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05-03-22 City Council Agenda REGULAR MEETING AGENDA City Council meetings are being conducted in a hybrid format with in-person and remote options for attending, participating, and commenting. The public can make statements in this meeting during public comment sections, including the public forum beginning at 6:20 pm. Remote Attendance/Comment Options: Members of the public may attend this meeting by watching on cable channel 16, streaming on CCXmedia.org, streaming via Webex or by calling 1- 415-655-0001 and entering access code 2465 002 0011. Members of the public wishing to address the Council remotely have two options: • Via web stream - Stream via Webex and use the ‘raise hand’ feature during public comment sections. • Via phone - Call 1-415-655-0001 and enter meeting code 2465 002 0011. Press *3 to raise your hand during public comment sections. 1. Call to Order A. Pledge of Allegiance Pages B. Roll Call C. Recognition of Golden Valley Fire Battalion Chief Ken Bence for his Participation and Donations Raised for the American Lung Association Fight For Air Climb 3 D. Proclamation for International Firefighters’ Day on May 4, 2022 4-5 E. Presentation of the Certificate of Achievement for Excellence in Financial Reporting 6-7 F. Proclamation Recognizing Arbor Day and Arbor Month 8-9 G. Proclamation Recognizing National Police Week 10-11 2. Additions and Corrections to Agenda 3. Consent Agenda Approval of Consent Agenda - All items listed under this heading are considered to be routine by the City Council and will be enacted by one motion. There will be no discussion of these items unless a Council Member so requests in which event the item will be removed from the general order of business and considered in its normal sequence on the agenda. A. Approval of Special City Council Meeting Minutes of April 19, 2022 12-13 B. Approval of Check Register 14 May 3, 2022 – 6:30 pm Council Conference Room Hybrid Meeting City of Golden Valley City Council Regular Meeting May 3, 2022 – 6:30 pm 2 C. Boards, Commissions and Task Forces: 1. Receive and File Environment Commission Meeting Minutes – March 28, 2022 15-17 2. Receive and File Planning Commission Annual Report and Work Plan 18-29 3. Receive and File Board of Zoning Appeals Annual Report 30-44 4. Receive and File Environmental Commission Annual Report and Work Plan 45-55 D. Bids, Quotes, and Contracts: 1. Approve Fourth Amendment to the License Agreement with Golden Valley Orchestra 56-60 2. Approve Court Rental Agreement with Twin City Tennis Camps 61-71 3. Authorize Waiver Agreement for the Minnesota Retiree Environmental Technical Assistance Program with the State of Minnesota 72-75 4. Approve Purchase of Valves for Golden Valley Pump House 76-78 5. Approve Purchase of Salt Brine Production Equipment 79-82 6. Approve Purchase of Public Safety Lower-Level Conference Room Equipment and Maintenance Contract 83-98 E. Grants and Donations: 1. Approve Resolution No. 22-045 to Accept a Donation for a Park Bench and a Tree to be Located at Lions Park Honoring Jim Zwettler 99-100 F. Approve Resolution No. 22-046 Adopting an Epidemic/Pandemic Response Plan 101-118 G. Approve Resolution No. 22-047 to Update the Crisis Communications Plan 119-141 H. Receive and File March 2022 Quarterly Financial Reports 142-156 I. Approve Resolution No. 22-048 City Classification Structure Adjustments 157-160 4. Public Hearing 5. Old Business 6. New Business All Ordinances listed under this heading are eligible for public input. A. Second Consideration of Ordinance No. 738 Amending the 2022 Master Fee Schedule for Outdoor Service Areas in Targeted Zoning Districts 161-162 B. Review of Council Calendar 163 C. Mayor and Council Communications 1. Other Committee/Meeting updates 7. Adjournment Golden Valley City Council Meeting May 3, 2022 Agenda Item 1. C. Recognition of Golden Valley Fire Battalion Chief Ken Bence for his participation and donations raised for the American Lung Association Fight For Air Climb Prepared By John Crelly, Fire Chief Summary In attendance is Terri Waddell, Senior Director of Development with the American Lung Association in Minnesota. Golden Valley Fire Battalion Chief Ken Bence has been involved with the American Lung Association Fight For Air Climb for many years. Ken and his Golden Valley Fire teammates have raised over $105,000 since their first climb in 2008. That is the most of any team in the entire state. The American Lung Association is recognizing Ken for his years of participation and raising donations. Financial Or Budget Considerations None Recommended Action Acknowledgement of Battalion Chief Ken Bence for his achievement with the American Lung Association Fight For Air Climb. Supporting Documents None Golden Valley City Council Meeting May 3, 2022 Agenda Item 1. D. Proclamation for International Firefighters’ Day on May 4, 2022 Prepared By John Crelly, Fire Chief Summary Proclaiming May 4, 2022 International Firefighters’ Day is in alignment of the City’s long history of dedication and investment in the safety of its citizens, employees and guests through its strong support of the Golden Valley Fire Department. International Firefighters’ Day is a time where the world’s community can recognize and honor the sacrifices that firefighters make to ensure that their communities and environment are as safe as possible, and a day where we can thank current and past firefighters for their contributions. Financial Or Budget Considerations None Recommended Action Motion to Proclaim May 4, 2022 International Firefighters’ Day Supporting Documents • Proclamation (1 page) CITY OF GOLDEN VALLEY PROCLAMATION FOR INTERNATIONAL FIREFIGHTERS’ DAY WHEREAS, International Firefighters’ Day is observed each year on May 4th to honor and remember past firefighters who have lost their lives while serving their communities, to express gratitude to those that have served in this line of work, and to show support and appreciation for those who presently serve; and WHEREAS, firefighters dedicate their lives to the protection of life and property; and WHEREAS, regardless of the language a firefighter speaks, or the country in which they reside, all firefighters fight against the same enemy – fire; and WHEREAS, firefighters follow a long line of tradition and honor that inspires them to help colleagues, neighbors and strangers alike; and WHEREAS, at a moment’s notice, firefighters are quick to respond to uncertain situations to mitigate danger and combat the threat of destructive fire in order to protect individuals, families, and the economic being of our community; and WHEREAS, the demands of firefighting are accompanied by both personal and physical tolls that all firefighters knowingly accept while risking their lives to protect the lives of others; and WHEREAS, the Golden Valley City Council has demonstrated a long history of dedication and investment in the safety of its citizens, employees, and guests through its strong support of the Golden Valley Fire Department. NOW, THEREFORE, let it be known, that the Mayor and City Council of the City of Golden Valley hereby recognize May 4, 2022, as International Firefighters’ Day and ask all to join in remembering the fallen and those still serving their communities and urge all citizens to express appreciation by showing our gratitude to firefighters everywhere. IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I Shepard M. Harris, Mayor of the City of Golden Valley, have hereunto set my hand and caused the great seal of the City of Golden Valley to be affixed this 4th day of May 2022. __________________________ Shepard M. Harris, Mayor Golden Valley City Council Meeting May 3, 2022 Agenda Item 1. E. Receive Award for the Certificate of Achievement for Excellence in Financial Reporting Prepared By Sue Virnig, Finance Director Summary The Certificate of Achievement for Excellence in Financial Reporting is an award from the National Government Finance Officers Association and is the highest form of recognition in governmental accounting and financial reporting. Joel Merry, State Representative for the Minnesota Government Finance Officers Association and Assistant Finance Director from Minnetonka will present the award to the City of Golden Valley for the 2021 financial report. Financial Or Budget Considerations The rating agency considers this a positive item at the time of sale for bonds. Recommended Action Council will allow the representative to present the award to the City of Golden Valley. Supporting Documents • Certificate of Achievement for Excellence in Financial Reporting (1 page) FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE 3/30/2022 For more information contact: Michele Mark Levine, Director/TSC Phone: (312) 977-9700 Fax: (312) 977-4806 Email: mlevine@gfoa.org (Chicago, Illinois)—Government Finance Officers Association of the United States and Canada (GFOA) has awarded the Certificate of Achievement for Excellence in Financial Reporting to City of Golden Valley for its annual comprehensive financial report for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2020. The report has been judged by an impartial panel to meet the high standards of the program, which includes demonstrating a constructive "spirit of full disclosure" to clearly communicate its financial story and motivate potential users and user groups to read the report. The Certificate of Achievement is the highest form of recognition in the area of governmental accounting and financial reporting, and its attainment represents a significant accomplishment by a government and its management. Government Finance Officers Association (GFOA) advances excellence in government finance by providing best practices, professional development, resources, and practical research for more than 21,000 members and the communities they serve. Golden Valley City Council Meeting May 3, 2022 Agenda Item 1. F. Proclamation for Arbor Day and Arbor Month Prepared By Al Lundstrom, Park Maintenance Superintendent Tim Teynor, City Forester Summary The city celebrates Arbor Day by hosting an annual tree planting event to fulfil one of the Tree City USA requirements. This year the Arbor Day Foundation has waived the requirement due to COVID. However, the city will be recording a virtual tree planting by Forestry staff on May 4 at Brookview Park in honor of Arbor Day that will be posted to the city’s website and social media. To become a Tree City USA, a community must meet four criteria: 1.Operate a forestry division 2.Have a tree ordinance 3.Manage a comprehensive community forestry program 4.Observe Arbor Day The city was awarded the Tree City USA Award for the 35th consecutive year, in addition to 10 Tree City Growth Awards from previous years. Tree City USA recognizes communities that have proven their commitment to an effective, ongoing community forestry program. Tree City USA is sponsored in cooperation with the National Association of State Foresters and the USDA Forest Service. Financial Or Budget Considerations Not Applicable Recommended Action Motion to adopt Proclamation for Arbor Day and Arbor Month declaring May 4, 2022, as Arbor Day and May 2022 as Arbor Month in the City of Golden Valley. Supporting Documents •Proclamation for Arbor Day and Arbor Month (1 page) CITY OF GOLDEN VALLEY PROCLAMATION FOR ARBOR DAY AND ARBOR MONTH WHEREAS, Golden Valley’s urban forest treasures were a significant attraction to early settlers because of their usefulness and the beautiful environment they provided; and WHEREAS, trees are an increasingly vital resource in Golden Valley today, enriching our lives by purifying air and water, helping conserve soil and energy, serving as recreational settings, providing habitat for wildlife of all kinds, and making our community more livable; and WHEREAS, trees are a renewable resource giving us paper, wood for our homes, fuel for our fires and countless other wood products; and WHEREAS, trees in our city increase property values, enhance the economic vitality of business areas, and beautify our community; and WHEREAS, trees, wherever they are planted, are a source of warmth and security; and WHEREAS, Golden Valley has been recognized as a Tree City USA by the National Arbor Day Foundation and desires to continue its urban forestry efforts; NOW, THEREFORE, I, Shepard Harris, Mayor of the City of Golden Valley, have proclaimed May 4, 2022, as Arbor Day and May 2022 as Arbor Month in the City of Golden Valley, and urge all citizens to support efforts to protect our trees and woodlands and to support our City’s urban forestry program; and BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED, the Golden Valley City Council urges all citizens to become more aware of the importance of trees to their well-being, and to plant, nurture, protect, and wisely use Golden Valley’s great treasure of trees. IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have hereunto set my hand and caused the great seal of the City of Golden Valley to be affixed this 3rd day of May 2022. __________________________ Shepard M. Harris, Mayor Golden Valley City Council Meeting May 3, 2022 Agenda Item 1. G. Proclamation Recognizing National Police Week Prepared By Alice White, Acting Police Chief Summary National Police Week will be observed from May 15 through May 21, 2022. This annual, weekly observance pays special recognition to law enforcement officers who serve and protect citizens with courage, dedication, and dignity. The week begins with the Peace Officers Memorial Standing Guard on Saturday, May 14th at 7:00pm until Sunday May 15th at 7:00pm. This 24-hour annual observance honors and remembers the 297 Minnesota Peace Officers who have lost their lives in the line of duty The Officers of the Golden Valley Police Department have chosen the profession of Law Enforcement and have made the decision to sacrifice themselves, for others, should it become necessary. I invite all civilians to recognize and thank all Peace officers for this choice. Financial Or Budget Considerations N/A Supporting Documents • Proclamation Recognizing National Police Week (1 page) CITY OF GOLDEN VALLEY PROCLAMATION RECOGNIZING NATIONAL POLICE WEEK MAY 15 - 21, 2022 WHEREAS, the first recognition of National Police Week and Peace Officers Memorial Day was signed by President Kennedy in 1962. It was resolved by Congress that May 15 be designated Peace Officers Memorial Day and the week in which it falls be designated as Police Week; and WHEREAS, the members of the law enforcement agencies of Golden Valley, Hennepin County and the State of Minnesota continuously provide a vital public service playing an essential role in safeguarding the rights and freedoms of the City of Golden Valley; and WHEREAS, it is important that all citizens know and understand the duties, responsibilities, hazards, and sacrifices of their law enforcement agencies, and that members of our law enforcement agency recognize their duty to serve the people by safeguarding life and property, by protecting them against violence and disorder, and by protecting the innocent against deception and the weak against oppression. NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED that the City Council of the City of Golden Valley does hereby proclaim the week of May 15 through May 21, 2022 as National Police Week in the City of Golden Valley, and I call upon all citizens and civic organizations to join in commemorating our public safety professionals, and to recognize the substantial contributions they make to protecting our health, safety, and quality of life. IN WITNESS WHEREOF, that I, Shepard M. Harris, Mayor of the City of Golden Valley have hereunto set my hand and caused the seal of the City to be affixed this 3rd day of May, 2022. ___________________________ Shepard M. Harris, Mayor SPECIAL CITY COUNCIL MEETING MINUTES City Council meetings are being conducted in a hybrid format with in-person and remote options for attending, participating, and commenting. Present: Mayor Pro Tempore Maurice Harris, Council Members Denise La Mere-Anderson, Gillian Rosenquist, and Kimberly Sanberg Absent: Mayor Shep Harris Staff present: City Manager Cruikshank and City Clerk Schyma Mayor Pro Tempore Harris started the special meeting at 5:10 pm. 1. Commissioner Interviews The Golden Valley City Council interviewed the following candidate for appointment to various boards and commissions - Dan Wilcox. 2. Discussion Regarding Appointments and Reappointments to Various Boards and Commissions The Council consensus was to make the following appointments and reappointments at the regular meeting: BOARD OF ZONING APPEALS TERM DATE Nancy Nelson April 30, 2023 Richard Orenstein April 30, 2023 Chris Carlson April 30, 2023 Kade Arms-Regenold April 30, 2023 ENVIRONMENTAL COMMISSION TERM DATE Debra Yahle April 30, 2025 Tonia Galonska April 30, 2025 HUMAN SERVICES COMMISSION TERM DATE Aaron Black April 30, 2025 Esther Black (Youth) April 30, 2023 OPEN SPACE AND RECREATION COMMISSION TERM DATE Roger Bergman April 30, 2025 John Cornelius April 30, 2025 Matthew Sanders April 30, 2025 April 19, 2022 – 5:00 pm Council Conference Room Hybrid Meeting City of Golden Valley City Council Special Meeting April 6, 2021 – 5:30 pm 2 PLANNING COMMISSION TERM DATE Adam Brookins April 30, 2025 Ellen Brenna April 30, 2025 DIVERSITY, EQUITY, & INCLUSION COMMISSION TERM DATE Melissa Johnson April 30, 2023 Nyre Chester April 30, 2023 Lee Thoresen April 30, 2023 POLICE, EMPLOYMENT, ACCOUNTABILITY, & COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT COMMISSION TERM DATE Loretta Arradondo April 30, 2024 Roslyn Harmon April 30, 2025 3. Adjournment The Council adjourned by unanimous consent at 6:15 pm. ________________________________ Shepard M. Harris, Mayor ATTEST: _________________________________ Theresa Schyma, City Clerk Golden Valley City Council Meeting May 3, 2022 Agenda Item 3. B. Approval of City Check Register Prepared By Sue Virnig, Finance Director Summary Approval of the check register for various vendor claims against the City of Golden Valley. Financial Or Budget Considerations The check register has a general ledger code as to where the claim is charged. At the end of the register is a total amount paid by fund. Recommended Action Motion to authorize the payment of the bills as submitted. Supporting Documents Document is located on city website at the following location: http://weblink.ci.golden-valley.mn.us/WebLink/DocView.aspx?id=976099&dbid=0&repo=GoldenValley The check register for approval: • 04-15-22 Check Register REGULAR MEETING MINUTES Remote Attendance: Members of the public may attend th3is meeting via Webex by calling 1-415- 655-0001 and entering access code 1773 93 4642. Questions/Comments: Members of the public who have questions about the commission or any items on the agenda should contact the staff commission liaison – Eric Eckman, Environmental Resources Supervisor, eeckman@goldenvalleymn.gov, 763-593-8084. 1. Call to Order The meeting was called to order by Chair Weirich at 6:30 pm following joint meeting with OSRC. 2. Roll Call Commissioners present: Scott Seys, Wendy Weirich, Tonia Galonska, Dawn Hill, Debra Yahle, Felix Fettig, Rachel Zuraff Commissioners absent: Shannon Hansen, Jim Stremel Council Members present: None Staff present: Eric Eckman, Environmental Resources Supervisor; Carrie Nelson, Administrative Assistant. 3. New Member Rachel Zuraff 4. Approval of Agenda MOTION by Commissioner Hill, seconded by Commissioner Seys to approve the agenda for March 28, 2022 and the motion carried. 5. Approval of February 28, 2022 Regular Meeting Minutes MOTION by Commissioner Fettig, seconded by Commissioner Galonska to approve the minutes of February 28, 2022 as submitted and the motion carried. 6. Old Business A. Recycling and Organics Update i. GV is at approximately 30% participation – about 2,100 households out of 6,976 put their bin out at least once between Feb 4 – Mar 4. It’s expected to rise when the snowbirds return and when the weather is warmer. ii. A formal participation study will be done in October. iii. The Republic Services Customer Service Number & E-Mail will be available throughout the length of the contract. There is an App in development. iv. Trucks will have tablets in them so contamination can be tagged right away when seen. March 28, 2022 – 6:30 pm City of Golden Valley Environmental Commission Regular Meeting March 28, 2022 – 6:30 pm 2 B. Environmental Justice Collaboration i. Discussed upcoming forum and updating the green infrastructure prioritization maps. ii. Building and Equitable Golden Valley Community Forum is schedule for May 19, 6:00- 7:30 pm. It will include topics of race, diversity, equity, and more. Discussion panelists feature a mix of City staff, councilmembers, commissioners, community members, and special guests. C. Energy Recognition Program i. Ethan and communications staff working on this. ii. Name will be “Energy Hero” and will include GV or Golden Valley in front of it when applicable. iii. We can list businesses on the website who have been recognized, but can’t promote them. iv. There is no official launch date, but we hope to have something in place by May 4. This is the 1-year anniversary of the adoption of the Energy Action Plan. D. 2022 Work Plan MOTION by Commissioner Hill, seconded by Commissioner Yahle to approve the 2022 Work Plan as amended at the meeting and the motion carried. Amendments are as follows: i. 2021 Accomplishments 1. Call out what the EC did vs what staff did? 2. Make the use of periods after bullet points more consistent. ii. 2022 Work Plan 1. Recycling & Organics 1. Wait until current 5-yr recycling contract is close to expiring and then look into organized trash hauling. 2. Change the word ‘in’ to ‘within’ before Hennepin County in the 2nd bullet point. 2. Energy Action 1. Add the word ‘solar’ in parenthesis after clean, renewable energy 3. Environmental Justice 1. ‘Consider’ drafting an Environmental Justice resolution. 4. Community Outreach 1. Add ‘and best practices for yards and gardens’ to the end of the 3rd bullet point. 2. Delete the last bullet point – ‘explore and develop a partnership with local schools…’ 3. Add a bullet point for Arbor Day and Earth Day activities. 5. Transportation 1. Add Hwy 55 and Douglas Dr Underpass. 2. Add BRT Corridor Study. City of Golden Valley Environmental Commission Regular Meeting March 28, 2022 – 6:30 pm 3 7. New Business A. EV Charging Infrastructure i. Staff presented an opportunity for a no risk, no cost program to increase number of EV Charging stations in GV using 3rd party consultant. ii. Install near parks, community centers, government buildings, and other gathering spaces with parking lots. Discussed potential locations identified by staff. iii. City will receive income through a monthly license fee for the parking spaces and revenue sharing if the use of charges reaches a certain level. iv. This program also offers no cost electric vehicles to the City, with an option to purchase them after 5 years. v. The program typically lasts 10 years with options to extend another 5 or 10. vi. City can request as many charging stations as they choose. vii. Could these be powered using solar and wind? B. Program/Project Updates i. Could the EC have a look at major projects earlier on? C. Council Updates i. None D. Other Business i. 2022 City Property Inventory – the parcels identified for development of affordable housing aren’t the properties preserved for open space. Commissioners made note that development of affordable housing should not occur in areas where there might be a concern about noise, air quality, flooding, inadequate tree cover or other environmental factors. 8. Adjournment MOTION by Commissioner Galonska, seconded by Commissioner Seys to adjourn the meeting at 8:47 pm and the motion carried. ATTEST: ________________________________ _______________________________________ Carrie Nelson, Administrative Assistant Wendy Weirich, Chair Golden Valley City Council Meeting May 3, 2022 Agenda Item 3. C. 1. Accept Planning Commission 2021 Annual Report and Approve the 2022 Work Plan Prepared By Jason Zimmerman, Planning Manager Summary At the April 13, 2022, Council Work Session, Planning Commission Chair Lauren Pockl and Planning staff presented the 2021 Annual Report and draft 2022 Work Plan. Financial Or Budget Considerations None Recommended Action Motion to accept the Planning Commission 2021 Annual Report and Approve the 2022 Work Plan. Supporting Documents •Planning Commission 2021 Annual Report and 2022 Work Plan (11 pages) PLANNING COMMISSION 2021 ANNUAL REPORT AND 2022 WORK PLAN Golden Valley Planning Commission 2021 Annual Report 2 2021 Planning Commission Commissioners Lauren Pockl, Chair (2024) Adam Brookins, Vice -Chair (2022) Andy Johnson, Secretary (2024) Rich Baker (2022) Ron Blum Sophia Ginis (2022) Mike Ruby (2023) Ryan Sadeghi Chuck Segelbaum (2023) Noah Orloff, Youth Member Council Liaison Gillian Rosenquist City Staff Marc Nevinski, Physical Development Director Jason Zimmerman, Planning Manager Myles Campbell, Planner Amie Kolesar, Planning Assistant Purpose, Mission, and Prescribed Duties The Planning Commission shall: • Review and make recommendations on specific development proposals made by private developers and public agencies. • Review and make recommendations on proposed rezonings, subdivision plans, amendments to the zoning text, platting regulations and variances, and similar items having to do with administration and regulatory measures. • Conduct special studies dealing with items such as renewal, civic design, maintenance of a suitable living and working environment, economic conditions, etc. These studies may be conducted at the initiative of the Planning Commission and/or specific direction from the City Council. • Review major public capital improvement plans against the policy and goals stated in the Comprehensive Plan for the area. • Advise and make recommendations relative to housing, new development, and redevelopment projects propose d by the HRA prior to the final commitment of such projects by the HRA. • Advise and make recommendations in matters relating to and affecting the environment. Golden Valley Planning Commission 2021 Annual Report 3 Table Of Contents 2021 Overview page 4 2022 Proposed Work Plan page 11 Golden Valley Planning Commission 2021 Annual Report 4 2021 Overview In a year that saw an increase in activity following a lull driven by the uncertainties of COVID-19, the Golden Valley Planning Commission spent 2021 both reviewing proposals for private development as well as working closely with staff to develop new language for the Zoning Chapter in an effort to continue to modernize the City Code and improve accessibility for the public. The Commission provided review for major amendments to three existing Planned Unit Developments (PUDs) as well as one new PUD in the northwest corner of the Golden Valley Country Club. It recommended approval of a new plat for the construction of a credit union and offered feedback on a site plan for new apartments on Douglas Drive in place of the former Tenant office building. Other proposals required revisions to the future land use and zoning maps, as well as subdivision actions. These included the Golden Valley Business Center and Artessa Senior Cooperative projects. A handful of rezonings were also initiated to try to bring to a close the process of aligning the zoning map with the future land use map in the City’s 2040 Comprehensive Plan. Zoning text amendments were researched and advanced to the City Council for consideration, including work on allowing rowhouses, new regulations around pawn shops, and an extensive rewrite of the zoning use tables. The Commission also began investigation of outdoor service areas and accessory dwelling units. In 2022, the Commission will work to complete its research on accessory dwelling units and recommend new zoning language for the City Council to consider. Other agenda items include augmenting the current regulations around mobile uses and updating the City’s off-street parking requirements. Staff will work to conduct education around the Planned Unit Development process and arrange for equity training for Commissioners. 2021 Activity The information below attempts to capture in figures and graphs the activities of the Planning Commission over the past year. Planning Commission Meetings Held: 21 Cancelled: 3 P lanning Applications Considered 25 Staff -Led Discussions/Presentations 22 Zoning Text Amendments Considered 3 Golden Valley Planning Commission 2021 Annual Report 5 17 8 Planning Applications Considered Recommended Approval Recommended Denial 14 24 8 17 25 0 5 10 15 20 25 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 Total Planning Applications by Year Golden Valley Planning Commission 2021 Annual Report 6 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Site Plan Review Future Land Use Map Amend Zoning Map Amend Platting (Subdivision/Lot Combination) Platting Variance CUP/Amend PUD/Major Amend Planning Applications by Type (2021) 0 2 4 6 8 10 12 Site Plan Review Future Land Use Map Amend Zoning Map Amend Platting (Subdivision/Lot Combination) Platting Variance CUP/Amend PUD/Major Amend Planning Applications by Type (5 years) 2021 2020 2019 2018 2017 0 1,800 3,600900 Feet IPrint Date: 3/21/2022Sources:-Hennepin County Surveyors Office for Property Lines (2022).-City of Golden Valley for all other layers. PlanningApplication Types, 2017 - 2021 A Location Year !2021: 20 !2020: 11 !2019: 8 !2018: 24 !2017: 14 0 1,800 3,600900 Feet IPrint Date: 3/21/2022Sources:-Hennepin County Surveyors Office for Property Lines (2022).-City of Golden Valley for all other layers. PlanningApplication Types, 2017 - 2021 A Location Type "PUD/Major Amend: "CUP: 22 !Platting (Subdivision/Lot Consolidation): 17 !Platting Variance: 1 !Rezoning: 14 ¸Land Use Change: 12 ¸Site Plan Review: 2 Golden Valley Planning Commission 2021 Annual Report 9 Zoning Text Amendments Considered Item Description Rowhouses Allows the construction of rowhouses as a permitted use in the Moderate Density Residential (R-2) zoning district Pawn Shops New regulations around the establishment of pawn shops, precious metal dealers, consumer small loan lenders, and currency exchanges Use Tables Updates to the lists of uses in each zoning district to create summary tables, refine language, reorganize the Institutional Subdistricts, and other modernizations Staf f Led Discussions/Presentations • Annual Commissioner Orientation • Zoning Code: 17 o Rowhouses: 1 o Use Tables/RLUIPA : 7 o Interim Uses/Outdoor Service Areas: 3 o Pawn shops: 2 o Accessory Dwelling Units: 4 • Exclusionary Zoning • Class I Material Request Consideration • Downtown Study Final Report • 2022-2031 Capital Improvement Program Other PUD Amendments C onsidered (not reviewed by Planning Commission) • Minor Amendments: 2 o Carousel Automobiles PUD 95 – revision to the amount of allowed signage to accommodate advertising for three dealerships on the site (APPROVED) o General Mills PUD 83 – updated language to clarify allowed uses on both the south and north lots of the James Ford Bell campus (APPROVED) • Administrative Amendments: 1 o Carousel Automobiles PUD 95 – modifications to landscaping and utility plans to accommodate new electric vehicle charging stations (APPROVED) Golden Valley Planning Commission 2021 Annual Report 10 Major Projects Reviewed Item/Location Type Description Regency Hospital 1300 Hidden Lakes Parkway Major PUD Amendment Amend the existing PUD to allow for an expansion of the existing hospital building Carousel Auto 9191 and 9393 Wayzata Blvd Major PUD Amendment Amend the existing PUD to add a third dealership and reconfigure aspects of the site to manage auto inventory storage Greenway Villas NW corner of GV Country Club Land Use and Zoning Map Amendments, Preliminary and Final PUD Modify land use and zoning to allow for residential development; create a new PUD to allow for seven villa home to be constructed Meadowbrook Elementary 5300 and 5430 Glenwood Ave Land Use and Zoning Map Amendments, Major PUD Amendment Modify land use and zoning and amend the existing PUD to incorporate a new parcel into the campus and improve circulation General Mills - JFB 9000 Plymouth Ave Zoning Map Amendments Modify zoning to clarify allowed uses on north half of site Academy of Whole Learning 8810 10th Ave N Replat/Lot Combination Combine three platted parcels to allow for construction of new gymnasium Spire Credit Union 6440 Wayzata Blvd Subdivision, CUP Divide one lot and allow the construction of a credit union with a drive thru Golden Valley Business Center 6000 Olson Memorial Hwy Land Use and Zoning Map Amendments, Subdivision Modify land use and zoning and subdivide one lot to allow for the construction of two new light industrial buildings Artessa Senior Coop SE corner of GV Country Club Land Use and Zoning Map Amendments, Subdivision, CUP Modify land use and zoning and subdivide to create a new lot for a senior The Simmons Group Apts 1111 Douglas Drive Site Plan Review Review the site plans for two new multifamily buildings Previously Approved Projects that Completed Construction in 202 1 None Golden Valley Planning Commission 2021 Annual Report 11 2022 Proposed Work Plan Implementation of 2040 Comprehensive Plan • Revisit proposed rezoning of the southeast corner of the Winnetka and Olson Memorial Highway intersection in order to achieve consistency with the adopted Future Land Use Map (awaiting additional information from pending Downtown traffic study and MnDOT Hwy 55 BRT study) Zoning Code Amendments/Updates • Research and make recommendations on adding Accessory Dwelling Units as a permitted or conditional use in one or more of the residential zoning districts; provide an initial evaluation of “tiny homes” as an affordable housing option • Expand the types of Mobile Uses that can operate in the city beyond food trucks and draft any necessary accompanying regulations • Examine the Off-Street Parking section of code to align existing categories with new use tables, to revisit minimum parking requirements, and to consider new regulations around electric charging stations • Update the Telecommunications section of the Zoning Chapter to address small cell telecom Planning Application Review and Evaluation • Continue to review and make recommendations on land use applications as they are submitted to the City, including subdivision requests, Conditional Use Permits, and Planned Unit Developments Commissioner Training and Education • Discuss the effectiveness of the city’s current Planned Unit Development regulations and look for ways to improve or modify PUD requirements to better address City priorities • Conduct e quity training coordinated with the City’s Equity and Inclusion Manager and the Diversity and Equity Committee of the state chapter of the American Planning Association Commissioner Initiatives • Work with staff to explore new and innovative planning concepts and to respond to the interests of individual Commissioners Golden Valley City Council Meeting May 3, 2022 Agenda Item 3. C. 3. Accept Board of Zoning Appeals 2021 Annual Report Prepared By Myles Campbell, Planner Summary At the April 13, 2022, Council Work Session, the Board of Zoning Appeals Vice Chair, Chris Carlson, presented a review of the work completed by the Board in 2021. Financial Or Budget Considerations None Recommended Action Motion to accept the Planning Commission 2021 Annual Report Supporting Documents • Board of Zoning Appeals – 2021 Annual Report (14 pages) BOARD OF ZONING APPEALS 2021 ANNUAL REPORT Golden Valley Board of Zoning Appeals 2021 Annual Report 2 2021 Board of Zoning Appeals Commissioners Richard Orenstein, Chair (2022) Sophia Ginis, Vice Chair (2022) Rotating Planning Commission Representative Chris Carlson, Vice Chair (2022) Kade Arms-Regenold (Youth Representative, Nancy Nelson (2022) 2021) Kade Arms-Regenold (2022) Note: Terms run May 1-April 30 Council Liaison Larry Fonnest City Staff Marc Nevinski, Physical Development Director Myles Campbell, Planner Jason Zimmerman, Planning Manager Amie Kolesar, Planning Assistant Purpose, Mission, And Prescribed Duties Code, which is Chapter 113 of the Golden Valley City Code. The BZA consists of five members that meet once a month if there are any petitions pending for action. A Planning Commissioner serves as the fifth member of the BZA. Criteria for Analysis A variance may be granted when the petitioner for the variance establishes that there are practical difficulties in complying with this Chapter. “Practical difficulties,” as used in connection with the granting of a variance, means: • the property owner proposes to use the property in a reasonable manner not permitted by this Chapter • the pli ght of the property owner is due to circumstances unique to the property not created by the property owner • the variance, if granted, will not alter the essential character of the locality Economic considerations alone do not constitute practical difficulties. Practical difficulties include, but are not limited to, inadequate access to direct sunlight for solar energy systems. The BZA may not grant a variance that would allow any use not allowed for property in the Zoning District where the affected person’s land is located. The BZA may impose conditions in the granting of variances. A condition must be directly related to and must bear a rough proportionality to the impact created by the variance . Golden Valley Board of Zoning Appeals 2021 Annual Report 3 Table Of Contents 2021 Overview page 4 Five-Year Summary: 2017-2021 page 6 Golden Valley Board of Zoning Appeals 2021 Annual Report 4 2021 Overview Variances Considered 23 In R-1 Residential Zoning District 16 Golden Valley Board of Zoning Appeals 2021 Annual Report 5 Golden Valley Board of Zoning Appeals 2021 Annual Report 6 Five-Year Summary: 2017-2021 Variances Considered 102 In R-1 Residential Zoning District 79 In R-2 Residential Zoning District 6 In Commercial Zoning District 6 In Mixed -Use Zoning District 2 In Institutional Zoning District 0 In Industrial Zoning District 1 In Light Industrial Zoning District 4 In Office Zoning District 4 Golden Valley Board of Zoning Appeals 2021 Annual Report 7 Golden Valley Board of Zoning Appeals 2021 Annual Report 8 Types of Variances Considered Variance Type Description Front Yard Setback Requests to build structures within 35 feet of the front yard property line in R- 1, R-2, and Institutional Districts. Institutional Districts also require that at least 25 fe et be landscaped and maintained as a buffer zone. Side Yard Setback Requests to build structures within the side yard setback area, which ranges from 5 feet to 50 feet depending on the type of structure and the Zoning District. Rear Yard Setback Requests to build structures within the rear yard setback area, which ranges from 5 feet to 50 feet depending on the type of structure and the Zoning District. Articulation Requests to waive articulation requirement, which requires inward or outward articulation of 2 feet in depth and 8 feet in length for every 32 feet of side wall on homes in the R-1 and R-2 Zoning Districts. Height Requests to build principal structures over the maximum height requirement, which ranges from 25 to 28 feet depending on the type of roof and the Zoning District. Fence Height Requests to build fences over the maximum height requirements, which ranges from 4 to 12 feet depending on the location on the property (front yard or side/rear yard) and the Zoning District. Building Envelope Requests to build a structure beyond the maximum building envelope, which is defined for properties within the R-1 and R-2 Zoning Districts. This includes the 2:1 or 4:1 slope requirement when the structure is taller than 15 feet at the side yard setback line. Accessory Structure Location Requests to build a garage, shed, or other accessory structure in a location that is not completely to the rear of the principal structure or in a location that is not at least 10 feet from the principal structure. Accessory Structure Size Requests to build a garage, shed, or other accessory structures above the allowable limit of 1,000 square feet in R-1, R-2, and Institutional Zoning Districts. Accessory Structure Height Requests to build a garage, shed, or other accessory structures above the maximum height requirements, which is 10 feet in the R-1, R-2, and Institutional Zoning Districts. Garage Width Request to build a garage in the R-2 District that is wider than 65 percent of the width of the front façade. Average Grade Requests to change the average grade of a property by more than 1 foot. Shoreland Setback Requests to build a structure within the minimum shoreland setbacks, which are larger than standard front, side, and rear setbacks. Impervious Surface Requests to construct additional impervious surface beyond the maximum allowable, which is 50 percent of the lot in R-1 and R-2 and 60 percent in R-3 and R-4 Zoning Districts. Minimum Parking Request to build or use an existing parking lot or garage with a number of parking spaces that is less than the minimum required based on the use of the property. Golden Valley Board of Zoning Appeals 2021 Annual Report 9 Variance Type Description Outdoor Lighting Request regarding the total amount of foot candles of light produced by lighting systems, the amount of allowed light trespass, or other issues relating to lighting systems. Roadway Width Requests to build a private roadway or drive aisles above or below the maximum and minimum required widths respectively. Added Curb Cut Requests to allow additional access from public rights of way then what is typically allowed by code. Laurel Ave Duluth St 10th Ave N Regent Ave NNoble Ave NOlympia St Western Ave Culver Rd 23rd Ave N Kelly DrWayzata Blvd Knoll St Plym outh Ave N Sumter Ave NPennsylvania Ave NN Frontage Rd S cottQuebec Ave NValders Ave NCountry Club Dr 26th Ave N Sandburg Rd Zane Ave NM anor D rWinsdale St Brunswick Ave N34th Ave N Boone Ave NEarl St Rd A veNBridgewaterRdTryo l T ra ilFlorida Ave NHanley RdGolden Hills Dr Lowry Ter Winnetka Ave SXerxes Ave NIndependence Ave NMajorDrZenith Ave NFlag Ave NWestwood Dr SWestbend Rd Sumter Ave SHampshire L nOrchard Ave NCircle Down Lindsay St NobleDrPoplar DrAve Heights Dr Heights Dr S Frontage R d DresdenLnLeg endDrFrontage RdBrookridgeAveNWinnetka Ave NLawn TerNatchez Ave SGettysburg Ave NMarket St Naper St Decatur Ave N Oregon Ave NK e w a n e e Wa y Pennsylvania Ave SDona Ln ArdmoreDrGlenwo o d P k w y Tryol T railWestbrook Rd Mc N air D r Phoenix St Ottawa Ave NThotland Rd Wisconsin Ave NUtah Ave SJersey Ave SBies DrWills PlColo n ial DrEdgewood Ave NB a ss ett C re e k DrAdair Ave NJune Ave SNevada Ave NHarold Ave BrookviewPkwyN Wynnwood Rd Lee Ave NT urners CrossroadNAquil aAveNMendelssohn Ave NBrookview Pkwy SE l m daleRd M e a nderRd Jersey Ave NSorell Ave Dakota Ave SVista DrKyleAveNWindsorWayAve SGoldenValley R o a d /C oun ty R o ad 66Highway 100Ros eMaryland Ave NAlfred Rd Cortlawn Cir SIdaho Ave NIndianaAve N7th Ave N Rhode Island Ave NBrunswick Ave SZane Ave NBurntsideDrRoanokeRd WoodstockAve PerryAveNAve NTrailMedl e y L n Georgia Ave NWally St C utacross R d Xenia Ave NHampshireKillarney DrKentucky Ave SJune Ave NZephyr PlLouisiana Ave SCloverLnCl o verlea fDr Clo v e rle afDrLil acLoop MaryHillsDrFloridaAveSXylonAveNDecaturAveNKent uckyAveNTopelRd YorkAve NGreenValley Rd Chatela in T er N o r m a n d y Bonni e LnElgin Pl MerribeeDr Louisiana Ave NDuluthLn Marie Ln E Kalt ern LnOrkla DrLilacDrNToledoAveNM a rkayRidge Westbend Rd FairlawnWayG o ld enValle y R d Nevada Ave SMarieLn W WestmoreWay WolfberryLn HamptonRd YukonCtHampshireAve NKentleyAve Cortlawn Cir WWinnetka OregonAve SPlUnityAveNB a s s e t t C reek Dr BassettCreek Ln M i nnaq u a D rToledoA v e NWinfieldAveUnity Ave NBr e n n e rPa s s FaribaultSt ArcherAve N AdelineLn K i n g s t o n C i r G o ld e n V a lle y D r VarnerCirValders Ct G re e n v ie wL n Hampshire Ave NWinnetka Phoenix St Duluth St Wayzata BlvdWisconsinAveN Adell A v e MajorAveNZealandAveNEnsignAveNKelly DrXerxes Ave NKnoll St Lilac Dr NFlag Ave NRhode Island Ave NPlymouth Ave N Wayzata Blvd G o lden Valley R d Orkla DrWayzata BlvdAve NZealandAveNS tCroixCirLeeAveNLamplighterLnSandbur g LnMadisonAve W Lewis RdLilac Dr NHampton Rd Elgin Pl Boone Ave NCircleDownJersey Ave NWinsdale St OttawaAve NOlympia St Winnetka Heights Dr Lila c Dr NLouisiana Ave NKyleAveNNoble AveManor 1 0th A v e N RhodeIslandAveSHalfMoonDr OrdwayLaurel Pt Loring Ln Winsdale StZane Ave NHarold Ave FloridaAve NJerseyAve NParkview TerPhoenix StWisconsin Ave NW a y z ataBlvd FranceAve NHiddenLakes P k wyIsland DrTryol Trail Maryla n dAveNMedicine Lake Road / County Road 70 B e t t y CrockerDr RidgewayRdRhodeIslandAveNTerrace LnCastle CtFieldIndiana Ave NSchaper Rd Colonial Rd 24th Ave N 27th Ave N SussexRdKing Hill RdConstance Dr W25th Ave N SpringValley CirFrontena cAve SkylineDrSkyline DrHampshirePlCavellAveN Laurel Ave S ki H ill R d Me ri di a nDr WesternTerLouisianaAve NColoradoS t M a rg a re t D rRoanoke CirCherokeeOak GroveQuebecAve SKennethWay WasatchLnWelcomeTyrolCrest CortlawnCir N NatchezAveNBu r n t s i d e DrG o ld e n V a lle yRdGeneralMillsBlvdE d g e w o o d A v e SEdgewood Ave SEllis LnJonellen Ln WestwoodLn Gregory Crestvi ewAveColoradoWi s c ons i n Ave SValley-woodCir Maryland Ave SMedicine Lake Road / County Road 70 SchullerGettysburgCt Vermont Ave SFloridaCtMajorCir PrincetonAve SValery RdBrogger CirGardenPark QuailAve NOrchardLouisiana Ave SWestern Ave Perry Ave NIdaho Ave NWayzata BlvdValders Ave NValders Ave NYosemiteAve NWinsdale St Decatur Ave NNatchezAve SG le n w o o d P k w y OttawaAve SEdgewoodAve NSpringValleyRdSt Croix AveN WaterfordDrMendelssohn Ave NManches te r Dr HeritageCir StCroix Ave N W el comeWinnetka Avenue North / County Road 156Douglas Drive / County Road 1021 Highway 1693 S F r ontage Rd DuluthStreet /Count y R o ad 66 LaurelCurvEnsign Ave NOrchardAve NIdaho Ave NKnoll WestbrookRd Winsdale St BrunswickScott Ave NWynnwood Rd HillsboroAve NSunsetRid g e Dr Que bec St OttawaAveSAngeloDrWoodlandTrailHiddenLakes P k wyWinsdale St AlpinePas sAvondale Rd Dou glasAve QuentinAveSRavineMaddausLn LnKyle PlUnity Ave NToledoAveNSpruce TrWes t chesterCirC irCt WaterfordScottAveNDawnviewTerDawnview Ter C onstanceDrELilac Dr NPlymouth Ave NWisconsinAveNMedley Rd 6 PaisleyLnGl e ndenTer P l Noble Ave NTer B yrd A v e N P ark vie wBl v dY ork AveNMeadowLnSLilac Dr NAve NDuluth St Patsy Ln 2 3 H illsboroINDEX 1 - English Cir 2 - Kings Valley Rd 3 - Kings Valley Rd E 4 - Kings Valley Rd W 5 - Marquis Rd 6 - Mayfair Rd 7 - Stroden Cir 8 - Tamarin Tr CarriagePath M e n d e ls s o h n L n N ValeCrestRdCir Cir TyrolTrail Janalyn Cir Glencrest RdJanalynCir StrawberryLn WestwoodDrNBe verly A v e Leber SunnyridgeLnMeadow Ln NMeadowLn N Dahlberg D r Woodstock Ave Lilac DrNN Frontage R dHeath-brookeCir Legend Ln Bassett C reekD r Glenwood Avenue /Co u n ty R oad40WelcomeAveNWesleyCommons DrTheod o r e W i r th PkwyQuailAveNPerryAveNQuailAveNRegentAveNScottA v eN33rd Ave N L o wry Drake R d T r it on Dr GlenwoodAvePennsylvania Ave NG o ldenV alleyR dJulianne Ter WesleyDr 4 5 6 7 8 8 2 2AveN ZealandAve NZealandAveNAquilaAveN Aquila Ave NM a ndanA v eNPlymouth Ave N OrklaDrKnol l S t Orkl a DrValders Ave NMedley Cir AveS Ewald T e rK in g CreekRdH aroldAve LoringLn Woodstoc k A v e Yosemite CirYosemiteAveNXeniaAveSTurners Crossroad SRadisson Rd Turnp i keRdTurnpikeRd B a s s ett Cre ekB l vdP a isleyLnPaisleyLn Alley AlleyHi ghway 100Highway 169I n t e r s t a t e -3 9 4 / H i g h w a y 1 2 In ters ta te-3 9 4 / Hig h way 1 2 Highway 55 / Olson Memorial Highway Highway 55 / Olson M emorial Highway H ig h w a y 5 5 / O l s o n M e m o r ia l H ig h w a y !( !( !( !(!( !( !( !( !( !(!( !( !( !(!( !( !( !( !( !(!( !(!(!( !(!( !( !( !(!( !(!( !(!(!( !( !( !( !(!( !(!( !( !( !( !( !( !( !( !(!( !( !(!(!(!( !(!(!(!( !( !( !( !( !( !( !( !( !( !( !( !(!( !( !(!( !( !(!( !( !( !( !( !( !( !( !( !( !( !( !( !( !( !( !(!( !( !( !( !( !( !( !(!( !( 0 1,800 3,600900 Feet IPrint Date: 3/22/2022Sources:-Hennepin County Surveyors Office for Property Lines (2022).-City of Golden Valley for all other layers. VarianceRequests Requests by Year !(2017 !(2018 !(2019 !(2020 !(2021 Laurel Ave Duluth St 10th Ave N Regent Ave NNoble Ave NOlympia St Western Ave Culver Rd 23rd Ave N Kelly DrWayzata Blvd Knoll St Plym outh Ave N Sumter Ave NPennsylvania Ave NN Frontage Rd S cottQuebec Ave NValders Ave NCountry Club Dr 26th Ave N Sandburg Rd Zane Ave NM anor D rWinsdale St Brunswick Ave N34th Ave N Boone Ave NEarl St Rd A veNBridgewaterRdTryo l T ra ilFlorida Ave NHanley RdGolden Hills Dr Lowry Ter Winnetka Ave SXerxes Ave NIndependence Ave NMajorDrZenith Ave NFlag Ave NWestwood Dr SWestbend Rd Sumter Ave SHampshire L nOrchard Ave NCircle Down Lindsay St NobleDrPoplar DrAve Heights Dr Heights Dr S Frontage R d DresdenLnLeg endDrFrontage RdBrookridgeAveNWinnetka Ave NLawn TerNatchez Ave SGettysburg Ave NMarket St Naper St Decatur Ave N Oregon Ave NK e w a n e e Wa y Pennsylvania Ave SDona Ln ArdmoreDrGlenwo o d P k w y Tryol T railWestbrook Rd Mc N air D r Phoenix St Ottawa Ave NThotland Rd Wisconsin Ave NUtah Ave SJersey Ave SBies DrWills PlColo n ial DrEdgewood Ave NB a ss ett C re e k DrAdair Ave NJune Ave SNevada Ave NHarold Ave BrookviewPkwyN Wynnwood Rd Lee Ave NT urners CrossroadNAquil aAveNMendelssohn Ave NBrookview Pkwy SE l m daleRd M e a nderRd Jersey Ave NSorell Ave Dakota Ave SVista DrKyleAveNWindsorWayAve SGoldenValley R o a d /C oun ty R o ad 66Highway 100Ros eMaryland Ave NAlfred Rd Cortlawn Cir SIdaho Ave NIndianaAve N7th Ave N Rhode Island Ave NBrunswick Ave SZane Ave NBurntsideDrRoanokeRd WoodstockAve PerryAveNAve NTrailMedl e y L n Georgia Ave NWally St C utacross R d Xenia Ave NHampshireKillarney DrKentucky Ave SJune Ave NZephyr PlLouisiana Ave SCloverLnCl o verlea fDr Clo v e rle afDrLil acLoop MaryHillsDrFloridaAveSXylonAveNDecaturAveNKent uckyAveNTopelRd YorkAve NGreenValley Rd Chatela in T er N o r m a n d y Bonni e LnElgin Pl MerribeeDr Louisiana Ave NDuluthLn Marie Ln E Kalt ern LnOrkla DrLilacDrNToledoAveNM a rkayRidge Westbend Rd FairlawnWayG o ld enValle y R d Nevada Ave SMarieLn W WestmoreWay WolfberryLn HamptonRd YukonCtHampshireAve NKentleyAve Cortlawn Cir WWinnetka OregonAve SPlUnityAveNB a s s e t t C reek Dr BassettCreek Ln M i nnaq u a D rToledoA v e NWinfieldAveUnity Ave NBr e n n e rPa s s FaribaultSt ArcherAve N AdelineLn K i n g s t o n C i r G o ld e n V a lle y D r VarnerCirValders Ct G re e n v ie wL n Hampshire Ave NWinnetka Phoenix St Duluth St Wayzata BlvdWisconsinAveN Adell A v e MajorAveNZealandAveNEnsignAveNKelly DrXerxes Ave NKnoll St Lilac Dr NFlag Ave NRhode Island Ave NPlymouth Ave N Wayzata Blvd G o lden Valley R d Orkla DrWayzata BlvdAve NZealandAveNS tCroixCirLeeAveNLamplighterLnSandbur g LnMadisonAve W Lewis RdLilac Dr NHampton Rd Elgin Pl Boone Ave NCircleDownJersey Ave NWinsdale St OttawaAve NOlympia St Winnetka Heights Dr Lila c Dr NLouisiana Ave NKyleAveNNoble AveManor 1 0th A v e N RhodeIslandAveSHalfMoonDr OrdwayLaurel Pt Loring Ln Winsdale StZane Ave NHarold Ave FloridaAve NJerseyAve NParkview TerPhoenix StWisconsin Ave NW a y z ataBlvd FranceAve NHiddenLakes P k wyIsland DrTryol Trail Maryla n dAveNMedicine Lake Road / County Road 70 B e t t y CrockerDr RidgewayRdRhodeIslandAveNTerrace LnCastle CtFieldIndiana Ave NSchaper Rd Colonial Rd 24th Ave N 27th Ave N SussexRdKing Hill RdConstance Dr W25th Ave N SpringValley CirFrontena cAve SkylineDrSkyline DrHampshirePlCavellAveN Laurel Ave S ki H ill R d Me ri di a nDr WesternTerLouisianaAve NColoradoS t M a rg a re t D rRoanoke CirCherokeeOak GroveQuebecAve SKennethWay WasatchLnWelcomeTyrolCrest CortlawnCir N NatchezAveNBu r n t s i d e DrG o ld e n V a lle yRdGeneralMillsBlvdE d g e w o o d A v e SEdgewood Ave SEllis LnJonellen Ln WestwoodLn Gregory Crestvi ewAveColoradoWi s c ons i n Ave SValley-woodCir Maryland Ave SMedicine Lake Road / County Road 70 SchullerGettysburgCt Vermont Ave SFloridaCtMajorCir PrincetonAve SValery RdBrogger CirGardenPark QuailAve NOrchardLouisiana Ave SWestern Ave Perry Ave NIdaho Ave NWayzata BlvdValders Ave NValders Ave NYosemiteAve NWinsdale St Decatur Ave NNatchezAve SG le n w o o d P k w y OttawaAve SEdgewoodAve NSpringValleyRdSt Croix AveN WaterfordDrMendelssohn Ave NManches te r Dr HeritageCir StCroix Ave N W el comeWinnetka Avenue North / County Road 156Douglas Drive / County Road 1021 Highway 1693 S F r ontage Rd DuluthStreet /Count y R o ad 66 LaurelCurvEnsign Ave NOrchardAve NIdaho Ave NKnoll WestbrookRd Winsdale St BrunswickScott Ave NWynnwood Rd HillsboroAve NSunsetRid g e Dr Que bec St OttawaAveSAngeloDrWoodlandTrailHiddenLakes P k wyWinsdale St AlpinePas sAvondale Rd Dou glasAve QuentinAveSRavineMaddausLn LnKyle PlUnity Ave NToledoAveNSpruce TrWes t chesterCirC irCt WaterfordScottAveNDawnviewTerDawnview Ter C onstanceDrELilac Dr NPlymouth Ave NWisconsinAveNMedley Rd 6 PaisleyLnGl e ndenTer P l Noble Ave NTer B yrd A v e N P ark vie wBl v dY ork AveNMeadowLnSLilac Dr NAve NDuluth St Patsy Ln 2 3 H illsboroINDEX 1 - English Cir 2 - Kings Valley Rd 3 - Kings Valley Rd E 4 - Kings Valley Rd W 5 - Marquis Rd 6 - Mayfair Rd 7 - Stroden Cir 8 - Tamarin Tr CarriagePath M e n d e ls s o h n L n N ValeCrestRdCir Cir TyrolTrail Janalyn Cir Glencrest RdJanalynCir StrawberryLn WestwoodDrNBe verly A v e Leber SunnyridgeLnMeadow Ln NMeadowLn N Dahlberg D r Woodstock Ave Lilac DrNN Frontage R dHeath-brookeCir Legend Ln Bassett C reekD r Glenwood Avenue /Co u n ty R oad40WelcomeAveNWesleyCommons DrTheod o r e W i r th PkwyQuailAveNPerryAveNQuailAveNRegentAveNScottA v eN33rd Ave N L o wry Drake R d T r it on Dr GlenwoodAvePennsylvania Ave NG o ldenV alleyR dJulianne Ter WesleyDr 4 5 6 7 8 8 2 2AveN ZealandAve NZealandAveNAquilaAveN Aquila Ave NM a ndanA v eNPlymouth Ave N OrklaDrKnol l S t Orkl a DrValders Ave NMedley Cir AveS Ewald T e rK in g CreekRdH aroldAve LoringLn Woodstoc k A v e Yosemite CirYosemiteAveNXeniaAveSTurners Crossroad SRadisson Rd Turnp i keRdTurnpikeRd B a s s ett Cre ekB l vdP a isleyLnPaisleyLn Alley AlleyHi ghway 100Highway 169I n t e r s t a t e -3 9 4 / H i g h w a y 1 2 In ters ta te-3 9 4 / Hig h way 1 2 Highway 55 / Olson Memorial Highway Highway 55 / Olson M emorial Highway H ig h w a y 5 5 / O l s o n M e m o r ia l H ig h w a y !( !( !( !( !( !( !( !( !( !( !( !( !( !( !( !(!( !( !( !( !( !( !( !(!( !( 0 1,800 3,600900 Feet IPrint Date: 3/22/2022Sources:-Hennepin County Surveyors Office for Property Lines (2022).-City of Golden Valley for all other layers. VarianceRequests Requests by Type, 2021 !(Accessory Structure Height !(Accessory Structure Location !(Accessory Structure Size !(Drive Aisle Width !(Front Setback !(Parking !(Parking Setbacks !(Rear Setback !(Side Setback Laurel Ave Duluth St 10th Ave N Regent Ave NNoble Ave NOlympia St Western Ave Culver Rd 23rd Ave N Kelly DrWayzata Blvd Knoll St Plym outh Ave N Sumter Ave NPennsylvania Ave NN Frontage Rd S cottQuebec Ave NValders Ave NCountry Club Dr 26th Ave N Sandburg Rd Zane Ave NM anor D rWinsdale St Brunswick Ave N34th Ave N Boone Ave NEarl St Rd A veNBridgewaterRdTryo l T ra ilFlorida Ave NHanley RdGolden Hills Dr Lowry Ter Winnetka Ave SXerxes Ave NIndependence Ave NMajorDrZenith Ave NFlag Ave NWestwood Dr SWestbend Rd Sumter Ave SHampshire L nOrchard Ave NCircle Down Lindsay St NobleDrPoplar DrAve Heights Dr Heights Dr S Frontage R d DresdenLnLeg endDrFrontage RdBrookridgeAveNWinnetka Ave NLawn TerNatchez Ave SGettysburg Ave NMarket St Naper St Decatur Ave N Oregon Ave NK e w a n e e Wa y Pennsylvania Ave SDona Ln ArdmoreDrGlenwo o d P k w y Tryol T railWestbrook Rd Mc N air D r Phoenix St Ottawa Ave NThotland Rd Wisconsin Ave NUtah Ave SJersey Ave SBies DrWills PlColo n ial DrEdgewood Ave NB a ss ett C re e k DrAdair Ave NJune Ave SNevada Ave NHarold Ave BrookviewPkwyN Wynnwood Rd Lee Ave NT urners CrossroadNAquil aAveNMendelssohn Ave NBrookview Pkwy SE l m daleRd M e a nderRd Jersey Ave NSorell Ave Dakota Ave SVista DrKyleAveNWindsorWayAve SGoldenValley R o a d /C oun ty R o ad 66Highway 100Ros eMaryland Ave NAlfred Rd Cortlawn Cir SIdaho Ave NIndianaAve N7th Ave N Rhode Island Ave NBrunswick Ave SZane Ave NBurntsideDrRoanokeRd WoodstockAve PerryAveNAve NTrailMedl e y L n Georgia Ave NWally St C utacross R d Xenia Ave NHampshireKillarney DrKentucky Ave SJune Ave NZephyr PlLouisiana Ave SCloverLnCl o verlea fDr Clo v e rle afDrLil acLoop MaryHillsDrFloridaAveSXylonAveNDecaturAveNKent uckyAveNTopelRd YorkAve NGreenValley Rd Chatela in T er N o r m a n d y Bonni e LnElgin Pl MerribeeDr Louisiana Ave NDuluthLn Marie Ln E Kalt ern LnOrkla DrLilacDrNToledoAveNM a rkayRidge Westbend Rd FairlawnWayG o ld enValle y R d Nevada Ave SMarieLn W WestmoreWay WolfberryLn HamptonRd YukonCtHampshireAve NKentleyAve Cortlawn Cir WWinnetka OregonAve SPlUnityAveNB a s s e t t C reek Dr BassettCreek Ln M i nnaq u a D rToledoA v e NWinfieldAveUnity Ave NBr e n n e rPa s s FaribaultSt ArcherAve N AdelineLn K i n g s t o n C i r G o ld e n V a lle y D r VarnerCirValders Ct G re e n v ie wL n Hampshire Ave NWinnetka Phoenix St Duluth St Wayzata BlvdWisconsinAveN Adell A v e MajorAveNZealandAveNEnsignAveNKelly DrXerxes Ave NKnoll St Lilac Dr NFlag Ave NRhode Island Ave NPlymouth Ave N Wayzata Blvd G o lden Valley R d Orkla DrWayzata BlvdAve NZealandAveNS tCroixCirLeeAveNLamplighterLnSandbur g LnMadisonAve W Lewis RdLilac Dr NHampton Rd Elgin Pl Boone Ave NCircleDownJersey Ave NWinsdale St OttawaAve NOlympia St Winnetka Heights Dr Lila c Dr NLouisiana Ave NKyleAveNNoble AveManor 1 0th A v e N RhodeIslandAveSHalfMoonDr OrdwayLaurel Pt Loring Ln Winsdale StZane Ave NHarold Ave FloridaAve NJerseyAve NParkview TerPhoenix StWisconsin Ave NW a y z ataBlvd FranceAve NHiddenLakes P k wyIsland DrTryol Trail Maryla n dAveNMedicine Lake Road / County Road 70 B e t t y CrockerDr RidgewayRdRhodeIslandAveNTerrace LnCastle CtFieldIndiana Ave NSchaper Rd Colonial Rd 24th Ave N 27th Ave N SussexRdKing Hill RdConstance Dr W25th Ave N SpringValley CirFrontena cAve SkylineDrSkyline DrHampshirePlCavellAveN Laurel Ave S ki H ill R d Me ri di a nDr WesternTerLouisianaAve NColoradoS t M a rg a re t D rRoanoke CirCherokeeOak GroveQuebecAve SKennethWay WasatchLnWelcomeTyrolCrest CortlawnCir N NatchezAveNBu r n t s i d e DrG o ld e n V a lle yRdGeneralMillsBlvdE d g e w o o d A v e SEdgewood Ave SEllis LnJonellen Ln WestwoodLn Gregory Crestvi ewAveColoradoWi s c ons i n Ave SValley-woodCir Maryland Ave SMedicine Lake Road / County Road 70 SchullerGettysburgCt Vermont Ave SFloridaCtMajorCir PrincetonAve SValery RdBrogger CirGardenPark QuailAve NOrchardLouisiana Ave SWestern Ave Perry Ave NIdaho Ave NWayzata BlvdValders Ave NValders Ave NYosemiteAve NWinsdale St Decatur Ave NNatchezAve SG le n w o o d P k w y OttawaAve SEdgewoodAve NSpringValleyRdSt Croix AveN WaterfordDrMendelssohn Ave NManches te r Dr HeritageCir StCroix Ave N W el comeWinnetka Avenue North / County Road 156Douglas Drive / County Road 1021 Highway 1693 S F r ontage Rd DuluthStreet /Count y R o ad 66 LaurelCurvEnsign Ave NOrchardAve NIdaho Ave NKnoll WestbrookRd Winsdale St BrunswickScott Ave NWynnwood Rd HillsboroAve NSunsetRid g e Dr Que bec St OttawaAveSAngeloDrWoodlandTrailHiddenLakes P k wyWinsdale St AlpinePas sAvondale Rd Dou glasAve QuentinAveSRavineMaddausLn LnKyle PlUnity Ave NToledoAveNSpruce TrWes t chesterCirC irCt WaterfordScottAveNDawnviewTerDawnview Ter C onstanceDrELilac Dr NPlymouth Ave NWisconsinAveNMedley Rd 6 PaisleyLnGl e ndenTer P l Noble Ave NTer B yrd A v e N P ark vie wBl v dY ork AveNMeadowLnSLilac Dr NAve NDuluth St Patsy Ln 2 3 H illsboroINDEX 1 - English Cir 2 - Kings Valley Rd 3 - Kings Valley Rd E 4 - Kings Valley Rd W 5 - Marquis Rd 6 - Mayfair Rd 7 - Stroden Cir 8 - Tamarin Tr CarriagePath M e n d e ls s o h n L n N ValeCrestRdCir Cir TyrolTrail Janalyn Cir Glencrest RdJanalynCir StrawberryLn WestwoodDrNBe verly A v e Leber SunnyridgeLnMeadow Ln NMeadowLn N Dahlberg D r Woodstock Ave Lilac DrNN Frontage R dHeath-brookeCir Legend Ln Bassett C reekD r Glenwood Avenue /Co u n ty R oad40WelcomeAveNWesleyCommons DrTheod o r e W i r th PkwyQuailAveNPerryAveNQuailAveNRegentAveNScottA v eN33rd Ave N L o wry Drake R d T r it on Dr GlenwoodAvePennsylvania Ave NG o ldenV alleyR dJulianne Ter WesleyDr 4 5 6 7 8 8 2 2AveN ZealandAve NZealandAveNAquilaAveN Aquila Ave NM a ndanA v eNPlymouth Ave N OrklaDrKnol l S t Orkl a DrValders Ave NMedley Cir AveS Ewald T e rK in g CreekRdH aroldAve LoringLn Woodstoc k A v e Yosemite CirYosemiteAveNXeniaAveSTurners Crossroad SRadisson Rd Turnp i keRdTurnpikeRd B a s s ett Cre ekB l vdP a isleyLnPaisleyLn Alley AlleyHi ghway 100Highway 169I n t e r s t a t e -3 9 4 / H i g h w a y 1 2 In ters ta te-3 9 4 / Hig h way 1 2 Highway 55 / Olson Memorial Highway Highway 55 / Olson M emorial Highway H ig h w a y 5 5 / O l s o n M e m o r ia l H ig h w a y !( !( !( !(!( !( !( !( !( !(!( !( !( !(!( !( !( !( !( !(!( !(!(!( !(!( !( !( !(!( !(!( !(!(!( !( !( !( !(!( !(!( !( !( !( !( !( !( !( !(!( !( !(!(!(!( !(!(!(!( !( !( !( !( !( !( !( !( !( !( !( !(!( !( !(!( !( !(!( !( !( !( !( !( !( !( !( !( !( !( !( !( !( !( !(!( !( !( !( !( !( !( !(!( !( 0 1,800 3,600900 Feet IPrint Date: 3/22/2022Sources:-Hennepin County Surveyors Office for Property Lines (2022).-City of Golden Valley for all other layers. VarianceRequests Requests by Type,2017-2021 !(Accessory Structure Height !(Accessory Structure Location !(Accessory Structure Size !(Articulation !(Grading/Average Grade !(Building Envelope !(Curb Cut !(Drive Aisle Width !(Fence Height !(Front Setback !(Garage Width !(Height !(Impervious Surface !(Outdoor Lighting !(Parking !(Parking Setbacks !(Rear Setback !(Roadway Width !(Side Setback Laurel Ave Duluth St 10th Ave N Regent Ave NNoble Ave NOlympia St Western Ave Culver Rd 23rd Ave N Kelly DrWayzata Blvd Knoll St Plym outh Ave N Sumter Ave NPennsylvania Ave NN Frontage Rd S cottQuebec Ave NValders Ave NCountry Club Dr 26th Ave N Sandburg Rd Zane Ave NM anor D rWinsdale St Brunswick Ave N34th Ave N Boone Ave NEarl St Rd A veNBridgewaterRdTryo l T ra ilFlorida Ave NHanley RdGolden Hills Dr Lowry Ter Winnetka Ave SXerxes Ave NIndependence Ave NMajorDrZenith Ave NFlag Ave NWestwood Dr SWestbend Rd Sumter Ave SHampshire L nOrchard Ave NCircle Down Lindsay St NobleDrPoplar DrAve Heights Dr Heights Dr S Frontage R d DresdenLnLeg endDrFrontage RdBrookridgeAveNWinnetka Ave NLawn TerNatchez Ave SGettysburg Ave NMarket St Naper St Decatur Ave N Oregon Ave NK e w a n e e Wa y Pennsylvania Ave SDona Ln ArdmoreDrGlenwo o d P k w y Tryol T railWestbrook Rd Mc N air D r Phoenix St Ottawa Ave NThotland Rd Wisconsin Ave NUtah Ave SJersey Ave SBies DrWills PlColo n ial DrEdgewood Ave NB a ss ett C re e k DrAdair Ave NJune Ave SNevada Ave NHarold Ave BrookviewPkwyN Wynnwood Rd Lee Ave NT urners CrossroadNAquil aAveNMendelssohn Ave NBrookview Pkwy SE l m daleRd M e a nderRd Jersey Ave NSorell Ave Dakota Ave SVista DrKyleAveNWindsorWayAve SGoldenValley R o a d /C oun ty R o ad 66Highway 100Ros eMaryland Ave NAlfred Rd Cortlawn Cir SIdaho Ave NIndianaAve N7th Ave N Rhode Island Ave NBrunswick Ave SZane Ave NBurntsideDrRoanokeRd WoodstockAve PerryAveNAve NTrailMedl e y L n Georgia Ave NWally St C utacross R d Xenia Ave NHampshireKillarney DrKentucky Ave SJune Ave NZephyr PlLouisiana Ave SCloverLnCl o verlea fDr Clo v e rle afDrLil acLoop MaryHillsDrFloridaAveSXylonAveNDecaturAveNKent uckyAveNTopelRd YorkAve NGreenValley Rd Chatela in T er N o r m a n d y Bonni e LnElgin Pl MerribeeDr Louisiana Ave NDuluthLn Marie Ln E Kalt ern LnOrkla DrLilacDrNToledoAveNM a rkayRidge Westbend Rd FairlawnWayG o ld enValle y R d Nevada Ave SMarieLn W WestmoreWay WolfberryLn HamptonRd YukonCtHampshireAve NKentleyAve Cortlawn Cir WWinnetka OregonAve SPlUnityAveNB a s s e t t C reek Dr BassettCreek Ln M i nnaq u a D rToledoA v e NWinfieldAveUnity Ave NBr e n n e rPa s s FaribaultSt ArcherAve N AdelineLn K i n g s t o n C i r G o ld e n V a lle y D r VarnerCirValders Ct G re e n v ie wL n Hampshire Ave NWinnetka Phoenix St Duluth St Wayzata BlvdWisconsinAveN Adell A v e MajorAveNZealandAveNEnsignAveNKelly DrXerxes Ave NKnoll St Lilac Dr NFlag Ave NRhode Island Ave NPlymouth Ave N Wayzata Blvd G o lden Valley R d Orkla DrWayzata BlvdAve NZealandAveNS tCroixCirLeeAveNLamplighterLnSandbur g LnMadisonAve W Lewis RdLilac Dr NHampton Rd Elgin Pl Boone Ave NCircleDownJersey Ave NWinsdale St OttawaAve NOlympia St Winnetka Heights Dr Lila c Dr NLouisiana Ave NKyleAveNNoble AveManor 1 0th A v e N RhodeIslandAveSHalfMoonDr OrdwayLaurel Pt Loring Ln Winsdale StZane Ave NHarold Ave FloridaAve NJerseyAve NParkview TerPhoenix StWisconsin Ave NW a y z ataBlvd FranceAve NHiddenLakes P k wyIsland DrTryol Trail Maryla n dAveNMedicine Lake Road / County Road 70 B e t t y CrockerDr RidgewayRdRhodeIslandAveNTerrace LnCastle CtFieldIndiana Ave NSchaper Rd Colonial Rd 24th Ave N 27th Ave N SussexRdKing Hill RdConstance Dr W25th Ave N SpringValley CirFrontena cAve SkylineDrSkyline DrHampshirePlCavellAveN Laurel Ave S ki H ill R d Me ri di a nDr WesternTerLouisianaAve NColoradoS t M a rg a re t D rRoanoke CirCherokeeOak GroveQuebecAve SKennethWay WasatchLnWelcomeTyrolCrest CortlawnCir N NatchezAveNBu r n t s i d e DrG o ld e n V a lle yRdGeneralMillsBlvdE d g e w o o d A v e SEdgewood Ave SEllis LnJonellen Ln WestwoodLn Gregory Crestvi ewAveColoradoWi s c ons i n Ave SValley-woodCir Maryland Ave SMedicine Lake Road / County Road 70 SchullerGettysburgCt Vermont Ave SFloridaCtMajorCir PrincetonAve SValery RdBrogger CirGardenPark QuailAve NOrchardLouisiana Ave SWestern Ave Perry Ave NIdaho Ave NWayzata BlvdValders Ave NValders Ave NYosemiteAve NWinsdale St Decatur Ave NNatchezAve SG le n w o o d P k w y OttawaAve SEdgewoodAve NSpringValleyRdSt Croix AveN WaterfordDrMendelssohn Ave NManches te r Dr HeritageCir StCroix Ave N W el comeWinnetka Avenue North / County Road 156Douglas Drive / County Road 1021 Highway 1693 S F r ontage Rd DuluthStreet /Count y R o ad 66 LaurelCurvEnsign Ave NOrchardAve NIdaho Ave NKnoll WestbrookRd Winsdale St BrunswickScott Ave NWynnwood Rd HillsboroAve NSunsetRid g e Dr Que bec St OttawaAveSAngeloDrWoodlandTrailHiddenLakes P k wyWinsdale St AlpinePas sAvondale Rd Dou glasAve QuentinAveSRavineMaddausLn LnKyle PlUnity Ave NToledoAveNSpruce TrWes t chesterCirC irCt WaterfordScottAveNDawnviewTerDawnview Ter C onstanceDrELilac Dr NPlymouth Ave NWisconsinAveNMedley Rd 6 PaisleyLnGl e ndenTer P l Noble Ave NTer B yrd A v e N P ark vie wBl v dY ork AveNMeadowLnSLilac Dr NAve NDuluth St Patsy Ln 2 3 H illsboroINDEX 1 - English Cir 2 - Kings Valley Rd 3 - Kings Valley Rd E 4 - Kings Valley Rd W 5 - Marquis Rd 6 - Mayfair Rd 7 - Stroden Cir 8 - Tamarin Tr CarriagePath M e n d e ls s o h n L n N ValeCrestRdCir Cir TyrolTrail Janalyn Cir Glencrest RdJanalynCir StrawberryLn WestwoodDrNBe verly A v e Leber SunnyridgeLnMeadow Ln NMeadowLn N Dahlberg D r Woodstock Ave Lilac DrNN Frontage R dHeath-brookeCir Legend Ln Bassett C reekD r Glenwood Avenue /Co u n ty R oad40WelcomeAveNWesleyCommons DrTheod o r e W i r th PkwyQuailAveNPerryAveNQuailAveNRegentAveNScottA v eN33rd Ave N L o wry Drake R d T r it on Dr GlenwoodAvePennsylvania Ave NG o ldenV alleyR dJulianne Ter WesleyDr 4 5 6 7 8 8 2 2AveN ZealandAve NZealandAveNAquilaAveN Aquila Ave NM a ndanA v eNPlymouth Ave N OrklaDrKnol l S t Orkl a DrValders Ave NMedley Cir AveS Ewald T e rK in g CreekRdH aroldAve LoringLn Woodstoc k A v e Yosemite CirYosemiteAveNXeniaAveSTurners Crossroad SRadisson Rd Turnp i keRdTurnpikeRd B a s s ett Cre ekB l vdP a isleyLnPaisleyLn Alley AlleyHi ghway 100Highway 169I n t e r s t a t e -3 9 4 / H i g h w a y 1 2 In ters ta te-3 9 4 / Hig h way 1 2 Highway 55 / Olson Memorial Highway Highway 55 / Olson M emorial Highway H ig h w a y 5 5 / O l s o n M e m o r ia l H ig h w a y !( !( !( !( !( !( !( !( !( !( !( !( !( !( !( 0 1,800 3,600900 Feet IPrint Date: 3/22/2022Sources:-Hennepin County Surveyors Office for Property Lines (2022).-City of Golden Valley for all other layers. VarianceRequests Requests by Project,2021 !(Accessory Structure !(Deck !(Garage/Garage Addition !(Mechanical Equipment !(New Home !