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7/20/2016 <br />Watertown first in county to tighten restrictions on level 3 sex offenders <br />Watertown is setting the precedence for Carver County;' said Deborah Everson, city council <br />member. We will be only city in Carver County that will have this." <br />The Watertown City Council voted to adopt Ordinance 397, amending Chapter 26 of the <br />Watertown City Code to increase the distance for restricted areas from a boundary of 500 feet <br />from schools and parks, as was stated in the existing law. The amendment prohibits level 3 sex <br />offenders from living within 1,000 feet of a school or park and within 500 feet from a licensed <br />daycare provider, creating very small pockets where level 3 sex offenders may live. <br />'We're taking an initiative to protect our citizens and, specifically, the children from convicted <br />predators;' said Michael Walters, city council member. 'We're talking about very dangerous <br />felons that the Department of Corrections has identified as likely to reoffend" <br />Walters said the measure serves as a 'community values statement;' and over the course of the <br />discussions, his opinion on the matter has only grown stronger. <br />According to city records, official discussions of the proposed amendment began in April, when <br />the Watertown City Council first considered the amendment in a work session. <br />A proposed amendment was brought forward at the June 14 meeting, but members of the city <br />council expressed that the prohibited areas were not large enough, The council considered <br />several different options, including boundaries or 500 feet, 750 feet, 1,000 feet, and <br />combinations giving schools and parks a different boundary than daycare providers. They tabled <br />the vote, and turned to other city and county staff for insight on what kind of boundaries could <br />be enforced. <br />Lieutenant Patrick Barry, representing the Carver County Sheriffs Office, said the county would <br />enforce whatever laws they put on the books. City Administrator Shane Fineran advised against <br />implementing boundaries that would take all of Watertown off the map for released offenders. <br />Then, City Attorney Jared Shepherd shared examples of what has been enacted in other <br />Minnesota cities. <br />'There are a few communities, for example Wyoming, Minnesota, has a 2,000 -feet buffer for <br />schools, daycare, parks, 1,000 feet for bus stops and places of worship;' he said. 'Taylors Falls: <br />2,000 -feet for schools, daycares, parks and playgrounds, 1,000 feet for bus stops and places of <br />worship,. Of course, it's important to realize that each community is laid out differently, and <br />those restrictions are a function of where the different buildings are." <br />No level 3 sex offenders are registered in the city of Watertown, or the whole of Carver County, <br />as reported to the Minnesota sex offender registry. <br />Even in neighboring counties, the numbers tend to be low. No level 3 sex offenders are <br />registered in McLeod County or Sibley County. Only two are registered in Wright County, and <br />three are registered in Scott County. In Wright County, the sex offenders are located in Maple <br />Lake Township and Monticello, and in Scott County, they are located in Prior Lake, Belle Plain <br />http://sunpatriot.com/2016/07/15/Watertown-first-in-county-to-tighten-restrictions-on-level-3-sex-offenders/ 2/4 <br />