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MINUTES OF THE <br /> ORONO CITY COUNCIL MEETING <br /> Monday,August 22,2022 <br /> 6:00 o'clock p.m. <br /> Johnson asked to expand on the question about whether the City Council has approved it or not. <br /> Edwards noted one concern he has is in regard to the letter from Long Lake which seems to insinuate that <br /> the City of Orono has already approved the purchase of the truck under the 2002 fire contract. He cannot <br /> find any record of the City having done so;he noted they did approve their own Capital Improvement <br /> Plan(CIP)but that is only a guiding document and does not authorize the purchase of anything. Edwards <br /> noted they have had Chief Van Eyll out to ask about the two command vehicles and in the Council action <br /> memo they said it would be 100%owned by Orono. In Edwards' opinion the City of Orono has not given <br /> the approval the City of Long Lake thinks they have.This is the reason Edwards would like to give Long <br /> Lake clarification on the item. <br /> Johnson clarified the City Council approved 100% of one vehicle the previous year(2021)that was <br /> cancelled. <br /> Edwards replied that was for 100%City of Orono ownership. <br /> Mayor Walsh noted in the last few Council meetings they approved the purchase of two vehicles at 100% <br /> Orono ownership.He does not know why there would be any reason to go back and do it a different way. <br /> Johnson spoke about conversations with the negotiation team consisting of Long Lake Mayor Miner and <br /> Councilmember Jahn Dyvik, and noted the Mayor stated if the deal with Orono falls apart,under the <br /> terms of the contract Long Lake has first right of refusal to buy anything in the contract. Johnson noted 90 <br /> days prior to the expiration of the contract is when Long Lake must make their decision and he stated <br /> procuring vehicles takes between 18-24 months for some fire vehicles.As he understands it,there are six <br /> vehicles available but only two with chips,therefore there is a shortage of vehicles.He shared Long <br /> Lake's position that if Orono purchases one on their own that is fine and if they cannot come together on <br /> an agreement,Long Lake has a vehicle and Orono has a vehicle.Johnson is in favor of doing one of each <br /> and thinks it is an important component to Long Lake that Orono follows the contract they are currently <br /> in. Johnson noted Orono has not received legal advice on it yet but noted this was the surface-level <br /> conversation. <br /> Seals agrees and noted these two vehicles are not big purchases and Orono needs to be very thoughtful <br /> when they look at engines as that is a longer timeline and bigger cost.This is a good middle-ground and <br /> stated the two cities are seeing things from very different sides which is why the situation is challenging. <br /> She said doing one under the contract and one out of the contract protects both sides and she would be in <br /> support of that,also. <br /> Johnson moved, Seals seconded,to approve the purchase of Command Vehicle#2 in accordance <br /> with the 2002 Fire Contract.VOTE: Ayes 5,Nays 0. <br /> Johnson shared in July,he and Councilmember Seals began meeting with Mayor Miner and <br /> Councilmember Dyvik with the goal to better understand both cities' positions.He noted the City of <br /> Orono and this City Council has tremendous respect for the+100-year relationship of the Fire <br /> Department. The fundamental question going into the meetings is:how does a City that pays 85%of the <br /> expenses create a contract with another city that represents 10%,yet not isolate that city?He noted it is a <br /> hard task because the cities are not evenly-sized. Johnson stated there is some clear mistrust on the part of <br /> both cities in entering in to these negotiations,yet they went into this trying to find a way to preserve the <br /> Page 2 of 9 <br />