(Parking Laurel Ave Duluth St 10th Ave N Regent Ave NNoble Ave NOlympia St Western Ave Culver Rd 23rd Ave N Kelly DrWayzata Blvd Knoll St Plym outh Ave N Sumter Ave NPennsylvania Ave NN Frontage Rd S cottQuebec Ave NValders Ave NCountry Club Dr 26th Ave N Sandburg Rd Zane Ave NM anor D rWinsdale St Brunswick Ave N34th Ave N Boone Ave NEarl St Rd A veNBridgewaterRdTryo l T ra ilFlorida Ave NHanley RdGolden Hills Dr Lowry Ter Winnetka Ave SXerxes Ave NIndependence Ave NMajorDrZenith Ave NFlag Ave NWestwood Dr SWestbend Rd Sumter Ave SHampshire L nOrchard Ave NCircle Down Lindsay St NobleDrPoplar DrAve Heights Dr Heights Dr S Frontage R d DresdenLnLeg endDrFrontage RdBrookridgeAveNWinnetka Ave NLawn TerNatchez Ave SGettysburg Ave NMarket St Naper St Decatur Ave N Oregon Ave NK e w a n e e Wa y Pennsylvania Ave SDona Ln ArdmoreDrGlenwo o d P k w y Tryol T railWestbrook Rd Mc N air D r Phoenix St Ottawa Ave NThotland Rd Wisconsin Ave NUtah Ave SJersey Ave SBies DrWills PlColo n ial DrEdgewood Ave NB a ss ett C re e k DrAdair Ave NJune Ave SNevada Ave NHarold Ave BrookviewPkwyN Wynnwood Rd Lee Ave NT urners CrossroadNAquil aAveNMendelssohn Ave NBrookview Pkwy SE l m daleRd M e a nderRd Jersey Ave NSorell Ave Dakota Ave SVista DrKyleAveNWindsorWayAve SGoldenValley R o a d /C oun ty R o ad 66Highway 100Ros eMaryland Ave NAlfred Rd Cortlawn Cir SIdaho Ave NIndianaAve N7th Ave N Rhode Island Ave NBrunswick Ave SZane Ave NBurntsideDrRoanokeRd WoodstockAve PerryAveNAve NTrailMedl e y L n Georgia Ave NWally St C utacross R d Xenia Ave NHampshireKillarney DrKentucky Ave SJune Ave NZephyr PlLouisiana Ave SCloverLnCl o verlea fDr Clo v e rle afDrLil acLoop MaryHillsDrFloridaAveSXylonAveNDecaturAveNKent uckyAveNTopelRd YorkAve NGreenValley Rd Chatela in T er N o r m a n d y Bonni e LnElgin Pl MerribeeDr Louisiana Ave NDuluthLn Marie Ln E Kalt ern LnOrkla DrLilacDrNToledoAveNM a rkayRidge Westbend Rd FairlawnWayG o ld enValle y R d Nevada Ave SMarieLn W WestmoreWay WolfberryLn HamptonRd YukonCtHampshireAve NKentleyAve Cortlawn Cir WWinnetka OregonAve SPlUnityAveNB a s s e t t C reek Dr BassettCreek Ln M i nnaq u a D rToledoA v e NWinfieldAveUnity Ave NBr e n n e rPa s s FaribaultSt ArcherAve N AdelineLn K i n g s t o n C i r G o ld e n V a lle y D r VarnerCirValders Ct G re e n v ie wL n Hampshire Ave NWinnetka Phoenix St Duluth St Wayzata BlvdWisconsinAveN Adell A v e MajorAveNZealandAveNEnsignAveNKelly DrXerxes Ave NKnoll St Lilac Dr NFlag Ave NRhode Island Ave NPlymouth Ave N Wayzata Blvd G o lden Valley R d Orkla DrWayzata BlvdAve NZealandAveNS tCroixCirLeeAveNLamplighterLnSandbur g LnMadisonAve W Lewis RdLilac Dr NHampton Rd Elgin Pl Boone Ave NCircleDownJersey Ave NWinsdale St OttawaAve NOlympia St Winnetka Heights Dr Lila c Dr NLouisiana Ave NKyleAveNNoble AveManor 1 0th A v e N RhodeIslandAveSHalfMoonDr OrdwayLaurel Pt Loring Ln Winsdale StZane Ave NHarold Ave FloridaAve NJerseyAve NParkview TerPhoenix StWisconsin Ave NW a y z ataBlvd FranceAve NHiddenLakes P k wyIsland DrTryol Trail Maryla n dAveNMedicine Lake Road / County Road 70 B e t t y CrockerDr RidgewayRdRhodeIslandAveNTerrace LnCastle CtFieldIndiana Ave NSchaper Rd Colonial Rd 24th Ave N 27th Ave N SussexRdKing Hill RdConstance Dr W25th Ave N SpringValley CirFrontena cAve SkylineDrSkyline DrHampshirePlCavellAveN Laurel Ave S ki H ill R d Me ri di a nDr WesternTerLouisianaAve NColoradoS t M a rg a re t D rRoanoke CirCherokeeOak GroveQuebecAve SKennethWay WasatchLnWelcomeTyrolCrest CortlawnCir N NatchezAveNBu r n t s i d e DrG o ld e n V a lle yRdGeneralMillsBlvdE d g e w o o d A v e SEdgewood Ave SEllis LnJonellen Ln WestwoodLn Gregory Crestvi ewAveColoradoWi s c ons i n Ave SValley-woodCir Maryland Ave SMedicine Lake Road / County Road 70 SchullerGettysburgCt Vermont Ave SFloridaCtMajorCir PrincetonAve SValery RdBrogger CirGardenPark QuailAve NOrchardLouisiana Ave SWestern Ave Perry Ave NIdaho Ave NWayzata BlvdValders Ave NValders Ave NYosemiteAve NWinsdale St Decatur Ave NNatchezAve SG le n w o o d P k w y OttawaAve SEdgewoodAve NSpringValleyRdSt Croix AveN WaterfordDrMendelssohn Ave NManches te r Dr HeritageCir StCroix Ave N W el comeWinnetka Avenue North / County Road 156Douglas Drive / County Road 1021 Highway 1693 S F r ontage Rd DuluthStreet /Count y R o ad 66 LaurelCurvEnsign Ave NOrchardAve NIdaho Ave NKnoll WestbrookRd Winsdale St BrunswickScott Ave NWynnwood Rd HillsboroAve NSunsetRid g e Dr Que bec St OttawaAveSAngeloDrWoodlandTrailHiddenLakes P k wyWinsdale St AlpinePas sAvondale Rd Dou glasAve QuentinAveSRavineMaddausLn LnKyle PlUnity Ave NToledoAveNSpruce TrWes t chesterCirC irCt WaterfordScottAveNDawnviewTerDawnview Ter C onstanceDrELilac Dr NPlymouth Ave NWisconsinAveNMedley Rd 6 PaisleyLnGl e ndenTer P l Noble Ave NTer B yrd A v e N P ark vie wBl v dY ork AveNMeadowLnSLilac Dr NAve NDuluth St Patsy Ln 2 3 H illsboroINDEX 1 - English Cir 2 - Kings Valley Rd 3 - Kings Valley Rd E 4 - Kings Valley Rd W 5 - Marquis Rd 6 - Mayfair Rd 7 - Stroden Cir 8 - Tamarin Tr CarriagePath M e n d e ls s o h n L n N ValeCrestRdCir Cir TyrolTrail Janalyn Cir Glencrest RdJanalynCir StrawberryLn WestwoodDrNBe verly A v e Leber SunnyridgeLnMeadow Ln NMeadowLn N Dahlberg D r Woodstock Ave Lilac DrNN Frontage R dHeath-brookeCir Legend Ln Bassett C reekD r Glenwood Avenue /Co u n ty R oad40WelcomeAveNWesleyCommons DrTheod o r e W i r th PkwyQuailAveNPerryAveNQuailAveNRegentAveNScottA v eN33rd Ave N L o wry Drake R d T r it on Dr GlenwoodAvePennsylvania Ave NG o ldenV alleyR dJulianne Ter WesleyDr 4 5 6 7 8 8 2 2AveN ZealandAve NZealandAveNAquilaAveN Aquila Ave NM a ndanA v eNPlymouth Ave N OrklaDrKnol l S t Orkl a DrValders Ave NMedley Cir AveS Ewald T e rK in g CreekRdH aroldAve LoringLn Woodstoc k A v e Yosemite CirYosemiteAveNXeniaAveSTurners Crossroad SRadisson Rd Turnp i keRdTurnpikeRd B a s s ett Cre ekB l vdP a isleyLnPaisleyLn Alley AlleyHi ghway 100Highway 169I n t e r s t a t e -3 9 4 / H i g h w a y 1 2 In ters ta te-3 9 4 / Hig h way 1 2 Highway 55 / Olson Memorial Highway Highway 55 / Olson M emorial Highway H ig h w a y 5 5 / O l s o n M e m o r ia l H ig h w a y !( !( !( !( !( !( !( !( !(!( !( !( !(!( !( !( !( !( !( !( !( !( !( !( !( !( !( !( !(!( !( !( !( !( !( !( !( !( !( !( !(!(!(!( !(!(!(!( !( !( !( !( !( !( !( !( !( !( !( !(!( !( !(!( !( !(!( !( !( !( !( !( !( !( !( !( !( !( !( !( !( !( 0 1,800 3,600900 Feet IPrint Date: 3/22/2022Sources:-Hennepin County Surveyors Office for Property Lines (2022).-City of Golden Valley for all other layers. VarianceRequests Requests by Project,2017-2021 !(Accessory Structure !(Building !(Deck !(Fence !(Front Porch !(Garage/Garage !(Home Addition !(Mechanical Equipment !(New Home !(Outdoor Lighting !(Parking !(Paved Area !(Private Road !(Shed !(Tax Parcel Division Golden Valley City Council Meeting May 3, 2022 Agenda Item 3. C. 4. Accept Environmental Commission 2021 Annual Report and 2022 Work Plan Prepared By Eric Eckman, Environmental Resources Supervisor Summary At the April 12, 2022, Council work session, Environmental Commission Chair Wendy Weirich and Physical Development staff presented the Environmental Commission 2021 annual report and 2022 proposed work plan. Financial Or Budget Considerations None Recommended Action Motion to accept the Environmental Commission 2021 Annual Report and Approve the 2022 Work Plan. Supporting Documents • Environmental Commission 2021 Annual Report and 2022 Work Plan (10 pages) ENVIRONMENTAL COMMISSION 2021 ANNUAL REPORT AND 2022 WORK PLAN Golden Valley Environmental Commission 2021 Annual Report 2 2021 Environmental Commission Commissioners Wendy Weirich, Chair (2023) Shannon Hansen, Vice Chair (2023) Felix Fettig, Student (2021) Tonia Galonska (2022) Dawn Hill (2024) Scott Seys (2024) Jim Stremel (2023) Debra Yahle (2022) Rachel Zuraff, Student (2023) Note: Terms run May 1-April 30 Council Liaison Kimberly Sanberg Larry Fonnest (through December 2021) City Staff Eric Eckman, Environmental Resources Supervisor Drew Chirpich, Environmental Specialist Carrie Nelson, Engineering Assistant Story Schwantes, MN GreenCorps Member Ethan Kehrberg, MN GreenCorps Member Purpose and Mission The Environmental Commission has been established to advise and make recommendations to the City Council in matters relating to and affecting the environment and human health. Cover Photo: “Pondering,” by Laurie Smith, Views O f The Valley 2021 Golden Valley Environmental Commission 2021 Annual Report 3 Golden Valley Environmental Commission 2021 Annual Report 4 Table of Contents 2021 Accomplishments page 4 2022 Proposed Work Plan page 6 Golden Valley Environmental Commission 2021 Annual Report 5 2021 Accomplishments Curbside Recycling And Organics Collection • Help ed guide and develop the new recycling and organics program that launched in January 2022. Energy Action • Helped guide and recommend approval of the City’s first Energy Action Plan as part of Xcel Energy’s Partners In Energy community collaboration program. • Recommended participation in the Residential Home Energy Squad program with an equitable cost sharing methodology for residents. • Guided staff to reduce the number of households experiencing energy cost burden by 20 through identifying, communicating, and connecting people with programs offered by utility companies and others . o Sent postcards and newsletters to households, distributed multi-lingual flyers to multi -family properties, worked with PRISM to reach residents, and completed four low-income home energy squad visits and 16 home energy savings program visits in five months, which included onsite energy efficiency improvements. • Developed an energy saver recognition program for businesses (launching in spring 2022). • Summarized the City’s energy consumption and greenhouse gas emissions reductions to date . GreenStep Cities/Climate Action • Achieved Step 5 of the GreenStep Cities Program, including advancement in the following topic areas: o buildings and lighting o renewable energy o land use o transportation and fleet o surface water o green buildings • Began tracking information in new topic areas such as: o solid waste and recycling o local food production o home energy squad visits Organics recycling cart The City mailed flyers to promote the Energy A ssistance Program. Golden Valley Environmental Commission 2021 Annual Report 6 A link to the summary of Golden Valley’s GreenStep Cities progress is located at https://greenstep.pca.state.mn.us/cityInfo.cfm?ctu_code=2394924 • Drafted and recommended adoption of a resolution declaring a climate emergency. • Recommended support for Hennepin County’s first Climate Action Plan. • Hosted an informational meeting with Hennepin County’s new director of climate & resiliency to learn about the climate action plan and discuss ways to work together to achieve common goals. Environmental Justice • Continued to partner with the Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion Commission (DEIC) on joint projects, events, and forums through a subcommittee formed in 2020. • Using the prioritization maps developed by the DEIC subcommittee in 2020, identified and explored a partnership with a naturally occurring affordable multi -family housing property in the community to target investment in trees and green infrastructure to address existing inequities. • Started updating source maps and data for the green infrastructure prioritization maps based on the new 2020 census data and other emerging data sources. • Began planning for the Building An Equitable Golden Valley environmental justice forum set for May 2022. Community Outreach • Explored partnership opportunities with local schools, ultimately deciding to recommend that the City Council update the City Code and Commission bylaws to allow the addition of a second student member to the Environmental Commission. • Hosted an educational workshop on planting for pollinators. • Promoted numerous educational opportunities in cooperation with the Golden Valley Garden Club. Natural Resources Management • Supported habitat restoration in the Briarwood Nature Area in 2021-22, made possible by a grant from the Minnesota DNR. • Helped guide the development of pollinator habitat on two remnant City parcels along the Douglas Drive corridor. Photo by Allen Carlson, Views Of The Valley 2019 Develo ping pollinator habitats remains an environmental goal. Golden Valley Environmental Commission 2021 Annual Report 7 Transportation • Explored ways to reduce vehicle usage and expand transportation options in the City and how to incorporate the information into the City website . Water Resources • Researched and recommended participation in a rain barrel cost share program for residents. A total of 72 rain barrels are being purchased and installed throughout the community. • Contributed to the scoping of a request for proposals for a neighborhood-level flood study for the community. • Met jointly with the Open Space and Recreation Commission to provide input and feedback on the design of two large stormwater projects (Medley Park and SEA School -Wildwood Park). Resources • Discussed and explored the resources available and needed to implement the City’s environmental goals, initiatives, plans, programs, and projects and how that might shape the Commission’s annual work plans. Medley Park floo dplain map Golden Valley Environmental Commission 2021 Annual Report 8 2022 Proposed Work Plan Proposed work plan priorities for 2022 are based on goals in the City’s 2022 Pyramid of Success , 2040 Comprehensive Plan (including Resilience & Sustainability, Natural Resources, Water Resources, Transportation), Equity Plan, Energy Action Plan, Pollinator Protection Resolution, Climate Emergency Declaration, GreenStep Cities Program, and City Council’s 2022 Legislative Priorities. • Recycling And Organics o Help develop a plan to increase participation rates for organics recycling, and opportunities for multi -family recycling, including organics and onsite composting. o Seek opportunities to partner with non-profits and others to reduce Styrofoam and single use plastics, bags, and containers (restaurants, stores, etc) within Hennepin County. • Energy Action Help guide and participate in implementation of the City’s Energy Action Plan, including: o monitoring and reporting on the progress of Xcel Energy’s Partners In Energy community collaboration program o reducing the number of households experiencing energy cost burden by 15 households through identifying, communicating, and connecting people with programs offered by utility companies and others o increasing participation in energy efficiency programs for residents and businesses, including:  implementing and monitoring the new energy saver recognition program for businesses  extending the Residential Home Energy Squad program for another budget cycle  exploring incentivizing businesses to participate in energy assessments and audits o exploring options for promoting, supporting, and developing renewable energy (solar) and electric vehicles and charging infrastructure , including:  hosting an EV show-and-tell event at City Hall in June 2022  increasing EVs and expanding charging infrastructure in the community o supporting state and local efforts to update building codes or standards that advance energy performance in buildings o exploring drafting a sustainable building policy for developments that receive city funding and resources One 2022 goal is to increase participation in the City ’s organics recycling program. Golden Valley Environmental Commission 2021 Annual Report 9 • GreenStep Cities/Climate Action Continue working on actions and metrics to address climate-related impacts, improve the environment, and reduce energy consumption and costs. o If awarded a MN GreenCorps Member in 2022-2023, work to complete GreenStep Cities actions related to Climate Action, Energy Action, and Environmental Justice . o Look for ways to partner with Hennepin County to implement its Climate Action Plan, with a focus on planting trees and reducing urban heat island effect. • Environmental Justice Continue to partner with the Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion Commission (DEIC) on joint projects, events, and forums through a subcommittee formed in 2020. Collaboration to include: o co-hosting the Building An Equitable Golden Valley environmental justice forum set for May 19, 2022 o updating the source maps and data for the green infrastructure prioritization maps to address existing inequities in the community o discussion on drafting an environmental justice resolution o seeking and identifying a partner and sponsor one green infrastructure project in a priority area o helping implement the land acknowledgement action plan by co-hosting a community event for Indigenous community members and inviting families through the school districts • Community Outreach o Review new City website for environmental content and clarity, better promotion of volunteer programs, and best practices for yards and gardens. o Explore ways to promote Earth Day and Arbor Day, including staff videos and webinars. o Use the Commission’s $3,500 budget toward one or more of the following efforts:  funding a joint project, event, or forum with the DEIC  sponsoring and supporting the new energy saver recognition program City staff and elected officials participate in annual Arbor Day events at local schools. Golden Valley Environmental Commission 2021 Annual Report 10 •Water And Natural Resources o Support habitat restoration in the Briarwood Nature Area in 2022 with DNR Grant funds; help identify the next nature area for enhancement or restoration. o Continue promoting educational opportunities in cooperation with the Golden Valley Garden Club. o Study ways to mitigate the loss of infested ash trees due to the emerald ash borer pest, especially in areas experiencing inequities in green infrastructure. o Explore ways to promote, improve, expand, and preserve remnant natural areas and open spaces in the City, especially with pollinator habitat. o Address the issue of human encroachment into nature areas. o Explore and understand water use in the community; look into conservation measures like a lawn watering ordinance. o Consider exploring participation in the No Mow May Campaign. •Transportation o Review Luce Line Trail connection under Highway 169 to Plymouth and other substandard trail sections. o Provide input and feedback on the Hwy 55/Douglas Dr pedestrian underpass project. o Support and contribute to the City’s Bus Rapid Transit efforts along Hwy 55. Golden Valley City Council Meeting May 3, 2022 Agenda Item 3. D. 1. Approve Fourth Amendment to the License Agreement with Golden Valley Orchestra Prepared By Greg Simmons, Recreation and Facilities Supervisor Summary The Golden Valley Orchestra has been a regular tenant at Brookview for many years. Staff has worked with representatives of the Golden Valley Orchestra to develop a space for performance license agreement for scheduled use of the Bassett Creek Room at Brookview. Financial Or Budget Considerations None Recommended Action Motion to authorize City Manager to execute Fourth Amendment to License Agreement Between with the Golden Valley Orchestra in the form approved by the City Attorney. Supporting Documents • 2022 Golden Valley Orchestra License Agreement (4 pages) FOURTH AMENDMENT TO LICENSE AGREEMENT BETWEEN CITY OF GOLDNE VALLEY AND THE GOLDEN VLALEY ORCHESTRA THIS FOURTH AMENDMENT TO LICENSE AGREEMENT BETWEEN CITY OF GOLDEN VALLEY AND THE GOLDNE VALLEY ORCHESTRA (this “Fourth Amendment”) is made effective as of May 3, 2022 (the “Amendment Effective Date”) by and between the City of Golden Valley (“Licensor”) and the Golden Valley Orchestra (“Licensee”), a Minnesota nonprofit corporation. RECITALS WHEREAS, Licensor and Licensee are parties to a License Agreement, dated January 1st, 2018 (the “License”), and previously amended by mutual agreement of the parties. WHEREAS, upon the mutual written agreement of the Licensor and Licensee, the terms of the License may be modified. WHEREAS, the parties wish to extend and amend the License as set forth below. AGREEMENT The parties agree to amend the License as follows, effective as of the Amendment Effective Date: 1. Recitals. The recitals set forth above are true and correct and are hereby incorporated herein by reference. Any capitalized terms used herein but not defined have the same meaning as that ascribed to them in the License. 2. Extension of Term. The term of the License shall be extended and the License shall continue in effect until December 31, 2022. 3. Exhibits. Exhibits B and C are replaced in their entirety with the attached Exhibits B and C. 4. Ratification. Except as specifically provided in this Fourth Amendment, each and every provision of the License, as amended through the date hereof, remains, and is, in all respects, in full force and effect. 5. Counterparts. This Fourth Amendment may be executed in any number of counterparts, including facsimile and .pdf, each of which constitutes an original and all of which, collectively, constitute one and the same instrument. The signatures of the parties need not appear on the same counterpart. 6. Miscellaneous. (i) The provisions hereof are binding upon and inure to the benefit of the parties and their respective successors and assigns; and (ii) this Fourth Amendment, the Second Amendment, the First Amendment, and the License constitute the entire understanding between the parties in respect to the subject matter hereof. INTENDING TO BE LEGALLY BOUND HEREBY, the parties have executed this Fourth Amendment as evidenced by the signatures of their authorized representatives below. Signed: Golden Valley Orchestra, a Minnesota nonprofit corporation By: _____________________________ Print Name: ______________________ Its (Title):________________________ Signed: City of Golden Valley, a Minnesota municipal corporation By ______________________________ Timothy J. Cruikshank, City Manager EXHIBIT B List of Rehearsal Dates and Board Meetings Date Start Time End Time Purpose 5/2/2022 7:00 PM 9:30 PM Rehearsal 5/9/2022 7:00 PM 9:30 PM Rehearsal 5/16/2022 7:00 PM 9:30 PM Rehearsal 5/23/2022 7:00 PM 9:30 PM Board Meeting 6/27/2022 7:00 PM 9:30 PM Board Meeting 7/25/2022 7:00 PM 9:30 PM Board Meeting 8/29/2022 7:00 PM 9:30 PM Board Meeting 9/12/2022 7:00 PM 9:30 PM Rehearsal 9/19/2022 7:00 PM 9:30 PM Rehearsal 9/26/2022 7:00 PM 9:30 PM Board Meeting 10/3/2022 7:00 PM 9:30 PM Rehearsal 10/17/2022 7:00 PM 9:30 PM Rehearsal 10/24/2022 7:00 PM 9:30 PM Board Meeting 10/31/2022 7:00 PM 9:30 PM Rehearsal 11/7/2022 7:00 PM 9:30 PM Rehearsal 11/14/2022 7:00 PM 9:30 PM Rehearsal 11/19/2022 9:30 AM 12:00 PM Rehearsal 11/21/2022 7:00 PM 9:30 PM Board Meeting 11/28/2022 7:00 PM 9:30 PM Rehearsal 12/5/2022 7:00 PM 9:30 PM Rehearsal 12/12/2022 7:00 PM 9:30 PM Rehearsal EXHIBIT C Agreed Services Sunday, November 20, 2022; 4:00-5:00 PM Brookview – Teddy Bear Concert Monday, December 5, 2022; 12:45 PM-1:15 PM Brookview – Holiday Tea Golden Valley City Council Meeting May 3, 2022 Agenda Item 3. D. 2. Approve Court Rental Agreement with Twin City Tennis Camps Prepared By Greg Simmons, Recreation & Facilities Supervisor Summary Parks & Recreation staff is recommending an Independent Contractor & Court Rental Agreement with Twin City Tennis Camps (TCTC) to provide tennis instruction and programs for youth and adults at tennis courts throughout Golden Valley. TCTC will be offering services on Golden Valley tennis court facilities as an independent contractor. Financial Or Budget Considerations The independent contractor will pay rental fees for use of all the tennis facilities. Recommended Action Motion to authorize City Manager to execute Independent Contractor & Court Rental Agreement with Twin City Tennis Camps in the form approved by the City Attorney. Supporting Documents • 2022 Twin City Tennis Camps Independent Contractor & Court Rental Agreement (10 pages) INDEPENDENT CONTRACTOR AGREEMENT THIS AGREEMENT is made this May 3, 2022 (“Effective Date”) by and between Twin City Tennis Camps (Inc.) a Minnesota corporation with its principal office located at 8014 Olson Memorial Highway, Ste. 101, Golden Valley, Minnesota (“Contractor”), and the City of Golden Valley, Minnesota, a Minnesota municipal corporation located at 7800 Golden Valley Road, Golden Valley, MN 55427 (the “City”): RECITALS A. Contractor is engaged in the business of providing tennis instruction. B. The City is the owner of tennis courts located at the Golden Valley Parks named in the attached Exhibit A in Golden Valley, Minnesota (the “Facilities”). C. Contractor desires to rent from the City and the City desires to rent Contractor tennis court time at the Facilities. NOW, THEREFORE, in consideration of the terms and conditions expressed in this Agreement, the City and Contractor agree as follows: AGREEMENT 1. Facility Use. The City agrees to rent court time to Contractor for the times and dates shown on the attached Exhibit A and in accordance with the terms of this Agreement. Such schedules may be amended from time to time upon the written agreement of both parties’ representatives, or as deemed necessary at the discretion of the Parks & Recreation Director. Contractor may request additional court time, which the City may grant or deny in its own discretion. Any additional court time shall be subject to additional fees. Contractor shall use and occupy the Facilities solely for the purpose of providing the services described herein and in accordance with the terms of this Agreement. 2. Other City Services. In addition to the Facility use described in paragraph one above, the City shall be responsible for the following services: a. Promotion: The City shall promote Contractor’s programs in one to two full pages of advertising in its Spring/Summer catalog and one-half to one page in its Fall catalog. Contractor will work with Golden Valley Park and Recreation staff for layout and catalog deadlines. b. Bathrooms: The City shall clean the permanent bathrooms located at the Brookview Park tennis building and all portable bathrooms on City property pursuant to the City’s CORR Plan, which shall be provided to Contractor for review prior to the beginning of the 2022 season. Contractor’s staff shall support the daily disinfecting schedule on the weekends using an approved disinfectant product provided by the city. c. Trash and Recycling: The City shall provide trash and recycling containers onsite as needed. The City shall remove all trash and recycling on a regular weekly schedule. 3. Term. This agreement will commence on May 3, 2022 and will continue until October 31, 2022. 4. Services. With respect to its programming, Contractor agrees to provide the services as described in the attached Exhibit B (the “Services”). All Services shall be provided in a manner consistent with the level of care and skill ordinarily exercised by professionals currently providing similar services. 5. Time for Completion. The Services shall be completed on the dates specified in the attached Exhibit A, provided that the parties may extend the stated deadlines upon mutual written agreement. Notwithstanding paragraph 3 above and except as otherwise provided herein, this Agreement shall remain in force and effect commencing from the effective date and continuing until the completion of Contractors programs, unless terminated by the City or amended pursuant to the Agreement. 6. Consideration. Contractor shall pay the City: a. $7.00 per hour of court usage + applicable taxes. b. 100% of the cost of renting and cleaning the rented portable toilets at the Facilities. c. $300 per month of use for the Brookview Tennis Building. d. $200 per month for support fees including additional bathroom cleanings, utilities, and increased trash and recycling removal. e. $250 per page of promotion in Park and Recreation Catalog The City shall invoice Contractor on a monthly basis and Contractor shall make all payments by check payable to the City of Golden Valley within 30 days. Invoices may be paid electronically with an additional 3% added to the invoice amount. All fees shall be considered fully earned by the City upon receipt by the City. Any expenses incurred by the Contractor pursuant to providing the Services, including but not limited to travel and phone expenses, are the sole responsibility of the Contractor. 7. Termination. Notwithstanding any other provision herein to the contrary, this Agreement may be terminated as follows: a. The parties, by mutual written agreement, may terminate this Agreement at any time; b. Contractor may terminate this Agreement in the event of a breach of the Agreement by the City upon providing thirty (30) days’ written notice to the City; c. The City may terminate this Agreement at any time at its option, for any reason or no reason at all; or d. The City may terminate this Agreement immediately upon Contractor’s failure to have in force any insurance required by this Agreement. Notwithstanding anything to the contrary herein, if at any time the actions of the Contractor and/or their staff compromise the physical, mental or emotional safety of a participant (as determined by the City), the City shall have the right to immediately suspend Services until the issue has been resolved or the contract terminated. In the event of a termination, Contractor shall pay the City for court time used to the date of termination. 8. Miscellaneous. a. Contractor shall make financial aid available for residents of Golden Valley following the guidelines of the Park and Recreation Department Financial Aid. 7. Amendments. No amendments may be made to this Agreement except in a writing signed by both parties. 8. Records/Inspection. Pursuant to Minnesota Statutes § 16C.05, subd. 5, Contractor agrees that the books, records, documents, and accounting procedures and practices of Contractor, that are relevant to the contract or transaction, are subject to examination by the City and the state auditor or legislative auditor for a minimum of six years. Contractor shall maintain such records for a minimum of six years after final payment. The parties agree that this obligation will survive the completion or termination of this Agreement. 9. Indemnification. To the fullest extent permitted by law, Contractor, and Contractor’s successors or assigns, agree to protect, defend, indemnify, save, and hold harmless the City, its officers, officials, agents, volunteers, and employees from any and all claims; lawsuits; causes of actions of any kind, nature, or character; damages; losses; or costs, disbursements, and expenses of defending the same, including but not limited to attorneys’ fees, professional services, and other technical, administrative or professional assistance resulting from or arising out of Contractor’s (or its subcontractors, agents, volunteers, members, invitees, representatives, or employees) performance of the duties required by or arising from this Agreement, or caused in whole or in part by any negligent act or omission or willful misconduct by Contractor, or arising out of Contractor’s failure to obtain or maintain the insurance required by this Agreement. Nothing in this Agreement shall constitute a waiver or limitation of any immunity or limitation on liability to which the City is entitled. The parties agree that these indemnification obligations shall survive the completion or termination of this Agreement. 10. Waiver. Contractor waives all its rights against the City for damages covered by property insurance. Contractor shall require a similar waiver from all its consultants and subcontractors, if any. Contractor waives all of its rights of recovery against the City because of deductible clauses in, or inadequacy of limits in, any policies of insurance that are in any way related to the work and that are secured and maintained by Contractor. Contractor waives any of its rights of recovery against the City because of a lack of insurance coverage. Contractor shall require similar waivers from all of its consultants. Contractor shall waive all of its rights of recovery against the City for loss or damage to any of its equipment, machinery, tools or property that is used in connection with this Agreement. Contractor shall require a similar waiver from all its consultants and subcontractors. 11. Insurance. Contractor, at its expense, shall procure and maintain in force for the duration of this Agreement, the following minimum insurance coverages: a. Comprehensive General Liability. Contractor shall maintain commercial general liability insurance in a minimum amount of $2,000,000 per occurrence; $2,000,000 annual aggregate. The policy shall cover liability arising from premises, operations, personal injury, advertising injury, and contractually assumed liability. The City shall be named as an additional insured. b. Automobile Liability. If Contractor transports any program participants in its vehicles, the Contractor shall maintain commercial automobile liability insurance, including owned, hired, and non-owned automobiles, with a minimum combined single limit of $2,000,000 per occurrence. c. Workers’ Compensation and Employer’s Liability. Contractor agrees to provide workers’ compensation insurance for all of its employees in accordance with the statutory requirements of the State of Minnesota. Within ten days of the effective date of this Agreement and thereafter upon the City’s request, Contractor shall provide a certificate of insurance as proof that the above coverages are in full force and effect. These insurance requirements may be met through any combination of primary and umbrella/excess insurance. Contractor’s policies shall be primary and non-contributory to any other valid and collectible insurance available to the City with respect to any claim arising out of the Contractor’s performance under this Agreement. Contractor’s policies and certificate of insurance shall state the coverage afforded under the policies shall not be cancelled without at least 30 days’ advanced written notice to the City. Without prejudice to any other right or remedy, if Contractor fails to obtain the required insurance, the City may elect to obtain equivalent insurance to protect Owner’s interests at Contractor’s expense and the consideration shall be adjusted accordingly. 13. COVID-19. In accordance with all applicable City, state, and federal laws, ordinances, rules and regulations related to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, Contractor agrees to the following: a. Contractor shall be solely responsible for all safety precautions at the Facilities during the time it is conducting its activities. b. Contractor shall at all times abide by all applicable state, federal and City rules, laws and ordinances. The City reserves the right to immediately terminate this Agreement without notice if Contractor does not abide by the requirements of this Paragraph 13. 14. Assignment and Subcontracting. Neither the City nor Contractor shall assign, or transfer any rights under or interest (including, but without limitation, moneys that may become due or moneys that are due) in the Agreement without the written consent of the other except to the extent that the effect of this limitation may be restricted by law. Unless specifically stated to the contrary in any written consent to an assignment, no assignment will release or discharge the assignor from any duty or responsibility under this Agreement. Nothing contained in this paragraph shall prevent Contractor from employing such independent consultants, associates, and subcontractors, as it may deem appropriate to assist it in the performance of the Services required by this Agreement. Any instrument in violation of this provision is null and void. 15. Independent Contractor. Contractor is an independent contractor. Contractor’s duties shall be performed with the understanding that Contractor has special expertise as to the services which Contractor is to perform and is customarily engaged in the independent performance of the same or similar services for others. Contractor shall provide or contract for all required equipment and personnel. Contractor shall control the manner in which the services are performed; however, the nature of the Services and the results to be achieved shall be specified by the City. The parties agree that this is not a joint venture and the parties are not co-partners. Contractor is not an employee or agent of the City and has no authority to make any binding commitments or obligations on behalf of the City except to the extent expressly provided in this Agreement. All services provided by Contractor pursuant to this Agreement shall be provided by Contractor as an independent contractor and not as an employee of the City for any purpose, including but not limited to: income tax withholding, workers' compensation, unemployment compensation, FICA taxes, liability for torts and eligibility for employee benefits. 