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MINUTES OF THE <br />ORONO CITY COUNCIL MEETING <br />Monday, August 13, 2018 <br />7:00 o'clock p.m. <br />14. LMCD — Continued <br />Printup questioned whether the mechanical harvesters are an antiquated way of dealing with this issue and <br />that it might be time to look at doing something new since it has been 40 years since they started <br />harvesting. <br />Dankey stated they could take the money from the harvesting program and direct it towards AIS removal. <br />Schleunig stated given the amount of boat traffic, they will not stop the fragments from drifting, which <br />does impact the biomass on the lake. <br />Walsh asked if she is open to stopping the harvesters and starting something different. <br />Schleunig stated the LMCD is open to looking at a lot of different things but that she is not sure what the <br />answer is. Schleunig stated they do not want to get to the point where there is so much muck on the <br />bottom of the lake where they are ending up with blue-green algae. <br />Walsh asked how much the LMCD is spending on the harvesters. <br />Schleunig indicated it was around $80,000 for 2018, with the total LMCD budget being approximately <br />$500,000. <br />Dankey asked if it is the DNR who sometimes inspects the boats. <br />Schleunig stated the LMCD contracts with Three Rivers and the DNR. Schleunig noted the amount of <br />their grants has been decreased. <br />Dankey commented it will be impossible to stop visitors from coming to the lake. <br />Schleunig stated other steps being taken include a 2018 carp study that was funded by Lessard -Sams <br />Outdoor Heritage Council and consists of removing carp from Lake Minnetonka. Other prevention <br />measures include watercraft inspections at boat landings, educating the public, the Stop Aquatic <br />Hitchhikers campaign, installation of LED screens at Arcola Bridge and Spring Park, and local businesses <br />assisting with community outreach. <br />Mayor Walsh asked whether anyone from the public would like to comment on this item. <br />Gabriel Jabbour, 985 Tonkawa Road and 450 Big Island, stated Vickie Schleunig is predominantly better <br />than her predecessor, but with all due respect, 90 percent of the information received here is inaccurate. <br />Jabbour stated the harvesters were gifted to the LMCD by Irwin Jacobs and seven of his friends with the <br />understanding that the milfoil eventually would bog down 100 percent of the major thoroughfares and <br />people not able to reach the LaFayette Golf Club, Lord Fletcher's, and other popular sites. The LMCD <br />decided to accept the harvesters and harvest the major thoroughfares. This effort was funded through <br />voluntary contributions by the cities. The program was run by the private sector until a few years later <br />when the LMCD decided to take it on. <br />Jabbour noted the LMCD was founded originally as a coordinating agency and not an implementing <br />agency, which is why the legislature did not give them funding capabilities. The LMCD later had a levy <br />limit of $180,000 when the harvesters were gifted. Jabbour stated over the years the harvester program <br />Page 7of14 <br />