04-11-00 WSNIINUTES
CITY COUNCIL WORK SESSION -APRIL 11, 2000
A work session of the Hopkins City Council was held at 6:00 p.m. on April 10, 2000, at
the City Hall. Council members present were Mayor Maxwell and Council members Brausen,
Hesch, Jensen and Johnson. City personnel present were City Manager Mielke, Assistant City
Manager Genellie, Economic Development Director Kerrigan, Public Works Director Stadler,
Finance Director Yager, Recreation Director Johnson, Police Chief Reid and Jim Parsons. Also
present was Tom Allen.
City Manager Evaluation
The Council met in closed session from 6:00 to 7:30 and reconvened again at 10:10.
Design Team Meeting Evaluation, Tom Allen
In opening remarks there was a general feeling that the attending staff felt the last meeting
went well and that staff in general were excited and wanting to get involved. Some had heard
concerns about diversity becoming too important. Concern about how to get the staff really
involved and committed was mentioned.
Mr. Mielke updated the group on recruitment for the design team. He commented all those
suggested as "recruiters" had helped get people. Some people still needed follow-up: Fran Hesch
will contact Ros Foley; Rick Brausen will contact Mary Beth Hays, Hillary Federer, Erik
Falkman; Karen Jensen will contact Paul Bengston; Gene Maxwell will contact Roy Wirth and
Erik Falkman. The following were suggested to fill vacancies: Butch should contact LaShawn
Hankton; Rick Brausen will check with Donna for people in education; Jim Parsons will check on
the daytime Lions and Diane Johnson will check on evening Lions and the Jaycees; Steve Mielke
will get 2 more staff and will recruit two youth. It was noted Fred Jensen and Nila Neumiller
have not responded. Mr. Mielke will be sending a letter with a summary and proposed agenda to
all who have agreed to be on the design team.
In response to suggestions at the last meeting, Mr. Allen said each team member would be
given a time to speak, with staff and Council to be last in each small group. At the first session
Council members may ask to not speak, but he thinks the small groups will want them to. People
will be assigned to small groups randomly. Each session will start with an exercise to help team
members connect as individuals before addressing the vision. Small groups will have 6 instead of
8 members (to help give each a chance to speak) and will stay the same throughout the process to
build personal connections. He suggested that staff involvement could be through staff
interviewing multi-family residents and diverse groups; May 9-15 a group of 50 staff will meet
between team sessions 3 and 4 to give feed-back to design team; they will meet again two evenings
in the fall.
Mr. Allen asked for feedback on the proposals. There was general discussion about the
staff interviewing; general consensus was it would help keep the interest alive over summer and
would be a way to survey the community. Tom Allen commented "interviewing" had included the
idea of on-site group meetings; Police Chief Reid noted on-site meetings on police issues had had
little success. Some felt acity-wide survey of some time should also be implemented. Fran Hesch
noted that those with limited English would not return mail-in surveys and would require
interviews. Karen Jensen suggested National Night Out might be a good time to utilize in the
process. General consensus was that both mail surveying and interviewing should be utilized.
There was consensus that the general rules and agenda were good.
Karen Jensen suggested that team members might like to see the "group designations" and
say how they each overlap those designations; Mayor Maxwell said they might want to first guess
which one they were chosen as. Jim Kerrigan noted that the members need to "buy into" the
ground rules at the first meeting through discussion, etc.
Dave Johnson and Jim Kerrigan suggested a "social hour" would give team members a
chance to mix. After discussion it was decided to start the first meeting ahalf-hour early with
refreshments to allow that for those who wished to do so. The first meeting will be in the
Raspberry Room.
Arts Funding, Jim Parsons
Mr. Parsons announced he had resigned, effective April 24~'. There were general
comments wishing him well at his new job and appreciation for his work at Hopkins.
He opened his presentation by saying the first issue to be decided is "Do we want to
support only local artists" or is this "Let's have the best, no matter where they come from"?
He said there are three general mechanisms to generate funding: percentage of city capital
spending earmarked for art, which requires ordinance passing; charter amendments to permit use
of parkland dedication fees; state legislation to permit tax for the arts on new construction (most
cities don't charge handicapped access costs or residential construction). He noted a couple years
ago Hopkins had looked at a utility bill check-off for the arts; he and Mr. Mielke thought that
might be possible now. Mr. Mielke noted that the park fund change would not generate much in
the future.
Mr. Mielke asked the Council what their chief goal was. All agreed it is to retire the Art
Center debt. Mr. Parsons noted that while the construction tax must have a set purpose, that
purpose could change once the debt was retired; however, the legislature may require a
referendum. Karen Jensen mentioned she had seen a special credit card, would there be a way to
utilize that? That may be brought up with the new bank coming in. Fran suggested park
dedication fees might be adjusted with only the increase going to arts. There was general
discussion on fund-raising events and possible ticket fees for the Center; since this would not be
part of the "ticket cost" it would not affect performer fees. Mr. Mielke noted Mankato had a
$25/vehicle fee earmarked for airport expansion.
Consensus: Staff shall obtain more information for the Council on utility bill check-off and
possibility of commercial park dedication fee changes; and explore a ticket tax with Jay. Steve
Mielke will talk to the state legislators.
Board and Commission Training
Mr. Mielke indicated the options were annual/semi-annual joint training sessions; attending
meeting prior to term start; using government training services; chairman training; staff doing
training by individual board or commission. The last method is used now, but is not as
comprehensive as it should be.
Mr. Brausen said he felt it was important for non-staff to do the training, though people
who have been staff members would be good, as would past board/commission members. He feels
present members should be offered the training. Mayor Maxwell commented the Citizens
Academy will help, and Mr. Mielke noted the Board reports at the Council meetings are helping.
Mr. Mielke suggested staff training on how to work with the Boards might be needed. Fran Hesch
suggested joint meetings with Boards/Commissions might be "piggybacked" with training. Karen
Jensen said present members should be asked what they wish they had gotten; Fran agreed they
should help plan the training for their new members.
General Consensus: One major annual training is very important, and must happen in
May or June before members start their terms. The Council will need to make sure Board/
Commission appointments are made in time to allow this. Mr. Mielke should look into costs and
get more detail on training options, such as workshops, government programs, chairmanship
training, etc. Board and Commission members should be kept up-to-date on their issues.
Rick Brausen moved continuance to the closed session, Karen Jensen seconded. Meeting
went to closed session at 10:10 p.m.
Kasey Kester, recording secretary
ATTEST:
COUNCIL MEMBERS: