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Administrative Section 1 ' ADMINISTRATIVE SECTION Letter to Joel Katz dated January 10, 1991. Letter from Al Wallin dated January 11, 1991. ' Memo from Scott Harr dated January 9, 1991. 1 Letter to MnDOT dated January 15, 1991. Letter from NSP dated January 11, 1991. 1 Letter from Joel Katz dated January 15., 1991. Letter from Southwest Corridor Transportation Coalition dated 1 January 14, 1991. Memo from Dave Hempel dated January 16, 1991. 1 Letter to Andrew Schmidt dated January 18, 1991. Future City Council Items from the Engineering Dept. ' DNR Metro News dated January, 1991. 1 Letter from Gary Fuchs dated January 15, 1991. Memo from Paul Krauss dated January 22, 1991. 1 Article submitted by Eric Rivkin, Breaking Ground on a New Idea. Public Safety Commission Attendance Record. ' HRA Accounts Payable dated December 26, 1990, January 14 and 28, 1991. 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 • CITYOF ClIANIIASSEN _ 1 a- 690 COULTER DRIVE • P.O. BOX 147 • CHANHASSEN, MINNESOTA 55317 ~` (612) 937 -1900 • FAX (612) 937 -5739 1 January 10, 1991 1 Minnesota Department of Transportation 1 Attn: Mr. Joel Katz District Traffic Engineer 5801 Duluth St. Golden Valley, MN 55422 1 • Re: Request for Speed Study on Trunk Highway 101 from Town Line Road to Twilight Trail 1 PW 262A Dear Mr. Katz: As I indicated during our telephone discussions today the City has received a _ request from a group of concerned residents in the neighborhood of Cheyenne Trail and Sandyhook Road regarding the speed limit on Trunk Highway 101. Over 1 the past years increased development has occurred adjacent to TH 101 creating additional traffic and intersections. The City is interested in verifying that the posted speed limits are warranted on this highway. Therefore, the City of 1 Chanhassen hereby requests the Minnesota Commissioner of Transportation to perform a speed study on Trunk Highway 101 in the aforementioned area. I have also attached a location map of the area concerned for your convenience. 1 Based on our telephone conversations I understand that this will not be completed until sometime in the spring. Your attention in this matter is greatly appreciated. If you have any additional questions concerning this request, please let me know. Sincerely, CITY OF CHANHASSEN 1 David C. Hempel Sr. Engineering Technician DCH:lap Attachment: Location map. c: Charles Folch, Assistant City Engineer 1 Scott Harr, Public Safety Director Administration Packet (1- 28 -91) r ards7waiffiessaugnanaggimaziggignmeiginumffinissugammaisignaumwsuniagainta k • E _ F , . 1 ? E § 2 8 ct 8 , § f g 0 F., TOWN LINE RD. --/ T - I j : 1 1 i O , I, I N ClCA I HENNEPIN! COUNTY c t own IL •C LANE . 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' at ' • Or HANgtos'aivEs 1 "e CARVER COUNTY COURTHOUSE ALLEN J. WALLIN 600 EAST 4TH STREET - BOX 9 Carver County Sheriff CHASKA, MiNNESOTA 55318-2190 tt e ( 612) 448 -3435 /'NES ° COUNTY Of CAQVEQ 1 January 11, 1991 Mr. Don Ashworth Chanhassen City Administrator 690 Coulter Drive Chanhassen, Minnesota 55317 1 RE: Police Contract Meeting Dear Mr. Ashworth, Please be advised the next communities police contract meeting will be held January 31, 1991 at 7:00 P.M. at the Cologne City Hall. Chanhassen Mayor Don Chmiel, Chairman of the Justice Center Advisory Committee, will be the guest speaker. 1 Respectfully, ✓L/ J-I W f � 1 Allen J. Wallin Sheriff AJW:ms 1 1 JAN 9 1991 (TT v .' L-1 t'ZFwi'Ft1,:J17:1\ Affirmative Action /Equal Opportunity Employer 1 - CITYOF CHANHASSEN 1 690 COULTER DRIVE • P.O. BOX 147 • CHANHASSEN, MINNESOTA 55317 (612) 937 -1900 • FAX (612) 937 -5739 MEMORANDUM ' TO: Mayor & City Council Don Ashworth, City Manager ' FROM: Scott Harr, Public Safety Directors" DATE: January 9, 1991 1 SUBJ: Animal Control Contract ' The purpose of this memo is to respond to Councilman Workman's concerns expressed at the 12/10/90 Council meeting regarding the cost effectiveness of the animal control contract. Following are the figures to address his concerns: 1 1990 Animal Control Contract We provide 20 hours of patrol service per week @ $22.00 1 per hour: ' 20 hours /week x $22.00 /hour $440.00/week x 53 weeks /year 1 $23,320.00 (income from contract) - 13,000.00 (cost of CSO, including benefits, to 1 provide the 20 hours of patrol service under the contract) 1 10,320.00 (remaining to pay for vehicle costs, administrative costs, secretarial time, finance time, insurance, etc., estimated 1 - 4.887.00 to be $4887.00 per year) - $ 5,433.00 1 1 Mayor & City Council 1 Don Ashworth January 9, 1991 Page 2 1 The benefits, in addition to the remaining monies left over after ' the expenses of the contract services, are that half of a new vehicle will be paid for; half of a CSO position is funded; not to mention the fact that we are providing a service for neighboring 1 communities that has also positively affected animal control in our City, as well as theirs. Please be aware that any overtime is charged out at time and one -half, and all related animal control expenses (impound fees, etc.) are charged back to the 1 cities from which the animals originated. If you any other questions, I hope you will feel free to contact me. Thank you. 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 ' • CITYOF 1 CHANHASSEN ' 690 COULTER DRIVE • P.O. BOX 147 • CHANHASSEN, MINNESOTA 55317 (612) 937 -1900 • FAX (612) 937 -5739 -- s 1 January 15, 1991 1 Minnesota Department of Transportation Attn: Mr. Chuck Weischelbaum District State Aid Engineer Metropolitan District /Golden Valley Office 2055 North Lilac Drive Golden Valley, MN 55422 1 Re: 1990 Certification of Mileage PW 033 Dear Mr. Weischelbaum: Please find enclosed the City of Chanhassens' Certification of ' Mileage as of December 31, 1990. Attached to the Certification is the City's itemization of Roadway Improvements and Municipal State Aid Street Improvements along with a current tabulation of the State Aid street segments within the City of Chanhassen. As ' you will note, there are a few minor changes which will be documented accordingly with the forthcoming submittal of the 1990 MSA Needs Study sheet. If you have any questions, please feel free to contact me. 1 Sincerely, CITY OF CHANHASSEN ' Charles Folch Assistant City Engineer CF :lap c: City Council Administrative Packet (1- 28 -91) with Attachment. Attachment: Certification of Mileage Form Itemization of Roadway Improvements 1 II' CITY OF CHANHASSEN I ' ANNUAL CERTIFICATION OF MILEAGE I 1990 ROADWAY IMPROVEMENTS €NTS 1/11/91 II "Other Local Roads and Streets" II Project # Project Name Miles 88 -24 Reed's Orchard Ridge (64th Ct.) 0.06 II 89 -1 Country Oaks 0.33 1 89 -27 Vineland Forest Addition 0.23 90 -14 Lake Susan Hills West 4th Add. 0.39 1 *90 -16 Lake Susan Hills West 5th Add. 0.12 *88_6 . Minnewashta Highlands 0.03 I *90 -12 Zimmerman Farms 1st Addition 0.13 II Total "Improved" Streets 1.01 miles II Total "Non - Existing" Streets 0.28 miles II Total Increase in Local Street Mileage 1.29 miles 1 "Municipal State Aid Streets" Mileage I Original Change New Project# Section Segement Project Miles Improved Mileage 1 89-6 ' 110 030 Lake Drive East 0.39(improved) -0.06 0.33 89-6 110 040 Lake Drive East 0.31(non- exist.)+0.31 0.31 II Total 0.70 miles + .25 0.64 miles II II *Denotes platted subdivision with non - existing streets. II I . QTY OF CHANHASSEN I STATE AID STREET SYSTEM 1990 II DESCRIPTION SECTION SEGMENT MILEAGE Non- EXisting Lake Lucy Road 101 010 . .61 II Lake Lucy Road 101 020 1.21 II Kerber Boulevard 101 030 .81 Kerber Boulevard 101 040 .63 II Saddlebrook 102 010 .19 Bluff Creek Drive 104 010 .66 II Bluff Creek Drive 104 020 .66 Audubon Road 106 010 1.52 II Non- Ecistin 9 Lake Drive East 107 010 1.00 II Lake Drive East 108 010 .63 Non - Foisting Pleasant View Road 109 010 1.52 II Lake Drive East 110 010 .47 - Lake Drive East 110 020 .04 " I (Revised Mileage) Lake Drive East 110 030 .33 (Per Const . Plan) I (Improved 1990) Lake Drive East 110 040 .31 II Non- Existing 184th Street 110 050 .10 Minnewashta Parkway 111 010 1.30 II West 78th Street 113 010 0.32 Lyman Boulevard 112 010 0.61 II Lake Riley Boulevard 112 020 0.40 II TOTAL MILEAGE 13.30 miles I Non- Existing = 3.21 miles Improved = 10.09 miles II 13.30 miles as of 1990 (State Aid) II Mai /UOT U (10 -19) Municipal Mileage Revisions During Municipal Mileage as of Dec. 31, 19 Current Year (+ or -) as of Dec. 31, 19 ANNUAL CERTIFICATION g ° mac ° , ° oo:sc4 ` o' o ' o � o c .�' o' o . S OF MILEAGE ,} .F F �° 2 .A a k° 2. c o W J c c � `F 40 ? `F 1 11 luil iv wig vi Ira viii ix x xi X11 • 1. Trunk Highways ilig 18.4 ' �--- 18.43 18.43 2. County State -Aid Highways 1.95 8.28 10.2: 1.95 8.28 10.23 3. Co. Municipal State -Aid Streets - • ---- 4. Municipal State -Aid Streets 3.52 9.84 13.36 0.31 - +0.25 -0.06 3.21 10.09 13.30 5. County Roads MI 3.7 3.77 3.77 6. Other Local Roads and Streets gm 73.7 0.28 +1.01 +1.2! 0.28 74.78 75.06 7. Total Improved Mileage Previous = 114.19 Adjustment +1.26 Current • ( + 115.3 MAXIMUM STATE -AID MILEAGE COMPUTATIONS - 8. Trunk Highways (Line 1, Column XI). 18.43 8.28 9. County State -Aid Highways (Line 2, Column XI). 10. County Municipal State -Aid Streets (Line 3, Column XI). 0 11. Total Deductions (Total of Lines 8, 9 and 10 above). 26.71 88.64 12. Basic Mileage For Computation (Line 7, Column XI, Minus Line 11). 13. Percentage Limitation. x .20 17.728 14. MAXIMUM MILES ALLOWED FOR M.S.A.S. DESIGNATIONS 15. Total Municipal State -Aid Street Designations (Column XII - Line 3 Plus Line 4) 13.30 16. Total Miles of T.H. Turnbacks Included In Line 15 ---- 17. Municipal State -Aid Street Mileage Over /Under Maximum Allowed. 4.498 ~ I hereby certify that the .total Improved Street Mileage in the Municipality of _ w 90 115. 35 as of December 31, 19 is Miles. Signed _._._ . _._._ __ Title -._____.