16. Compliance with Laws. Contractor shall exercise due professional care to comply with applicable federal, state and local laws, rules, ordinances and regulations in effect as of the date Contractor agrees to provide the Services. Contractor’s guests, invitees, members, officers, officials, agents, employees, volunteers, representatives, and subcontractors shall abide by the City’s policies prohibiting sexual harassment and tobacco, drug, and alcohol use as defined on the City’s Tobacco, Drug, and Alcohol Policy, as well as all other reasonable work rules, safety rules, or policies, and procedures regulating the conduct of persons on City property, at all times while performing duties pursuant to this Agreement. Contractor agrees and understands that a violation of any of these policies, procedures, or rules constitutes a breach of the Agreement and sufficient grounds for immediate termination of the Agreement by the City. 17. Entire Agreement. This Agreement, any attached exhibits, and any addenda signed by the parties shall constitute the entire agreement between the City and Contractor, and supersedes any other written or oral agreements between the City and Contractor. This Agreement may only be modified in a writing signed by the City and Contractor. If there is any conflict between the terms of this Agreement and the referenced or attached items, the terms of this Agreement shall prevail. 18. Third Party Rights. The parties to this Agreement do not intend to confer any rights under this Agreement on any third party. 19. Choice of Law and Venue. This Agreement shall be governed by and construed in accordance with the laws of the state of Minnesota. Any disputes, controversies, or claims arising out of this Agreement shall be heard in the state or federal courts of Hennepin County, Minnesota, and all parties to this Agreement waive any objection to the jurisdiction of these courts, whether based on convenience or otherwise. 20. Conflict of Interest. Contractor shall use reasonable care to avoid conflicts of interest and appearances of impropriety in representation of the City. In the event of a conflict of interest, Contractor shall advise the City and, either secure a waiver of the conflict, or advise the City that it will be unable to provide the requested Services. 21. Agreement Not Exclusive. The City retains the right to hire other professional service providers for this or other matters, in the City’s sole discretion. 22. Data Practices Act Compliance. Any and all data provided to Contractor, received from Contractor, created, collected, received, stored, used, maintained, or disseminated by Contractor pursuant to this Agreement shall be administered in accordance with, and is subject to the requirements of the Minnesota Government Data Practices Act, Minnesota Statutes, Chapter 13. Contractor agrees to notify the City within three business days if it receives a data request from a third party. This paragraph does not create a duty on the part of Contractor to provide access to public data to the public if the public data are available from the City, except as required by the terms of this Agreement. These obligations shall survive the termination or completion of this Agreement. 23. No Discrimination. Contractor agrees not to discriminate in providing products and services under this Agreement on the basis of race, color, sex, creed, national origin, disability, age, sexual orientation, status with regard to public assistance, or religion. Violation of any part of this provision may lead to immediate termination of this Agreement. Contractor agrees to comply with the Americans with Disabilities Act as amended (“ADA”), section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, and the Minnesota Human Rights Act, Minnesota Statutes, Chapter 363A. Contractor agrees to hold harmless and indemnify the City from costs, including but not limited to damages, attorneys’ fees and staff time, in any action or proceeding brought alleging a violation of these laws by Contractor or its guests, invitees, members, officers, officials, agents, employees, volunteers, representatives and subcontractors. Upon request, Contractor shall provide accommodation to allow individuals with disabilities to participate in all Services under this Agreement. Contractor agrees to utilize its own auxiliary aid or service in order to comply with ADA requirements for effective communication with individuals with disabilities. 24. Authorized Agents. The City’s authorized agent for purposes of administration of this contract is Rick Birno, the Parks and Recreation Director of the City, or designee. Contractor’s authorized agent for purposes of administration of this contract is Daniel Nabedrick, or designee who shall perform or supervise the performance of all Services. 25. Notices. Any notices permitted or required by this Agreement shall be deemed given when mailed, personally delivered or emailed to: CONTRACTOR THE CITY Daniel Nabedrick Twin City Tennis Camps 8014 Highway 55, Ste. 101 Golden Valley, MN 55427 dnabedrick@twincitytenniscamps.com Rick Birno, Parks & Recreation Director City of Golden Valley 7800 Golden Valley Road Golden Valley, MN 55427 rbirno@goldenvalleymn.gov or such other contact information as either party may provide to the other by notice given in accordance with this provision. 26. Waiver. No waiver of any provision or of any breach of this Agreement shall constitute a waiver of any other provisions or any other or further breach, and no such waiver shall be effective unless made in writing and signed by an authorized representative of the party to be charged with such a waiver. 27. Headings. The headings contained in this Agreement have been inserted for convenience of reference only and shall in no way define, limit or affect the scope and intent of this Agreement. 28. Severability. In the event that any provision of this Agreement shall be illegal or otherwise unenforceable, such provision shall be severed, and the balance of the Agreement shall continue in full force and effect. 29. Signatory. Each person executing this Agreement (“Signatory”) represents and warrants that they are duly authorized to sign on behalf of their respective organization. In the event Contractor did not authorize the Signatory to sign on its behalf, the Signatory agrees to assume responsibility for the duties and liability of Contractor, described in this Agreement, personally. 30. Counterparts and Electronic Signatures. This Agreement may be executed in two or more counterparts, each of which shall be deemed an original, but all of which taken together shall constitute one and the same instrument. This Agreement may be transmitted by electronic mail in portable document format (“pdf”) and signatures appearing on electronic mail instruments shall be treated as original signatures. 31. Recitals. The City and Contractor agree that the Recitals are true and correct and are fully incorporated into this Agreement. [Remainder of page intentionally left blank. Signature page follows.] IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the City and Contractor have caused this Professional Services Agreement to be executed by their duly authorized representatives in duplicate on the respective dates indicated below. TWIN CITY TENNIS CAMPS (INC.): CITY OF GOLDEN VALLEY: By: _________________________________ By: _________________________________ Name: ______________________________ Shepard M. Harris, Mayor Title: _______________________________ By: _________________________________ Timothy J. Cruikshank, City Manager SPRING Wesley Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday Sunday 5/4-End of Spring HS Tennis 3-8 PM 3-8 PM 3-8 PM 3-8 PM 3-6 PM 2 courts 2 courts 2 courts 2 courts 2 courts Brookview Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday Sunday 5/4-End of Spring HS Tennis 9:30 AM-5 PM 11 AM-5 PM 4 courts 4 courts Brookview Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday Sunday End of Spring HS Tennis-6/5 3-8 PM 3-8 PM 3-8 PM 3-8 PM 3-6 PM 9:30 AM-5 PM 11 AM-5 PM 4 courts 4 courts 4 courts 4 courts 4 courts 4 courts 4 courts End of spring HS Tennis - tentative: 5/26 NOTES: No TCTC on Monday, May 30 SUMMER Wesley Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday Sunday 6/6-9/4 8:30 A-4 PM 8:30 A-4 PM 8:30 A-4 PM 8:30 A-4 PM 8:30 A-4 PM 4 courts 4 courts 4 courts 4 courts 4 courts Brookview Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday Sunday 6/7-9/4 8:30 AM-4 PM 8:30 AM-4 PM 8:30 AM-4 PM 8:30 AM-4 PM 8:30 AM-4 PM 9:30 AM-12 PM 6 courts 6 courts 6 courts 6 courts 6 courts 4 courts 4-8:30 PM 4-8:30 PM 4-8:30 PM 4-8:30 PM 4-6 PM 4 courts 4 courts 4 courts 4 courts 4 courts Saturday, June 12: Brookview move to Wesley 4 courts FALL Wesley Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday Sunday 9/6-10/24 3-6 PM 3-6 PM 3-6 PM 3-6 PM 4 courts 4 courts 4 courts 4 courts Brookview Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday Sunday 9/6-10/23 6-8 PM 6-8 PM 6-8 PM 6-8 PM 4-6 PM 8:30 AM-4 PM 9:30 AM-12:30 PM 4 courts 4 courts 4 courts 4 courts 4 courts 4 courts 1 Court Brookview 11 AM-4 PM 11 AM-4 PM 11 AM-4 PM 10/19-10/21 4 courts 4 courts 4 courts NOTES: No TCTC Sept 5 2022 TWIN CITY TENNIS CAMP SCHEDULE EXHIBIT A FACILITY USE SCHEDULE EXHIBIT B CONTRACTOR SERVICES It is understood that the Contractor is experienced and trained to provide tennis recreation program services and that the City requires such services. Therefore, it is hereby agreed that Contractor shall be solely responsible for providing tennis instruction services (the “Services”) in accordance with the following standards: 1. Instruction: a. Contractor shall be a member of the United States Tennis Association (“USTA”) and follow all USTA guidelines for tennis instruction. b. Contractor shall complete background checks on all of its instructors. c. Contractor shall provide concussion training, as provided through the Center of Disease Control and Prevention website, for all of its instructors. d. Copies of all staff’s background checks and Concussion Training Certificates shall be made available upon request to Golden Valley Parks and Recreation. e. All of Contractor’s instructors shall be at least 16 years of age or older. 2. Supplies: a. Contractor shall provide all necessary supplies and staff, including. Including all supplies needed to protect staff and program participants from Covid 19. b. Contractor shall remove all supplies from the Facilities at the end of program. Contractor shall remove all teaching aides, supplies, additional signage, etc. at the end of each daily program. c. Contractor may have clocks and court caddies on the court. Clocks and caddies may stay on the courts for the duration of the season. The City is not responsible for damaged or stolen items. d. Contractor shall retrieve all tennis balls and other supplies from the area at the conclusion of each day. 3. Registration and Communication: a. Contractor shall be responsible for all aspects of registration. b. Contractor shall have a working website and access for phone communication for all participants and Golden Valley Parks and Recreation staff. c. Contractor shall use best efforts to accommodate the registration requests of Golden Valley residents before the registration requests of non-Golden Valley residents. . d. Contractor shall offer fee assistance for Golden Valley residents who request financial assistance. 4. Facility Use: a. Contractor shall submit all facility repair requests in writing or via email to City staff. Contractor shall not make any changes to the Facilities without written approval from the City. b. Contractor shall maintain a neat and orderly operation for the duration of the program. Contractor shall pick up all recycling, garbage, and debris and place them in appropriate containers at conclusion of each day. c. Any additional Facility usage above and beyond the contracted days and times must be requested and approved and will be subject to additional charges. d. Contractor may use the Brookview Tennis Court building office area beginning on the effective date of this Agreement and ending October 31, 2022. The City shall supply up to 4 keys for the Brookview tennis building office area. Contractor shall return all keys to the City by Oct. 31, 2022. 5. Permits/Ordinance: a. Contractor shall follow City signage guidelines as directed by Parks and Recreation Staff. Contractor may post one banner/sign per two tennis courts. Banners/signs are not allowed on any City building. b. If Contractor wishes to sell merchandise, Contractor must obtain a permit from the City. 6. Tournaments: a. Contractor shall be responsible for ordering and paying dumpster expense for all tournaments if offered. 7. Safety: a. Contractor shall provide first aid kit, ice, and safety supplies. b. Contractor shall report to the City all injuries that occur on City property or during the Program. c. Contractor will be expected to follow all Covid 19 safety procedures as outlined by the State of Minnesota and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and as otherwise required in this Agreement. 8. Transportation. If the Contractor transports, or provides any transportation services to, any participants in the tennis recreation program then: a. If the Contractor transports any minor it shall obtain the written consent of the parent or guardian of such minor prior to transporting such minor; b. The transportation services provided to any participants shall be provided in accordance with all applicable laws and regulations; and c. Contractor shall maintain automobile liability insurance as required under the Independent Contractor Agreement. Golden Valley City Council Meeting May 3, 2022 Agenda Item 3. D. 3. Authorize Waiver Agreement for the Minnesota Retiree Environmental Technical Assistance Program with the State of Minnesota Prepared By Ethan Kehrberg, Minnesota GreenCorps Member Eric Eckman, Environmental Resources Supervisor Summary Golden Valley’s Minnesota GreenCorps member is helping the City implement its Energy Action Plan. The member’s work includes evaluating opportunities to improve the energy efficiency of City buildings, equipment, and lighting, and abating waste. Utilizing the Buildings Benchmarks and Beyond (B3) Benchmarking tool, the member identified Golden Valley City Hall as one of the least energy- efficient municipal buildings with the greatest opportunity for improvement. An impactful way to address energy use and its associated costs is to complete an energy audit. Minnesota Retiree Environmental Technical Assistance Program (RETAP) provides facility assessments by skilled, retired professionals. Their visits bring a team of RETAP members to find opportunities to increase energy efficiency and water conservation, reduce waste, and reduce operating costs. Over 500 businesses and institutions have completed RETAP assessments since 2001. Recommendations may be simple behavior changes, maintenance improvements, or more complicated retrofits. While the City is under no obligation to implement the recommendations, a high percentage of surveyed clients do. Expectations for the RETAP visit include: • Prior to the site visit: we provide RETAP with monthly utility bills for a one-year period and any available pre-assessment information list data. • During the site visit: 1) RETAP meets with persons knowledgeable about building structure, building function, energy use policies, utility billing, HVAC, and waste disposal; 2) RETAP tours the facility. • After the site visit: RETAP meets with persons responsible for building operations and maintenance to present results of the assessment and recommendations for energy, waste and cost savings. City Council Regular Meeting Executive Summary City of Golden Valley May 3, 2022 2 Financial or Budget Considerations RETAP’s services are no-cost and non-regulatory so there are no budget considerations for the City. The Minnesota Pollution Control Agency (MPCA) provides financial support for Minnesota RETAP. Implementing RETAP recommendations has resulted in an average annual savings of approximately $6,000 per client. Recommended Actions Motion to Authorize the City Manager to enter into an Agreement with Minnesota RETAP for an energy and waste management assessment in a form approved by the City Attorney. Supporting Documents • RETAP Assessment Waiver Agreement 2022 (2 pages) ENERGY, WASTE MANAGEMENT ASSESSMENT RETAP February 8, 2022 Tim Cruikshank, City Manager Shep Harris, Mayor City of Golden Valley 7800 Golden Valley Rd Golden Valley MN 55427 ASSESSMENT WAIVER FORM Thank you for requesting an energy and waste management assessment for your facility. Upon acceptance, this letter will document the agreement whereby you will participate in an assessment with consultants from the Minnesota Retiree Environmental Technical Assistance Program (Minnesota RETAP). This assessment will be conducted by a team leader and a Minnesota RETAP team at no cost to you. This letter confirms an energy and waste management assessment site visit scheduled for Golden Valley City Hall building at a date we agree upon. The RETAP assessment team will include members with relevant experience and training in the assessment process. Expectations for this visit include: • Prior to the site visit: you provide us with monthly utility bills for a one-year period and any available pre-assessment information list data. We need copies of the complete bills, not just the page with the amount due. • During the site visit: 1) we meet with persons knowledgeable of building structure, building function, energy use policies, utility billing, HVAC, and waste disposal; 2) we tour the facility. • After the site visit: we meet with persons responsible for building operations and maintenance to present results of the assessment and recommendations for energy, waste and cost savings. The on-site assessment will take approximately 3 hours. The purpose of the assessment is to reduce energy and water use and reduce waste. Upon completion of this assessment, you will be provided a report containing recommendations to reduce energy and water use and waste generation. You have no obligation under this agreement to implement the recommendations provided by the assessment. However, this letter confirms that you will try to implement the recommendations that are most beneficial to you in terms of saving you money from water, waste and energy use reductions. This letter also confirms that you agree to cooperate in providing follow-up data to Minnesota RETAP about which recommendations you implement. RETAP is partnering with Minnesota Clean Energy Resource Teams (CERTS) to assist you with identifying and procuring financing to help implement the recommendations. After you receive the report, CERTS may contact you about types of financial assistance you may be eligible for, such as Property-Assessed Clean Energy (PACE), utility rebates and tax incentives, seed grants, loans and other assistance. In consideration of the assessment being conducted and services provided to you (hereinafter “The Company/Organization”) at no cost, it is agreed as follows: 1. Neither any member of Minnesota RETAP, the State, nor the Minnesota Pollution Control Agency (hereinafter “The Parties”) nor their respective agents and employees shall be held liable for any oral or ENERGY, WASTE MANAGEMENT ASSESSMENT RETAP written statements made during or resulting from the assessment and final report. It is further understood and agreed that The Parties and their respective agents and employees assume no liability to The Company/Organization, its officers, directors, agents, employees, or to any third party for any damages to property, both real and personal, or personal injuries, including death, arising out of or in any way connected with the services provided at no cost under this agreement. In addition, The Company/Organization shall indemnify and hold harmless the Parties, and their respective agents and employees from any and all costs, demands, or damages, including any attorney fees, arising out of or in any way connected with the services provided at no cost. 2. It is further understood and agreed that The Parties and any of their respective agents and employees do not: (a) make any warranty or representation of any kind whatsoever, either expressly or implied, to the accuracy, safety, completeness, usefulness, or reliability of any information, apparatus, product, method, or process in any way related to the assessment; (b) assume any liability or responsibility for the use of, or for damages resulting from the use of, any information, apparatus, product, method, or process in any way related to the assessment; and (c) represent that the use of any information, apparatus, product, method, or process in any way related to the assessment would not infringe privately owned rights. The Company/Organization further understands and agrees on behalf of itself, its officers, directors, agents, and employees that it is solely responsible for determining the adaptability or suitability of the assessment and final report for its purposes. If the above correctly reflects our agreement, please sign and date two original copies on behalf of The Company/Organization in the space provided below and return one original to us. The other original is for your files. If it is more convenient for you, we can pick up our copy of the signed agreement at the time of our site visit. Minnesota RETAP will not be able to begin work without your acceptance and signing of this document. Thank you for your interest and agreement to participate in this worthwhile project. Very truly yours, Dr Rin Porter RETAP Co-Coordinator Telephone: 507-235-3355 E-Mail: retaprin@gmail.com Accepted and agreed to this date: MAY 3, 2022. CITY OF GOLDEN VALLEY: BY:_________________________________ Shepard M. Harris, Mayor BY:_________________________________ Timothy J. Cruikshank, City Manager Golden Valley City Council Meeting May 3, 2022 Agenda Item 3. D. 4. Approve Purchase of Valves for Golden Valley Pump House Prepared By Tim Kieffer, Public Works Director Joe Hansen, Utility Maintenance Superintendent Summary The city is part of the Joint Water Commission (JWC) with the cities of Crystal and New Hope that purchase drinking water from Minneapolis. The JWC Capital Improvement Program includes funds in 2022 to replace pumps, motors, and valves at the Crystal and Golden Valley pump houses. Before that work can occur, three valves at the Golden Valley pump house need to be replaced. Staff proposes to replace the existing pneumatic actuating valves with electronic actuating valves. Staff solicited quotes for the valves. The results are below: Vessco, Incorporated $42,139.48 Duncan Company $45,471.00 The valves will be purchased through the JWC and installed by the Utility Maintenance department to keep costs down. Financial Or Budget Considerations The 2022-2031 Joint Water Commission Capital Improvement Program includes $480,000 for Replacements at Pump Stations (#16-001). The cost of the valves is $42,139.48. It is anticipated another $18,000 will be needed to calibrate the new valves and connect them to the SCADA system. Recommended Action Motion to approve purchase of valves for Golden Valley pump house from Vessco, Inc. in the amount of $42,139.48. Supporting Documents • Vessco, Inc. Quote (1 page) • Duncan Co. Quote (1 page) DATE 3/24/2022 TO:DERRICK GODDARD PROJECT:ACTUATOR REHAB OWNER CITY OF GOLDEN VALLEY, MN FROM: CHAD BELTRAND QTY ITEM UNIT EXT 1 DEZURIK 12" AWWA BUTTERFLY VALVE, BAW SERIES, CI BODY, DI DISC, 316 SS  SHAFT, 150B CLASS, ROTORK IQT SERIES ELECTRIC MOTOR OPERATOR, 1000  SERIES, 120V/1PH/60HZ, WT NEMA 4/6 ENCLOSURE, CPT/FOLO, MOD SERVICE, 4‐ 20mA IN & OUT, AND MANUAL OVERRIDE. 11,553.14$          11,553.14$              1 DEZURIK 12" AWWA BUTTERFLY VALVE, BAW SERIES, CI BODY, DI DISC, 316 SS  SHAFT, 150B CLASS, G‐SERIES GEARBOX WITH HANDWHEEL 1,308.06$            1,308.06$                 1 DEZURIK 12" AWWA BUTTERFLY VALVE, BAW SERIES, CI BODY, DI DISC, 316 SS  SHAFT, 150B CLASS, ROTORK IQT SERIES ELECTRIC MOTOR OPERATOR, 1000  SERIES, 120V/1PH/60HZ, WT NEMA 4/6 ENCLOSURE, CPT/FOLO, MOD SERVICE, 4‐ 20mA IN & OUT, AND MANUAL OVERRIDE. 11,553.14$          11,553.14$              1 DEZURIK 12" AWWA BUTTERFLY VALVE, BAW SERIES, CI BODY, DI DISC, 316 SS  SHAFT, 150B CLASS, G‐SERIES GEARBOX WITH HANDWHEEL 1,308.06$            1,308.06$                 1 DEZURIK 12" AWWA BUTTERFLY VALVE, BAW SERIES, CI BODY, DI DISC, 316 SS  SHAFT, 150B CLASS, ROTORK IQT SERIES ELECTRIC MOTOR OPERATOR, 1000  SERIES, 120V/1PH/60HZ, WT NEMA 4/6 ENCLOSURE, CPT/FOLO, MOD SERVICE, 4‐ 20mA IN & OUT, AND MANUAL OVERRIDE. 11,553.14$          11,553.14$              1 DEZURIK 12" AWWA BUTTERFLY VALVE, BAW SERIES, CI BODY, DI DISC, 316 SS  SHAFT, 150B CLASS, G‐SERIES GEARBOX WITH HANDWHEEL 1,308.06$            1,308.06$                 3 SPOOL PIECE, GASKETS, AND BOLTS 1,185.30$            3,555.90$                 TOTAL 42,139.48$              FREIGHT: PREPAY & ADD STARTUP: INCLUDED The following is a list of Sections and Equipment included in our Scope of Supply.  Vessco hereinafter referred to as “Company” proposes to furnish, under the Terms and Conditions hereinafter set forth and described  in the accompanying description and specifications, the following equipment.  Vessco, Inc. will provide pricing and any additional  information you may require prior to the bid opening. Good luck on your bid and we look forward to working with you on this most  important project.  DELIVERIES: 24‐26 WEEKS The above quotation is offered in accordance with Vessco’s and the attached individual Terms and Conditions of sale. If you have any  questions regarding the above equipment, please direct them to my attention. I would be more than happy to discuss any part of this proposal with you via phone at 952‐314‐0644, via email at  cbeltrand@vessco.com, or by arranging a meeting at a mutually acceptable time.  Again, good luck to all of you and I look forward to  working with you on this project. Respectfully Submitted, VESSCO, INC.  Chad Beltrand Sales Manager ‐ Flow Control CITY OF GOLDEN VALLEY MAY 3, 2022 _________________________________ ___________________________________ Shepard M. Harris, Mayor Timothy J. Cruikshank, City Manager 425 Hoover St. N.E. Minneapolis, MN 55413 Phone: 612-331-1776 Fax: 612-331-4735 www.duncanco.com QUOTATION Attention:Derrick Goddard Phone:651-325-8362 Company:City of Golden Valley Fax: Date:4/20/2022 From:Phil Sowden Quote #GV0420-1036 Project Reference:Dezuriks w/ Rotorks QTY DESCRIPTION PRICE EA TOTAL 3 12,425.00 37,275.00 3 1,422.00 4,266.00 3 Spool piece, gaskets, and hardward 1,310.00 3,930.00 TOTAL 45,471.00 All sales of products by Duncan Co. are subject exclusively to, and expressly conditioned on, your acceptance of the terms in this quotation and Duncan Co.'s Terms and Conditions of Sale, which are available at http://www.duncanco.com/company-profile/duncan-terms-conditions/ and made part of this agreement as if fully set forth here. Any terms or conditions of buyer that conflict with, differ from, or add to these terms will not become part of any order or agreement unless specifically agreed to in writing by an authorized representative of Duncan Co. Lead time: 24-28 wks Dezurik 12" BAW (CI body, DI disc, 316SS shaft) w/ Rotork IQT1000-MOD-120/1/60 Electric Actuator WT Nema 4/6, 4-20 in/out, manual override, battery backup Dezurik 12" BAW (CI body, DI disc, 316SS shaft) w/ manual gear operator Freight Prepay & Add 12" 12" Size 12" Prices herein are firm for 30 days from the date quoted, subject to change after that time without notice or if quantity changes. Leadtimes quoted are subject to change prior to sale. Golden Valley City Council Meeting May 3, 2022 Agenda Item 3. D. 5. Approve Purchase of Salt Brine Production Equipment Prepared By Tim Kieffer, Public Works Director Marshall Beugen, Street and Vehicle Maintenance Superintendent Summary The equipment staff uses to make salt brine for snow and ice control is 10 years old and reached its useful lifespan. Staff uses salt brine to anti-ice before winter storms and pre-wet granular salt before applying it to roadways. Using salt brine, along with various additives, allows the city to use less granular salt and still maintain the same level of service. This helps reduce the environmental impacts to creeks, lakes, and wetlands. Another benefit is reduced costs by purchasing less salt. Staff recommends purchasing the equipment from the state contract through the State of Minnesota’s cooperative purchasing venture (CPV). The Minnesota Materials Management Division has awarded contract number S-829(5) to VariTech Industries, Inc. Financial Or Budget Considerations The 2022-2031 Vehicles and Equipment and Storm Water Capital Improvement Programs include $50,000 (V&E-159) and $50,000 (SS-64) for a total of $100,000 to purchase the equipment. The total cost of the equipment is $83,163.10. Recommended Action Motion to Approve Purchase of Salt Brine Production Equipment from VariTech Industries, Inc. in the amount of $83,163.10. Supporting Documents • VariTech Industries, Inc. Quote (3 pages) VariTech Industries Inc. A subsidiary of FORCE America, Inc. 501 East Cliff Road Burnsville, MN 55337 (952) 707-1300 Subject: Message: From: Date: To: Total Pages (including cover): Email: Phone Number: FAX Number: www.forceamerica.com E-Mail 4/19/22 3 VariTech Industries Inc 4115 Minnesota Street Alexandria MN 56308-3328 USA sales@varitech-industries.com City Of Golden Valley 7800 Golden Valley Rd Minneapolis MN 55427 USA 888-208-0686 320-763-5612 Attn:Mark Rae S O L D T O S H I P T O 17415 City Of Golden Valley 7800 Golden Valley Rd Minneapolis MN 55427 USA Expiration Date: Customer Ref.: Customer P/O: Customer Contact: Payment Terms: Sales Rep: F.O.B.: VariTech Industries Inc. A subsidiary of FORCE America, Inc. 501 East Cliff Road Burnsville, MN 55337 (952) 707-1300 QUOTE QT060-1017955-5 DATE 4/19/2022 PAGE 2 OF 3 001554 City Of Golden Valley 7800 Golden Valley Rd Minneapolis MN 55427 USA VariTech Industries Inc Site 160 4115 Minnesota Street Alexandria MN 56308-3328 USA Price bases off of the MNDOT State 2022 Contract S-829 Ship From: NOTES Sales Quotation 4/28/2022 BB-SB600H1P1 Mark Rae Net 30 days Kietzmann, Andrew J Alexandria, MN PRODUCT / DESCRIPTION QTY PRICEU/M EXTENSION 1165769 Rev. A Brine Boss IFM, SB600, Hybrid, Single Phase, 1 Tank Setup BB-SB600H1P1 1 59,490.00EA 59,490.00 1 1168984 SNY 6000 Gal 102" D x 188" H Deicer Tank 3" Bulkhead SNY-VST-6000-Deicer Tank-102 2 10,599.00EA 21,198.00 2 1085313 2" Fth Ss Bolted Tank Ftg New Style Epdm Gasket SNY TAN-200BOLT-SS 4 210.00EA 840.00 3 1085314 2" Poly Siphon Tube SNY TAN-200SIPHON-FT 2 65.55EA 131.10 4 1100036 Rev. A Service, Installation INSTALL 1 1,000.00EA 1,000.00 5 1100020 Rev. A Freight, Estimated Charges for Quotation FR-EST 1 675.00EA 675.00 6 www.forceamerica.com MISC CHARGE: TAX: QUOTE TOTAL: $0.00 $0.00 $83,334.10 Questions about your order? Contact us by phone at 888-208-0686 or email us at sales@varitech-industries.com MERCHANDISE TOTAL:$83,334.10 ________________________________ Shepard M. Harris, Mayor ________________________________ Timothy J. Cruikshank, City Manager DATE: MAY 3, 2022 Acceptance: These Terms and Conditions shall govern all contracts for the sale of any goods to Buyer by VariTech Industries, Inc. and/or its subsidiaries and divisions (collectively "Seller"). These Terms and Conditions shall control over any conflicting terms and condition set forth in any request for quotation, purchase order, confirmation or other transaction document submitted to Seller by Buyer. VARITECH INDUSTRIES, INC. TERMS AND CONDITIONS Delays in Delivery: Seller shall not be responsible for any delay in delivery of goods to Buyer due to fires, strikes, riots, Acts of God, government orders or restrictions, delays in transportation delays by suppliers or materials or parts, inability to obtain necessary labor or other causes beyond Seller’s control. In the event of such delay, the delivery date shall be extended for a reasonable period of time. Damage or Loss in Transit: All risk of loss shall pass to Buyer at the time of delivery of the goods. Deliver of the goods to any carrier shall constitute delivery of the goods to Buyer, regardless of which party retained or hired the carrier. Warranties: Seller warrants that any goods sold by Seller to Buyer shall be free from defects in material and workmanship for a period of one (1) year from the date of delivery. THIS WARRANTY SHALL BE THE SOLE AND EXCLUSIVE WARRANTY MADE BY SELLER TO BUYER. SELLER HEREBY DISCLAIMS ANY IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, WITHOUT LIMITATION, ANY IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. Exclusive Remedy: If within the aforementioned one-year warranty period, any goods sold by Seller are proven by Buyer to be defective to Seller’s reasonable satisfaction, then such defective goods shall be repaired or replaced, at Seller’s sole option. THIS REMEDY SHALL BE THE SOLE AND EXCLUSIVE REMEDY AVAILABLE TO BUYER. BUYER SHALL NOT, UNDER ANY CIRCUMSTANCES, BE ENTITLED TO RECOVER ANY INCIDENTAL, CONSEQUENTIAL OR CONTINGENT DAMAGES, INCLUDING, WITHOUT LIMITATION, LOST PROFITS. Payment: Buyer shall pay Seller’s invoices within thirty (30) days of receipt. Buyer agrees to pay interest to Seller on any past-due amounts at the rate of 18% per year. Security Interest: To secure payment of Seller’s invoices, Buyer hereby grants Seller a security interest in all goods sold by Seller to Buyer. Buyer hereby authorizes Seller to file financing statements on behalf of Buyer to perfect Seller’s security interest. In the event Buyer fails to timely pay Seller for any goods sold to Buyer, Seller may proceed, at its option, to utilize the remedies available to a secured party under Article 9 of the Uniform Commercial Code. Freight Terms: All sales made by Seller to Buyer shall be F.O.B. Seller’s Distribution Center. Returned Goods: Goods may only be returned by Buyer with Seller’s prior authorization and consent. Only unused goods in original containers of current design will be considered for return. Specially manufactured, custom or modified goods shall not be returnable. Buyer shall pay all transportation charges for any goods accepted for return by Seller. Buyer shall also pay a restocking charge equal to 15% of the original price of any goods accepted by Seller for return. Taxes and Other Charges: Buyer shall be responsible for paying any taxes, duties, fees, or other charges imposed by any governmental entity based upon Buyer’s purchase of any goods from Seller. Legal Action: These Terms and Conditions and the terms of any contract for the sale of goods by Seller to Buyer shall be governed by and construed in accordance with Minnesota law. Any action relating to or arising out of any contact for the sale of goods by Seller to Buyer shall be venued in state or federal court in Minnesota. Buyer consents to the personal jurisdiction of Minnesota courts and waives any defense that venue in Minnesota is in any manner inconvenient. Buyer shall pay all attorney fees, costs and disbursements incurred by Seller in collecting any amounts due from Buyer, enforcing these Terms and Conditions and/or enforcing the terms of any contract for the sale of goods by Seller to Buyer. Any legal action by Buyer against Seller relating to or arising out of any contract for the sale of goods by Seller to Buyer shall be brought within one (1) year after the delivery of the goods or be forever barred. Golden Valley City Council Meeting May 3, 2022 Agenda Item 3. D. 6. Approve Purchase of Public Safety Lower-Level Conference