My WebLink
|
Help
|
About
|
Sign Out
Home
Browse
Search
10.2. SR 06-04-2018
ElkRiver
>
City Government
>
City Council
>
Council Agenda Packets
>
2011 - 2020
>
2018
>
06-04-2018
>
10.2. SR 06-04-2018
Metadata
Thumbnails
Annotations
Entry Properties
Last modified
6/6/2018 8:22:20 AM
Creation date
6/1/2018 9:56:34 AM
Metadata
Fields
Template:
City Government
type
CCM
date
6/4/2018
There are no annotations on this page.
Document management portal powered by Laserfiche WebLink 9 © 1998-2015
Laserfiche.
All rights reserved.
/
13
PDF
Print
Pages to print
Enter page numbers and/or page ranges separated by commas. For example, 1,3,5-12.
After downloading, print the document using a PDF reader (e.g. Adobe Reader).
View images
View plain text
Duluth left in the <br />cold by Legislature <br />As Duluthians know, it's often "colder by the lake." But the chill <br />that Republican State Convention delegates experience in the city <br />this weekend may have an origin other than Lake Superior. The <br />Republican -controlled Legislature this year spurned both of Duluth's <br />top requests, leaving that city's leaders feeling justifiably ill -served. <br />Atop the Zenith City's legislative list was a request that ought to have <br />been easy to accommodate. Last November, Duluth voters overwhelm- <br />ingly said yes to a 0.5 -percentage -point increase in the sales tax rate <br />within the city, hoping to raise $7 million per year to be used for street <br />improvements. <br />All that was needed to impose that tax was a green light from the <br />Legislature. No state money was required. "We are willing to solve our <br />own problem here," Mayor Emily Larson told an editorial writer. More <br />than 20 public meetings ensured that the tax proposal was well under- <br />stood by voters, she said. The referendum was approved with 76.5 per- <br />cent of the vote. <br />Larson spent 15 days at the State Capitol making the case. One sur- <br />vey rated S5 percent of Duluth's streets "in critical condition." Her city <br />needs to spend at least $10 million a year to drive that number down, she <br />explained. When she became mayor in 2016, Larson pushed for spend- <br />ing cuts to boost a$2.8 million annual street budget to $3.8million. More <br />cuts won't cut it, she said. <br />The Legislature's response was no response. Neither the House nor <br />the Senate version of the eventually vetoed tax bill gave Duluth permis- <br />sion to raise its sales tax. Other cities seeking permission for local sales <br />tax increases were also turned down, Duluth DFL Sen. Erik Simonson <br />noted, but among them only Duluth had already obtained the consent of <br />local voters. <br />"They intentionally disregarded the will of the electorate," Larson <br />complained. "It feels very disrespectful to the voters." <br />Duluth's hope for state help with infrastructure of another kind was <br />also dashed. The city sought assistance in paying the municipal costs <br />associated with the proposed Essentia Health redevelopment in down- <br />town Duluth. That $800 million project, dubbed Vision Northland, is <br />planned to be the largest private development in the city's history. The <br />request for state aid relied in part on state bonding and was fashioned <br />after the assistance extended to the Destination Medical Center in Roch- <br />ester in 2013. That year, the Legislature authorized matching funds for <br />Rochester ofup to $400 millionto bepaid over 20 years; this year, Dulu- <br />th's request for less than half of that stalled in committee. <br />That's a regrettable result—even though it's likely not the final word, <br />on either front. Duluth intends to bring the same or similar requests to <br />the 2019 Legislature. Still, this year's inaction will delay and add to the <br />cost of both street improvements and the municipal components of <br />the Essentiaproject. And it will fuel a growing sense among Minnesota <br />local governments that state government is no longer a reliable partner. <br />The 2018 Legislature didn't reject everything on Duluth's wish list. <br />The bonding bill included $1.9 million for the Duluth Zoo, $6.9 million <br />for its proposed Superior Street steam heating project and $4 million <br />to refurbish the Glensheen mansion. <br />But while those smaller gains are welcome, they did little to soothe <br />city leaders' disappointment about their two priorities. They are left to <br />wonder whether then city's propensity to elect DFLers contributed to the <br />result. "I hate to assume that it was partisanship, but Idon'thave any bet- <br />ter answer," Simonson said. Our hunch is that some of his 86,000 fellow <br />Duluthians will be asking Republican legislators for one this weekend. <br />
The URL can be used to link to this page
Your browser does not support the video tag.