__ lia MI MN i♦ MI (♦ M ,,- NM N i♦ MN OM MS INM i♦ NM - REVISIONS DURING CURRENT YEAR • MUNICIPAL STATE-AID STREETS COUNTY MUNICIPAL STATE -AID STREETS ROUTE ORIG. MILEAGE CHANGE +OR - C= MILEAGE CHANGE +OR - REVISED GATE ROUTE NNUMBER WILES OF REASON LUUE ORIG. OR IN of REASON NON mi. SROVD TOTAL MLES CHANGE NUMBER MILES NON- TOTAL MILES 4344141:* 110- EXISTING uwrROYD EXISTING InIrROV d � 030 .39 -.06 -.06 .33 9/90 New Const. 11 ° 040 .31 +.31 +.31 .31 9/90 New Const. TOTAL NET CHANGE COUNTY STATE -AID HIGHWAYS TOTAL NET CHANGE +0.25 +0.25 0.6 ! ///' /,4, TOTAL NET CHANGE Jan. 1, To Dec. 31, 19 9 ° MUNICIPALITY e r41 ;.■t. - 4 7 Northern States Power Company ' Minnetonka Area 5505 County Road 19 Excelsior, Minnesota 55331 -8565 Telephone (612) 474 -8881 1 January 11, 1991 1 City of Chanhassen 690 Coulter Drive Chanhassen, MN 55317 1 Don Ashworth RE: Certificate of deposit no. 8414 and Promissory Note in the amount of $107,000.00 for the replacement of 1 overhead facilities with underground facilities in downtown Chanhassen. 1 Dear Mr. Ashwor 1 Under the terms described on the Promissory Note and Statement - ' Of Work Requested, all qualifications have been met to satisfy the certificate of deposit and Promissory Note mentioned above. 1 We are, therefore returning the Promissory Note at this time. If we can be of any service in the future, please call on us. 1 Sin - - - Nve Jer y s ik Manager 1 Minnetonka Area ' JFK:lcd Enclosure 1 1 Exhibit "B" 1 PROMISSORY NOTE 1 $ 106,850.00 1 October , 1987 1 FOR THE VALUE RECEIVED, the undersigned City of Chanhassen (Promisor) promises to pay to the order of Northern States Power Company, a Minnesota corporation (Promisee), its successors or assigns, at 414 Nicollet Mall 1 Minneapolis, Minnesota 55401 (or such place as they may hereafter designate in writing) the sum of One hundred and six thousand eight hundred fifty & no /100 Dollars ($ 106,850.00 ) lawful money of the United States -of America. ' The principal balance shall be due and payable 60 months following the date hereof. Interest shall accrue on this note on the principal balance which re- mains unpaid one year from the date of this note and on the same date in every subsequent year during its term at the rate of 17.25 %» per year. Payment of each year's interest shall be made to Promisee with- in 10 days of the day it accrues. Failure to pay the interest when due shall constitute a default and Promisee may demand immediate pay- ment of all outstanding principal and interest. 1 Presentment and demand for payment, notice of protest are hereby waived by the Promisor hereof as well as all endorsers and guarantors hereof. Upon default in any payment due hereunder, Promisor agrees to pay costs of collection including reasonable attorney's fees. Revenue credits will be determined as follows: When new customers ' or additional loads from existing customers are ready for service - the NSP standard of 3 times the anticipated revenue for construction will be applied. Any revenue amount in excess of construction ex- penses for that job will be applied as credit to the remaining $106,850 charge. ' This note is secured by a Certificate of Deposit issued by The Chanhassen State Bank on the account of The City of Chanhassen and NSP • 1 By ' City Manager er g ' Title STATEMENT OF WORK REQUESTED FORM 17.7012 (1,2.811 RISP 1 NORTHERN STATES POWER COMPANY October 1987 1 WORK REQUESTED BY CITY OF CHANHASSEN II WORK TO BE AT City of Chanhassen (Downtown Development) ADDRESS 690 Coulter Drive P. 0. Box 147 II Chanhassen, MN. 55317 CONSISTING OF: II I - Undergrounding for the City of Chanhassen as per Attachment Exhibit "A". The City of Chanhassen will pay to NSP a one- time charge of $106,850 upon completion of construction for work described on Exhibit "A ". In addition the City of II Chanhassen will provide NSP with a promissory note for the remaining $106,850 that will be due and payable to NSP 60 months from the date of this agreement. II Said promissory note balance will be adjusted annually with credit for revenue produced from new loads withii the boundaries of this project (see Exhibit "A "). Each year the City of Chan- ' hassen will pay to NSP 174% Revenue Requirements on the balance amount after credits. (See Exhibit "B "). I At the termination of this agreement, 60 months from date above, the balance after credits will be payable to NSP. II I The facilities installed or removed by the Company shall be the property of the Company and any payment by customer shall not entitle customer to any ownership interest or right therein. I The undersigned hereby requests and authorizes the NORTHERN STATES POWER COMPANY to do the work described above, and in consideration thereof, agrees to pay One hundred six thousand eight hundred fifty and no /100 1 ($ 10 6 , 8 5 0.0 0 ), in accordance with the following terms: As stated above Credit Approval • I Receipt of the above amount hereby acknowledged on behalf of NSP by NORTHERN STATES POWER COMPANY Customer s By ■ A� • n -- By ..1 I AW • • • • • • • • • • • • • • w • • • . • • w w • • w w • • w • w • w w w City Manager 1 NSP Representative R. K. Lee Division Minnetonka NSP Proj. No. . C,p I :' _ y - ` " .;.; Rem. $ Maint. $ Oper. $ T . ansf. $ _ Total $ COPY CUSTOMER CO°'`•'STONDISTRIBUTIONENGINEERING IIIIIII I • MN M I MN • • M Min In Mi. OM MI li NM UM 011. ARP EXHIBIT A '� \\__ _1___ l l tl_I11111 1 ' ) /�� �� 1 . 1 off.� -' [_ _ 1111��L�1 ` %' • 14 � (�� "--~ -- l C 1 ^_ - 1_.11.51 pi il 11 ` . . E _______ _ ... 1011'Lw i� _ - 1fi =ST�l' i, ~ W n NO. 18 _.. ._J Y 4 1 I__ _____I � ' _• u , _�� 1 ' v - -- � .. 1 - asT nTM �_ -- . - _.. I rte. _ � . r..a II1! �Vr� . \ .. - - - ---= ~�- C '� DOW DEVELOPM • • , g / - 1 _ - AR A ''� ° Z' / ; 1 ; - } I ------- . \--;----- - 7-; ''<'!',.. - -- \ \ 0- . .g -. 1. ..._:._,( \ X rs. — I 1 I . ---- ,)c \u.-A .....; ....-- 1......1_1--- , , , r ii:61 j_ ez .... v.,-,-- , -;-„: - ......... : r --------- L._i_____,______ „ s‘...... it„, :,. , / , a • . : , - -4:Lail- _Fr ry, _,. ...„, T .,.. _ I SSEN SINESS PA • K I 0 �.4 �,�•, y b` j :: --- \._... s'Y 1 ‘ I 0 " ' '- .; ' ;--- re177-6 :: _(:) .. J. i - /i , i' \ , , f LAKE SUSAN .' FIGURE 1 LEGEND t CHANHASSEN PROJECT AREA BOUNDARY .t , .N • DOWNTOWN PROJECT AREA ------ TAk RI INCREMENT DISTRICT SONO REDEVELOPMENT PLAN HOISINGTON GROUP INC. CHANHASSEN, MINNESOTA I MI MI MN OM N = um ms = um u • 3 ��' • STATE BANK OF CHANHASSEN p �� DATE neceareber 4 , TD 8 8 414 • CO CHANHASSEN, MINNESOTA 55317 'SOC. SEC. NO. N O o ca 41- G885331 DEPOSITOR(S) City of Chanhassen and NortherndStates Power • • . ; , • '�' . ill. el �• ►' t, ` ., t ry j � RiRF 1 C :,. 1 07 000. UU ' Q. p v 2 DEPOSIT e { f 1�, .: , W f . r.L s '.,, i „ r D OLLARS, $ . s ( t— _ o' the%1 . rA lm bov. you "You" means Me depositor(*) named above. We will pay this certificate to you when in you present end H to us, properly .ndorsed (signed by you), on a maturity date. N more 1— 2 Woo o of You one of you era named ed swore, you u wig own this ardlkste n Join lnt tenants with right of surrirorsMp grad nd not a tenants In common). oncommon). (Yoo may cu may chap this ownership by written instructions.) Wtr will treat any one of . V„ v O • you es owner for proposes of endorsement, payment of principal and Interest, presentation (demanding payment of amounts due), transfer and any notice to or from you. Each of you appoints the other as your agent, for : ' O z 8 . the purposes described abore.,We will use the address on our records for mailing notices to you. You cannot transfer or assign this certificate or any rights under If without our written consent 9 2 T,(. 5 year Wm' C.Alne ete of D.posf matures on December 4 • , ,B . 1114n . ❑ PRESENT S CERTIFICATE PROMPTLY AT MATURITY FOR PAYMENT. IT IS NOT AUTOMATICALLY RENEWABLE AND NO INTEREST WILL ACCRUE AFTER THE MATURITY DATE SHOWN. ^ Q Z if if MS ® "IS A OS 1) TN M tERTI IS PEER PRP IT WILL FOR PA ON A ATE CESSIN TET DAYS THE MATUR WE REC E IVE WRIT (� NOTICE FROM YOU BEFORE A MATURITY DATE OF YOUR INTENTION TO CASH IN THIS CERTIFICATE; A NOT L THAN 11 DAYS BEFORE A MATURITY DATE WE MAIL TO YOU A WRITTEN NOTICE OF � so , OUR INTENTION TO CASH I U. W t II THIS CERTIFICATE ON A MATURITY DATE. 's z INTEREST TO FIRST MATURITY DATE WRl ACCRUE AT THE YEARLY RATE OF AU TOMATIC RENEWALS Eoeh renew te will be the Berne as the original term, beginning on the matwNy date. • r- < The IntaraS rah will Serbs same we offer on new certificates on the maturity date which have the same term, mint , • ' CC I` i 8. % USING A 3 DAYIYEAR. ACCRU INTEREST WILL SE mum balance (ll inyt and other features es this original certificate. You may cad us on or shortly before Me maturity : date and we will tell you whet the Internet rate will be for the next renedal term. We will not pay interest alter the W p COMPOUNDED anriue l ly 1 leaf maturity date N thisAertificate is f .ufomatlaity renewed. • • z so wZ /7 - / , fc_,...4.—'..J ._ AUTHORIZED SIGNATURE Horny MI. Institution hnmedlotsly e11.ny cA.nDe In the above address. NOTICE: See OIh r Sid. for Penalty j Paym.nl of Tlms Deposll Bator. Maturity Ig • • • ■ • ��NHESOOq Minnesota Department of Transportation eW 1/� b Metropolitan District Transportation Building Q CC- fit�irl /J; 5+r ? ?,,,`t I ;Fy 5� St. Paul, Minnesota 55155 R�c t+" I y ( c 1 ' op TO. Oakdale Office, 3485 Hadle y Avenue North, Oakdale, Minnesota 55128 1 Golden Valley Office, 2055 North Lilac Drive, Golden Valley, Minnesota 55422 Reply to: Duluth Street, Golden Valley, IN 55422 1 Telephone No. 591 - 4605 1 January 15, 1991 1 David C. Hempel City of Chanhassen • 690 Coulter Drive, P.O. Box 147 Chanhassen, MN 55317 Re: Speed Zoning ' C.S. 2736 (T.H. 101) Dear Mr. Hempel: A speed zoning study for Trunk Highway 101 between Twilight Trail and Town Line Road has been placed on our agenda as requested in your January 10 letter. It is also possible the study will extend beyond the above limits. 