Room Equipment and Maintenance Contract Prepared By Sue Virnig, Finance Director Adam Knauer, Information Technology Supervisor Summary The equipment in the lower-level Public Safety conference room has ended its useful life. The equipment is used by both police and fire departments along with other city groups to allow training exercises and facilitate large groups. The new equipment will also allow hybrid meetings with many departments. The pricing is from the University of Minnesota contract and allowed to purchase under Statute 123A. 21. The contract for maintenance has been approved by the City Attorney. Financial Or Budget Considerations Both American Rescue Plan Act monies for $70,000 and Unassigned Fund Balance of $45,000 was appropriated to pay for the technology needs of the Public Safety Lower-Level conference room. The remaining $1,276.13 will come from the police department supply budget. The maintenance contract for three years is $7,840 and will be paid for from the 2022 Police Budget (1320.6340). Recommended Action • Motion to approve a contract from AVI for the Public Safety Lower-Level Conference Room Equipment for $116,276.13. • Motion to approve maintenance contract with AVI for $7,840 for a term of three years. Supporting Documents • Retail Sales Agreement with AVI Systems, Inc. (15 pages) Retail Sales Agreement AVI Systems Inc., 9675 W 76th St Eden Prairie, MN, 55344 | Phone: (952)949-3700, Fax: (952)949-6000 Proposal Number: 1115097 Proposal Date: April 21, 2022 Prepared For: Golden Valley, City of Golden Valley PD & FD Updates; Training Room 4.21.2022 Attn: Adam Knauer Prepared By: Renea Dalton Phone: (952)949-6040 Email: renea.dalton@avisystems.com Attn: Adam Knauer Attn: Adam Knauer Golden Valley, City of Golden Valley, City of 7800 Golden Valley Rd 7700 Golden Valley Road Golden Valley, MN, 55427-1968 Golden Valley, MN, 55427 Phone: (763)593-8016 Phone: (763)593-8015 Email: aknauer@goldenvalleymn.gov Email: aknauer@goldenvalleymn.gov Customer Number: 14354 COMMENTS Bethany Brunsell & Ryan Schroeder are the contacts at Fire Dept. PRODUCTS AND SERVICES SUMMARY Equipment $77,236.72 Integration $34,760.24 PRO Support $7,840.00 Shipping & Handling $4,279.17 Tax $0.00 Grand Total $124,116.13 Unless otherwise specified. The prices quoted reflect a discount for a cash payment (i.e., check, wire transfer) made by Cus tomer in full within the time stated for payment on each invoice. Discount only applies to new items included on the invoice, and only applies if the balance on the invoice is paid in full. All returned equipment is subject to a restocking charge. The prices are valid for 15 days and may be locked in by signing this Retail Sales Agreement. Overdue balances are subject to a finance charge of 1.5% per month, or interest at the highest rate permitted by applicable law. In the event AVI must pursue collection of unpaid invoices, Customer agrees to pay all of AVI’s costs of collection, including its a ttorneys’ fees. BILL TO SITE RSA: 1115097 Printed on April 21, 2022 Page 2 of 15 INVOICING AND PAYMENT TERMS Customer and AVI have agreed on the payment method of CHECK. Payment must be remitted by stated method. To the extent Customer seeks to use of any payment methods other than stated, and that payment method results in an increased transactio n cost to AVI, the new payment must be approved in writing, and the Customer shall be responsible for paying the increased transaction cost to AVI associated with the change in payment method. Payments shall be made 30 days from invoice date. So long as t he invoice has been sent and the Customer’s payment is made within the terms work will continue. AVI uses progress billing, and invoices for equipment and services allocated to the contract on a monthly basis. Unless other wise specified, all items quoted (goods and services) as well as applicable out of pocket expenses (permits, licenses, shipping, e tc.) are invoiced in summary (including applicable sales taxes due for each category of invoiced items). Customer is to make payments to the following “Remit to” address: AVI Systems NW8393 PO Box 1450 Minneapolis, MN 55485-8393 If Payment Method is ACH: Customer must make all payments in the form of bank wire transfers or electronic funds transfers through an automated clearinghouse with electronic remittance detail, in accordance with the payment instructions AVI Systems provide s on its invoice to Customer. A monthly summary of detailed equipment received is available upon request. Equipment received may be different than equipme nt billed based on agreed billing method. TAXES AND DELIVERY Unless stated otherwise in the "Products and Services Summary" above, AVI will add and include all applicable taxes, permit fees, license fees, and delivery charges to the amount of each invoice. Taxes will be calculated according to the state law(s) in which the product(s) and/or service(s) are provided. Unless Customer provides a valid tax exemption certificate for any tax exemption(s) claimed, AVI shall invoice for and collect all applicable taxes in accordance with state law(s), and Customer will be responsible for seeking a tax credit/refund from the applicable taxing authority. AGREEMENT TO QUOTE AND DOCUMENTS CONSTITUTING YOUR CONTRACT WITH AVI Customer hereby accepts the above quote for goods and/or services from AVI. When duly executed and returned to AVI, AVI's Cr edit Department will check Customer's credit and approve the terms. After approval by AVI's Credit Department and signature by AVI, this Retail Sales Agreement will, together with the AVI General Terms & Conditions (which can be found at http://www.avisystems.com/TermsofSale) form a binding agreement between Customer and AVI. (This Retail Sales Agreement and the AVI General Terms & Conditions of Sale (the “T&Cs”) are referred to collectively as the “Agreement”). If not defined in this Agreement, all capitalized terms shall have the meaning given to them in the T&Cs. Should AVI's Credit Department determine at any point prior to AVI commencing work that Customer’s credit is not adequate, or should it otherwise disapprove of the commercial terms, AVI reserves the right to terminate the Agreement without cause and without penalty to AVI. AGREED AND ACCEPTED BY AVI Systems, Inc. City of Golden Valley Company Signature Signature Shepard M. Harris, Mayor Printed Name Date: May 3, 2022 Date RSA: 1115097 Printed on April 21, 2022 Page 3 of 15 CONFIDENTIAL INFORMATION The company listed in the “Prepared For” line has requested this confidential price quotation , and shall be deemed “Confidential Information” as that term is defined in the T&Cs. This information and document is confidential and is intended solely for the private use of the customer identified above. Customer agrees it will not disseminate copies of this quote to any third party withou t the prior written consent of AVI. Sharing a copy of this quote, or any portion of the Agreement with any competitor of AVI is a violation of this confidentiality provision. If you are not the intended recipient of this quote (i.e., the customer), you are not properly in possession of this document and you should immediately destroy all copies of it. RSA: 1115097 Printed on April 21, 2022 Page 4 of 15 SERVICES TO BE PROVIDED INTEGRATION SERVICES INTEGRATION SCOPE OF WORK A. SUMMARY: AVI Systems will update the Fire & Police Training Room located on the lower level of the Public Safety Building in Golden Valley. It is important the system be easy to use for all types of users. The system must provide quality audio, video, and presentations for both local and far end participants. The system must support multiple room configurations as well use cases. Room dimensions are 38’4” side to side, 28’4” front to back with an 8’11” ceiling. It is noted there is a soffit at front of house as well as back of house. Soffit 1= 7’11.5” Soffit 2= 7’3” Furthest viewer is 25’ B. SYSTEM DESCRIPTION: Lower-Level Training Room • Functionality Description: This space will be used for large group training sessions as well as an EOC. The space requires three (3) large displays. Two (2) wall mounted in the front of house with the third display in the back o f house to be used as a confidence monitor. There will be an additional wall mounted display located in the adjacent open area to be used as overflow. Content from multiple sources will be viewed via mounted displays • Displays: o Two (2) 98” displays wall mounted in the front of the room o 65-75” display wall mounted in back of house (confidence monitor) o 65” display in overflow area ▪ Content on this display will mirror main display • Source Devices: o Owner furnished Dedicated PC ▪ This PC will be used for UC Conferencing applications. Owner will be responsible to provide the applications. ▪ Camera capturing presenter ▪ Camera capturing audience o Wireless presentations via Barco Click Share o Cable box provided by owner o Cable box provided by owner o HDMI connections at lectern ▪ This connection will accommodate any portable source requiring HDMI connection – Document Camera – OFE Portable Device (Laptop) o Available inputs, two (2), for future source additions to the system • Audio: o Program audio will be via ceiling mounted speakers (9 existing) o Ceiling mounted microphones for coverage of the entire space o Gooseneck Microphone at lectern ▪ Lectern will be provided by AVI Systems o Wireless microphone system ▪ One wearable • Conferencing: o Video meetings via soft client application (i.e., Zoom, Teams and WebEx) located on owner furnished PC ▪ Content for conferencing will be shared from OFE devices joining the hosted meeting. Sources listed above will not be able to be shared with the call. RSA: 1115097 Printed on April 21, 2022 Page 5 of 15 ▪ Two (2) pan tilt zoom (PTZ) cameras will be used for conferencing. One will capture the presenter the other to capture the audience. • Controls: o Touch screen controller will be housed at the front of the room. There will be two locations for the touch panel to reside. The room layout and graphical icons will be included for ease of use. The control interface will also be available as an App allowing the owner to control the system from an OFE iPad. Control functions include: ▪ System on/off ▪ Volume controls ▪ Source selection and routing – Default routing is the same content to all displays – Option for advanced routing will include selecting independent source to independent display location. Displays will be selected per room layout on touch panel. ▪ Conferencing Control – Camera selections Up to three (3) pre-sets per camera Pre-sets can be updated by owner at any time with a simple press and hold solution. – Microphone Mute/Unmute – Note content sharing during conferencing will be available only from additional devices joining the call. The PC hosting the meeting can share content from that PC only, no other sources are available to share content via hosting PC. • Equipment Location: o Equipment Rack will be moved to the storage closet located within the room. All equipment not wall mounted or ceiling mounted will be housed in the equipment rack. Requirements for the rack power and network will be provided prior to integration. o Lectern to be provided by AVI. A cable whip will be provided allowing movement and disconnect of the lectern from the system. C. EXCLUSIONS: The following work is not included in our Scope of Work: • All conduits, high voltage, wiring panels, breakers, relays, boxes, receptacles, etc. • Concrete saw cutting and/or core drilling • Fire wall, ceiling, roof and floor penetration • Necessary gypsum board replacement and/or repair • Necessary ceiling tile or T-bar modifications, replacements and/or repair • Structural support of equipment *AVI Systems not responsible for building related vibrations • Installation of ceiling mounted projection screen • All millwork (moldings, trim, cut outs, etc.) • Patching and Painting • Permits (unless specifically provided for and identified within the contract ) • Unless otherwise stated the pricing in this agreement does not include prevailing wage or union labor • Unless specifically noted lifts and scaffolding are not included D. CONSTRUCTION CONSIDERATIONS: In order to accomplish the outlined goals of this project, the Customer will be responsible for contracting with an outside entity to make the necessary modifications to the space as directed by AVI Systems. The costs associated with these modifications are not included in this proposal. E. NOTICE: THIS SCOPE OF WORK IS DELIVERED ON THE BASIS OF THE FOLLOWING ASSUMPTIONS: • The room(s) match(es) the drawings provided . RSA: 1115097 Printed on April 21, 2022 Page 6 of 15 • Site preparation by the Customer and their contractors includes electrical and data placement per AVI Systems specification. • Site preparation will be verified by AVI Systems project manager or representative before scheduling of the installation. All work areas should be clean and dust free prior to the beginning of on-site integration of electronic equipment. • Customer communication of readiness will be considered accurate and executable by AVI Systems project manager. • In the event of any arrival to site that AVI Systems is not able to execute work efficiently and definably progress, the Customer will be charged a fee to reimburse AVI Systems for all lost time and inefficiencies. At this time, the Customer will be presented a Contract Change Order and will/may halt work until acceptance by the Customer and rescheduling of the integration effort is agreed upon. • Rescheduling and redeployment of AVI Systems technicians due to unacceptable site preparation may cause scheduling delays of up to 10 business days. • There is ready access to the building / facility and the room(s) for equipment and materials. • There is secure storage for equipment during a multi-day integration. • If Customer furnished equipment and existing cabling is to be used, AVI Systems assumes that these items are in good working condition at this time and will integrate into the d esigned solution. Any repair, replacement and/or configuration of these items that may be necessary will be made at an additional cost. • All Network configurations including IP addresses are to be provided, operational and functional before AVI Systems integration begins. AVI Systems will not be responsible for testing the LAN connections. • Cable or Satellite drops must be in place with converter boxes operational before the completion of integration. Any delay resulting in extra work caused by late arrival of these items will result in a change order for time and materials. • Document review / feedback on drawings / correspondence will be completed by the Customer within two business days (unless otherwise noted). • The documented Change Control process will be used to the maximum extent possible – the Customer will have an assigned person with the authority to communicate/approve project Field Directed Change Orders and Contract Change Orders (see Appendix). • In developing a comprehensive proposal for equipment and integration services AVI Systems’ Sales Representatives and Engineering teams must make some assumptions regarding the physical construction of your facility, the availability of technical infrastructure and site conditions for installation. If any of th e conditions we have indicated in the site survey form are incorrect or have changed for your particular project or project site, please let your Sales representative know as soon as possible. Conditions of the site found during integration effort which are different from those documented may have an effect on the price of the system solution, integration or services. To ensure that you have an accurate proposal based on your facility and specific to the conditions of your project, please review all project documentation carefully. F. INTEGRATION PROJECT MANAGEMENT PROCESSES AVI Systems will follow a foundational project management process which may include the following actions/deliverables (based on the size/complexity/duration of the integration project): • Site Survey – performed prior to Retail Sales Agreement and attached • Project Welcome Notice – emailed upon receipt of Purchase Order • Project Kick-Off meeting with Customer Representative(s) – either by phone or in-person • Project Status reviews – informal or formal – either by phone or in-person (based on the size/complexity/duration of the project) • Project Change Control – comprised of Field Directed Change Order and/or Contract Change Order submittals (see Appendix) • Notice of Substantial Completion (see Appendix) – at Customer walk-through – prior to Service transition G. KNOWLEDGE TRANSFER (TRAINING) RSA: 1115097 Printed on April 21, 2022 Page 7 of 15 This is geared specifically towards the end-user / operator. The purpose of this knowledge transfer is to provide operators with the necessary knowledge to confidently and comfortably operate all aspects of the integrated system. Areas covered include the following: • Equipment and system overview • Equipment operation and function • Equipment start up, stop, and shut down • Equipment automatic and manual operation • Discussion and documentation relating to control system operation • Discussion and documentation relating to system processor and its control applications • Powering up, powering down AV system via control system • Manual operation of display systems, audio system and all other related components • Use/operation of patch panels, when and where to be used • Who to call when help is required H. AVI SYSTEMS INTEGRATION SERVICES RESPONSIBILITIES AVI Systems will provide services/work for the project as described above in the Scope of Work or per the attached separate Scope of Work document detailing the scope of work to be performed. • Provide equipment, materials and service items per the contract products and services detail. • Provide systems equipment integration and supervisory responsibility of the equipment integration. • Provide systems configuration, checkout and testing. • Provide project timeline schedules. • Provide necessary information, as requested, to the owner or other parties involved with this project to ensure that proper AC electrical power and cableways and/or conduits are provided to properly integrate the eq uipment within the facilities. • Provide manufacturer supplied equipment documentation. • Provide final documentation and “as built” system drawings (CAD) - if purchased. • Provide system training following integration to the designated project leader or team. I. CUSTOMER INTEGRATION SERVICES RESPONSIBILITIES • Provide for the construction or modification of the facilities for soundproofing, lighting, electrical, HVAC, structural support of equipment, and decorating as appropriate. Includes installation of ceiling mounted projection screen. • Provide for the ordering, provisioning, installation, wiring and verification of any Data Network (LAN, WAN, T1, ISDN, etc.) and Telephone Line (Analog or Digital) equipment and services prior to on-site integration. • Provide all necessary cableways and/or conduits required to facilitate AV systems wiring. • Provide all necessary conduit, wiring and devices for technical power to the AV systems equipment. • Provide reasonable accesses of AVI Systems personnel to the facilities during periods of integration, testing and training, including off hours and weekends. • Provide a secure area to house all integration materials and equipment. • Provide a project leader who will be available for consultation and meetings. • Provide timely review and approval of all documentation (Technical Reports, Drawings, Contracts, etc.). ENGINEERING SERVICES ENGINEERING SERVICES TO BE PROVIDED AVI Systems will work with the Customer and any related design professionals selected (architects, engineers, etc.) to provide initial and ongoing audiovisual systems design and engineering support for this project. AVI Systems strongly encourages the fostering of a truly open, cooperative “design team” approach with team members bringing unique, valuable insight from their special perspective to the team. The goal of these services is as follows: • Understand clearly the current and future AV needs of the Customer. • Provide accurate construction documents for implementation of the AV related infrastructur e. • Provide an overall AV plan that will allow for the procurement of appropriate AV equipment and installation, complete with system diagrams, ensuring correct integration of the equipment. • Compile the data gathered during the engineering process into an Integration Agreement for a turnkey installation of all AV systems, with the added value of a seamless integration process. RSA: 1115097 Printed on April 21, 2022 Page 8 of 15 The Design Process can be modified at any time per the direction of the Customer – otherwise it shall follow this general outline: AV Program Review / Verification – The AVI Systems design team will obtain from the Customer operational specifications desired of the audio and video systems within the designated facility. Additional facility information will be required including the building’s electrical, structural infrastructure, as well as the physical sizes of each room or space. Using compatible AutoCAD drawings, the integration of desired AV systems within available spaces will be visualized. During this initial design phase various equipment options, with an eye toward future expandability while maintaining current value, will be suggested. Budget Verification – The AVI Systems design team will create a project scope compiled from the information received from the Customer. AVI Systems will generate cost estimates for the various systems as outlined above and compare these budget estimates to any initial AV budgets. This process will reaffirm the exact direction that engineering resources should target in the next phase. Initial Design – During this phase, AVI Systems will begin applying the above-defined systems in detail to the various areas of the Customer facility. Further communications between the Customer and the other design team members, as various options are explored will be necessary at this time. Typical deliverables from this phase would include the following drawings and/or documents. • Preliminary AV Floor Plan and Elevations detailing locations of all AV devices • Preliminary Projection Geometry detailing projection/screen locations with viewing angles, mounting details, and etc. • Preliminary AV Technical Power, Conduit Plans, and Riser Drawings • Preliminary AV Video Flow • Preliminary AV Audio Flow • Preliminary AV Control Flow • Preliminary AV Rack Layouts • Preliminary Equipment Lists • Preliminary Budget Estimates Submittal of the above for the various rooms will be a progressive process, with most critical drawings being submitted first, allowing construction details to be available on an as needed basis. During this process, modifications to the preliminary plans due a variety of considerations - architectural/aesthetic considerations, budget reviews etc. Electronic exchange of AutoCAD drawings between all the “team members” will facilitate quick exchange of updates. Specific design “freeze dates” will be established with all parties to facilitate timely submittals and help manage Customer’s end cost. All changes are to be reviewed and approved by all parties. Final Systems Design – The changes made in the previous phase to the preliminary designs will be updated and regenerated as “final” construction documents. AVI Systems will typically work off of background drawings from an architect under contract to the Customer, entering AV specific data and returning these back to the architect (or other Customer retained design professional) for integration into final construction documents. Project Specifications Document – The final audiovisual systems designs will be compiled into a written project technical specifications document with equipment lists and any pricing not already included in the quote for a complete integration. This document will include the following system diagrams and documents. • AV Floor Plan and Elevations detailing locations of AV devices • AV Video Flow • AV Audio Flow • AV Control Flow • Equipment lists as specified • System infrastructure requirements including cable and termination specifications • System operational and post operational requirements • Project Scope of Work • Project costs • Project Integration Agreement RSA: 1115097 Printed on April 21, 2022 Page 9 of 15 CUSTOMER CARE CUSTOMER CARE SERVICES TO BE PROVIDED Customer Care is the ongoing care and maintenance services delivered to keep your System(s) functioning as originally designed and installed. AVI Systems will perform the services below, as further described in Definitions, for covered Systems. Customer Care Entitlement Matrix Entitlement Definition System Support Unified Communi- cations Digital Media Service Level Incident Management AVI Systems provides Priority Support to troubleshoot, remediate, and escalate all Incidents through to resolution. Included Included Included Remote initiation within two (2) business hours, Monday through Friday during standard hours (8am-5pm local time, excluding holidays) Remote Support AVI Systems provides remote Priority Support for supported systems to diagnose and resolve incidents. Included Included Included Remote response within (8) business hours, Monday through Friday during standard hours (8am-5pm local time, excluding holidays) Onsite Support AVI Systems provides Priority Support for technician dispatch to the client location to diagnose and resolve an Incident. Included Not Included Not Included Onsite response within eight (8) business hours, Monday through Friday during standard hours (8am-5pm local time, excluding holidays) Advanced Parts Replacement AVI Systems provides advanced replacement of failed hardware components. Does not include Consumables or Obsolete Equipment. Included Included Included Repair and/or replacement is manufacturer dependent. Loaner Equipment on Best Effort basis Software Update Assistance AVI Systems provides labor to implement updates of existing software to correct software errors and/or resolve incidents Included Included Included System Training AVI Systems conducts user training to cover operation of the system and how to contact AVI Systems for support. Technical, Administrative, or Product Specific training is available separate from this agreement. Included Not Included Not Included Remote user training, scheduled at least one (1) week in advance  System Health Checks AVI Systems personnel perform preventative maintenance. Includes cleaning, adjustments, functional tests, and replacement of parts to keep the system equipment in efficient operating condition. Included Not Included Not Included Two (2) System Health Checks per year, each scheduled at least one (1) week in advance  Asset Management AVI Systems tracks asset information for Systems. Included Included Included CUSTOMER CARE DEFINITIONS System – Defined as the items listed in the Products and Services Detail section of this Agreement or listed on an attached Equipment List with the exception of Consumables, Owner Furnished Equipment, and Obsolete Equipment. RSA: 1115097 Printed on April 21, 2022 Page 10 of 15 Priority Support – Means all work under AVI Systems support agreements with Customers is scheduled ahead of any other on-demand work. Remote Support – Means a service whereby remote calls made to communications and terminal equipment via Customer provided IP connection to determine failures and remedies. Only available where equipment is capable and configured by AVI Systems to provide same. Onsite Support - Service level response assumes client location is within 60 miles of an AVI Systems Service Center. Additional travel costs may apply if the client location is beyond 60 miles of an AVI Systems Service Center. Consumables – Means parts such as recording media, batteries, projection lamps and bulbs, etc. Consumables are parts that are not included under this Agreement. Obsolete Equipment – Defined as items (though possibly still in use) that are outdated with no manufacturer support or parts availability, or products with formal end of life as defined by their manufacturer. Obsolete Equipment are parts that are not included under this Agreement. Loaner Equipment – Defined as table top LCD projectors and flat screen monitors under 50”. Table top pro jectors are not integrated into a system. Flat screen monitors will be installed onto a wall if reasonably possible. Best Effort – Means AVI Systems strives to provide the Service or repair any Incident in an appropriate and generally accepted manner using the resources available but makes no promise in this reference. Advanced Parts Replacement - Provides for recycling of equipment covered in a system or consumables with no additional fees. Includes coverage for shipping to/from manufacturer for equipment sent to for warranty diagnosis, repair or exchange Software Update Assistance – Defined as revisions of existing software which provide maintenance to correct software errors. Assumes software is provided at no charge by the manufacturer or covered under a valid manufacturer maintenance contract. Cascading software dependencies may impact ability to issue updates. Software and features which require additional licensing are not included under this Agreement. Changes to custom templates or scripts after initial deployment are available separate from this agreement. CUSTOMER CARE - UNIFIED COMMUNICATIONS Remote Technical Support • Help Desk phone number: 866-836-8277 • Help Desk email: ucsupport@avisystems.com CUSTOMER CARE - DIGITAL MEDIA Remote Technical Support • Help Desk phone number: 866-929-4256 • Help Desk email: dmsupport@avisystems.com SYSTEM SUPPORT TERMS Coverage Dates – Unless otherwise stated, the service coverage date will be effective as of substantial completion or System Support Agreement invoice date; whichever is applicable. Coverage will extend for the duration specified by the corresponding line item description found in the Product and Services Detail section of this Agreement. AVI Systems reserves the right to withhold services until the invoice is paid in full. Exclusions – For situations where AVI Systems is providing service or support under this Agreement, no cost service, maintenance or repair shall not apply to the Equipment if any person other than an AVI Systems technician or other person authorized by AVI Systems, without AVI Systems prior written consent, improperly wires, integrates, repairs, modifies or adjusts the Equipment or performs any maintenance service on it during the term of this Agreement. Furthermore, any Equipment service, maintenance or repair shall not apply if AVI Systems determines, in its sole discretion, that the problems with the Equipment were caused by (a) Customer's negligence; or (b) theft, abuse, fire, flood, wind, lighting, unreasonable power line surges or brownouts, or acts of God or public enemy; or (c) use of any equipment for other than the ordinary use for which such equipment was designed or the purpose for which such equipment was RSA: 1115097 Printed on April 21, 2022 Page 11 of 15 intended, or (d) operation of equipment within an unsuitable operating environment, or (e) failure to provide a suitable operating environment as prescribed by equipment manufacturer specifications, including, without limitation, with respect to electrical power, air conditioning and humidity control. Systems Support Terms are in addition to AVI Systems’ General Terms and Conditions of Sale. UNIFIED COMMUNICATIONS TERMS Coverage Dates – Unless otherwise stated, the service coverage start date for Unified Communications Support Services for new unified communications infrastructure equipment will be the shipped date from the manufacturer and coverage will extend for the duration of time specified by the corresponding line item description found in the Product and Services Detail section of this Agreement. The start date for Unified Communications Support Services purchased to c over existing equipment are established by the manufacturer and the coverage will extend for the duration specified by the corresponding line item description found in the Product and Services Detail section of this Agreement. Unified Communications Terms are in addition to AVI Systems’ General Terms and Conditions of Sale. PRODUCTS AND SERVICES DETAIL PRODUCTS: Mfg Description Qty Price Extended Training Room/EOC NEC MultiSync C981Q - 98" Direct LED LCD Public Display Monitor, 3840 x 2160 (4K / UHD), 350 cd/m2, Anti 2 $9,515.85 $19,031.70 CHIEF Micro-Adjust Tilt Wall Mount X-Large 2 $332.93 $665.86 NEC MultiSync C751Q - 75" Slim LED LCD Public Display Monitor with ATSC Tuner (SB-11TM), 3840 x 2160 (4K 1 $3,582.93 $3,582.93 CHIEF Micro-Adjust Tilt Wall Mount Large 1 $280.98 $280.98 NEC MultiSync ME651 - 65" LED LCD Public Display Monitor, 3840 x 2160 (UHD), 18/7, 400 cd/m2, Landscape/ 1 $1,685.37 $1,685.37 CHIEF Micro-Adjust Tilt Wall Mount Large 1 $280.98 $280.98 OWNER Owner Furnished PC 1 $0.00 $0.00 OWNER Owner Furnished LAPTOP CONNECTION 1 $0.00 $0.00 OWNER Owner Furnished CABLE TV 2 $0.00 $0.00 BARCO CLICKSHARE CSE-200+ SET 1 $2,219.51 $2,219.51 ELMO MO-2 STEM CAM 1 $557.32 $557.32 BIAMP Fixed I/O DSP with 12 analog inputs, 8 analog outputs, 8 channels configurable USB audio, 32 x 32 ch 1 $2,621.95 $2,621.95 OWNER Owner Furnished Ceiling Speakers 9 $0.00 $0.00 CRESTRON X-Series Amplifier 1 $555.56 $555.56 SENNHEISER TeamConnect Ceiling 2 Microphone kit. Includes (1) TeamConnect Ceiling 2 microphone, (1)Set of SL CM 2 $3,375.00 $6,750.00 SHURE Cardioid-18" Gooseneck Condenser Microphone, Attached Preamp with XLR, Shock Mount, Flange Mount, Sn 1 $201.59 $201.59 SHURE WL183 Lavalier Microphone System 1 $1,064.70 $1,064.70 SHURE 50' UHF Remote Antenna Extension Cable, BNC-BNC, RG8X/U Type 2 $84.57 $169.14 SHURE In-line antenna amplifier for remote mounting. (470-902 MHz) 2 $144.82 $289.64 SHURE In-line adapter. Supplies 12V DC bias power over coaxial BNC cable, includes PS23US 2 $67.20 $134.40 VADDIO AV Bridge Mini N/A 1 $1,978.41 $1,978.41 ICRON Icron USB 3-2-1 Raven 3104 Pro 1 $1,604.88 $1,604.88 VADDIO RoboSHOT 12E OneLINK HDMI SYS WHT 2 $4,847.68 $9,695.36 CRESTRON 4-Series? Control System 1 $1,944.44 $1,944.44 CRESTRON IR Emitter Probe w/Terminal Block Connector 2 $34.72 $69.44 CRESTRON 10.1 in. Tabletop Touch Screen, Black Smooth 1 $2,083.33 $2,083.33 OWNER Owner Furnished iPad w/ Crestron Control App 1 $0.00 $0.00 NETGEAR M430028GPOE+ MANAGED SW APS1000W 1 $2,424.50 $2,424.50 CRESTRON DM NVX® 4K60 4:4:4 HDR Network AV Decoder 4 $812.50 $3,250.00 CRESTRON DM NVX® 4K60 4:4:4 HDR Network AV Encoder 2 $812.50 $1,625.00 CRESTRON DM NVX® 4K60 4:4:4 HDR Network AV Encoder/Decoder Card with Downmixing and Dante® Audio 1 $1,500.00 $1,500.00 CRESTRON DM NVX® 4K60 4:4:4 HDR Network AV Encoder Card 5 $812.50 $4,062.50 RSA: 1115097 Printed on April 21, 2022 Page 12 of 15 CRESTRON DigitalMedia? Card Chassis for DM-NVX-C & DMCF, 8 Slots 1 $1,388.89 $1,388.89 CRESTRON DM NVX Director? Virtual Switching Appliance, 80 Endpoints 1 $3,472.22 $3,472.22 OWNER Owner Furnished Equipment Rack 1 $0.00 $0.00 MIDDLE ATLANTI 9OUT15ARCKMNT POWER CEN 2 $121.65 $243.30 MIDDLE ATLANTI L2 LECTERN28W25DCFGE 1 $1,565.76 $1,565.76 MIDDLE ATLANTI 1SP VENTED UTILITY SHELF 3 $42.28 $126.84 WIREMOLD DSKTP PWR CTR COMMERCIAL BLK 3 PW 1 $110.22 $110.22 Sub-Total: Training Room/EOC $77,236.72 Integration Including: Engineering & Drawings Project Management Programming Integration Cables & Connectors On Site Integration Sub-Total: Integration $34,760.24 Sub-Total: $0.00 Total: $111,996.96 PRO SUPPORT: Model # Mfg Description Qty Price Extended AVISSA1YR AVI SYSTEMS 1 Year System Support Agreement 1.0000 $7,840.00 $7,840.00 Refer to Page 1 for the Grand Total that includes Taxes, and Shipping & Handling. RSA: 1115097 Printed on April 21, 2022 Page 13 of 15 AVI Systems General Terms and Conditions of Sale The following General Terms & Conditions of Sale (the “T&Cs”) in combination with either (a) a signed Retail Sales Agreement or (b) Quote under which AVI Systems, Inc (“AVI”) agrees to supply goods or services constitute a binding contract (the “Agreement”) between AVI and the entity identified on page one of the Retail Sales Agreement or Quote (the “Customer”). In the absence of a separately negotiated “Master Services Agreement” between AVI and Customer signed in “wet ink” by the Chief Executive Officer or Chief Financial Officer of AVI, these T&C’s shall apply. Any terms and conditions set forth in any correspondence, purchase order or Internet based form from Customer to AVI which purport to constitute terms and conditions which are in addition to those set forth in this Agreement or which attempt to establish conflicting terms and conditions to those set forth in this Agreement are expressly rejected by AVI unless the same has been manually countersigned in wet ink by an Officer of AVI. 1. Changes In The Scope of Work – Where a Scope of Work is included with this Agreement, costs resulting from changes in the scope of this project by the Customer, including any additional requirements or restrictions placed on AVI by the Customer or its representatives, will be added to the contract price. When AVI becomes aware of the nature and impact of the change, a contract Change Order will be submitted for review and approval by the Customer before work continues. AVI has the right to suspend the work on the project pending Customer’s written approval of the Change Order. 2. Ownership and Use of Documents and Electronic Data – Where applicable, drawings, specifications, other documents, and electronic data furnished by AVI for the associated project under this Agreement are instruments of the services provided. These items are “Confidential Information” as defined in this Agreement and AVI shall retain all common law, statutory and other reserved rights, including any copyright in these instruments. These instruments of service are furnished for use solely with respect to the associated project under this Agreement. The C ustomer shall be permitted to retain copies of any drawings, specifications, other documents, and electronic data furnished by AVI for information and reference in connection with the associated project and for no other purpose. 3. Proprietary Protection of Programs – Where applicable this Agreement does not cause any transfer of title, or intellectual rights, in control systems programs, or any materials produced in connection therewith, including any source code. Any applications or programs supplied by AVI are provided, and are authorized for installation, execution, and use only in machine-readable object code form. This Agreement is expressly limited to the use of the programs by the Customer for the equipment in connection with the associated project. Customer agrees that it will not seek to reverse- engineer any program to obtain source codes, and that it will not disclose the programs source codes or configuration files t o any third party, without the written consent of AVI. The programs, source codes and configuration files, together with AVI' know-how and integration and configuration techniques, furnished hereunder are proprietary to AVI, and were developed at its private expense. If Customer is a branch of the United States government, for purposes of this Agreement any software furnished by AVI hereunder shall be deemed "restricted computer software", and any data, including installation and systems configuration information, shall be deemed "limited rights data", as those terms are defined in FAR 52.227-14 of the Code of Federal regulations. 4. Shipping and Handling and Taxes – The prices shown are F.O.B. manufacturer's plant or AVI’s office depending on where items are located when direction is issued to ship to the point of integration. The Customer, in accordance with AVI’s current shipping and billing practices, will pay all destination charges. In addition to the prices on this Agreement, the Customer agrees to pay amounts equal to any sales tax invoiced by AVI, or (where applicable) any use or personal property taxes resulting from this Agreement or any activities h ereunder. Customer will defend, indemnify and hold harmless AVI against any claims by any tax authority for all unpaid taxes or for any sales tax exemption claimed by Customer. 5. Title – Where applicable, title to the Equipment passes to the Customer on the earlier of: (a) the date of shipment from AVI to Customer, or (b) the date on which AVI transmits its invoice to Customer. 6. Security Interest – In addition to any mechanics' lien rights, the Customer, for value received, hereby grants to AVI a security interest under t he Minnesota commercial code together with the a security interest under the law(s) of the state(s) in which work is performed or equipment is delivered. This security interest shall extend to all Equipment, plus any additions and replacements of such Equipment, and all accessories, parts and connecting Equipment now or hereafter affixed thereto. This security interest will be satisfied by payment in full unless otherwise prov ided for in an installment payment agreement. The security interest shall be security for all sums owed by Customer under this Agreement. A copy of this Agreement may be filed as a financing statement with the appropriate authority at any time after signature of the Customer. Such filing does not constitute acceptance of this Agreement by AVI 7. Risk of Loss or Damage – Notwithstanding Customer’s payment of the purchase price for Equipment, all risk of loss or damage shall transfer from AVI to Customer upon transfer of Title to Customer. Customer shall be responsible for securing insurance on Equipment from t his point forward. 8. Receiving/Integration – Unless the Agreement expressly includes integration services by AVI, the Customer agrees to furnish all services required for receiving, unpacking and placing Equipment in the desired location along with integration. Packaging materials shall be the property of the Customer. 9. Equipment Warranties – To the extent AVI receives any warranties from a manufacturer on Equipment; it will pass them through to Customer to the full extent permitted by the terms of each warranty. Factory warranties vary by manufacturer, and no additional warranties are expressed or implied. 10. General Warranties – Each Party represents and warrants to the other that: (i) it has full right, power and authority to enter into and fully perf orm its obligations under this Agreement, including without limitation the right to bind any party it purports to bind to this Agreement; (ii) the execution, delivery and performance of this Agreement by that Party does not conflict with any other agreement to which it is a Party or by which it is bound, and (iii) it will comply with all applicable laws in its discharge of its obligations under this Agreement. AVI warrants, for a period of 90 days from Substantial Completion, the systems integration to be free from defects in workmanship. CUSTOMER WARRANTS THAT IT HAS NOT RELIED ON ANY RSA: 1115097 Printed on April 21, 2022 Page 14 of 15 INFORMATION OR REPRESENTATION PROVIDED BY OR ON BEHALF OF AVI WHICH IS NOT EXPRESSLY INCLUDED IN THESE GENERAL TERMS AND CONDITIONS OR THE RETAIL SALES AGREEMENT. EXCEPT AS EXPRESSLY SET FORTH HEREIN. AVI DISCLAIMS ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES WITH REGARD TO THE EQUIPMENT, MATERIALS AND SERVICES PROVIDED BY AVI, INCLUDING WITHOUT LIMITATION WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE, NON INFRINGEMENT AND TITLE. 11. Indemnification – Customer shall defend, indemnify and hold harmless AVI against all damages, claims, liabilities, losses and other expenses, including without limitation reasonable attorneys' fees and costs, (whether or not a lawsuit or other proceeding is commenced), that arise in whole or in part from: (a) any negligent act or omission of Customer, its agents, or subcontractors, (b) Customer's failure to fully conform to all laws, ordinances, rules and regulations which affect the Agreement, or (c) Customer’s breach of this Agreement. If Customer fails to promptly indemnify and defend such claims and/or pay AVI’s expenses, as provided above, AVI shall have the right to defend itself, and in that case, Customer shall reimburse AVI for all of its reasonable attorneys' fees, costs and damages incurred in settling or defending such claims within thirty (30) days of e ach of AVI’s written requests. AVI shall indemnify and hold harmless Customer against all damages, claims, liabilities, losses and other expenses, including without limitation reasonable attorneys' fees and costs, (whether or not a lawsuit or other proceeding is commenced), to the extent that the same is finally determined to be the result of (a) any grossly negligence or willful misconduct of AVI , its agents, or subcontractors, (b) AVI’s failure to fully conform to any material law, ordinance, rule or regulation which affects the Agreement, or (c) AVI’s uncured material breach of this Agreement. 12. Remedies – Upon default as provided herein, AVI shall have all the rights and remedies of a secured party under the Minnesota commercial code and under any other applicable laws. Any requirements of reasonable notice by AVI to Customer, or to any guarantors or sureties of Customer shall be met if such notice is mailed, postage prepaid, to the address of the party to be notified shown on the first page of this Agreement (or to such other mailing address as that party later furnishes in writing to AVI) at least ten calendar days before the time of the event or c ontemplated action by AVI set forth in said notice. The rights and remedies herein conferred upon AVI, shall be cumulative and not alternative and shall be in addition to and not in substitution of or in derogation of rights and remedies conferred by the Minnesota commercial code and other applicable laws. 13. Limitation of Remedies for Equipment – AVI’s entire liability and the Customer's sole and exclusive remedy in all situations involving performance or nonperformance of Equipment furnished under this Agreement, shall be the adjustment or repair of the Equipment or replacement of its parts by AVI, or, at AVI option, replacement of the Equipment. 14. Limitation on Liability – EXCEPT IN CIRCUMSTANCES INVOLVING ITS GROSS NEGLIGENCE OR WILLFUL MISCONDUCT, THE TOTAL LIABILITY OF A AVI UNDER THIS AGREEMENT FOR ANY CAUSE SHALL NOT EXCEED (EITHER FOR ANY SINGLE LOSS OR ALL LOSSES IN THE AGGREGATE) THE NET AMOUNT ACTUALLY PAID BY CUSTOMER TO AVI UNDER THIS AGREEMENT DURING THE TWELVE (12) MONTH PERIOD PRIOR TO THE DATE ON WHICH AVI’S LIABILITY FOR THE FIRST SUCH LOSS FIRST AROSE. 15. 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Please speak to your AVI representative if you have any questions in this regard. Golden Valley City Council Meeting May 3, 2022 Agenda Item 3. E. 1. Approve Resolution No. 22-045 to accept a donation for a park bench and a donated tree to be located at Lions Park honoring Jim Zwettler Prepared By Rick Birno, Director of Parks & Recreation Summary As adopted in the Donation/Gift Policy, a gift of real or personal property must be accepted by the City Council by resolution and be approved by a two-thirds majority of the Council. All donations and grants must be acknowledged and accepted by motion with a simple majority. Financial Or Budget Considerations Not applicable. Recommended Action Motion to adopt Resolution No. 22-045 to accept a donation from the Zwettler Family for the addition of a park bench and a donation of a tree for Lions Park honoring Jim Zwettler. Supporting Document • Resolution No. 22-045 to accept a donation of $2,600.00 from the family of Jim Zwettler for a park bench and the donation of a tree to be placed at Lions Park (1 page) RESOLUTION NO. 22-045 RESOLUTION ACCEPTING A DONATION FOR A PARK BENCH AND THE DONATION OF A TREE FROM THE ZWETTLER FAMILY FOR LIONS PARK WHEREAS, the City Council adopted Resolution 04-20 on March 16, 2004, which established a policy for the receipt of gifts; and WHEREAS, the Resolution states that a gift of real or personal property must be accepted by the City Council by resolution and be approved by a two-thirds majority of the Council. A cash donation must be acknowledged and accepted by motion with a simple majority. NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED that the City Council accept the following donations on behalf of its citizens: $2,600 donation from the Zwettler family for the addition of a new park bench and the donation of a tree (value of $40) honoring Jim Zwettler to be located at Lions Park. Adopted by the City Council of Golden Valley, Minnesota this 3rd day of May 2022. _____________________________ Shepard M. Harris, Mayor ATTEST: _____________________________ Theresa Schyma, City Clerk Golden Valley City Council Meeting May 3, 2022 Agenda Item 3. F. Approve Resolution No. 22-046 Adopting an Epidemic / Pandemic Response Plan Prepared By John Crelly, Fire Chief Summary The City of Golden Valley’s Epidemic/Pandemic Response (“EPR”) Plan was developed to prepare for, respond to, and recover from an epidemic/pandemic. Its purpose is to ensure uninterrupted performance of essential functions in the event of an epidemic/pandemic. This plan serves as a high-level initial approach to an emerging epidemic/pandemic event. It encompasses all personnel and operations of the City of Golden Valley. It presents a management framework to develop and establish a specific plan to address all aspects of an emerging epidemic / pandemic. The COVID-19 Recovery and Readiness Plan (CORR) is an example of a plan that was developed to address all aspects of dealing specifically with COVID-19. Financial Or Budget Considerations None Recommended Action Motion to Approve Resolution No. 22-046 Adopting an Epidemic / Pandemic Response Plan Supporting Documents • Resolution No. 22-046 – Adopting an Epidemic/Pandemic Response Plan (1 page) o Exhibit A - Epidemic / Pandemic Response Plan (16 pages) RESOLUTION NO. 22-046 RESOLUTION ADOPTING AN EPIDEMIC/PANDEMIC RESPONSE PLAN WHEREAS, the City Council adopted a COVID-19 Recovery and Readiness Plan (CORR) as an example of a plan that was developed to address all aspects of dealing specifically with COVID-19; and WHEREAS, the City’s Epidemic/Pandemic Response (EPR) Plan was developed to prepare for, respond to, and recover from an epidemic/pandemic for the purpose to ensure uninterrupted performance of essential functions in the event of an epidemic/pandemic. NOW THEREFORE BE IT RESOLVED, that the City Council for the City of Golden Valley adopts the Epidemic/Pandemic Response Plan attached hereto as Exhibit A. Adopted by the City Council of Golden Valley, Minnesota this 3rd day of May 2022 _____________________________ Shepard M. Harris, Mayor ATTEST: _____________________________ Theresa Schyma, City Clerk Epidemic/Pandemic Response Plan (“EPR Plan”) Epidemic/Pandemic Response Plan (“EPR Plan”) Epidemic/Pandemic Response Plan (“EPR Plan”) Epidemic/Pandemic Response Plan (“EPR Plan”) Table of Contents INTRODUCTION ............................................................................................................................................. 4 Executive Summary ................................................................................................................................... 4 Security and Privacy Statement ................................................................................................................ 4 Plan Assumptions ...................................................................................................................................... 4 Activation of the Epidemic/Pandemic Response (“EPR”) Plan ................................................................. 5 State & Local Emergency Response Leadership ....................................................................................... 5 State Pandemic Leadership ................................................................................................................... 5 City’s Emergency Management Director .............................................................................................. 6 Additional Government Leadership & Resources ..................................................................................... 6 North Suburban Emergency Operations Plan ....................................................................................... 6 Federal, State & County Resources ....................................................................................................... 6 External Support/Mutual Aid ................................................................................................................ 6 BACKGROUND INFORMATION - HISTORY ..................................................................................................... 6 Introduction and Purpose - objectives ...................................................................................................... 6 World Health Organization (WHO) ........................................................................................................... 7 “Continuum of Pandemic Phases” ........................................................................................................ 7 Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) .................................................................................... 7 EPR PLAN ACTIVATION .................................................................................................................................. 9 Coordination Team ................................................................................................................................... 9 Department Roles and Responsibilities .................................................................................................. 10 Specific Roles and Responsibilities.......................................................................................................... 10 Mayor .................................................................................................................................................. 10 City Council ......................................................................................................................................... 10 City Manager and Emergency Management Director ........................................................................ 10 M-Team (initial Coordination Team)................................................................................................... 10 Strategies to minimize the spread of disease (Mitigation Measures) ........................................................ 12 Understanding how viruses spread ........................................................................................................ 12 Health Screening for Symptoms ............................................................................................................. 13 Employees ........................................................................................................................................... 13 Epidemic/Pandemic Response Plan (“EPR Plan”) Customers and Vendors ...................................................................................................................... 13 Non-Pharmaceutical Interventions (NPIs) .............................................................................................. 13 Stay at home ....................................................................................................................................... 13 Cover your coughs and sneezes .......................................................................................................... 14 Wash your hands ................................................................................................................................ 14 Personal hygiene ................................................................................................................................. 14 Social Distancing ................................................................................................................................. 14 Community Level Interventions .............................................................................................................. 15 Engineered Controls ................................................................................................................................ 15 Barriers ................................................................................................................................................ 15 Surface Cleaning (routine surface cleaning) ....................................................................................... 15 Ventilation Systems ............................................................................................................................ 15 Pharmaceutical Interventions ................................................................................................................. 15 Administrative Actions (as need) to maintain operations ...................................................................... 16 Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) ..................................................................................................... 16 Epidemic/Pandemic Response Plan (“EPR Plan”) Epidemic/Pandemic Response Plan (“EPR Plan”) INTRODUCTION Executive Summary The City of Golden Valley’s Epidemic/Pandemic Response (“EPR”) Plan was developed to prepare for, respond to, and recover from an epidemic/pandemic. Its purpose is to ensure uninterrupted performance of essential functions in the event of an epidemic/pandemic. This plan serves as a high-level initial approach to an emerging epidemic/pandemic event. It encompasses all personnel and operations of the City of Golden Valley. It presents a management framework to develop and establish a specific plan to address all aspects of an emerging epidemic/pandemic. The COVID-19 Recovery and Readiness Plan (CORR) is an example of a plan that was developed to address all aspects of dealing specifically with COVID-19. Security and Privacy Statement This document is for official use only. This document is to be controlled, stored, handled, transmitted, distributed, and disposed of accordingly and is not to be released to the public or other personnel who do not have a valid “need to know” without prior approval of the Emergency Management Director. The disclosure of information in this plan may compromise the security of essential equipment, services, and systems of the City of Golden Valley, or otherwise impair its ability to carry out essential functions. Distribution of the EPR Plan in whole or part is limited to those personnel who need to know the information in order to successfully implement the plan. The City of Golden Valley or the Emergency Management Director (or designee) will distribute updated versions as critical changes occur. Copies of the EPR Plan will be distributed to other organizations to promote information sharing and facilitate a coordinated inter-organization continuity effort. Further distribution of the plan is not permitted without approval from the Emergency Management Director. Plan Assumptions In the event of an epidemic/pandemic, the City will be faced with reductions of workforce and significant human health concerns in the workplace and out in the public. This plan is designed to help the city minimize the risks that an epidemic/pandemic poses to the health and safety of employees, continuity of operations, and economic well-being. No one can predict when a pandemic might occur, how long it will last, and how serious its impacts might be. Therefore, it is imperative the City take steps to develop service continuation plans that protect employees, minimize disruptions, and limit negative impacts on staff, Epidemic/Pandemic Response Plan (“EPR Plan”) customers, vendors and our community. While a pandemic cannot be stopped, proper preparation may reduce the impact. Preparedness and mitigation require the city to assume and plan for worst-case scenarios. Accordingly, the city's EPR Plan is based on the following assumptions: • Minnesota Department of Health (MDH) will be the lead agency in the public health response to the pandemic. • The Emergency Management and the City Manager will act as the lead coordinators • Absenteeism due to illness rates for city employees could be as high as 40-50% at the height of the pandemic’s peak. Another 5% may fail to report to work due to fear of becoming ill or because they are caring for an afflicted family member. • Basic services such as law enforcement, fire emergency response, communications, public works, city hall and parks and recreation could be disrupted during a pandemic. • Assistance from outside organizations, county, state and federal government will be limited. • City government will not be able to perform all functions and provide all services at full capacity throughout the Epidemic / Pandemic. • Any city office may be closed due to staffing shortages or community quarantine. Activation of the Epidemic/Pandemic Response (“EPR”) Plan The City Manager, Emergency Manager or designee may activate this Epidemic/Pandemic Response (“EPR”) Plan when one or more of the following occurs: • The State of Minnesota advises local governments to implement Epidemic/Pandemic Response (“EPR”) plans • The State of Minnesota declares an emergency • The State of Minnesota activates (or partially activates) its Emergency Operations Center (“EOC”) • Hennepin County declares a public health emergency • Hennepin County activates (or partially activates) its EOC • The Federal government requests state and local governments to activate surge plans • The Mayor or City Council declare a local emergency under Minn. Stat. § 12.29 • The World Health Organization declares an Epidemic/Pandemic affecting the United States State & Local Emergency Response Leadership State Pandemic Leadership The Governor of Minnesota may declare a peacetime emergency under Minn. Stat. §12.31. By declaration the Governor has emergency powers to assign various state agencies to the Disaster Response and Recovery Council (DRRC). Designated members of the DRRC serve as points of contact to Homeland Security and Emergency Management (HSEM). HSEM will establish a Homeland Security Advisory Committee (HSAC) to determine strategies and priorities to manage the emergency. For Epidemic / Pandemic emergencies the Minnesota Department of Health (MDH) will most likely serve as the lead agency for all human infectious disease outbreaks and pandemic influenza in the state of Minnesota. MDH will coordinate the consequence management of infectious disease and pandemic outbreaks with HSEM and the State Emergency Operations Center (SEOC). If the need for mass vaccination dispensation or mass clinics arises, Hennepin County Human Services and Hennepin County Public Health will assume control and responsibility for operating Epidemic/Pandemic Response Plan (“EPR Plan”) the sites. In the event of pandemic influenza or other large-scale events, the Hennepin County Epidemiology unit will carry out recommendations made by MDH. City’s Emergency Management Director The City’s Emergency Management Director is the Fire Chief. The Assistant Fire Chiefs shall serve as alternate Emergency Management Directors. Additional Government Leadership & Resources North Suburban Emergency Operations Plan The North Suburban Emergency Managers Planning Group (NSEMPG) Emergency Operations Plan (“EOP”) provides details for organization officials to prepare for, respond to, recover from, and mitigate the impact of disasters and emergency events. Federal, State & County Resources Additional organizational support is available from the following agencies: • Hennepin County Emergency Management (HCEM) https://www.hennepin.us/residents/emergencies/emergency-management • Minnesota Division of Homeland Security and Emergency Management (HSEM) https://dps.mn.gov/divisions/hsem/Pages/default.aspx • Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) https://www.fema.gov/ External Support/Mutual Aid The City works with several other government entities under emergency management mutual aid agreements pursuant to Minn. Stat. § 12.27. Additionally, the City has joint powers agreements (JPAs) to ensure continuation of operations in the event of a crisis. These JPAs include, but are not limited to: • The City’s Public Works department has a Public Works Joint Powers Mutual Aid Agreement to share personnel and equipment with other agencies within the State of MN. • The City’s Fire department has a Joint and Cooperative Agreement for use of fire personnel and equipment • The Information Technology department has a Joint Powers Agreement with LOGIS. • The Communications department has an agreement with CCX Media. BACKGROUND INFORMATION - HISTORY Introduction and Purpose - objectives The City of Golden Valley is committed to providing a safe and healthy workplace for all its employees. Epidemics and pandemics are country- and world-wide outbreaks of an infectious disease that may cause widespread absenteeism, employee illness or deaths, restricted public transportation, mandatory social distancing, and fear. In the event of an outbreak, City leaders may need to close City buildings and limit services to only essential services due to staffing shortages or to minimize the risk of spreading illnesses that pose risks to the health and safety of employees and members of the public. The City has developed this Epidemic/Pandemic Epidemic/Pandemic Response Plan (“EPR Plan”) Response Plan (“EPR Plan” or “Plan”) to mitigate the potential for transmission of infectious diseases within the workplace. Managers and workers are all equally responsible for implementing this plan. Only through this cooperative effort can we establish and maintain the safety and health of all persons in our workplaces. This Plan describes how the City will provide a safe and healthy workplace for its workers in response to an Epidemic/Pandemic event. An epidemic is a disease that affects a large number of people within a community, population, or region. A pandemic is an epidemic that has spread to multiple countries or continents across the world. The EPR Plan follows industry guidance developed by the World Health Organization (WHO), League of Minnesota Cities (LMC), the State of Minnesota, which is based upon Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), Minnesota Department of Health (MDH) guidelines, Minnesota’s Occupational Safety and Health Administration (Minnesota OSHA) statutes, rules, and standards, and Minnesota’s relevant and current executive orders. In case of a conflict between this plan and any applicable state or federal law, including but not limited to any Order of the Governor of Minnesota, the applicable state or federal law shall govern. World Health Organization (WHO) “Continuum of Pandemic Phases” The World Health Organization (WHO) uses a risk assessment process that is broken down into four phases that depict the continuum of pandemic phases. They are interpandemic, alert, pandemic, and transition phases. Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) The Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) uses an Influenza Risk Assessment Tool (IRAT) to measure potential pandemic risk. The 10 risk elements which can be grouped into three overarching categories: “properties of the virus (4 elements),” “attributes of the population (3 elements),” and “ecology & epidemiology of the virus (3 elements).” The CDC also uses a tool called Pandemic Severity Assessment Framework (PSAF). The PSAF uses information available from surveillance, investigations, initial case series, and other sources to help predict how severe the impact of the pandemic will be compared with past seasonal and pandemic experiences. Epidemic/Pandemic Response Plan (“EPR Plan”) The CDC uses PSAF to determine the impact of the pandemic, or how “bad” the pandemic will be. There are two main factors that can be used to determine the impact of a pandemic. The first is clinical severity, or how serious is the illness associated with infection. The second factor is transmissibility, or how easily the pandemic virus spreads from person-to-person. These two factors combined are used to guide decisions about which actions CDC recommends at a given time during the pandemic. (1918: Spanish Flu Deaths 675,000 US – 50,000,000 WW, 1957: H2N2 Asian Flu Deaths 116,000 US – 1.1 million WW, 1968: H3N2 Hong Kong Flu Deaths 100,000 US and 1,000,000 WW, 2009: H1N1 Swine Flu Deaths 12,469 US – 363,550 WW, 2006-07 H5N1) Similarly, the CDC has identified intervals that the pandemic event transitions through. Pandemic Intervals Framework (PIF) consists of 6 interval which are investigation, recognition, initiation, acceleration, deceleration, and preparation. When there is a suspected virus outbreak the World Health Organization (WHO), the Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and the Minnesota Department of Health (MDH) will investigate to identify the type of outbreak during the pre-pandemic intervals. Once a pandemic has been identified the event will transition and cycle from initiation, acceleration, deceleration and preparation as seen in the chart and will have a pronounce bell curve that reflects the number of diagnosed cases. The pandemic will continue to cycle through these four intervals until such time that the pandemic is alleviated. This cycling has been described as wave of illness Epidemic/Pandemic Response Plan (“EPR Plan”) EPR PLAN ACTIVATION Coordination Team The M-Team will serve as the initial coordination team prior to, and after, activation of the EPR Plan. The City Manager and the Emergency Management shall discuss the situation with the M- Team. A determination will be made if the appropriate staff are involved based on the situation. Additional staff may be required to join the team. The responsibilities of the coordination team include gathering relevant information on the epidemic/pandemic from various health organizations, State agencies and Federal agencies. This information needs to be reviewed to determine the City’s actions, which may include monitoring the situation, preparing, or reacting to the epidemic/pandemic. o Monitoring includes gathering information from the CDC, MDH, WHO, FEMA, HSEM, LMC, and other professional agencies. All information gathered needs to be reviewed by the coordination team on a periodic basis. Based on gathered information, it may be recommended that staff review various policies, procedures and plans sources. All City staff and City Council should be updated with regular communications keeping them informed on the activities of the coordination team. o Preparing by the coordination team includes identifying how the epidemic/pandemic may impact operations and staff. The goal is to identify and develop strategies to mitigate these anticipated impacts. The coordination team will develop general guidelines for all departments to follow. o Reacting includes implementing new policies and procedures specific to the epidemic/pandemic. Consideration should be given to the need for declaration of a local emergency. Epidemic/Pandemic Response Plan (“EPR Plan”) Department Roles and Responsibilities In the preparation stage, each department manager should meet with their first-line supervisors to discuss how the epidemic/pandemic may impact their department operations and staff. The goal is to identify and develop strategies to manage and mitigate the anticipated impacts specific to each department. Each department should take time to review their portion of the Continuity of Operations Plan (COOP) and identify information that needs to be updated. Additionally, each department shall be responsible for meeting all requirements and mandates set by the coordination team. Each department may add measures that exceed the City’s requirements to reduce or minimize the effect of the epidemic/pandemic on their department’s staff. Specific Roles and Responsibilities Mayor A local emergency declaration may be made by the mayor. It may not be continued for a period in excess of three days except by or with the consent of the governing body of the political subdivision. City Council Confirmation/Extend the local emergency declaration City Manager and Emergency Management Director • Activate various emergency plans • Liaison to City Council/Mayor M-Team (initial Coordination Team) The Coordination Team is initially comprised of the department head from each City department. Each department head brings unique professional expertise, knowledge and skillsets that complements the process of monitoring, planning and reacting to an epidemic/pandemic. For unique situations, other staff may be added to the team. City Manager (City Manager, Human Resources, Legal) • Coordinate staff within the Managers office • Provide direct support to all departments • Ensure City Council meetings and other activities run smoothly Deputy City Manager / Human Resource Director • Coordinate all matters related to personnel • Employee communications • FMLA/Leave benefits support • Worker’s compensation • Support critical services • Identify potential employee handbook policy changes and makes proposed changes City Attorney • Coordinate all matters requiring legal action and review • Provide legal advice • Prepare council actions related to local emergency • Review contracts and agreements related to EPR measures Epidemic/Pandemic Response Plan (“EPR Plan”) • Monitor state, federal and local mandates and litigation • Conduct legal research • Support other City departments on compliance and enforcement matters • Manage open meeting law issues and assisting with external messaging. • Litigation management • Support critical services Communications Department • Coordinate all internal and external messaging related to the endemic/pandemic • Administer the City’s Communications Plan • Develop messages consistent with messaging from the CDC, MDH and other identified sources of information • Monitor social media • External communications (websites, social media, email releases, print publications/notices, news releases) • Support internal communications • Coordinate media relations • Coordinate continued broadcast of public meetings Finance Department (Finance, General Services, IT, Motor Vehicle Licensing) • Coordinate all activities related to the flow of monies • Payroll • Benefit Administration • Utility billing • Accounts payable – insurance payments • Maintain access to server • Equipment maintenance • Phone services and repair • Tracking costs, material costs, labor costs related to the endemic / pandemic • Convert users from desktops to laptops • Add VPN for all users • Install software as needed for employees to meet and communicate virtually Physical Development Department (Engineering, Inspections, Planning) • Support with implementation of physical barriers • Collaborate with state, county, other local governments and non-profits regarding the distribution of financial and other supportive resources to businesses, residents, tenants and landlords. • Maintaining continuity of services for permitting, inspections, improvement projects, etc. • Emergency procurement & contracting • Mapping/GIS for Public Safety • Right Of Way. Storm water, Tree, Landscape permits • Time sensitive building inspections • Land Use Applications (in process, comply w/statutory timeframes) Public Works Department (Parks, Streets, Utilities, and Vehicle Maintenance) - Make and install barriers, signs, and implement engineered measures to reduce virus spread - Maintain building heating, ventilation and air conditioning (HVAC) systems - Maintain access and security for facilities Epidemic/Pandemic Response Plan (“EPR Plan”) - Collect public area garbage - Distribute potable water - Convey sanitary sewer - Flood control - Emergency infrastructure repair - Snow removal as needed - Recycling as part of debris removal and disposal - Maintain City fleet vehicles and equipment Police Department • Maintain normal patrol operations • Respond to 911 calls for service and other emergency calls • Assist at Close Points of Distribution (CPOD) with security measures • Assist with distribution of PPE Fire Department • Continue to provide basic emergency fire and rescue services • Emergency and disaster response functions • Fire suppression • Emergency medical • Disaster recovery assistance • Coordinate the purchase and distribution of PPE Parks & Recreation Department (Brookview, Golf, 316) • Provide facility support for any pandemic needs, • Develop alternative methods/opportunities for service delivery, • Manage facilities and services based on current mandates, • Act as point of delivery for any pandemic distribution needs, etc. • Maintain building heating, ventilation and air conditioning (HVAC) systems • Brookview is a Red Cross Shelter facility Strategies to minimize the spread of disease (Mitigation Measures) Understanding how viruses spread There are multiple methods to reduce and/or prevent the transmission of diseases through a pathogen. Each of method is directed at minimizing exposure. Diseases can be transferred to us from objects, animals and other persons. Each infectious disease possesses unique characteristics on how it spreads. The four general ways that a person can be exposed to diseases is by inhalation, digestion, injection, and absorption. • Inhalation - breathing in air or other gases that enters the lungs that contains a pathogen. The quantity, size of droplets, and amount of time breathing in a pathogen are variables related to how easily a pathogen is transmitted in the air. • Digestion - physically introducing a pathogen into your mouth and digesting it by swallowing. • Injection - coming in contact with an object or needle that has a pathogen on it and introducing it under your skin • Absorption - the process or action by which a pathogen on the skin surface is absorbed (enters your body through the skin surface). Epidemic/Pandemic Response Plan (“EPR Plan”) Health Screening for Symptoms Employees Employees are required to actively monitor their own health. Each day, employees are required to screen themselves for symptoms identified by current CDC and MDH guidance. Symptoms might include: • Not feeling good • Persistent cough • Runny nose • Sore throat • Fever • Shortness of breath • Chills • Nausea, vomiting, or diarrhea • Loss of smell or taste • Fatigue • Headache • Other symptoms as identified by current CDC and MDH guidance Customers and Vendors Customers, vendors and contractors are expected to adhere to City mandates that the City employees are required to monitor their own health for symptoms identified by current CDC an MDH guidance. Non-Pharmaceutical Interventions (NPIs) Community mitigation measures aim to slow the spread of viruses in the workplace by using Non-Pharmaceutical Interventions (NPIs). They can be used from the earliest stages of a virus outbreak, including the initial months when the most effective countermeasure—a vaccine— might not yet be broadly available. NPIs are readily available behaviors or actions, and response measures employees can take to help slow the spread viruses in the workplace. Enhanced understanding of such interventions, and the capacity to implement them in a timely way, can increase community resilience during an epidemic/pandemic. Using multiple NPIs simultaneously, also referred to as layering, can reduce virus transmission even before vaccination is available. NPIs all people should always practice are particularly important during a pandemic. These everyday preventive actions include: Stay at home If you are not feeling well or are experiencing symptom(s) identified by CDC and MDH guidance. Sick employees should follow CDC and MDH recommendations for isolation/quarantine. Employees should not return to work until the criteria to discontinue isolation/quarantine are met, in consultation with healthcare providers and state and local health department’s guidance. For a fever, stay home at least 24 hours after you no longer have a fever or signs of a fever without the use of fever-reducing medicines. Guidance by the CDC and MDH on various symptoms will need to be strictly followed. (Voluntary home isolation, stay home when sick) Epidemic/Pandemic Response Plan (“EPR Plan”) • Isolation - separating sick people or people that have been exposed to a contagious disease from people who are not sick. • Quarantine - separates and restricts the movement of people who were exposed to a contagious disease to see if they become sick. **Protocols for isolation and quarantine may vary based on the nature of job duties, contact with the public and contact with co-employees. If job or department specific protocols differ from the universal protocols, it will be noted as such. Cover your coughs and sneezes Cover your nose and mouth with a tissue when you cough or sneeze. This will block the spread of droplets from your mouth or nose that could contain germs and pathogens. (Respiratory etiquette) • www.cdc.gov/healthywater/hygiene/etiquette/coughing_sneezing.html Wash your hands Wash your hands often with soap and water for at least 20 seconds. Use at least a 60% alcohol- based hand sanitizer if soap and water are not available. (Hand hygiene) Routine and frequent hand washing. Washing with plain soap, hand sanitizer lotion, alcohol or other antiseptic-based hand wash products eliminates virus and pathogens on your skin. It is important to wash hands even if protective gloves have been worn. Gloves are not a substitute for hand washing. • www.cdc.gov/handwashing/when-how-handwashing.html • www.cdc.gov/handwashing • https://youtu.be/d914EnpU4Fo Personal hygiene Personal hygiene is how you care for your body. This practice includes bathing, washing your hands, brushing your teeth, and more. Every day, you encounter millions of outside germs, viruses and pathogens. They can linger on your body, and in some cases, they may make you sick. Personal hygiene practices can help you and the people around you prevent illnesses. They can also help you feel good about your appearance. • Avoid touching your eyes, nose, and mouth. Germs and pathogens spread this way. • Try to avoid close contact with sick people • Routine cleaning of frequently touched surfaces • Depending on the type and severity of the pandemic other NPI’s may be necessary. Employers should be prepared to take these additional actions as recommended by MDH and CDC. Social Distancing Social distancing measures are intended to prevent the spread of a contagious disease by maintaining a physical distance between people and reducing the number of times people come into close contact with each other. Measures range from spatial distancing and restricted movement and travel (paths of travel, directions of travel, and frequency of travel). • Decrease the frequency and duration of contact among people at work. • Threat-appropriate travel and border health measures Epidemic/Pandemic Response Plan (“EPR Plan”) Community Level Interventions Community-level interventions can be added during pandemics and implemented in a graded fashion depending on the severity of the pandemic. These include: • Measures aimed to reduce social contacts between people in schools, workplaces, and other community settings. • Requiring appropriate PPE based on the current epidemic/pandemic • Restricting nonessential travel within the City of Golden Valley Engineered Controls Barriers Strategies designed to protect workers from biological hazards by placing a barrier between the worker and the hazard or by removing a hazardous. Surface Cleaning (routine surface cleaning) Cleaning and disinfecting are effective ways to prevent the spread of illnesses and disease. In most situations, cleaning alone can remove most germs, viruses, bacteria, pathogens on surfaces. After cleaning, surfaces should be disinfected using disinfecting wipe or approved chemicals that work by killing any remaining germs, viruses and pathogens on the surface. • https://www.cdc.gov/healthywater/hygiene/disinfecting-bleach.html Ventilation Systems Fresh air being brought into the workplace, limited air recirculation, and proper use and maintenance of ventilation systems will improve air quality and reduce exposure to airborne contaminants. Heating Ventilation Air Conditioning (HVAC) adjustments may include: • Follow recommendations from the American Society of Heating, Refrigerating and Air- Conditioning Engineers (ASHRAE). www.ashrae.org/technical-resources/resources • Continuously maximize fresh air into the workplace, and eliminate air recirculation as much as possible • Maintain relative humidity levels of RH 40%-60% • Keep systems running 24/7 to enhance the ability to filter contaminants out of the air • Check and rebalance the HVAC system to provide negative air pressure whenever possible • Minimize airflow from blowing across people. • Changing air filters on a more frequent basis and with a higher quality filter • Adding bipolar ionization systems to the HVAC equipment Pharmaceutical Interventions Pharmaceutical interventions are mitigation measures aimed at identifying and countering the pathogen causing widespread illness. Once developed, the ability to identify the presence of a known pathogen and how it spreads will more precisely determine countermeasures to limit the spread of the disease. Countermeasures would include testing, prophylactics and vaccinations. • Testing identifies who has contracted the disease and will determine actions to be taken such as isolating verses quarantining. • Prophylactic is a medicine or course of action used to prevent the spread of disease Epidemic/Pandemic Response Plan (“EPR Plan”) • Vaccination is the administration of a vaccine to help the immune system develop immunity from a disease Administrative Actions (as need) to maintain operations The implementation of the various emergency plans will require support from Human Resources, Legal and the City Manager. There are many policies and procedures that will need administrative review, City Manager approval and possibly City Council approval. Administrative actions are directed at policies and procedures that directly impact staff. Examples of administrative actions to consider include policies covering: • Leaves related to the epidemic/pandemic • Staff with underlying medical conditions • Modification of work schedules • Telework - Virtual working • Situations involving family medical leave act (FMLA) • Expectations of staff pertaining to various epidemic/pandemic issues • Health screening, staying home, being sent home and notification of exposed workers • Contact tracing • Isolation and quarantine • Work travel • Vaccinations • Sick leave flexibility • Flex time Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) Personal protective equipment (PPE) refers to protective clothing, helmets, gloves, face shields, goggles, facemasks and/or respirators or other equipment designed to protect the wearer from injury or the spread of infection and illness. When an infection outbreak affects a broad population in the United States, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), is responsible for making specific recommendations for infection control measures in different circumstances and settings. Golden Valley City Council Meeting May 3, 2022 Agenda Item 3. G. Approve Resolution No. 22-047 to Update the Crisis Communications Plan Prepared By Cheryl Weiler, Communications Director Summary The City’s updated Crisis And Critical Issues Communications Plan reflects recent staff changes. Its appendices (not attached) include additional messaging examples indicated by events and situations of recent years (pandemic, civil unrest, and drought). Financial Or Budget Considerations None Recommended Action Motion to Approve Resolution No. 22-047 Updated the Crisis and Critical Issues Communications Plan Supporting Documents • Resolution No. 22-047 – Adopting an Update to the Crisis Communications Plan (1 page) o Exhibit A - Crisis and Critical Issues Communications Plan (21 Pages) RESOLUTION NO. 22-047 RESOLUTION ADOPTING AN UPDATE TO THE CRISIS COMMUNICATIONS PLAN WHEREAS, the City Council adopted a COVID-19 Recovery and Readiness Plan (CORR) as an example of a plan that was developed to address all aspects of dealing specifically with COVID-19; and WHEREAS, On January 11, 2022, the Mayor of the City of Golden Valley found that the world health pandemic caused by the novel coronavirus and resulting COVID-19 disease threatened the health, safety, and welfare of the members of the Golden Valley community , would impact City operations, and continues to cause a significant impact on the ability of public safety personnel to address any immediate dangers to the public; and WHEREAS, on January 11, 2022, the Mayor declared that the situation was a local emergency; and WHEREAS, on January 11, 2022 the City Council recognized and extended the local emergency; and WHEREAS, the City’s Crisis Communications Plan was developed to prepare for, respond to, and recover from an epidemic/pandemic for the purpose to ensure uninterrupted performance of essential functions in the event of an epidemic/pandemic. NOW THEREFORE BE IT RESOLVED, that the City Council for the City of Golden Valley adopts the Updates to the Crisis Communications Plan attached hereto as Exhibit A. Adopted by the City Council of Golden Valley, Minnesota this 3rd day of May 2022 _____________________________ Shepard M. Harris, Mayor ATTEST: _____________________________ Theresa Schyma, City Clerk 1 City of Golden Valley Crisis And Critical Issues Communications Plan Crisis And Critical Issues Communications Plan For Internal Use Only 2 City of Golden Valley Crisis And Critical Issues Communications Plan Introduction: What To Expect During A Crisis .....................................................................3 Initial Stages ....................................................................................................................................4 Golden Valley Crisis Communications Management Team ...........................................6 Team Structure And Team Roles ..............................................................................................8 Crisis Team Leader .....................................................................................................................8 Internal Communications Team ...........................................................................................8 External Communications Team ..........................................................................................8 Legal Team ...................................................................................................................................9 Incident Commander ...............................................................................................................9 Extended Team Responsibilities ..........................................................................................9 Situational Assessment ...............................................................................................................10 Determine Crisis Level And Identify Necessary Response Time ...............................10 Client Internal Communication Outreach Assessment ..................................................11 Audience Identification ...............................................................................................................12 Social Media Outreach ................................................................................................................14 Message Development ...............................................................................................................15 Stakeholder Outreach ..................................................................................................................17 Publicity Policy ...............................................................................................................................17 Media Spokesperson ....................................................................................................................18 Media Outreach .............................................................................................................................19 Press Statements .......................................................................................................................19 Press Releases .............................................................................................................................19 Media Advisories .......................................................................................................................19 News Conferences .....................................................................................................................20 Media Interviews .......................................................................................................................21 Media Contact Log ....................................................................................................................21 Appendix 1: Analysis Worksheets ............................................................................................23 Appendix 2: Media And Messaging Worksheets ................................................................25 Contents 3 City of Golden Valley Crisis And Critical Issues Communications Plan Introduction: What To Expect During A Crisis Time is critical when a crisis hits. No matter how prepared you are, you can expect the following: • The first few hours and stages of the crisis will be the most critical (see Initial Stages Checklist on page 4). • All of the information you need may not be immediately available. • You may have to make a rapid series of decisions. • The outside spotlight may be on you. • Internally, you may encounter conflicting advice. • It may be difficult to maintain a long-term perspective. • There may be a difference between facts and perception. • You will not have total control. This plan includes the most important steps to follow to engage crisis communication management immediately. 4 City of Golden Valley Crisis And Critical Issues Communications Plan Initial Stages The first stages of a crisis are the most crucial. This stage-by-stage summary of what should occur will serve as a guide for most crisis situations (see Initial Stages Checklist in Appendix 1A). It should be reviewed and up- dated as needed. Stage 1 Contact The First Alert Team The members of the First Alert Team are the Crisis Communica- tions Management Team’s leaders and should be the first team members contacted in a crisis situation (see Crisis Communica- tions Team Contact Information in Appendix 1B). They will help determine if the situation is an actual or potential incident (see Incident Checklist in Appendix 1C), if the City Council should be notified, and if the Crisis Communications Management Team should be convened to manage the City’s message. They will be the points of contact before, during and after the crisis. First Alert Team Responsibilities • Receive initial notification of an incident that may have significant impact and determines if a crisis exists. • Determine if it is appropriate to assemble the Crisis Communications Management Team for addressing the issue. • Notify City Council • Convene the Crisis Communications Management Team to address the issue as needed. • Determine if it is appropriate to contact Padilla’s Crisis Communications Team. Assemble The Crisis Communications Management Team Led by the First Alert Team, the Crisis Communications Management Team meets (in person and/or using the Crisis Phone Line) and works through the following questions using the Incident Response Form in Appendix 1D). • Is there continuing danger/fallout/ramifications? • What important information is missing or in con- flict? • What is the customer risk? • What is the consumer risk? • What is the public risk? • What is the employee risk? • What is the legal risk? • Who else needs to be involved (HR, legal, opera- tions, etc)? • Assign roles and responsibilities. • Assess operational issues. • Notify appropriate local, state, or federal public safety and regulatory officials. • Establish on-site crisis management center, if ap- propriate. • Check Internet/social media for coverage sur- rounding the crisis (ongoing). • Remind employees/elected officials about the media policy not to speak with media. Tim Cruikshank, City Manager Cheryl Weiler, Communications Director First Alert Team Crisis Line available 24/7 1-877-7737-911 Padillia Crisis Communications Team 5 City of Golden Valley Crisis And Critical Issues Communications Plan In conjunction with the First Alert Team: • Prepare key messages and public statement or response(s) to key audiences. All public/media statements and key messages must first be re- viewed by the First Alert Team. • Follow social media postings to assess whether a response is needed and what that response will be. • Prepare a script for office and front desk staff to direct inquiries to appropriate contacts. • Assign and prepare a media spokesperson to answer questions. • Coordinate public statements. • Respond to media calls and keep track of calls with the Media Contact Log. • Evaluate need for internal communication. Stage 2 • Determine method of communicating with media (eg, press statement, news briefing, indi- vidual interviews, news release, etc). • Prepare news conference space (if needed), assess backdrop, entrance/exit space for media spokesperson(s), and audio capabilities. • Distribute statement to key media. • Determine communications for website and so- cial media channels (including GV Emergency). A “dark site” is a crisis website prepared in advance of a crisis that remains dark and becomes live and visible on the web only when a crisis oc- curs. The dark site is housed on an off-site server; it will be a place to post statements and other pertinent information about the crisis going forward. • Notify other appropriate audiences. • Respond to media calls. • Monitor and react, as necessary, to media and internet coverage. • Continue tracking media and social media cover- age Stage 3 And Ongoing • Continue notifying key audiences. • Review/update public statement. • Distribute updated communications to appropri- ate audiences. • Continue responding to media calls. • Continue tracking media and social media cover- age. • Re-evaluate need for internal communication or updated internal communication. 6 City of Golden Valley Crisis And Critical Issues Communications Plan Golden Valley Crisis Communications Management Team Role Of Crisis Communications Management Team This team will convene immediately to respond to warning signals of a crisis and to execute the City’s Crisis Communications Plan in emergency situations. The Team will: • analyze the situation • formulate a plan to mitigate damage of the City of Golden Valley brand • implement the plan of action • inform the City Council Subject matter experts may be added to the Crisis Communications Management Team based on the nature and scope of the crisis and the need for additional experts or spokespersons on the subject. After initial assessment, the Crisis Communications Management Team will determine involvement from other departments and the City Council. The Extended Team will support the Crisis Communications Management Team, carrying out specific tasks as directed/needed. Crisis Communications Management Team Extended Team Finance Legal CommunicationsPublic Safety (Fire/Police/ Public Works) HR IT First Alert Team Crisis Communications Management TeamCity Council 7 City of Golden Valley Crisis And Critical Issues Communications Plan Golden Valley Crisis Communications Management Team Title Name Work Phone City Manager Tim Cruikshank 763-593-8003 City Attorney Maria Cisneros 763-593-8096 Communications Director Cheryl Weiler 763-593-8004 Finance Director Sue Virnig 763-593-8010 Fire Chief John Crelly 763-593-8065 Human Resources Director/ Deputy City Manager Kirsten Santelices 763-593-3989 Parks & Recreation Director Rick Birno 763-512-2342 Physical Development Director Marc Nevinski 763-593-8008 Police Chief Virgil Green 763-512-8059 Public Works Director Tim Kieffer 763-593-3960 Padilla 1-877-7737-911 Golden Valley Extended Team (Subject Matter Experts) Title Name Work Phone Brookview Facility Supervisor Greg Simmons 763-512-2367 Catering & Restaurant Manager Wendy Maanum 763-512-2314 City Engineer Jeff Oliver 763-593-8034 Assistant Fire Chief Bethany Brunsell 763-593-3977 Assistant Fire Chief 763-593-8080 Equity and Inclusion Manager Kiarra Zackery 763-593-8045 Golf Maintenance Supervisor Mike Ward 763-512-2356 Golf Operations Manager Ben Disch 763-512-2315 IT Manager Adam Knauer 763-593-8015 Assistant Police Chief Alice White 763-512-2502 Assistant Police Chief 763-512-2503 Park Maintenance Superintendent Al Lundstrom 763-593-8046 Street and Vehicle Maintenance Superintendent Marshall Beugen 763-593-8085 Utilities Maintenance Superintendent Joe Hansen 763-593-8038 Golden Valley City Council Title Name Phone Mayor Shep Harris 612-219-8531 Council Member Maurice Harris 612-567-2584 Council Member Denise La Mere-Anderson 763-593-8001 Council Member Gillian Rosenquist 763-529-9279 Council Member Kimberly Sanberg 612-584-1333 8 City of Golden Valley Crisis And Critical Issues Communications Plan Team Structure And Team Roles Crisis Communications Team Leader Leads crisis response. Directs teams without getting into the work. Orchestrates the work but does not necessarily make every decision. • Works with entire Crisis Team to develop the appropriate response strategy. • Directs the respective ac- tions by each team. • Approves and oversees all communication actions taken related to an incident. • Serves as a primary spokes- person. • Ensures the team is follow- ing company values and crisis guidelines. • Other responsibilities: Internal Communications Team Responsible for communica- tion to all internal audiences (typically defined as employees, employee families, volunteers, and council members). Also re- sponsible for all communication regarding benefits impacted by the issue. This role is typically filled by someone in human resources. • Coordinates all internal com- munications to staff, volun- teers, council members, etc. • Ensures all relevant policies and procedures are followed during the incident; secures all necessary documentation that may be needed for legal claims. • Other responsibilities: External Communications Team Responsible for managing all aspects of the response to customers and media, including social channels. Also serves as one of the primary spokesper- sons for the company. This role is typically filled by a person in PR, marketing, or sales. • Works with the internal and legal teams to develop all messaging and materials to be used in communicating to all key audiences. • Prioritizes communication to key customers. • Tracks media and social me- dia coverage and provides updates to the entire team. • Coordinates or handles all media interviews. • Other responsibilities: Crisis Communications Team Leader Internal Communication External Communication Legal Incident Commander 9 City of Golden Valley Crisis And Critical Issues Communications Plan Extended Team Responsibilities Communications • Communicate with regulatory bodies and provide required reporting. • Brief crisis team leadership on potential short- and long- term impacts. Legal • Identify legal resources in area(s) where company oper- ates. • Advise on legal aspects of situation. • Manage documents during crisis for potential use in legal proceedings. Finance • Brief crisis team on financial ramifications of actions. • Track all expenses related to crisis. • Identify financial resources in area(s) where company oper- ates. Human Resources • Maintain copies of all person- nel records. • Answer pay and benefit ques- tions. • Monitor employee morale; advise team on employee communications. • Provide links to employee assistance plans and other external resources. IT • Maintain active disaster recovery plan for all technical services in keeping with IT corporate plan. • Coordinate resources to en- sure resumption/continuation of IT services. • Ensure redundancies of sys- tems and backups of key data kept at various locations. Public Safety (Fire/ Police/Public Works) • Establish command post. • Evaluate scene and campus security. Coordinate with other agencies for additional staff. Establish route security for offsite relocation of critical assets if needed. • Evaluate infrastructure. • Identify ongoing life-threat- ening issues. • Inform proper higher authori- ties (BCA, HCSO, FBI, MDH, MPCA, DNR, etc) if warranted. • Ensure continuation of emer- gency services, may require other agencies to help. External Counsel • Outside legal counsel as required • Outside crisis communica- tions counsel as required Legal Team Handles all communication to government leaders or legal representatives. Also leads the investiga- tion into the issue. This role is usually filled by the company’s legal department. • Quickly reviews all messaging and communica- tion materials prior to distribution. • Provides legal guidance to the Crisis Team as needed. • Leads the investigation into the incident. • Ensures all applicable laws are being followed. • Other responsibilities: Incident Commander Manages the incident on the ground with a focus on operations. Often used in situations like natural disasters, active shooter, major accidents. Manages the response to the crisis, including coordination with local emergency responders. This role is typi- cally handled by someone in operations. • Completes Incident Report Form. • Manages all operational aspects of the incident (police, fire, rescue). • Responsible for returning the facility back to normal operating procedures. • Other responsibilities: 10 City of Golden Valley Crisis And Critical Issues Communications Plan Situational Assessment The Crisis Communications Management Team will assess the situation, determine facts, and begin delegation. After this assessment, it may be appropriate to add subject matter experts to the Crisis Communications Man- agement Team (both internal and external). * Note: In some cases, the media may be alerted to the situation before all of the facts can be determined and the situational assessment complete. In this case, it is important to provide the media with a statement indi- cating the situation is under investigation, and that as soon as more information is available it will be provided. If appropriate, a social media update should also accompany this brief media statement outreach. Determine Crisis Level And Identify Necessary Response Time Level Characteristics Response Time 4 HIGHLY INTENSE Media have immediate and urgent need for informa- tion about the crisis. Immediate response (0-1 hour) required. Opening statement of empathy/caring may need to come before key messages are developed (within 30 minutes). One or more groups of individuals express anger or outrage. Broadcast and print media appear at location for live coverage. 