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MINUTES OF THE <br /> ORONO CITY COUNCIL MEETING <br /> July 10,2023 <br /> 6:00 o'clock p.m. <br /> City Attorney that doing so was not violation of anything. She said she was in favor of the wording and <br /> thinks it was good to have a discussion around it. <br /> Veach said her name was on a comment card and she was disappointed to find that her name had been <br /> used and assigned to a support category based on what Benson thought she was saying. She said she <br /> thought her comments were matter-of-fact,and they were the same questions she had asked Long Lake <br /> previously as a citizen. She said she put those comments together not knowing that they would ever be <br /> used in that way or that she would be assigned to a category without her actual comments being used. She <br /> wondered why she wasn't included in the third column which was headed just asking questions. <br /> Walsh moved, Johnson seconded,to approve the label in paragraph three to be used by <br /> Councilmembers when providing documents to the public at City Council meetings.VOTE: Ayes 5, <br /> Nays 0. <br /> PUBLIC COMMENTS <br /> Kendall Nygard, 1386 Rest Point Road,and 5658 Judith Road,Bokeelia,Florida,welcomed <br /> Councilmember Crosby back saying she had probably made more meetings than he has though she lives <br /> in Florida. She said Crosby was characterizing the Fire Department issue as a business decision, so she <br /> was going to cover the City's legal affairs. She said she and her husband,Jay Nygard,have lawsuits with <br /> the City that tax dollars through the League of Minnesota Cities Insurance Trust are covering in the <br /> amounts of$32,000 and$199,000. Other open suits,she said, include$50,000 from the League Trust for <br /> Mayor Walsh's private legal fees. In regard to Bederwood Park she said her data request found nothing, <br /> but she alleged the attorneys are being paid for that case out of the City budget.Her malicious prosecution <br /> suit, she said,is costing the League Insurance Trust$85,000 for maximizing hard cover on their property <br /> with a one and five-eighths inch driveway lip,noting the Council had just spent 30 minutes with an <br /> applicant attempting to go up two stories on their house.Another suit involving residents seeking some <br /> sort of lane access is costing taxpayers $110,000,she said, and the City does not yet know the cost of the <br /> Long Lake suit. <br /> James Elder, 195 South Brown Road, said he would like to comment on the 2024 preliminary Orono <br /> budget. He said it was his understanding that one of the major arguments being made by Orono to start its <br /> own Fire Department was that it was paying too much for fire services under the Long Lake Fire <br /> Department arrangement. In the 2024 budget,he said,expenses related to fire will account for 24 percent <br /> of the City's total budget.The current cost to Orono to lease fire coverage from Long Lake is$544,000 a <br /> year,he said,but Orono is preparing to spend$2,251,000 in 2024,which seems to be over four times <br /> what the City is currently spending.He said that was startling and a lot of tax dollars for a City likely <br /> facing legal action from the City of Long Lake regarding Orono's plans to start a new Fire Department. <br /> He asked the City Council to go to mediation before making irreversible financial decisions. <br /> David Pierson,2160 Webber Hills Road,said Councilmember Benson had asked about the lack of a date <br /> on the fire resolution and it was interesting that the attorney had replied that the date was still July 1,2024 <br /> but if no agreement had been reached the City would have to go to Plan B. Plan B,he said,is very <br /> dangerous because it will then be an issue of public safety including where the equipment is coming from, <br /> Page 6 of 8 <br />