1 When all necessary data has been collected and evaluated, we will contact you to discuss possible speed zoning alternatives for Trunk Highway 101. In the 1 meantime, please address any questions or information concerning the study to Ed Brown (591 -4617) at this office. Sincerely, 1 f,, Iz , District Traffic Engineer JSK:pl:EB t: • lj T . jA, t k i. _T rta 1 MINNESOTA Z■:i i 1990 An Equal Opportunity Employer 1 SOUTHWEST CORRIDOR TRANSPORTATION COALITIONc I LNC.L. 470 Pillsbury Center Minneapolis, Minnesota 55402 612- 337 -9300 1 1 January 14, 1991 1 Mr. Earl Howe District Right of Way Engineer ' Metropolitan District Minnesota Department of Transporation Golden Valley Office ' 2055 North Lilac Drive Golden Valley, MN 55422 ' Donald Meuting Special Assistant Attorney General Minnesota Department of Transportation _ Transportation Building St. Paul, MN 55155 1 Re: State of Minnesota Acquisition from Chanhassen Holding Company ' S.P.1002 Parcel 316 Carver County Permit to Construct 1 Our File No. LN400 -51 Gentlemen: 1 I am enclosing a letter dated January 8, 1991 from Bradley J. Gunn, of Leonard, Street & Deinard, attorney for Chanhassen 1 Holding Co., and attached proposed Temporary Permit to Construct for the above parcel. Brad's draft is responsive to a discussion held January 7 among us by telephone to discuss the unacceptability of the hold harmless clause previously proposed 1 by Brad for the temporary permit. Please review the enclosed draft of the permit in its entirety to determine its acceptability to MnDot. If you do not find the permit to be 1 acceptable, please contact Brad directly to attempt to work out language which is acceptable to MnDot. The portion of the permit found on the bottom of page 2 1 (paragraphs 2 and 3) is apparently acceptable to the City of Chanhassen. I discussed this with Don Ashworth, City Manager, at 1 1 !' the Southwest Coalition meeting on January 9. However, I am copying him with this letter in order that he may review the specific language and speak for himself on that issue. I have asked Don to advise Earl or me if either of those paragraphs is ' not acceptable. I would appreciate your prompt response to Brad Gunn, and then to me, so that we may attempt to resolve this matter before 1 February 1. Thank you all for your cooperation. u very truly, 1 �� Robert J. indall 1 President RJL:jmc 1 cc: Do Chmiel M"on Ashworth Coalition Board Members (w /o encl.) 1 Fred Hoisington P.S. Fred Hoisington called me on January 9 (and again on January 1 14) to advise me that Don McCarrville told him by telephone on January 8 (and again on January 14) that McCarrville was dropping the Entry Permit off at the City of Chanhassen. It 1 would be helpful if Don Ashworth would confirm that it has been received. Also, Fred advised me on January 14 that Kris Kristufek of Amoco Oil Co. told him January 14 that Amoco has signed the Entry Permit with the deletion of the 1 hold harmless clause as described in Earl's letter of January 3, 1991, and has mailed the permit back to Earl. Earl, please confirm to us that you have received the 1 permit. 1 1 1 1 1 1 ,4/), se_d- CITYOF AA/ i CHANIIASSEN 1 690 COULTER DRIVE • P.O. BOX 147 • CHANHASSEN, MINNESOTA 55317 (612)937-1900* FAX(612)937-5739 1 -; MEMORANDUM TO: Karen Engelhardt, Office Manager 1 FROM: Dave Hempel, Sr. Engineering Technician DATE: January 16, 1991 SUBJ: Inquiries about Storm Water Utility Billings PW 207 ' As you may be aware the City has established a Surface Water Management Utility. The Finance Department has recently sent out the first batch of storm water utility bills. I anticipate this ' new billing will generate a number of telephone calls with a variety of questions. All inquiries regarding this billing - should be first directed to Kari O'Konek for processing. If i necessary Kari will forward engineering related inquiries such as verifying calculations to my attention. Politically motivated or zoning questions and appeals will be forwarded to Paul Krauss. i In hopes to effectively deal with any inquiries, please inform the receptionist counter accordingly. Thank You. i lap c: Don Ashworth, City Manager Charles Folch, Asst. City Engineer i Paul Krauss, Planning Director Kari O'Konek, Finance Account Clerk Tom Chaffe Finance Data Processing 1 1 1 1 • 1 is CITYOF CHANHASSEN ' 690 COULTER DRIVE • P.O. BOX 147 • CHA NHASSEN, MINNESOTA 55317 (612) 937 -1900 • FA (6 12) 937 -5739 1 ' January 18, 1991 Mr. Andrew Schmidt ' Video Update #27 19465 West Hwy. 7 Shorewood, MN 55331 Dear Mr. Schmidt: __ We have received your request for permission to install an antenna 1 for receiving satellite transmissions on the roof of the Seven - Forty One Crossing Shopping Center. The proposed antenna will be no larger than 4 feet and will not be fastened to the structure. 1 Since the proposed antenna is relatively small and should not be very visible from surrounding properties, staff is administratively ' approving the installation of the antenna with the following conditions: 1. The antenna will be no higher than 4 feet. ' 2. A building permit will be obtained for installation of the antenna and any conditions of the permit shall be met. 3. If the City receives complaints about the antenna you will ' either be required to screen or remove the antenna. 4. Submit an application and pay a $50 fee. ' I am enclosing an application form for an administrative site plan approval. The fee is $50. Please submit the application and fee to formalize the approval. Should you have any questions, please feel free to contact me. 1 .1544-4-4 Sincerely,( Jo Ann Olsen ' Senior Planner cc: Paul Krauss, Planning Director Steve Kirchman, Building Official 1 Planning Commission & City Council i • CITY OF CHANHABSEN 690 COULTER DRIVE CHANHASSEN, MN 55317 937 -1900 1 (612) DEVELOPMENT REVIEW APPLICATION 1 APPLICANT: OWNER: ADDRESS: ADDRESS: 1 TELEPHONE (Day time) TELEPHONE: 1 REQUEST 1 ♦ Conditional Use Permit - $150 ♦ Subdivision: ♦ Interim Use Permit - $150 Preliminary Plat: 1 ♦ Land Use Plan Amendment - $100 - Sketch Plan - $200 ♦ Planned Unit Development: - Create less than 3 lots - $100 - Sketch Plan - $200 - Create more than 3 lots - $100 + $15 acre + $5 per lot 1 - Preliminary Development Plan lot created $300 + $15 acre - Final Plat - $100 - Final Development Plan - $200 1 - Metes and Bounds - $100 - Amendment to Final Development Plan - $300 + $15 acre - Consolidate Lots - $100 1 TOTAL PUD TOTAL SUBDIVISION ♦ Site Plan Review - $150 ♦ Wetland Alteration Permit: 1 ♦ Administrative Site Plan - Individual Single Family Review - $ • - -• 1 r Lots - $25 1 ♦ Vacation of Utility or - All Others - $150 - Street Easement - $100 1 ♦ Variance - $75 ♦ Rezoning - $250 1 ♦ Zoning Appeal - $75 ♦ Zoning Ordinance Amendment - No Charge • A list of all property owners within 500 feet of the boundaries of the property must be included with the application. Twenty -six full size folded copies of the plans must be submitted. 1 * NOTE - When multiple applications are processed, the appropriate fee shall be charged for each application. 1 ' PROJECT NAME LOCATION X NI LEGAL DESCRIPTION 1 PRESENT ZONING ' kKQUESTED ZONING PRESENT LAND USE DESIGNATION REQUESTED LAND USE DESIGNATION 1 REASON FOR THIS REQUEST This application must be completed in full and be typewritten or clearly printed and must be accompanied by all information and plans required by - applicable City Ordinance provisions. Before filing this application, you should confer with the Planning Department to determine the specific 1 ordinance and procedural requirements applicable to your application. This is to certify that I am making application for the described action by ' the City and that I am responsible for complying with all City requirements with regard to this request. This application should be processed in my name and I am the party who the City should contact regarding any matter ' pertaining to this application. I have attached a copy of proof of ownership (either copy of Owner's Duplicate Certificate of Title, Abstract of Title or purchase agreement), or I am the authorized person to make this application and the fee owner has also signed this application. 1 I will keep myself informed of the deadlines for submission of material and the progress of this application. I further understand that additional fees may be charged for consulting fees, feasibility studies, etc. with an estimate prior to any authorization to proceed with the study. The documents and information I have, submitted are true and correct to the best of my knowledge. I also understand that after the approval or granting of the permit, such permits shall be invalid unless they are recorded against the title to the ' property for which the approval /permit is granted within 120 days with the Carver County Recorder's Office and the original document returned to City . Hall Records. 