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MINUTES OF THE <br />ORONO CITY COUNCIL MEETING <br />June 26, 2023 <br />6:00 o’clock p.m. <br />_____________________________________________________________________________________ <br /> <br />Page 4 of 11 <br /> <br /> <br />CITY ADMINISTRATOR/ENGINEER REPORT <br /> <br />8. NEXT WORK SESSION DRAFT AGENDA <br /> <br />City Administrator Edwards said he had recommended to cancel the next work session but the Cannabis <br />discussion was cut short today so he would change his recommendation to having a work session on July <br />10 before the regular Council meeting. <br /> <br />Johnson moved, Crosby seconded, to add the cannabis discussion to the July 10, 2023 work session <br />agenda. VOTE: Ayes 5, Nays 0 <br /> <br />Edwards also said the new public works building is progressing on schedule. They have had the pre- <br />construction conference for parking lot work at the Navarre parking lot in mid-July and the golf course in <br />September. The project of lining old clay sewer pipes will begin soon and this year they will be finishing <br />up all of the older main sewer pipes on Casco Point. <br /> <br />PUBLIC COMMENTS <br /> <br />Mayor Walsh opening public comments with the change that Orono residents would be called on to speak <br />first. <br /> <br />Kathy Sweetman, 475 Deborah Drive, said she was speaking again that evening to protest what she has <br />seen in terms of the process and the conduct that takes place at City Council meetings citing a few <br />examples of abuse of power. She stated that at the February 1, 2023 meeting she saw the Mayor engage in <br />an uninterrupted 15-minute rant berating another Council Member. Pleas for a fulsome discussion to <br />consider all aspects of fire services have been ignored, she said, adding that the meeting of May 22, 2023 <br />was not adequate. Other member matters have been similarly dismissed. She said two weeks ago it was <br />argued that the Mayor was elected; let him do his job. She said she agrees the Mayor was elected but <br />disagrees that he's doing his job. She claimed the Mayor gaslights, manipulates with counter-narratives, <br />denies facts, and discredits and silences people who don’t agree. She thanked the firefighters and their <br />families for having sacrificed so much to keep the community safe. She called on the angry individuals <br />who are present week after week to recognize that yelling obscene language and engaging in personal <br />attacks will not solve their problems and garner empathy from fellow citizens. She asked the citizens of <br />Orono to pay attention to what is happening in the City, adding that democracy is not a spectator sport <br />and there is an election next year. <br /> <br />Kim Carswell, 261 Cygnet Place, said her comments were in response to the June 12, 2023 Council <br />meeting. By suppressing Councilmember discussion, the Orono City Council is not following best <br />practices for fair and impartial decision-making, she said. It is important for Orono citizens to hear all the <br />Council Member’s viewpoints, she continued, so shutting down Alisa Benson's discussion at the last <br />meeting was an insult to the Orono majority that elected her in 2022. She noted Carswell said Benson <br />represents the most recent voters choice and those voters deserve to hear her point of view. She said <br />meetings are being run like there is an autocracy and quoted from the Minnesota Mayor’s Handbook <br />which reads in part that presiding officers should not dominate discussion, and that in most cities the <br />mayor has the same rights as other council members but since the mayor is also the presider at the <br />meeting, mayors may choose to limit their comments or save their comments until all other members have