explain how this taxing district would work. <br />Mr. McGinley asked where he should begin? Acting Mayor Zelinka asked that he explain <br />the entire program. Mr. McGinley explained the law allowing the establishment of <br />the suborniate taxing districts. This law gives the Board of Commissioners the <br />authority to designate certain parts of Anoka County to be set up as service districts <br />and have a mill rate levied against that district. He felt it was a simple law and <br />the legislature is looking at it with the possibility of giving all other counties <br />the same authority. <br />Mr. McGinley said the law has never been implemented until the Sheriff's office <br />ran into financial problems. One 18 hour contract with the Sheriff's office had <br />been cancelled and one contract had been cut back to 8 hours. This had created a <br />$60,000.00 deficit in the budget for that department. The Board of Commissioners <br />had looked at this law as an alternate to contract service with communities. They <br />felt this would provide a more stable base than the contracts. <br />Mr. Burman said some communities do not levy any amount for law enforcement. He <br />felt the action taken on this matter was backwards. The request should have come <br />from the communities. He felt the communities will not accept this without some <br />say in the operations. <br />Acting Mayor Zelinka said the Council had heard some statements to the effect the <br />service districts would not follow community boundaries. Mr. Burman said there <br />had been no thought of not using community bondaries. <br />Mr. Burman was asked, if a community has it's own force, can the service district <br />encompass that community and Mr. Burman said, there was no interest in assuming <br />the responsibility for law enforcement in communities that have their own depart- <br />ments. <br />Mr. Schneider asked about communities with only part -time forces, with only 16 <br />hour coverage, would the County take over that community. Mr. Burman said, No, if <br />