1 Signature of Applicant Date Signature of Fee Owner Date 1 Application Received on Fee Paid Receipt No. 1 This application will be considered by the Planning Commission /Board of Adjustments and Appeals on 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 ' QTY OF CHANHASSEN FUTURE CITY COUNCIL AGENDA ITEMS ENGINEERING ' January 28, 1991 - Request MnDOr to Consider Construction of Auxiliary Turn Lanes on TH 101 at 1 Pleasant View Road and Cheyenne Trail - Authorize Feasibility Study for Trunk Watermain and Sanitary Sewer Extension ' to Lake Riley Hills, and Reconstruction of Lyman Boulevard from Trunk Highway 101 to Lake Riley Boulevard - Project No. 91 -2 1 February 11, 1991 - Trunk Highway 5 Improvements from County Road 17 to Trunk Highway 41: ' 1. Approve Joint Powers Agreement for Preparation of Construction Documents 2. Approve Engineering Services Contract with Barton- Aschman ' - Authorize Update of Feasibility Study for Teton Lane and Lilac Lane Project No. 91 -4 - Approve Contract Modification #1 for HNTB - Audubon Road Project No. 89 -18 February 25, 1991 ' - Approve Plans and Specifications for Construction of Well No. 6 and Related Watermains and Appurtenances; Authorize Advertising for Bids, Project No. 91 -1 - Approve Plans and Specifications for South Leg TH 101 Improvement Project ' No. 90 -20; Authorize Advertising for Bids - Receive Pavement Management Needs Report - Authorize Preparation of Plans and Specifications for 1991 Sewer Rehab /Pavement Rehab Program ' - Accept Feasibility Study for Upgrade Minnewashta Parkway; Call Public Hearing, Improvement Project No. 90-15 ' March 11, 1991 March 25, 1991 ' - Approve Plans and Specifications for 1991 Sanitary Sewer Rehabilitation Program; Authorize Advertising for Bids ' - Award of Bids for Construction of Well No. 6, Project No. 91 -1 - Award of Bids for West 78th Street Detachment Project No. 87 -2 - Approve Preliminary Plans for TH 5 from TH 41 to CSAH 17; Layout No. 1B, S.P. 1002 -88035 (5 =121) 1 1 IF CITY OF CHANHASSEN FUTURE CITY COUNCIL AGENDA ITEMS ENGINEERING ' Page 2 ' Future Agenda Items Approve Amended Development Contract for Market Square - Accept Feasibility for Minnewashta Parkway; Call Public Hearing. - Adopt Assessment Roll for Audubon Road South Project No. 89 -18 ' - Adopt Assessment Roll for Frontier Trail Project No. 89 -10 - Adopt Assessment Roll for Country Hospitality Suites Project No. 89 -25 - Award of Bids; 1991 Sanitary Sewer Rehabilitation Program (5/28/91) - Approve Contract Amendment No. 1 for 1990 Sanitary Sewer Rehabilitation Improvement Project No. 90 -2 (4/8/91) ' - Award of Bids; South Leg TH 101 Improvement Project No. 90 -20 (6/24/91) Consider Feasibility Study for Extension of Dell Road from Lake Drive East South to Eden Prairie City Limits, Project No. 90 -7 (Joint with Eden Prairie) ' - Approve Plans and Specifications for County Road 17 Upgrade South of TH 5 Improvement Project No. 90 -4; Authorize Advertising for Bids (1/92) ' - Award of Bids; County Road 17 Upgrade South of TH 5 Improvement Project No. 90 -4 (Spring /1992) - Approve Plans and Specifications for North Leg TH 101 Improvement Project No. 88 -22B; Authorize Advertising for Bids (1/92) - Award of Bids; North Leg TH 101 Improvement Project No. 88 -22B (4/27/92) - Review Traffic Control Issues - Pheasant Hill Addition CONSULTANTS PLEASE NOTE: Reports are due in ineeri no later than 10 days Eng ng ys prior to the City Council meeting date, i.e. Friday. Copies to: ' City Hall Department Heads Kim Meuwissen, Eng. Secretary Karen Engelhardt, Office Manager City Council Administrative Packet Gary Ehret, BRW Bill Engelhardt, Englehardt & Associates Gary Warren, Acting City Engineer 1 1 I - Minnesota Department of Natural Resources, Metro Region 1 i llt . . , - _ DNR. Metro News Volume 5, Number 1 - January 1991 I Some cities protect small wetlands - 1 Provide urban model for legislators _ I In the next few weeks the Minnesota - - . - - Legislature will begin formulating a law - to protect wetlands in Minnesota. The - - . goal will be to stop or offset loss which I is occurring at a rate of 5000 acres per _ year. Wetlands in the state include marshes, - 1 bogs, shallow ponds and seasonally . s . > .. _ x - _._ flooded basins. In the Twin Cities ' ` # ' : ' ; , . E. metropolitan area, about 90,000 acres I *t__ f i:_ tf i remain of the 200,000 that were here ' ` v *- ” " " _ ` _c - „ � � . - ,', , 4 r when European settlers arrived. 4: xz Wetlands were drained for farmland `. . 24; - w . .. - �` 24 and in more recent times have been ` ` .,. t .o ` ` '� ,+ , 3; , ` II �� s1 4 ) threatened by urban sprawl— housing € y x developments, industrial arks �l� �` x - � � � �s - � - � � � r P parks, -_, v'' i s #'�'' f'..,,-*, a t 1. % r shopping malls. rte, y � " „,4.-.... 9 ��� ` vi . � * � � t� �^ > £ f � y;r{' � 2 ft � { ♦}�.p3 `a .iyG i F` 1 Mounting public sentiment for �,A preserving wetlands stems from their , • ` 1 . - : , * many environmental values. Depending s = « � , on the type and season, wetlands , m � �` a , = - - � collect floodwater, they cleanse water of pollutants while recharging aquifers, Rosemount, Inc., a manufacturer of instruments for industrial and aerospace use, worked provide critical fish and wildlife habitat with the City of Chanhassen to preserve this nearby wetland when the facility was built. 1 and provide open space and scenic f amenity. will also be questions about preserving small wetlands is In Minnesota, some types and sizes of consolidating wetland management in _ Mounds View in Ramsey County. I wetlands are protected by law, others urban areas such as the Twin Cities. Mounds View's ordinance protects are not. The regulating agencies are the Local ordinances differ greatly from wetlands down to one acre in size and Minnesota Department of Natural one municipality to the next in the manages activity in a 100 ft. buffer 1 Resources, U.S. Army Corps of seven county Twin Cities area. zone adjacent to the wetland's edge Engineers and local watershed districts. John Stine, DNR Metro Regional (buffer zones are important habitat for In the upcoming session, state Hydrologist, said this frustrates shore birds and waterfowl). I lawmakers will consider protecting developers, who must already deal with Rick Minetor, Acting City those wetlands that "fall through the a complicated regulatory process. "It Administrator, said the ordinance was cracks” of existing regulation. Topics . can also be frustrating to city officials passed in the 1970s as part of a storm of debate will include which wetlands who want to increase their tax base - water management scheme. "Residents 1 should be protected, and how _ while preserving the environmental were faced with a major storm sewer landowners will be compensated. quality of life," he said. "Developers proposal which would have been While legislative discussions have until naturally compare one city's ordinance I now focused primarily on the to another." . _ SEE WETLAND agricultural areas of the state, there One city that has taken the lead in (continued on page two) II . Pa g WETLAND - . " 1 (continued from page one) R .. a _ ' - - ,. costly," he said. "They opted instead for natural detention to control runoff, n Minnesota, the wetland debate repeatedly degenerates into t he classic which meant preserving wetlands. The "ducks vs. food" argument. it must be elevated to a higher plane with the other benefits of saving these focus on the broad public benefits provided by our wetland resource. In - areas — pollutant stripping, open space, today's world of burgeoning deficits and expanding budget demands, pure I wildlife habitat — followed as a result." economics may offer the -best opportunity to enhance concern over the loss Wetlands in Mounds View have of our wetland resource. - designated primary and secondary - It costs the State of Minnesota dearly $300 for each acre/ ft. of flood storage I . purposes, which helps in managing that we have to create. If we eliminate; a one acre wetland that holds 12 them. "No development has been lost - - inches_of water during a storm, the public cost t0 replace that storage is as a result of the ordinance, although 5300. With 5000 acres of wetland lost per year, .assuming only 12 inches of ' we have lost some density of storage, the cost of replacement storage is 51.5 million. ?'his exceeds the I development," said Minetor. "We've state's general fund appropriation for flood control. _ also had some challenges to the buffer A similar case can be made when one examines the issue of non point - - zone portion of it. Some say it's too pollution and the role of wetlands as .biological fillers. Federal and state I restrictive, others too liberal. In an expenditures on non oinl pollution control over the past decade" are almost urban wetland you have to be actively 520 million, and in the future the total costs will be awesome. Does it make managing — building a deck on a house, economic sense to continue to eliminate natural biological - _ I for example, will not usually affect a we increase public expenditures to control the wetland buffer zone. problem? The answer is clearly no. "One thing that concerns me is that A no net -loss of wetlands goal in Minnesota would ideally be achieved on an communities are going in different -. individual property basis. Program implementation should be driven by local I. directions with wetland management. A units of government, -with review at the state level, andfederalfunding and regional approach, perhaps based on a statutes - should provide overall national objectives, directions and leadership. - model ordinance by the Met Council, - • - I would work best for everyone." Ron Nargang " _ Another city that protects wetlands A 1 smaller than two acres is Chanhassen. - - - - ,_ Senior Planner Jo Ann Olsen said the Xl /rt- . ' —. . _ .. -. - i " " , ,- . ordinance grew out of public concern - over rapid development in the 1980s. Director, DNR Division of Waters : -- _ . - I Fully 80 of development in - Chanhassen City affects consults Olsen said the regular ly with the IDIINR teamwork folds e City consuts regular with U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service on I preservation and modification of poachers on Hickey ' s Lake - wetlands. Like Mounds View, the City of Chanhassen has lost no development I as a result of the ordinance. Scott County, October 6, 1990 "Hunter number one just dropped " - "Some new residents will see cattails number four duck...it's now about they don't like and want to remove - Conservation Officer Ross Opsahl sat 12:12 p.m....he's shooting some kind them," she said "but most have perched in an oak tree on the north of three shot repeater that appears to supported the ordinance at City shore of Hickey's Lake, watching be plugged. It's 12:17. He's got five Council meetings. One owner of a fast through high powered