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Wimpy winter saves Minneapolis and St. Paul a (small) pile of snow spending

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The 2023-2024 winter that wasn’t featured no snow emergencies in either Minneapolis or St. Paul and few days where plowing or salting was necessary.

So taxpayers saved a ton of money, right?

Sort of.

The actual dollar savings weren’t as much as you might think, but public works officials from both cities say there are other benefits for the public, primarily in the form of smoother, cleaner streets.

“Sure, we spent less money on overtime and salt, but we spent more money on other things like street sweeping and pothole patching,” said Joe Paumen, director of transportation maintenance and repair for Minneapolis.

Public works folks know the public might assume their crews were goofing around all winter with nothing to do. St. Paul even made a cheeky video featuring workers snowboarding down a pile of unused road salt. But in truth, officials say there was plenty of work to do, and the question of where all the snow money went carries a nuanced answer.

Here are several takeaways from the wimpy winter.

No snow emergencies

The last time we had a winter without a snow emergency in either city was the winter of 2011-12. And that was a big deal. You have to go back to 1986-87 to find a snow-emergency-free Minneapolis winter before that, according to city records.

Roughly speaking, each snow emergency costs Minneapolis about $1 million and costs St. Paul between $660,000 and $800,000. Most of that money is spent on overtime pay for plow drivers.

But those drivers aren’t simply plow drivers: They’re mostly year-round city employees who work in an all-hands-on-deck/keep-plowing-’til-it’s-done scenario when a snow emergency is declared. When they’re not plowing, they’re still on the cities’ payrolls, doing their normal jobs.

One thing they did this year in Minneapolis — practice.

“We’ve had staffing challenges like everyone else,” Paumen said. “The lack of snow gave us more time to mentor and train new hires so they can learn their routes. This is more important than people realize. You have to know where those concrete medians are so you don’t do damage — because you can’t always see them in a storm.”

Some money saved

Here’s the thing about snow spending: The cities budget for the calendar year, but the snow season straddles two years. So it gets a little complicated.

The money “not spent” from November and December was actually already gone — spent in early 2023.

You remember the winter of 2022-23 (just last year)? It was a whopper of snowfest.

For example, in calendar year 2023, Minneapolis budgeted $11.8 million for snow expenses. It spent $13.1 million, most of which was spent plowing the record-threatening storms of January, February and March of 2023.

So from a taxpayer standpoint, it was a relief that this winter started out meekly. (This serendipity isn’t unique; the nearly snowless winter of 2011-12 also followed a brutal winter. In 2010-11, eight emergencies were declared in Minneapolis.)

So far this calendar year, the cities are running well under budget for snow. Minneapolis’ 2024 budget allocates $13.6 million, but the city had only spent $2.2 million before the storm that hit in late March. But whether that extra money remains will depend on what the weather does in October, November and December.

Sean Kershaw, St. Paul’s director of public works, said residents shouldn’t expect city coffers to be overflowing with unspent cash from one light season.

“It certainly evens out,” Kershaw said. “We tend to budget on an average snowfall. The problem is ‘average’ is changing. We will never not plow because of budget. The budget is what it is, in terms of the cost. And certainly, this year we didn’t have to spend as much money on salt, we didn’t have to spend as much money on overtime.”

Kershaw said most of the money saved probably went to pay for street light copper wire theft, which is another conversation. But certainly, last winter was more expensive than this winter.”

If there is extra money from plowing, that money will typically revert back to a city’s general fund, where it can be spent on paving, fixing or installing streetlights or whatever the city council and mayor decide.

As for extra salt — and there are mountains of extra salt in both cities right now — it can just sit in covered sheds for the summer.

Smoother & cleaner streets

Have you noticed that the streets aren’t as grungy as they normally are in early April? Usually, thoroughfares are sprinkled with a grime of gravel, antifreeze, plastic baggies, single mittens and other grody detritus that previously buried under a months-long blanket of snow. A lot less of that this year, right?

That’s because street sweepers fanned out across the cities at various times this winter. No, you didn’t have to move your car; it was more of a dusting than a deep spring cleaning.

“We made center-passes,” Paumen said, meaning the sweepers generally drove the center of the streets. “All that fine sediment we pick up doing that, that puts phosphorous into our lakes. Normally, it just goes down the drains.” While Paumen said he doesn’t have water quality data to back this up, he’s confident the winter street sweeping has helped water quality for the area’s lakes and streams.

The lack of ice and snow banks also allowed crews with loppers and chainsaws to get out and trim back vegetation that can encroach on sidewalks or hamper drivers’ visibility.

