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01-13-04 WSJanuary 13, 2004 Page 1 MINUTES CITY COUNCIL WORK SESSION -January 13, 2004 A work session of the Hopkins City Council was called to order by Mayor Gene Maxwell at 6:30 p.m. on January 13, 2004, at the City Hall. Council members Brausen, Johnson, Rowan and Thompson were present. City personnel present were: City Manager Steve Mielke, Assistant City Manager Jim Genellie; Facilities Director Jay Strachota and Public Works Director Steve Stadler. Also present were Steve Barberio of Stages and Ted Sauer of Hopkins School District. Mainstreet School of Performing Arts Update Mr. Barberio handed out the brochure for the school. The planned opening date is August 30 as its terms will be concurrent with other Hopkins district schools. At first it will have only grades 9 and 10, with one upper grade added each of the next two years. Stages will be the provider for the arts as it is for Fair School in Crystal, but the Hopkins school district is the district sponsor and will oversee finances and student supervision. The school will be a charter school and a nonprofit corporation. Mr. Sauer said a survey had shown high interest for such a school in the Hopkins school district. Mr. Barberio said St. Joseph's school is vacating their Mainstreet school, so they will be leasing their building on a ten-year lease with aten-year option at the end. A formal lease will be signed this spring. The church is doing extensive remodeling to get the building to code. The money will be repaid over the term of the lease. Karen Charles will be the principal. Most funds will be state aid; a federal grant will cover start-up costs. Full capacity will be 416. Mr. Sauer added 90 students are already enrolled; the goal is 216. Basic curriculum will be like the Hopkins school district's. Answering Council questions, Mr. Barberio and Mr. Sauer said there will be 8 full-time teachers at start-up. A motivating factor was to make better use of HCA during daytime hours; $25,000 will be spent per school year for HCA time; much of the scheduling has already been worked out. The present St. Joseph's gym will be divided into a dance area and a music area. Emphasis will be on student creativity - drama will be student-written, rather than a "school band" there will be groups such as a jazz combo performing their own music. Performances will usually be at HCA. Parking will be on St. Joseph's lot. Students will come from all over, but the majority will be from western suburbs. The Perpich School is not a problem as it is a state school with mandated congressional district enrollment. Mr. Mielke added he sees the city's role as participant, not the leader. If expansion is needed in the future, the city may participate more. Mayor Maxwell said he would like the city attorney to be in on the drawing up of the lease from the beginning due to HCA involvement. Excelsior Blvd. Phase 2 Landscaping Plan Amendments Mr. Stadler said staff would like to reduce the $220,000 by $60,000. Median landscaping would stay the same. Answering questions, he said reduced landscaping areas would be sodded; most of these areas are adjacent to the trail system. The money amounts are solid as they are based on per plant costs in the original bid as determined by Hennepin County. The money saved, however, would be Hopkins money, not County money. General discussion followed. General Consensus: The reductions should be made, with the savings reserved incase some plantings need to be added later. There is no need to go to the neighborhood on this change. January 13, 2004 Page 2 Mr. Stadler informed Council there will be work on Excelsior Blvd. through next summer. Mr. Mielke added Luther is planning to make landscaping improvements up to the bus stop on their new property. Mayor Maxwell said he would like the Council to get follow-up with Luther Companies on their schedule. Prevailing Wage Ordinance Mr. Genellie noted wages are already under state and federal rules. Even if an ordinance is passed, it will not affect the facilities projects as bids have already been let. It would apply only to future construction, probably mostly street reconstruction that does not involve state aid. Such ordinances are usually passed only by large cities; the only one he knows of about Hopkins' size is White Bear Lake, and they say the ordinance has had little impact for them. Staff sees no reason to pass such an ordinance. Answering Mr. Brausen, Mr. Genellie said prevailing wage isn't the same as how the city determines how its non-union employees get paid in that market is the major determiner for the city. Mr. Mielke added the theory is that not having the ordinance would help non-union contractors, but there have not been any non-union bidders on street reconstruction. He added the major issue is should the city set wages. Mr. Stadler said he feels if the plumbers union can come and present their arguments, they will feel good. General Consensus was representatives of both sides should be given time to speak at a Council meeting in April or May. In the meantime staff and Kraus-Anderson should look at how such an ordinance would have affected the facilities projects. Other Mr. Mielke said there will be no February 10 work session as only three members could attend. Steve Stadler asked about presentation of recycling. General Consensus was it should be a Council presentation. Mr. Brausen said good news should get more coverage at Council meetings, citing the $50,000 grant for the Depot which was on the consent agenda and got mentioned only because a question was raised. Employee negotiations are underway. One or two are close to completion, but the union wants atwo-year contract. Mr. Genellie said they are considering a split 3 % (1'h % raise in January; 1'/z % raise in July) for 2004 and 3 % on January 1 for 2005. He added 3 % seems to be the average for area cities. Another consideration is that 3 bargaining units have binding arbitration. General Consensus was more information is needed at a closed discussion after the next Council meeting. Specific numbers are needed for split year vs. full year 3 %. Ms. Johnson asked that if there is a question on merit pay, it can be brought up. Mr. Thompson asked for information on LGA moneys. Mr. Brausen noted grandfathering is the key in the history of it for Hopkins. Mr. Thompson noted cars with expired tags are sitting out in front of Transportation Electronics. Ms. Johnson said she received an invitation to the business council meeting next Tuesday. Mr. Mielke noted he regularly attends and gives them updates. Mr. Rowan asked about the squad car purchases issue. Mr. Mielke said the information will be sent to Virgil. General Consensus was when the information is sent, Virgil should be asked to discuss the issue. Then the issue should be put on a Council agenda so it is on the record. Mayor Maxwell asked what the Council wants to accomplish in the coming year. Ms. January 13, 2004 Page 3 Johnson said she feels strongly the last year needs to be really looked at first. General discussion followed. Mr. Brausen said he felt very frustrated at the end of the year; he feels communication with the rank-and-file employees is a major issue. General Consensus was to have a preliminary discussion at the January 27 work session, starting at 5:30 with supper, and discussion starting at 6:00. On February 21 there should be a follow-up session at a different setting, such as the Pavilion, with 8:30 am juice and rolls and 9:00 discussion start. Communication should be a major theme. Mr. Brausen asked that the Depot come in with end-of--year numbers. Discussion of 35' lots needs to be finished. He wants ayes/no answer as to whether Inspections inspects duplexes on a two-year basis. Mayor Maxwell asked for ideas on State of the City. Mr. Mielke suggested a preview of the next year, Mainstreet School, transportation (Shady Oak, Excelsior Blvd., 73/5). Mr. Brausen suggested updating different plans and reviewing boards and commissions. Mayor Maxwell mentioned development projects. Mr. Rowan added new businesses in town (including Marketplace). Mayor Maxwell said he felt Council should ask the community "Where do you want to go?"; Mr. Mielke said a business survey could be done and the results discussed. Publicity was discussed; Ms. Johnson said it should be put in the local paper. Mr. Mielke suggested sending out a letter; Mayor Maxwell suggested getting HBCA's mailing list. Mr. Mielke suggested holding it at the Pavilion meeting room. Mayor Maxwell asked for Police Review Committee clarification at a future session. Mr. Mielke said AGA picked a site in Plymouth. SuperValu is very frustrated and wants to discuss its relationship with Hopkins. Mr. Thompson moved adjournment. Ms. Johnson seconded. Meeting adjourned at 9:35 p.m Kasey Kester, Secretary ATTEST: i~` ~'~ Euge J. axwell, Mayor