binoculars as a ducks down.. . it's 12:24. That's - food restaurant initially wanted to . hunter demonstrated good shooting number six he's got down..." remove a small cattail wetland from the technique on the opening day of - corner of his property, but now he's waterfowl season. - Opsahl decided not to make an proud of it and shows it to visitors. It - - - immediate arrest since he would have inspired him to decorate his restaurant The man started legally at noon, letting had to lose sight of the shooter for an in a wetland - waterfowl motif." ducks work in close to his decoys, then extended time while approaching the Olsen says dozens of wetlands have dropping big ones, mainly mallards, blind. This could have jeopardized his been saved by the local ordinance in with single shots. He reached his legal case in court since none of the ducks - the past few years. Both she and limit of three at precisely 12:10 p.m. - had been retrieved and the hunter Minetor have had requests from other _ - could have left while Opsahl made his cities for copies of their city ordinances Opsahl narrated his observations to a - way over. to use as a guide. - hand held tape recorder. - (continued on page three) ■ r ib " othhe CSU Performing Arts Center. The play, a comedy, revolves . r-- , • 1 .. •• : ,A' rlaround the characters of Dorian and Sylvia, who an promised to each t j_L �'' other in marriage although they have never met. They both take a chance an observing each other objectively by switching roles with their servants 1 r s)-: t#er and the sportish game of love begins. For ticket information, call the ' . ate► � i theater office at (612) 255.2455. Above, Bragg, lett, gets into character " with the help of Melissa Gerhardt of St. Cloud. (Submitted photo) The 21 Plains Boulevard. - . • rt A theft of gasoline worth $7.75 r Amish Handcrafted Fur was reported after a drive -off at the a op a .. . Amish Homemade Quilt Brooks Superette on West 78th Street Handcrafted 1 at 5:22 p.m. fted Berns , s is Saturday, Jan. 12: Antiques The theft of s $10,000 $undai Un Wa y speakers - Johnston takes office - Ant was reported at the Chanhassen Bowl Two Chanhassen residents, Pa- ' Dist. 36 State Sen. Terry at 1:13 am. tricia Dolegsi and David Haddenof Johnston and her 66 Senate col- • - at Damage amounting to S595 was ' of the Community Action Council, leagues' were sworn into office Tues- - of reported to a TV, carpet, window, served as volunteer speakers for day, Jan. 8 by Minnesota Supreme smoke detector, and a chair, after the united A.M. "Sandy " :. occupants moved out of the Brookside during 1 Way of Minaeapolit Area Court Chief Justice Keith as part of the first day of Min- `' a Motel on Flying Cloud Drive. Volunteers gave more than 1,400 nesota.'s 77th Legislative Session. The theft of gasoline worth $17.60 Sp eeches Burin 8 the year to help in- Johnston was joined by her bus- - = ;: I was reported after a drive -off at the form people about community needs band Don on the Senate floor for that _ Y _ 0 A Holiday Station Store on West 79th and health and human care programs ceremony, under the terms of a new = =' =, ` :n Street at 10:24 p.m. - offered by 138 United Way partici- Senate rule which allows each sena- =" , Sunday, Jan. 13: pating agencies. guest �" � afire envies. tor to have a est in the chamber as - - e A. A theft from a vehicle and posses- As part of United Way's "pis - the oaths of office are taken. In addi- " �` . Sion of alcohol was reported at Filly's covery program, the speakers bu- tion, two of Johnston's election vol- Nightclub on Market Boulevard at reau offers and opportunity for caring unteers, Buff Nugent of Prior Lake At Ken 12:59 a.m. No other information was - volunteers to share their United Way and Mike Beard of Shakopee, ob- I available. experiences, and to describe United, served the first -day proceedings from • . V Way program that help people. . the Senate gallery. 3e • U Way of Minneapolis Area "In a day full of excitement and - trans' is a volunteer organization dedicated highlights, the biggest thrill was I to enhancing the community's ca- having Don and two of my key cam- *Transmission •� Fire & rescue pacity to meet the human service paign workers and friends share this = •Transaxies *Fria' id , needs of its people. United Way serves ceremony," Johnston said "Their : •Computer Conti' The Chanhassen Volunteer Fire residents of Anoka, Carver, Henne- Support was invaluable." - , • . • Department responded to the follow Pm and Scott counties. CALL FC m grecent fire and rescue calls: . FREE DI/ 'r• Wednesday, Jan. 9: Named to task force On campus • I Medical - Possible overdose o JoAnn Olsen, a Chanhassen city , • '} - -- Chanhassen Road at 2:58 p.m. planner, has been appointed by Sea . '''A O" . KtNNCOY Medical - Neck injury on Utica Dave Durenberger to serve on his . " of M g , graduates Jane at 9:08 p.m. Wetlands Advisory Task Force. Olson The following Chanhassen stu- Thursday, Jan. 10: will advise Durenberger on Wetlands . dents participated in commencement Medical - Person fainted at initiatives in the 102nd Congress as) ceremonies at the University of ' Rosemount Inc. on Market Boule- the Clean Water Act'is reauthorized.': Minnesota in December, 1990:: .■ . - ' y vard at 6:38 am. , , :..., , :Olson and the Wetlands Advi•. Joel Spalding, B.A.; Col ege,tf' , ''•- " """"'•• Medical - Seizure at Rosemount sory Task Force held its first meeting Liberal Arts; Peirce Clayton, B.F.A., - Inc. on Market Boulevard at 11:32 with Durenberger onJan. 8. The Task College of Liberal Arts; Angela r , le a.m. Force will meet throughout the year Prokop Meyer, B. Music; William Medical - Seizure at Rosemount in an on -going advisory capacity. Out Arons, B.S.B., Carlson School of Inc. on Market Boulevard at 2:22 of this process, Durenberger is ex- Management; Terry Brill, Master of - ; :_• p m• - pected to introduce a comprehensive Business • Administration; Nadine . Saturday, Jan. 12: wetlands amendment to the Clean Harms, Master of Business Arlmini- Broken water pipe on Chanhas- Water Act. • - stration; and Jane P. Johnson, Mas- _ sen Hills Drive at 8:14 am. ' - ter of Business Administration. I 1 t i • ARBY'S . ' W ' l i wil S C � / E S S ' I , • 'i R RVA O ti 1 I SERVING: SundoyThursd II I ! r II 11 p.m. Friday 8 MOnday Soturdo TAKES • I it 1 AYS I ii \ i I HOUSE SPECIALtIES : Ark I I �/ l fort service restaurant A .., / • 1 o f.J F Ai I r ,1 �II 1 I Sil variety Oi me r rf . en. I CAMPBELL, KNUTSON, SCOTT & FUCHS, P.A. c c- Attorneys at Law /rte Y - .' Thomas J. Campbell Roger N. Knutson Thomas M. Scott (612) 456 -9539 Gary G. Fuchs Fax (612) 456 -9542 James R Walston Elliott B. Knetsch Gregory D. Lewis Dennis J. Unger January 15, 1991 Mr. James Larkin Larkin, Hoffman, Daly & Lindgren ' Suite #1500 7900 Xerxes Avenue South Bloomington, Minnesota 55431 ' Re: City of Chanhassen v. Estate of Martin J. Ward, et al. Carver County Court File #89 -25170 Dear Mr. Larkin: I Enclosed herewith and served upon you by United States Mail please find a photocopy of the Notice of Filing of the Stipulation and Order in the above referenced matter, together with a photocopy of the Stipulation and the Order as filed, and a photocopy of the ' check drawn on the City of Chanhassen payable to your clients which, it is my understanding from a conversation with the Court Administrator, it is being delivered directly to you. If you have any questions, please feel free to call. ' Very truly yours, CAMPBELL, KNUTSON, SCOTT t & FUCHS, P.A. Air By : i/ Ga' •. , Y GGF:srn / Enclosures cc: Mr. Don Ashworth Yankee Square Office III • Suite 202 • 3460 Washington Drive • Eagan, Mla`T5 '2{; :V.: : i ,� `:`` 1 l ti Ir E II Gary Fuchs STATE OF MINNESOTA Campbell, Knutson, Scott & Fuchs PA 3460 Washington Dr., Suite #202 L.. Eagan, MN 55122 COUNTY OF : CARVER 1 _ NOTICE OF: . E. C,d FILING James Larkin Larkin, Hoffman, Daly & Lindgren O ENTRY OF JUDGMENT 7900 Xerxes Av. So., Suite 1500 II Bloomington, MN 55431 O DOCKETING OF JUDGMENT II II IN RE: City of Chanhassen v. Estate of Martin J. Ward OT FILE N0. 89 -25170 II You are hereby notified that in the above entitled matter that on 1 -10 -91 ' II- a: II Findings and Order was duly filed. x Order was duly filed. and Stipulation for Dismissal filed. I Findings of Fact, Conclusions of Law and Order for Judgment was duly filed. '' Judgment was duly entered. . Judgment was duly docketed in the amount of $ • -' Other Also please be informed that the Check for a_ C�� { _ 8, II $ 108,867.00 is being mailed to Mr. Larkin with thinsateo ice j- i Taffs have been paid in Carver Co 1 J YCE A. v ANEYLL, Court Administrator Copies attached. By 1 Phone (612)- Deputy Court Administration I Carver County Courthouse 600 East 4th Street Chaska, MN 55318 1 A true and correct copy of•this Notice has been served by mail upon the parties herein at the last known address of each, pursuant to Minnesota Rules of Civil II - Procedure, Rule 77.04 _, 1 STATE OF MINNESOTA DISTRICT COURT COUNTY OF CARVER FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT 1 File No. 89- 25170A City of Chanhassen, a Minnesota CASE TYPE: CONDEMNATION 1 municipal corporation, Petitioner, 1 v. STIPULATION FOR DISMISSAL ' Estate of Martin J. Ward, a /k /a M.J. Ward, Estate of Emily Torpey, Austin T. Ward, William J. Ward, FILED John Ward, Donna Ward, Mary Ellen DISTRICT COt3RT ' Ward, Northern States Power Company, and Carver County, /— /0- 9/ Respondents. ' " CARVER COUNTY Joyce A. VanEyll COURT ADMINISTRATOR 1 It is hereby stipulated by and between the parties in the above - entitled matter as follows: 1 1. The City of Chanhassen will pay to the Appellant- Respondents and to the County of Carver as its interest may appear, the sum of $108,867.00 in addition to amounts previously paid herein. 2. Said funds shall be delivered to the Court ' Administrator of Carver County for distribution on receipt of a fully executed copy of this Stipulation and Order of the Court. 