My WebLink
|
Help
|
About
|
Sign Out
Home
Browse
Search
06-22-2020 Council Minutes
Orono
>
City Council
>
Minutes
>
2020-2024
>
2020
>
06-22-2020 Council Minutes
Metadata
Thumbnails
Annotations
Entry Properties
Last modified
7/21/2020 1:09:42 PM
Creation date
7/21/2020 1:09:32 PM
Metadata
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).
Show annotations
View images
View plain text
MINUTES OF THE <br /> ORONO CITY COUNCIL MEETING <br /> Monday,June 22,2020 <br /> 6:00 o'clock p.m. <br /> The City Council Members stated it looks like a good plan. <br /> MAYOR/COUNCIL REPORT <br /> Johnson said Edwards spent more time with Golden Valley and South St. Paul with respect to the time-of- <br /> sale inspection. He noted he was the only one who opposed it. He is still adamantly against that vehicle <br /> but is 100%for dealing with the problem. They have tightened up some loose ends. One unintended <br /> consequence of the process is a new term, "illicit discharge,"which is Public Works' way of saying you <br /> have a sewer line that is completely disconnected and the sewer is going in the ground. He learned that <br /> Edwards will be responsible for conveying to Orono's citizens that the purpose of the ordinance is the <br /> intrusion-of-water issue. It is not to find damaged or broken existing sewer lines. However, it will be an <br /> unintended consequence, because when they start looking at the videos,they are going to find dips, <br /> breaks, and tree roots. <br /> Seals asked how the City was going to address some of those things. She said during a certain time period <br /> when people were building houses,the sump pump, etc., was actually routed into the sewer. <br /> Johnson noted the intended consequence is to identify some of the stuff that is not supposed to be <br /> happening. <br /> Seals indicated there are probably more of those situations than what the City knows about. <br /> Johnson said one thing that will happen is the City is going to attempt to do this and will not be able to get <br /> their cameras down because there are going to be so many roots,etc. They will have to tell homeowners <br /> that they need to get a Roto-Rooter type of company to clean the line and then reschedule for them to <br /> come back.He noted in the real estate business,time is often of the essence. As time goes on,people will <br /> get used to it. He is trying to provide input for the first roll-out, where people are not going to know. He <br /> said he asked Edwards what happens when a title company closes it because they do not know about the <br /> new ordinance, as it was not communicated to everyone. He stated there is a lot to learn and that other <br /> cities told him it is harder to roll out than they ever thought. The theory is good and the cities think it is <br /> the right thing to do and it has saved taxpayer money. The City and Riefs responsibility is the <br /> communication component,which includes the realtors, residents, and title companies. It is not an easy <br /> process and he heard that there is not a lot of cooperation from the Minnesota Board of Realtors, because <br /> it does not support the time-of-sale inspections. He noted there were a lot of pitfalls coming. <br /> Seals asked if there was any way to avoid any of the pitfalls. <br /> Walsh commented that this is getting in the way of somebody's business,and there will be problems <br /> when closings are impacted. There may be no silver bullet, but the City should get the best system <br /> possible and move it forward until everyone gets used to it. <br /> Johnson stated one of his concerns about what they are rolling out is the consequence of non-compliance: <br /> the surcharge on a bill. If it gets scoped out and there is a$10,000 problem, an owner can choose to pay <br /> the surcharge.Also,the City is giving 90 days for compliance. If there is illicit discharge, which is a <br /> sewer line that is broken,the City cannot give people 90 days to fix an illicit surcharge. He was told it <br /> would fall into another area of the code. He indicated that it needs to state in the ordinance that it's a <br /> reference point, because the City would red-tag that house and they cannot run water in any capacity <br /> through that house until it is fixed.The City, in doing the inspection,has to advertise what the timeline <br /> will be for the City to do them,because people will start to rely on that process. Orono's certificate is <br /> Page 9 of 13 <br />
The URL can be used to link to this page
Your browser does not support the video tag.