Not only was the winter weak on snow, it was warm — so warm that crews were able to get a head start on summer work.

March was warm enough for both cities, as well as surrounding suburbs, to start applying “hot mix” asphalt — the blend that binds and seals more durably than winter patches that infamously dislodge during spring freeze-thaw cycles.

St. Paul got so far ahead in its spring pothole-patching schedule that crews began working on alleys, which normally don’t get touched until July or August. Officials cautioned that plenty of new potholes formed after the most recent storm and more might come. But, they said, they’ve got a head start that’s unprecedented in recent memory.

Staff writer Katie Galioto contributed to this report.



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Star Tribune

Aunt IDs 3-year-old who was fatally shot in Minneapolis home, speaks about what happened

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A close relative on Tuesday identified the 3-year-old boy who was fatally shot this week in his family’s northeast Minneapolis apartment a day earlier.

Woods said police have told the family that Jajuan got ahold of the gun and it went off.

“Someone left a loaded gun [in the home,” said Woods, who has started an online fundraiser for her sister, Charlotte Williams. “He got ahold of it thinking it was a toy.”

Woods said her nephew, who went by Junior, “loved trucks and dinosaurs. He was just so silly and goofy. He was a momma’s boy.”

Jajuan suffered a gunshot wound to the top of the head, a source with knowledge of the incident told the Star Tribune. Paramedics rushed the toddler to HCMC, where he died a short time later.

Woods said she did not know who owned the gun.

Police spokesman Trevor Folke said Tuesday evening there have been no arrests and had no update to share in the “active and ongoing investigation.”



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Star Tribune

Who’s running for Minneapolis school board and what’s at stake in election?

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Bergman is championing efforts to boost literacy and invest in early childhood programming, and getting there, she said, requires financial sustainability, and that may mean closings and mergers. She attended last week’s finance committee meeting — as she’s done on a regular basis — and described the mention of “opportunity” as another rosy way of avoiding hard truths.

The district is spread too thin, she said. Some schools could take more students. Yet in others, class sizes are huge and caseloads so large that educators can’t build relationships with students and families, she said.

“I just fundamentally believe, and it’s been one of the objectives of my campaign, to be someone out in the community talking about this moment, listening to reactions, and listening for the places where families could get on board with the possibility of their beloved school having to close,” she said.

A way to get there, Bergman said, is by consolidating buildings, and in turn, expanding programming — perhaps not far from the school left behind.

Callahan argues that the mere mention of closings is causing families to leave the district: “This is not something that should be talked about so flippantly,” she said.

She said she would entertain the idea only if there also are plans to stabilize and recruit students, plus answers to three questions: How much money is being saved by closing a building? How many students will be retained if the school closes? And how many new students have to enroll to keep it open?



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Minnesota DNR sues Lake County to stop resort expansion near the Boundary Waters

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State environmental regulators are suing the Lake County Planning Commission to try to stop a developer from building 49 new cabins at a century-old fishing resort on an entry lake to the Boundary Waters Canoe Wilderness Area.

The Minnesota Department of Natural Resources said that the planning board ignored local and state shoreline protection rules to allow the Silver Rapids Resort on Farm Lake to build the cabins. The project would accompany an extensive remodel and renovation to a motel and restaurant on the site that would also increase the size and number of docks.

The agency asked a district court judge in a suit filed Oct. 3 to throw out the resort’s permit for the construction. A hearing is scheduled for November and no work will be allowed to start while the case is pending. A group of homeowners in the area opposed to the project filed a separate lawsuit that also seeks to overturn the resort’s permit.

Alex Campbell, the environmental service specialist for the planning commission, declined to comment on ongoing litigation. Commission member and Lake County Board Chair Rich Sve did not return phone calls seeking an interview. Sandy Hoff, one of the site’s developers, did not return messages seeking comment.

Silver Rapids opened in 1919 as a fishing resort on a stretch of shore where White Iron Lake meets the western edge of Farm Lake. The Boundary Waters begins on Farm Lake’s eastern shore a couple miles from the resort. It has 12 small cabins on site, an 11-room motel, a restaurant and 21 campsites.

Developers asked the county planning commission for a permit to allow an $45 million expansion that would include a remodel of the restaurant, the installation of a tiki bar and the building of 49 new cabins that would each be sold to up to four owners apiece and rented out when those owners aren’t using them.

The expansion would increase the total number of dwelling units on the site from 13 to 62 and add 12 new docks with space for 75 boats.

But the county’s shoreline protection rules, which were written in the 1990s, allow the resort a maximum of 29 dwelling units and docks that could fit a maximum of 14 boats, the DNR argued in its complaint.



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