1 3. The Court may enter its Order herein for such distribution and for dismissal with prejudice of the ' appeal previously filed herein by Appellant- Respondents and by the City of Chanhassen. 1 Dated : a/ 7 q0 /,/ .!, ` `James P. Larkin (60227) ' LARKIN, HOFFMAN, DALY & LINDGREN, Ltd. Attorneys for Appellant- Respondents 1500 Northwestern Financial Center • • 7900 Xerxes Avenue South ' Bloomington, Minnesota 55431 (612) 835 -3800 1 1 1-_ 1 Dated: ‘fi Gary 4 ; f. r uch -. 66) ' CAMS�• . LL, K , SOb . , SCOTT & FUCHS, P.A. At,s%•neys f•r P= titioner- Appellant 3'•0 Washin.ton Drive Suite 202 1 Eagan, Minnesota 55122 (612) 456 -9539 1 ORDER 1 - IT IS SO ORDERED. 1 1 BY THE COURT: 1 Dated: /`-• /OSI • The nora le Phi Lip T. Kanning 1 Jud a of District Court 1 - 1 1 1 1 1 1 • 1 JPL:JV2S 2. • 1 • STATE BANK OF CHANHASSEN CHANHASSEN, MN 75- 1458/919 OTY p�c r p� ' 033511 �'�'�'S �S•'•v TREASURER SHAM L BECOME SIGNED HECK PAY TO THE ORDER OF THE PAYEE NAMED FOR THE AMOUNT STATED. • 690 COULTER DRIVE • P.O. BOX 147 VOID AFTER DAYS FROM DATE OF CHECK CHANHASSEN, MINNESOTA 55317 AMOUNT DATE *$108,867.00 12 -27 -90 PAY One Hundred Eight Thousand Eight Hundred Sixty -seven and no /1C MOOR The Estate of Martin J. Ward and the County of Carver 4 • I, 11 Q MAYOR I t / URER OR MANAGER II 0 335ii11' 1:09L9145E1 ?I: 09 0 L 611' CITY OF CHANHASSEN REMITTANCE ADVICE PLEASE DETACH BEFORE CASHING 690 COULTER DR., CHANHASSEN, MN 55317 1 620 -4701 $108,867.00 • 1 1 1 • • • 1 - 1 1 1 1 1 1 CITYOF CHANHASSEN 690 COULTER DRIVE • P.O. BOX 147 • CHANHASSEN, MINNESOTA 55317 (612)937-19000 FAX (612) 937 -5739 1 MEMORANDUM 1 TO: Don Ashworth, City Manager FROM: Paul Krauss, Planning Director 1 DATE: January 22, 1991 SUBJ: 1991 Minnesota Real Estate Survey Each year the Minnesota Real Estate Journal conducts a survey of 1 metro area communities. This newspaper is widely read in the development community and the survey is undertaken amongst it's readership. Among questions asked are opinions as to which communities are hostile or supportive of development and which cities do you currently believe are hot spots for real estate development and which cities do you believe will become hot spots three years from now. A copy of the survey is attached for your ' review. I find the results to be fairly interesting. Chanhassen is rated as supportive of development by 23% of those responding and hostile by 10 %. When compared with other communities, I 1 believe these numbers indicate that we are viewed as a community that is receptive to new development while not being a pushover. For example, our 10.1% hostile to new development rating compares 1 to a 33.8% rating for Minnetonka and a 40.3% rating for Plymouth. Eden Prairie has a 35.7% hostile rating. In the supportive category, our 23% rating relates to 18.3% for Eden Prairie, 27% for 1 Eagan and a 7.7% rating for Minnetonka. Under the question of which cities are currently hot spots, Chanhassen got a 13.1% rating which compares to a 28.2% rating for 1 Apple Valley, a 39% rating for Eagan and 33.4% rating for Eden Prairie. However, when the question was asked what do you think will be a hot spot 3 years from now, Chanhassen goes up to 23.4% ' and is among the highest communities listed, exceeded only by Eagan at 32.1 %, Maple Grove at 27.9% and Woodbury at 32.2 %. This would appear to indicate that the general development community views Chanhassen's prospects as holding great promise for the future. I personally agree with this assessment and have made this point frequently during public hearings on the Comprehensive Plan. 1 Page 1 0 Minnesota Real Estate Journal January 7, 1991 1 Which of the following cities do you consider A I The to have regulatory environments which are ' .; hostile to or supportive of development? . in Anoka 3.9% 23.7% Apple 8.1 25.0 r c F i / Blaine Valley 6.8 23.7 11991 Bloomington 28.6 25.3 j; ; _ ° Brooklyn Center 10.7 18.3 � �, J i, i . Brooklyn Park 8.4 27.7 0 - ^ 'J 0, IE; • "' Burnsville 17.2 22.3 >> ". ,11,, Minn esota r _ Champlin 5.5 20.7 t i ri i ty�, R Chanhassen 10.1 23.0 i i ��� l l -- ` '6,1.. Columbia Heights 6.8 15.3 tt3 lit }tk' ll p. - ' - '-.•i:..,.. - ---w: t iR .,� Coon Rapids 6.5 26.7 ; i i ! t " ,ji' �""• Grove 4.2 20.7 ,tft = ; �t � �. \ \ Duuth 2.9 19.3 ' !' 1st w, °cis �ttti tt', 17.9 27.0 pits Eagan 1 :i ii via.1 .� Eden Prairie 35.7 18.3 ■ , i titer Edina 27.9 10.7 , ,e _4 4 , 1 1111 in !Pt ' o Fridley 5.2 20.3 Grove ter: LL Golden Valley 16.6 11.3 a 1ESTATE Hastings 3.2 17.0 I' = �� i Hopkins 8.8 16.0 A lender took control of the Foshay Inver Grove Heights 7.1 17.0 Tower in iS90. Lakeville 6.5 21.7 Maple Grove 12.7 25.7 I Maplewood 12.3 13.0 SURVEY Mendota Heights 10.4 13.0 Minneapolis 20.8 27.7 Minnetonka 33.8 7.7 Columbia Heights 0.9 1.5 • New Brighton 5.5 18.0 Coon Rapids 16.6 12.0 - New Hope 10.4 13.0 Cottage Grove 5.5 8.4 Oakdale 7.1 19.7 Duluth 3.8 7.5 Plymouth 40.3 10.3 Eagan 39.0 32.1 Ramsey 4.5 10.0 Eden Prairie 33.4 22.2 Richfield 11.0 13.3 Edina 9.0 3.6 'The 1991 Minnesota Real Estate Survey" Over the next three years, where in Min- Rochester 2.6 20.3 Fridley 2.0 3.0 was cosponsored by Arthur Andersen & Co. nesota will investment be the most attractive? Rosemount 2.9 18.3 Golden Valley 1 7 3.6 and the Minnesota Real Estate Journal. It Suburban Minneapolis 53.9% Roseville Hastings 3.8 9.3 was intended to solicit opinions of MREI Downtown Mi lis 27.2 age 3.2 20.0 Hopkins 0.9 1.8 subscribers, primarily real estate profes- Bloomington 17.1 Shakopee 6.8 16.7 Inver Grove Heights 5.2 12.0 sionals, on the state of the Minnesota real would like to thank the es St. Cloud 16.8 Stillwater 10.7 10.3 Lakeville 11.6 20.4 estate marker. Rh Suburban St. Paul 15.7 St. Cloud 1.0 26.3 Maple Grave 31.4 27.9 respondents who took a few minutes to coin- Rochester 14.3 St. Louis Park 22.1 5.3 Maplewood 3.5 4.8 plete the survey and return it to Arthur Downtown St. Paul 6.0 St Paul 10.7 18.3 Mendota Heights -5.8 8.4 Andersen & Co. for tabulation and analysis. Duluth 3 Vadnais Heights 3.2 12.7 Minneapolis 9.3 11.1 Other 8.7 Wayzata 22.4 3.0 Minnetonka 11.0 8.4 Development trends West St. Paul 8.1 7.3 New Brighton 4.4 4.5 White Bear Lake 7.8 11.3 New Hope 2.0 2.1 The general perception of the real estate What are the greatest challenges facing real Woodbury 6.8 21.7 Oakdale 8.7 16.2 market is that the industry is in a downturn. estate developers currrmly and during the Other 2.7 1.6 Plymouth 28.5 20.7 In your estimate, how long will it be before next three years? Ramsey 1.5 2.1 the industry improves in Minnesota? Cal wr Wm Mx Which of the following cities are curreruly Richfield 0.6 3.9 I Y.. " hot spots" for real estate developme and Rochester 13.1 15.0 one year One ot tvo 25 2 Oversupply 88.2% 62.0% which will be three years from now? Rosemount 4.1 10.5 Two to three years 38.8 Financing 84.3 62.5 Thee » Roseville 7.3 4.8 km ow Environmental issues/ Grady Savage 2.9 9.9 Three to five years 24'3 litigation 33.8 48.6 Anoka 9.6% 14.1% Shakopee 3.2 13.5 I Five years or longer 7.2 R competition 24.7 30.5 Apple Valley 28.2 19.2 Stillwater 5.2 13.2 0.6 21.9 I a tu ou market s healthy, Anti-growth sentiment 16.6 21.0 Blaine 9.9 12.0 St. Cloud 2 a turnaround time is Fees and exactions 11.8 17.0 Bloomington 19.2 12.0 St. Louis Park 1.7 2.4 not applicable 0.6 Traffic 11.8 21.2 Brooklyn Center 3.5 4.2 St. Paul 1.2 5.1 Corporate mergers/ Brooklyn Park 15.7 15.3 Vadnais Heights 9.0 6.9 I Which factors do you see influencing the 1991 acquisitions 8.6 8.6 Burnsville 14.5 8.4 Wayzata 4.7 3.9 real estate market? State regulation 8.4 9.9 Champlin 8.4 13.2 West St. Paul 1.5 1.8 Financing constraints 82.8% Federal regulation 5.8 9.1 Chanhassen 13.1 23.4 White Bear lake 4.9 10.5 Large supply 70.7 Woodbury 22.7 32.7 Low demand 61.8 Other 5.3 6.3 I Declining return on investments 47.8 , '4.,,,-.,....., - Financing available 47.6 Decreasing rents 46.1 Equity capital not available 45.2 Which development products have the Proposed tax law changes 19.5 - greatest potential, currently and three years Many alternative investments 17.8 �, - from now, m Minnesota? 1 Future appreciation 16. 1"°�?'" .- 1- y "° C .m. Three yews Few alternative investments 3 .8 Increasing rents 3.6 r. a ., ` i Industrial /warehouse 46.1 % 42.6% Equity capital available 1.9 f .r r 0.r Eq • cep - _ = «�,4 �=� _' :. � � � . Strip retail 27.9 17.3 Low supply 1.7 tr ,. _ .� �, Retirement housing 24.7 43.6 �� . _ High demand 0.6 ►•, 4 `"i Single- family homes 20.3 25.0 I ...v.�;',� p� ?._�,� � .- ' 'ilr '' y Multi-family homes 15.7 30.7 Over the next three years, where in Min- _`cs<sr t.'xpy,A ,a Y . r r u land 14.9 26.7 nesota will development be the most u :a '°? ` ,,,t , i R eg i ona l re t a il 10.8 9.4 attractive? � ¢ r *� g ; Law >yse office - -$ '' -. . 9.2 17.3 Suburban Minneapolis - 49.9% ib ..., - 4,- ,, r v ',+ buildings • St. Cloud 25.1 oe - 6 1 ' --,� ' R&D office buildings 7.9 9.4 Rochester 22.6 .x � � , '� , , . * Hotels 1.4 6.9 Suburban St. Paul 22.3 f +,� � i s : , ,r High-rise office Downtown Minneapolis 14.7 ' `x " ° if buildings 0.5 6.2 Bloomington 13.8 isi . it li y,' =' i Other 4.9 4.4 I Duluth 5.2 2.5 Woodbury, where Florida -based Robert Muir Co. is building a 420,000 retail 14.3 center called Woodbury Village, is expected to be a hot spot for development °� Downtown St. Paul Other in three years. - l' ��� - 1 �r ? f °V` - books on passive-solar heating, HOME REPORT P g 4 ..-� organic waste disposal and low -ir- -.., rigation landscaping. - - i / •'y °..,- "'`°' —s ✓4 - u ��.=' "With a team like that," says B reaking Ground chitect who is helping design Nance Canyon, "we weren't go- on a Ne w Idea ing to come back with anything ' like a conventional development. BY TOM JOHNSON We're talking about a sea- change difference from the way Ameri- ' cans have settled this continent. This isn't short-term rape and pil- ust south of Chico, Califor- no construction in the ravines that lage. It's growth in such a way I nia, along Highway 99, a series of separate the low hills. "It's the that the natural and built environ- verdant hills has long beckoned kind of demand you make when ments sustain each other." ambitious real estate developers. you know you want to be unrea- Only minutes into the first pub- I Beautiful, close to transporta- sonable," said one Chico activist, Iic meeting on the project, Blake - tion namely the highway — and attending the first public mating ley- Swartz announced that con - recreation, minutes from historic about the project. "It never oc- struction would be Chico and the town's California curred to us that the developer CamilamIlies are restricted to 20 per- I State University campus, the hills would go along." now b t ant of the land, all have the potential to become the Unlike other developments, of it atop the mesas next in the long series of Califor- which bring environmental con- W0 with nature, and along Highway I nia boomtowns. "Another Silicon sultants in late in the process to not against 99. "In many ways Valley" is how Don Swartz puts iron out —some might say gloss "5""'�Y - we're building on { it, referring to the area around over— problems, Nance Canyon's the worst land," says Kaufman. I San Jose where the personal�oom design team included environ- "But the most sensitive habitat is puter revolution took root. When mental activists from the very down in the ravines, so you stay Swartz talks, people around Chi- start. The design team behind out of the ravines." co listen. His company, Blakeley- Nance Canyon is as cutting -edge The announcement shocked '" I Swartz, owns and wants to de- as any ever assembled: Architects and pleased Chico residents, who velop 6,400 acres of those scenic Andres Duany and Elizabeth Pla- viewed the first meeting as the green hills. ter- Zyberk; Gary Coates, an ar- kickoff of what would surely be a I Separating the hills is a series chitect and environmentalist from long and difficult battle over of almost alpine canyons and Kansas State University; futurist Nance Canyon. The design team, meadows, each with its own Stewart Brand; and a team of however, just shrugged its collec- • stream. Free - flowing streams are consultants that included the peo- Live shoulders and went on design- I a rarity in water - starved Califor- pie who had literally written the ing what they unabashedly see as nia, and for as long as developers _ ; _ _, v a model development. "We're go- 1 =_; = S : ' 4 have talked about building up the hex :=: - =_'',. ' "'_.:4: -;.:_, LL in ahead and maxing out on the I area, environmentalists have - e nv i ronmental proscriptions, talked about fighting develop- ': 3 .�;t,; ' �{ says Duany. "W_ a know there's protecting p ::- • _• l going to be new legislation, so ment and rotectin those re- �-•- :.� A �' � .=^ ate_ � - 1 € . cious streams. Silicon Valley is to `.~ x: " ��_ .,., 4 we re loin eve hin that could ' . :-�; + ' possibly legislated so we won't Swartz a symbol of everything vi- � ° ,� , - „ •. ,� .::41' , `r xt poss y g' ' brant and entrepreneurial in the ; > z -- ti have to make changes.; American economy, but to the - residents of Chico it's something . e ` he result appears to be a plan • tc# ' li - :•.-7; 1 - ,--'. that protects both the environ- I polluted, Fx 91 - -"," rz .' else entirely: sprawling, po > 1 - , 815 ment and the developer. In fact, ugly, and representative of all i , one of the happy discoveries of I that they don't want their quaint -* „-• .' -" ' sk ' 4 Nance Canyon is that many of little town to become. - A the things that environmentalists The basic assurance that local %'g -e- ' "' }= -- •�•4� have been pushing — things often environmentalists wanted of any - �� :��s i--. :, dismissed before as economically ' p proposed develop -; unrealistic —turn out actually to one who ro ed to develo the ;�` - nom area, which is known locally as p = .. ,� . � t save the developer money. Nance Canyon, was that there be Y F , = ' r * The result, the planners say, is 20 NOVEMBER 1990•HOME r 1 _— ._•.__ , ■ 1 - � . j� �_ t ►"� HOME REPORT s a ' .. a community development that is, I ii S I . �' z� - ; --'��;'[[�� _; -'1 t, +': £ ' ,., in the current jargon, "sustain - 1� `' _ K able." Broadly defined, a sustain- . �'ia 4. : -: 2 able activity is one that can go Y s' , ,' -;_c, ' l on —at least theoretically— forever, 4 = i r. without consuming so many re- sources that it destroys the envi- ill .��` " , p t- ,. L..+, 2 —� r ronment on which the activity z i)` , _ _t. .:.� � ' f ,, depends. Farmers, for example, r , t> ®_ 1 are talking these days about sus - mac f-. r - s,,, _ -, -_ - Al --et- -eX I tainable agriculture, which pre .. [ S r f ..� ; r •°' � " � 4 ,.� ' x�. -. '� serves and even enriches the land �� �� rather than exhausting it. 0 ,. < 0� ' °? _. ;� � 1 . -='k----",...:5-- , - 1..- � ,- ' Nowhere is sustainability a lar- 1 AR ger issue than in housing. Across Q II'I�GT DESIGNED CUSTOM HOMES the political spectrum, there is in- Individua0y designed and built homes since 1947 For the new 1990 creasing consensus that the stan- • Stag' architects that start from your unique needs and site. Acomcoloraota/og dard shelter of more and more • Finest materials throughout: Western red cedarsi with over 50 d� Pella Low -E windows, mahogany entry doors, andsso inr s trim- send Americans— sprawling suburbs • Delightful. exciting interiors full of space, natural light, and informal elegance. of single - family development— • Energy efficient and passive solar designs cannot go on forever. ACORN STRUCTURES, INC, P.O. Box 1445, Concord, MA 01742 Ik "We're in an era of incredible Models/Offices: Eastern MA (508)369 Western MA (413) 369 -4966 • NH/VT(603) 256-66834 • Cr (203)254-8432 NY/N) -1505 •PA( 215) 344 7395• MD(301)923- 7707•VA(703 )352- 2077•cA 415)456.9560 change," says Swartz, whose Name &Address: company is best known for donat- ' Phone:( ) Building Site: Town State Qt10 ing the land on which Ronald Reagan 's presidential library is being built. "The development community, if it's going to sur- I vive, has to develop in way that York Spiral Stair' A Step than destro activity." s to be more In g III The Right Direction Nance Canyon, like the few Nance experimental en- a ii Prepare urs vironmental utopias that have '° `' ° '' , . co g 1 ,, , i .h„ pliments yo conce to receive rn in your more gone before it, will be based on home than ever before. The the idea that people should live in -' presence of York's dramatic ►` �� ; dense clusters surrounded by na- - f „ ., ss aircases (in 5' 0, 6' 0, 8' 6" lure. Unlike earlier experiments, s . quarter-turn), will enrich a wide y + I " -x,.T piral diameters as well as 18' 0 however, Nance Canyon also 1 . �1 -; - va of modern as well as - 4, 41 � t1 ► = seeks to serve as an economic as �: - �I�. , : _ traditional architectural - designs. Our st airs are also well as architectural example. ii -e . ,, available in many species of "Whenever groups have set out .� .. , _ fine hardwoods, oak and # to design and create communities _ '' �, mahogany being the standards. g ,� _ t Each York stair is handcraft like this it's been detached from - :.1 g the world, says Tom DiGio- I - , . 1€:'-' ;', : to fit your floor -to -floor height •+ t ,e x here in our Maine plant. Our Nance Canyon project •,�, dual laminated handrails and vanni, " .. x stringers supply more strength, manager. We want this to be en- i , =- .... ,, ,.= ::-�; `.„;;;_F' beauty, safety and comfort then tirely engaged with the economy T t; that of a centerpost stair. For a ' free 12 page color brochure call of the region and the culture of ', r' or write . . the region. This can really be part 3 - - ' y 6Y of the mainstream." ral To do that, the mainstream will .‘„,.,.,,__-_,,,_.._,- .. 1 v :a,� have to veer considerably. This is a,�' _� .' . .. . fa. � - t a very difficult issue," says an .. b $ ✓ , ' ` s t . � : environmentalist who, while not afraid of difficult issues in gen- Dept. HC, N. Vassalboro, ME 04962 7hl. (2071 872-5558, Ex. 13-11 Fax (2071 872 -6731 .;HOME .REPORT development. Along the Texas ronmentall■ sound planning. I coast, residential development is In 1970. after stunning the eral. would rather not have his blamed for declining catches by world with a show of his work at name attached to this particular gulf fishing fleets, and construe- the Whitne■ Museum. Soleri led I difficult issue. "We're talking tion of houses in the Pacific a small group into the wilderness about the American Dream here, Northwest is choking previously to build what he said would be the the house and the yard and the pristine streams with silt. model. Dubbed Arcosanti, the white picket fence. You start "If we continue to build on the new town was designed to be an I messing around with that and you edges of our cities," says Carl An- example of the way mankind make enemies fast." thony, co- director of the Earth Is- needed to go if it was going to sur- The damage caused by single- land Institute's Urban Habitats vive. The crux of Soleri's theory family homes has never been Project, "We're going to destroy was that people should live in quantified. There are, however, a habitat and fragile farmland, pol- densely urban clusters surroun- few clues to the effect of conven- lute watersheds, clear -cut forests ded by uninhabited areas where I tional suburban development. In and exacerbate our reliance on nature could flourish. Florida, where construction of automobiles. This is a really pro- Arcosanti today is, in many single- family homes is the state's found problem." ways, a failed experiment. Its largest industry, residential devel- As long as 25 years ago, the population of 60 is far from the I opment is implicated in ground- strains caused by single - family 5,000 Soleri planned for. (It has water pollution that caused the development were evident to foundered largely because Soleri closure of wells supplying Miami small groups of architects, plan- is unwilling to allow private own- I with 1.5 million gallons of water a ners and theoreticians. Architect ership or to borrow money for day. A 1985 study by the Oceanic and futurist Paolo Soleri was a- construction.) Despite that, the Society determined that half the mong the first to conclude that theories behind Arcosanti are oil pollution in the sea comes from low- density suburbs could not generally accepted as valid. , I urban runoff, a direct result of sustain themselves indefinitely, "It's clear what we need to do," single - family, pavement intensive and he laid out the basics of envi- says Anthony. "We need Less pav- ing, less energy loss, more com- as a series of small, traditional vil- you're building. You can build a I pact development and more effi- lages, each with its own inte- little at a time." cient use of water resources." grated shopping, residential and Another environmental innova- Traditionally, the best places to commercial district. Driving to tion paying economic dividends is I develop have been exactly the work, the grocery store, the mov- Nance Canyon's dependence on places that most need to be left ies will be unnecessary, since each local, nonchemical treatment of alone. Developers love fragile hill- village will be self- contained. « , liquid waste. En- I sides, for example. because a few By building villages rather than What we're finding vironmentalists bulldozers can plow out scores of sprawl, Nance Canyon can be is that ecoloO ai prefer local treat - expensive homesites with spec- built incrementally, one village at ment over huge, tacular views. Houses built near a time, over a period of years. planning can be very centralized sew- I water are also more valuable, so Environmentally, that minimizes eCanOlnl(dlly sound:' age plants, be- builders routinely concentrate the amount of erosion during con- cause people who subdivisions around wetlands. struction, preserving not only vat- see what happens to their waste I Seldom considered in this equa- uable topsoil but also the streams tend to produce less of it, a side lion is the cost of that type of and pools in the canyons that effect that does not fit into any development. While building on might otherwise be choked with existing method of cost account - I hillsides allows highly marketable silt. Incremental construction ing. Developers, more concerned views, it also requires a relatively should also lower Blakeley- with the bottom line than with large amount of expensive grad- Swartz's construction costs. public consciousness raising, have ing and road construction. By "This is eminently more feasi- resisted local treatment, fearing it I concentrating Nance Canyon on ble than conventional subdivi- would increase their costs. How - the flat tops of the mesas, not only sions," says DiGiovanni. "It's less ever, small neighborhood treat - will the amount of grading be cut, capital- and energy - intensive. ment facilities may actually save I but the development can be laid You don't have to build the whole Blakeley- Swartz millions of dol- out in a compact, relatively cheap infrastructure ahead of time and lars in construction and mainte- grid. Nance Canyon will be built pay interest on that money while nance, since they will not have to 1 • I p Q - - -H O M REPORT O R T . - developers will have to build in The Mate Of Re ways that don't require so much build a six - mile -long pipeline to driving- oriented infrastructure. ...goes TV! Chico's water treatment plant. "The conventional suburb I "What we're finding," explains doesn't offer many alternatives to project manager DiGiovanni, "is cars," says Elizabeth Plater -Zy- A 12 -Week that ecological planning can be berk. "We're not advocating giv- Remodeling very economically sound. It's ing up the car. We're just trying I Miniseries amazing to see how [those two to give people a choice." things] can work synergistically." At the same time, the environ- "This kind of project gives mental movement is becoming I credibility to a whole range of one of the most potent political \/.. ideas that have been floating a- forces in the world. Hillside and - 4A . 4, - ;= * ff- 4 :--41r-4:: 7 - - . . - , round the margins for years," wetland acreage that would have says Gary Coates, author of Re - been prime for development 10 I settling America. "We're harvest- years ago is increasingly being " t ing the fruits of 20 years of envi- placed off - limits, leaving develop- `-' ronmentalism. Many of the ideas ers searching for some advantage '" V- F : are mature." in the marketplace. You can, in Gary Coilms ,DanaFkmmgandKtttrlarthobnew, Nance Canyon, it is important fact, deliver more than just the HOME Show; Joe Ruggiero, HOME magazine. to point out, is today little more home," says DiGiovanni. "You ' than an academic exercise. It will can create value by giving people be months before the first shovel- the full array of what makes a Starting September 10th, tune in and ful of soil is turned, and years be- good place to live." , watch Joe Ruggiero, editor in chief of fore its economic viability is Increasingly, that means pre- ' determined. "If it doesn't make serving the environment. "Na- HOME magazine, along with ABC money," says developer Don ture's not just a pretty view," says HOME Show hosts Gary Collins and Swartz, "it won't go." Robert Thayer, a college profes- I Dana Flemin g program's and the ro 's deco Future profits for Blakeley- sor and partner in the environ- Swartz, and the future of environ- mental consulting firm CoDesign. _ razor. Kitty Bartholomew, for an excit mentally sound development as a "It's a set of functions. Those I ing 12 - week miniseries on America's whole, hinge on a single deciding functions can be preserved for question: Is the public willing to people to enjoy." favorite subject — remodeling! revise the American Dream? Whether they will be, of course, "The single - family home," says remains to be determined. But - See a complete home transformation in Anthony, "is our very definition environmentalists —who are often just 12 weeks. Watch Joe, Kitty and of prosperity." dismissed as habitual doomsay- Increasingly, developers and ers — appear to be remarkably op- their crew remodel bathrooms, build an I environmentalists are coming to timistic about the possibilities the g addition, lay new flooring, redesign the the same conclusion, that a shift future holds for development. "If kitchen, create a master suite and finish from single - family development is I didn't think it was possible to I inevitable. "We're facing what we change without giving up life - the project with a fresh decorating didn't understand, the ramifica- styles of safety and comfort and scheme. tions of our boom," says Phoebe .freedom, I wouldn't be doing 7 Schlanger, an environmental pol- this," affirms Thayer. "1'd be in a These programs offer hundreds of use- icy analyst for the National Asso- cave somewhere." ciation of Home Builders. "The "There's a growing market for ful and inspiring ideas. If you're basic thing everyone wants is a environmentalism," says Swartz. remodeling or planning to do so soon, single - family detached home. But "There's a segment of society in cities, that's almost impossible that's in tune with these issues, don't miss it. to have." and that's who we're trying to ap- A recent Florida study deter - peal to. That's why we have these ' Consult your local mined that 60 percent of the people on board. If this is profit - listing for time state's infrastructure repair and able, it's going to be a reflection and station. construction backlog consists of on how well we do our jobs." I HOME " Horft streets and bridges. If housing construction is going to con- Freelance writer Tom Johnson is • • tinue —and it has to continue— afrequent contributor to HOME. 1 1 ,. 1 1 PUBLIC SAFETY COMMISSION ATTENDANCE II 1990 1 JAN ) 11B MAR 1 APR MAY JUN JUL AUG + SEP ocr 1 NOV ECC i Craig Blechta X X X X X X X)XX II - 1 i C I Bill Bernhjelm X X :XX ZXX ,X;XX II .. H P.: tx1 41 Bill Boyt X I X X i Z X II Z ' i ! 1 I Barb 'Click I X X X 1 ? X X - X i X X I. ! , • Wayne Wenzlaff , X co ,, X C) : X , . iXX X = = 1 Brian Beniek .. , : 1 X 2 - 41 fli ' X X 0 i ,X X i , 1 - 1 - II Dave Dummer ! ' X X X X:XiX XIX; 1 • Don Chmiel X X (for Boyt) 1 1 : , ‘ 1 1 1 1 , 1 1 1 .1111 1.111 111111 1111 1111. OM MI MI 1111111 111111 Mel MI MN MI MP CHANHASSEN H.R.A. ACCOUNTS PAYABLE 12 -26 -90 PAGE 1 CHECK# AMOUNT CLAIMANT PURPOSE 042356 4,048.57 BARTON ASCHMAN ASSOC. FEES, SERVICE 042357 10.00 CHAN CHAMBER OF COMMERCE TRAVEL + TRAINING 042358 18,668.38 STRGAR - ROSCOE - FAUSCH INC FEES, SERVICE 3 22,726.95 CHECKS WRITTEN � w r CHANHASSEN H.R.A. A C C O U N T S P A Y A B L E 01 -14 -91 PAGE 1 CHECK # A M O U N T C L A I M A N T P U R P O S E 033498 2,582.30 ROBERT'S AUTOMATIC SPL ASSESSMENT PAYMENTS 033509 2,201.70 STRGAR - ROSCOE - FAUSCH INC FEES, SERVICE 2 4,784.00 NECESSARY EXPENDITURES SINCE LAST COUNCIL MEETING IIIII 111111 ME - - ME M- 11111 N -- MR - r r N CHANHASSEN H.R.A. A C C O U N T S P A Y A B L E 01 -14 -91 PAGE 2 CHECK $ A M O U N T C L A I M A N T P U R P O S E 042458 1,652.46 HOISINGTON GROUP, INC. FEES, SERVICE 042459 801.45 HOLMES & GRAVEN FEES, SERVICE 042460 36,318.36 ALFRED A IVERSON SPL ASSESSMENT PAYMENTS 042461 448.80 MERLIN'S HARDWARE HANK PROMOTIONAL EXPENSE 4 39,221.07 CHECKS WRITTEN TOTAL OF 6 CHECKS TOTAL 44,005.07 all a - -- l- i i- - . a r -- r -- s CHANHASSEN H.R.A. A C C O U N T S P A Y A B L E 01 -28 -91 PAGE 1 CHECK # A M O U N T C L A I M A N T P U R P O S E 1990 042651 9,613.16 BLOOMBERG COMPANIES, INC SPL ASSESSMENT PAYMENTS 1 9,613.16 CHECKS WRITTEN F Ira — — — — r r — r — — — — r r we r as