3 INTENSE Crisis causes growing attention from local and regional media. Immediate response (1-2 hours) required. Media, stakeholders, and community partners are present at location. Affected and potentially affected parties threaten to talk to the media. 2 MODERATELY INTENSE Crisis situation may/may not have occurred; the situa- tion is attracting slow, but steady media coverage. Respond if necessary (24-72 hours). Continue to monitor the situation, develop messaging, and be prepared to respond quickly if situation escalates. External stakeholders (government agencies, industry trade organizations) receive media inquiries. The public at large is aware of the situation/event, but it is attracting very little attention. 1 MINIMALLY INTENSE Crisis attracts little or no attention.Crisis Communications Manage - ment Team should monitor the situation closely. Pre-event information requests are received. Public and/or media are virtually unaware of the crisis. 11 City of Golden Valley Crisis And Critical Issues Communications Plan Client Internal Communication Outreach Assessment The Crisis Communications Management Team will assess the situation, determine facts, and begin delegation. Each situation will require an assessment for communicating throughout the organization (see Communication Outreach Assessment form in Appendix 1E). Communications shared with the City‘s communications targets are NOT intended to be shared with others internally or externally unless noted in the communication. Level Characteristics Golden Valley Communication Targets 4 HIGHLY INTENSE Media have immediate and urgent need for informa- tion about the crisis. All staff, elected, and appointed of- ficials (Communications updated ASAP)One or more groups of individuals express anger or outrage. Perhaps safety is at the heart of the issue. Widespread internal and external discussion (ie, shooting at location). 3 INTENSE Crisis causes growing attention from local and re- gional media. All staff (where issue is occurring), elected officials, pertinent appoint- ed officials (Communications updated 1-2 hours) Media, stakeholders and community partners are aware and discussing situation. Traditional and mainstream media active. (ie, nation- wide story). 2 MODERATELY INTENSE Crisis situation may/may not be attracting media coverage or discussion with key stakeholders. Cover- age/discussion is likely to intensify (ie, upcoming news story). Direct communications to Crisis Communication Management Team and staff (where issue is occurring), elected officials, pertinent appoint- ed officials (Communications updated daily/ TBD by situation developments) External stakeholders (government agencies, in- dustry trade organizations/partners) receive media inquiries. The public at large is aware of the situation/event, but it is attracting very little attention. 1 MINIMALLY INTENSE Crisis attracts little or no attention.Direct communications to Crisis Communication Management Team and staff (where issue is occurring) (Likely single communication) Pre-event information requests are received. Public and/or media are virtually unaware of the crisis. Internal discussion is minimal (ie, workplace accident). 12 City of Golden Valley Crisis And Critical Issues Communications Plan Audience Identification After gathering as much information as possible about the crisis, it is important to understand which audiences the City needs to reach with it. There are many potential audiences that will want information during and follow- ing an incident, and each has its own needs. Consider the level of the crisis and how potential audiences would want to be informed. 1. Identify potential audiences. 2. Determine their need for information. 3. Identify who within the City is best able to communicate with that audience and appoint that person as audi- ence spokesperson. Compile contact information for each audience in advance of any crisis so it is immediately accessible during an incident. Lists should be updated regularly, secured to protect confidential information, and available to autho- rized users/members of the Crisis Communications Management Team. Internal Audiences City of Golden Valley City Council/Employees/Staff Based on the level of the crisis, this audience can include all City of Golden Valley elected officals, employees, and their families. Low-level crises may not require notification of all employees. If there is potential for an employee or employee group to hear about the crisis from the news media, it is important they be included as an audience. Remind elected officials and staff that all media inquiries should be referred to the designated spokesperson and that they should refrain from commenting. If the incident involved death or serious injury, close coordination between the City of Golden Valley management, human resources, and public agen- cies is needed. Appropriate channels of communication: In-Per- son, Phone, Email (for lower-level crises) Recommended spokesperson: City Manager External Audiences County Officials (ie, Hennepin County) Communications with county officials (Hennepin County) depends on the nature and severity of the incident and regulatory requirements. On-site inju- ries and/or deaths, environmental incidents, and ac- tions involving tampering, contamination, or quality require notification of appropriate county officials. Appropriate channels of communication: Phone, In-Person Recommended spokesperson: City Manager State Officials (State Reps, Senators, etc) Communications with state officials depends on the nature and severity of the incident and regulatory requirements. On-site injuries and/or deaths, envi- ronmental incidents, and actions involving tamper- ing, contamination, or quality require notification of appropriate government officials or regulators. Appropriate channels of communication: Phone, In-Person Recommended spokesperson: City Manager 13 City of Golden Valley Crisis And Critical Issues Communications Plan Citizens/Community If the crisis could impact the surrounding commu- nity, then the community becomes an important audience. The message should include advisements to the public of hazards, risks, and any actions they should take to protect themselves. Appropriate channels of communication: Media Statement, News Conference Recommended spokesperson: City Manager League of Minnesota Cities The League of Minnesota Cities may be an impor- tant audience depending on the situation. Appropriate channels of communication: Phone, In-Person Recommended spokesperson: City Manager News Media If the incident is a high-level crisis, the news media will be on scene or calling to obtain details. There may be numerous requests for information from lo- cal, regional, or national media. Prioritizing requests and developing press releases/talking points can assist with the need to communicate quickly and effectively. Remember, any information released to the news media can and likely will reach all afore - mentioned audience segments. Appropriate channels of communication: Media Statement, News Conference, Press Release Recommended spokesperson: City Leader (TBD based on issue) 14 City of Golden Valley Crisis And Critical Issues Communications Plan Social Media Outreach Social media is an effective tool for monitoring and engaging public response during a crisis. During a crisis, being active on social channels can counterbal- ance negative or inaccurate information provided by outside sources. Messages should be participatory in nature and conversational, not simply a push of infor- mation. In high-level crises it is mandatory that the City of Golden Valley include social media communi- cations. Failure to do so demonstrates disorganization and disinterest. Use social media during a crisis to: • disseminate key messages to the public • share video feeds of statements/news conferences for public viewing • respond to posts/comments/tweets with approved key messages • monitor what the public is saying (see Social Me - dia Monitoring Report in Appendix 1E) Messaging Messages should be based on the key and supporting messages developed by the Crisis Communications Management Team, and they should be brief and pertinent. They should be conversational in tone and designed to inform and collaborate with the public, not command and control. Monitoring & Response During a crisis, social media will be used as an avenue by many stakeholders to express thoughts on the crisis. Rather than simply using social media to push out information, the City of Golden Valley welcomes public input. City responses to social media conversa- tions should be based on key messages. Note: Those who have displayed interest by follow- ing or commenting on a crisis, although possibly not previously considered stakeholders, should be con- sidered an audience and should be included in future communication strategies during the crisis. Tips for Responding To Comments Dur- ing Crisis: • Decide which comments warrant a response and which do not. • Do not argue and do not delete comments. • Demonstrate empathy, emotion, and understand- ing. • Never send a third reply to the same party, this is arguing (take it offline). Identifying Social Channels And Their Uses In Time Of Crisis Type Of Social Media Channels Use Social Networking Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, Instagram, NextDoor, Google+ Enhance coordination, provide up- dates, and share information Content-Sharing Media You Tube, Flickr, Vimeo Situational awareness of crisis devel- opment in real time Collaborating Knowledge Wikis, Podcasts, Forums Develop dialogue between stake- holders Blogging Social Media Twitter, Blogger, Tumblr Share facts, rapid information dis- semination 15 City of Golden Valley Crisis And Critical Issues Communications Plan Message Development During a crisis, it is important that spokespeople do not “wing it” when it comes to relaying important information about the incident. To prepare spokespeople and the organization, the Crisis Communications Management Team will develop key messages to be used for communication during the specific crisis. Messages should only be developed after the situational assessment has been conducted and facts gathered. The key messages should be used to communicate with all identified audiences. The consistency of mes- sages across audience groups is imperative. Messages should follow this format: Key Messages Key messages demonstrate the City’s response to the situation. To be useful, key media messages must: • be few, usually no more than two or three. During an emergency, people will be upset. They will have difficulty remembering lots of information. Get the important facts out first. In time, the public will want more information. • be short and concise, generally no more than a sentence or two each. Short messages are easier for spokespeople and the public to remember and are more likely to be conveyed without editing by the media. • be in writing. Writing the key messages down ensures they are short, concise, and understand- able. It also serves as reference for the entire team throughout the crisis. Supporting Messages After identifying the two to three appropriate key messages, supporting messages should be developed for each of them. Supporting messages are action statements that show what the City of Golden Valley is doing to respond to the situation or what response the community and/or stakeholders should be taking. Examples of communications that should be devel- oped from the key messages: • Media statements/press releases • Website updates and/or notification • Talking points and script for Call Center • Talking points and script for office staff • Email notifications • Social media updates (Facebook, Twitter, etc) • Internal notification • Letters/communications/talking points to key stakeholders • News conference preparation * Note: As additional information becomes available, key messages may need to be further developed and updated. Always make sure all spokespersons have the latest messages and all communication channels are updated. Message Development Musts State relevant information only. Do not start with massive amounts of background information. Acknowledge uncertainty. Sounding more confident than you are rings false, sets you up to be proven wrong, and provokes debate with those who disagree. It is better to say what you know, what you do not know and what you are trying to learn more about. Give positive-action steps. Instead of negatives, use positive messages, such as “In case of fire, use stairs,” and “Stay calm.” Negative messages are “Do not use elevator” and “Don’t panic.” Create action steps in threes. During a crisis people remember fewer bits of information. Use personal pronouns for the City of Golden Valley. “We are committed to” or “We understand the need for.” ActionSituationResponse 16 City of Golden Valley Crisis And Critical Issues Communications Plan Be careful about speculation. Try to stick to the known facts. Keep in mind that too much specula- tion weakens credibility, but people want answers. Concentrate on describing the steps in place to get the facts and help the audience deal with the uncer- tainty while that process goes on. Treat emotion as legitimate. In a crisis, people are right to be fearful and miserable. To help people bear their feelings, it is important to respect their feelings, not negate them. Establish your own humanity. Express your feel- ings and wishes: “I wish we could give you a more definite answer.” Touch upon your family and your reactions to the crisis. Offer people things to do. Self-protective action helps mitigate fear. Avoid The Following Technical jargon. Instead of “epidemic” or “pan- demic,” say “outbreak” or “widespread outbreak.” Instead of “deployed” say “sent” or “put in place.” Instead of “correlation” say “relationship.” Unnecessary filler. Save background information for news releases or fact sheets. Attacks. Attack the problem, not the person or organization. Be careful not to point fingers at a specific person or group, but talk about the issue at hand. Promises/guarantees. State only what you can deliver. Otherwise, promise to remain committed to keeping people informed throughout the emer- gency response. Discussion of money. Discussion of the problem’s magnitude should be in context with the health and safety of the public or environment. Loss of property and amount of money spent is not an acceptable demonstration of concern. Humor. Humor is never a good idea. Be especially sensitive when speaking to the public. Standby Statements Sample response documents, including communica- tion statements for likely scenarios, are included in Sample Standby Statements in Appendix 2A. While not all-inclusive, it provides a good representation of statement examples. The sample statements are based on possible sce- narios outlined by the City for crisis and critical issue situations. A crisis may fit into one or more of the categories outlined. The possible scenarios are those most likely to occur with the greatest impact on busi- ness, brand, and reputation and include: • Acts of Nature/Severe Weather • Public Safety/Public Health • Personnel • Administrative/Legal • Negative High-Profile Occurrences • Officer Involved Shooting 17 City of Golden Valley Crisis And Critical Issues Communications Plan Stakeholder Outreach If employees and/or the City of Golden Valley management, suppliers, customers or other stakeholders are deemed an important audience in this crisis, an internal notification should be distributed via voicemail, email, and posted at all City of Golden Valley offices during the crisis In high-level crises, notification should occur within 0-1 hour. Communication should always precede any media outreach. Whenever possible, employees and stakeholders should hear about the crisis from the City of Golden Valley, not the media. See Appendix 2B for Sample Stakeholder Communications. Publicity Policy The City of Golden Valley has designated its Management Team and Communications Department to make public statements on its behalf with reporters and other media representatives regarding matters that affect the City and its community. Given the changing nature of electronic communications, participation by employees in a news group, chat session, mailing list, social networking site, or similar internet-based service in a way that may constitute a public statement violates this policy. See Appendix 2C for the City’s Social Media Policy. 18 City of Golden Valley Crisis And Critical Issues Communications Plan Designate A Media Spokesperson The job of the spokesperson during a crisis is to communicate information the public wants or needs to know. This person’s job is vital to reducing the magnitude of the crisis. Early in a crisis, the spokesperson is expected to describe: • the incident and its magnitude (who, what, where, when, why, how) • the risks, both current and future • what’s being done to respond to the incident The spokesperson should, in most cases, be a member of executive leadership. This conveys the message that the City of Golden Valley is fully vested, at the highest level, in managing and resolv- ing the crisis. In some situations it may make sense to appoint a back-up or supporting spokesperson who is a subject matter expert in the area of crisis. The spokesperson and all back-up spokespersons or subject matter experts should be knowledgeable about the situation at hand. The spokesperson should be briefed with the most current information as it becomes available. General Recommendations For All Spokespersons In All Settings • Know the organization’s policies about the re- lease of information. • Stay within the scope of responsibilities, unless authorized to speak for the entire organization’s responsibility. • Tell the truth. Be as open as possible. • Follow-up on issues. • Use visuals when possible. • Do not minimize or exaggerate the key message(s). • Discuss only the facts and do not speculate. • Do not express personal opinions. • Do not show off. This is not the time to display an impressive vocabulary. 19 City of Golden Valley Crisis And Critical Issues Communications Plan Media Outreach The media plays an essential role in informing the community and will do so with or without our help. Depending on the level and duration of the crisis, especially ones involving serious injury or death, the number of media representatives can reach 100 or more on-site at a particular location, and numer- ous requests for information will likely be made by phone or email. See Appendix 2D for Media Contacts. Press Statements A press statement will be the first communication with the media following a crisis. In a highly intense crisis, this statement will need to come before every detail and fact is determined (within the first 30 minutes of the incident). It is important to release a statement almost immediately so that people feel informed and updated. The press statement can be a written document or a verbal statement by the media spokesperson. Additional press statements will follow to provide additional updates – these will be based upon key messages developed by the Crisis Communications Management Team. A good press statement: • gives the City of Golden Valley’s view on the is- sue • has an attention-grabbing headline and first paragraph • includes all the necessary facts on the situation (who, what, when, where, why, how) • is accurate • gives information about actions the City of Golden Valley is taking • invites the media to contact the City of Golden Valley for more information • provides the City of Golden Valley contact per- son and phone number • indicates when another update will be given See Appendix 2E for the City’s press statement template and a sample press statement. * Note: If the initial press statement is delivered ver- bally, it is best to decline to take questions at that time. Questions should only be taken after all of the facts have been gathered and key messages have been developed. Press Releases A press release is designed to give all pertinent background information on the story. It is the preferred method of communication in a low-level crisis. Press releases also should be used for the du- ration of a higher-level crisis to communicate most recent information and latest developments. The press release should answer who, what, when, where, why and how of the ongoing event. Helpful Hints for Emergency Press Releases • Never reuse the same headline during a crisis. • If providing a new telephone information num- ber or website address, introduce it higher in the press release. • Avoid using technical terms. • Eliminate emotionally laden words. • Check the facts with subject matter experts. • Do a security check—some information may be classified. • Do a privacy check—some information may violate the privacy of victims/families. See Appendix 2F for the City’s press release tem- plate and a sample press release. Media Advisories The media advisory is the City of Golden Valley’s op- portunity to alert the media to an upcoming news conference or media briefing where we will be mak- ing a press statement or releasing additional infor- mation. It should be directed to reporters, produc- ers, and editors. It should include the person(s) the 20 City of Golden Valley Crisis And Critical Issues Communications Plan reporter can interview and what could be discussed as well as possible photo or video opportunities. When writing a media advisory remember: • Include the target audience. • Include media contact name and phone number. • Limit advisory to one page. • Provide a description of photo and interview op- portunities. • Send the advisory as early as possible before the media event, and follow up with phone calls to local news editors; resend advisory a few hours prior to event, if time permits. • If time permits, send media advisories to wire services. See Appendix 2G for the City’s media advisory template and a sample media advisory. News Conferences A news conference can be one of the best ways to update the media following a crisis. A news confer- ence should be scheduled only when necessary— when the news is important enough to affect large populations, and when it is appropriate to dissemi- nate urgent information to a group of reporters at one time. This should only be conducted after facts have been gathered and key messages developed. All identified City of Golden Valley spokespersons and subject matter experts should attend the news conference. The purpose of the news conference is to: • conduct media interview requests at one time • ensure consistent information is released • introduce the spokesperson(s) and subject mat- ter experts to the public • show early on that the City of Golden Valley has a process in place to respond to the crisis • fulfill immediate needs of the media if informa- tion is changing rapidly or not enough is known to issue a news release Use the News Conference Checklist in Appendix 2H to help prepare. Plan the date, time and location. The news conference should occur 2–4 hours after a crisis has occurred, depending on severity. Give the media as much advance notice as possible. Hold the news conference in a safe venue close to the site of the crisis. Alert the media. To hold a news conference, it’s imperative to send a media advisory email to the TV affiliates and print/ online publications that the City of Golden Valley hopes to have attend the conference. Email is the best method of alerting the media about a news conference. However, making a direct phone call to the newsroom assignment desk will also prove ef- fective in communicating with key local influencers. See Appendix 2D for Media Contacts. Prepare the room. Make sure the news conference site includes stag- ing, chairs, a podium, and microphones. Check the microphone and sound system. Get a mult box. Position reporters so they can get their stories easily without moving about. The City of Golden Valley logo should be clearly visible on the front of the podium or behind the speaker. Provide media materials. If time permits, prepare media kits including any news releases, a list of speaker names and anything else that is available that will help reporters write their stories. Include fact sheets. Be prepared. The main spokesperson(s) should rehearse the key messages developed for the crisis and be ready to answer questions. Make sure the spokesperson(s) knows what the most important information is and how to stay focused, even if asked questions that 21 City of Golden Valley Crisis And Critical Issues Communications Plan concern other issues. Discuss in advance which key points will be made by each spokesperson. Des- ignate a moderator in advance to set a clear end time for the conference. This person will establish any ground rules and will field reporter questions for the spokesperson(s) to answer. Make language spokespersons and/or translators available as nec- essary. Be thorough. Make sure all questions are answered. If a spokes- person does not know the answer to a question, a Crisis Communications Management Team member needs to find the answer after the news conference and make it available to the reporter at a later time. A member of the Crisis Communications Manage- ment Team can ask questions during the news conference that are important for reporters to hear. Monitor attendance. Have reporters check-in, and be sure to capture their email addresses and phone numbers. This will provide a list of who attended for follow-up infor- mation and who did not attend so that offers for phone interviews can be extended. Follow up. Identify time, place, and format for any updates. Media Interviews Whether conducted at the conclusion of a news conference or as separate phone or in-person media interviews, the Crisis Communications Manage - ment Team will identify which questions the media will likely ask and develop an appropriate response for each (see Commonly Asked Media Interview Questions in Appendix 2I and Talking To The Media in Appendix 2J). Reference key messages as much as possible. Questions and responses should be documented and distributed to the spokesperson(s) to become familiar with and practice. Media Contact Log It is important to track all media inquiries received. This will ensure follow-up with all media contacts, establishing credibility that the situation is under control. The Media Contact Log (Appendix 2K) will help evaluate the plan post-crisis. Make copies for all per- sons who will be fielding incoming calls or emails, and create a new log page for each inquiry. Golden Valley City Manager Meeting May 3, 2022 Agenda Item 3. H. Receive and File March 2022 Quarterly Financial Reports Prepared By Sue Virnig, Finance Director Summary The quarterly financial report provides a progress report of the following funds: •General Fund Operations •Conservation/Recycling Fund (Enterprise Fund) •Water and Sewer Utility Fund (Enterprise Fund) •Brookview Golf Course (Enterprise Fund) •Motor Vehicle Licensing (Enterprise Fund) •Storm Utility Fund (Enterprise Fund) •Equipment Replacement Fund (Capital Projects Fund) •Brookview Center (Special Revenue Fund) •Human Services Commission (Special Revenue Fund) •Building Improvement Fund (Capital Projects Fund) •Park Improvement Fund (Capital Projects Fund) •Housing Fund (HRA) Financial or Budget Considerations As of March 2022, the City of Golden Valley General Fund has used $4,020,342 of fund balance to balance the General Fund Budget. The report activity is from January 1 through March 31. Recommended Action Motion to receive and file and 2022 Quarterly Financial Reports Supporting Documents •March 2022 General Fund (2 pages) •March 2022 Conservation/Recycling Fund (1 page) •March 2022 Water and Sewer Utility Fund (1 page) •March 2022 Brookview Golf Course (1 page) •March 2022 Motor Vehicle Licensing (1 page) •March 2022 Storm Utility Fund (1 page) Council Manager Meeting Executive Summary City of Golden Valley May 3, 2022 2 • March 2022 Equipment Replacement Fund (1 page) • March 2022 Brookview Center Fund (1 page) • March 2022 Human Services Commission (1 page) • March 2022 Building Improvement Fund (1 page) • March 2022 Park Improvement Fund (1 page) • March 2022 Housing Fund (1 page) 25.00% Over % 2022 March YTD (Under)of Budget Type Budget Actual Actual Budget Received Ad Valorem Taxes $22,116,855 0 0 ($22,116,855)0.00%(1) Licenses 244,165 17,100 49,544 ($194,621)20.29% Permits 963,650 88,725 239,383 ($724,267)24.84% Governmental Agencies Aid Federal 121,800 0 0 ($121,800)0.00% Police 25,000 1,319 1,319 ($23,681)5.28% Fire 25,000 0 0 ($25,000)0.00% Charges For Services: General Government 20,200 55 218 ($19,982)1.08% Public Safety 36,200 245 7,244 ($28,956)20.01% Public Works 186,400 19,145 47,722 ($138,678)25.60% Park & Rec 440,200 11,956 52,045 ($388,155)11.82% Other Funds 766,500 1,520 4,704 ($761,796)0.61% Fines & Forfeitures 125,000 9,384 16,596 ($108,404)13.28% Interest On Investments 150,000 0 0 ($150,000)0.00%(2) Miscellaneous Revenue 196,620 0 0 ($196,620)0.00% Transfers In 30,000 7,500 7,500 ($22,500)25.00%(3) TOTAL Revenue $25,447,590 $156,949 $426,275 ($25,021,315)1.68% Notes: (1) Payments are received in July, December, and January (delinquencies). First 1/2 is higher due to some full paymen (2) Investment income allocated at year end. (3)Transfers are monthly. Percentage Of Year Completed City of Golden Valley Quarterly Budget Report - General Fund Revenues March 2021 (unaudited) Over % 2022 March YTD (Under)Of Budget Budget Actual Actual Budget Expend. 001 Council $458,210 28,251 72,248 ($385,962)15.77% 003 City Manager 1,285,825 88,016 264,974 (1,020,851)20.61% 004 Transfers Out 2,750,000 0 0 (2,750,000)0.00%(1) 005 Admin. Services 2,573,030 163,037 535,190 (2,037,840)20.80% 006 Legal 428,045 18,977 55,899 (372,146)13.06% 007 Risk Management 355,000 160,374 160,374 (194,626)45.18% 011 General Gov't. Bldgs.816,045 92,126 215,327 (600,718)26.39% 016 Planning 392,330 29,693 87,688 (304,642)22.35% 018 Inspections 912,335 63,575 180,041 (732,294)19.73% 022 Police 7,178,575 461,992 1,334,500 (5,844,075)18.59% 023 Fire 1,843,165 124,548 303,450 (1,539,715)16.46% 035 Physical Dev Admin 350,690 23,198 75,696 (274,994)21.58% 036 Engineering 819,975 43,083 125,177 (694,798)15.27% 037 Streets 2,475,815 161,183 484,237 (1,991,578)19.56% 066 Park & Rec. Admin.928,445 70,163 195,153 (733,292)21.02% 067 Park Maintenance 1,452,555 107,100 293,225 (1,159,330)20.19% 068 Recreation Programs 429,550 12,143 63,438 (366,112)14.77% TOTAL Expenditures $25,449,590 $1,647,459 $4,446,617 ($21,002,973)17.47% (1) Transfers will be made in June 2022. City of Golden Valley Quarterly Budget Report - General Fund Expenditures March 2022 (unaudited) Division Over 2022 March YTD (Under)% Budget Actual Actual Budget Current Revenue Hennepin County Recycling Grant 35,000 0 0 (35,000)0.00% Recycling Charges 942,745 72,147 207,946 (734,799)22.06%(2) Miscellaneous Revenues 13,000 0 0 (13,000) Interest on Investments 10,000 0 0 (10,000)0.00%(1) Total Revenue 1,000,745 72,147 207,946 (792,799)20.78% Expenses: Recycling 1,148,635 69,579 140,667 (1,007,968)12.25%(3) Total Expenses 1,148,635 69,579 140,667 (1,007,968)12.25% (1) Interest Earnings are allocated at year-end. (2) Includes utility billings thru March 2022. (3) This includes the recycling services thru February 2022. Further information about projects and financing are located in the 2021-2030 CIP and 2021-2022 Budget. City of Golden Valley Quarterly Budget Report - Conservation/Recycling Enterprise Fund March 2022 (unaudited) Over 2022 March YTD (Under)% Budget Actual Actual Budget Current Revenue Water Charges 5,280,275 330,750 1,095,354 (4,184,921)20.74% Emergency Water Supply 234,675 12,880 42,696 (191,979)18.19% Sewer Charges 4,535,365 306,363 1,056,541 (3,478,824)23.30% Meter Sales 15,000 0 1,317 (13,683)8.78% Penalties 150,000 18,105 38,134 (111,866)25.42% Charges for Other Services 18,000 0 11,312 (6,688)62.84% State Water Testing Fee Pass Through 72,045 5,235 17,674 (54,371)24.53% Sale of Assets 96,400 0 0 (96,400)0.00% Franchise Fees 1,500,000 0 0 (1,500,000)0.00% Certificate of Compliance 30,000 5,025 10,800 (19,200)36.00% Micellaneous Revenue 20,000 502 1,600 (18,400)8.00% Other Governments 525,000 0 0 (525,000)0.00% Interest Earnings 100,000 0 0 (100,000)0.00% Total Revenue 12,576,760 678,860 2,275,428 (10,301,332)18.09% Expenses: Utility Administration 5,334,850 54,059 84,368 (5,250,482)1.58%(1) Sewer Maintenance 3,719,125 281,790 835,035 (2,884,090)22.45% Water Maintenance 5,406,315 426,080 1,438,051 (3,968,264)26.60% Total Expenses 14,460,290 761,929 2,357,454 (12,102,836)16.30% (1) Depreciation is allocated at year-end. Further information about projects and financing are located in the 2022-2031 CIP and 2022-2023 Budget. City of Golden Valley Quarterly Budget Report - Water and Sewer Utility Enterprise Fund March 2022 (unaudited) Over 2022 March YTD (Under)% Budget Actual Actual Budget Current Revenue Green Fees 1,090,000 0 0 (1,090,000)0.00% Driving Range Fees 255,500 0 0 (255,500)0.00% Par 3 Fees 269,000 0 0 (269,000)0.00% Lawn Bowling 75,000 0 0 (75,000)0.00% Pro Shop Sales 80,000 330 393 (79,607)0.49% Pro Shop Rentals 360,000 951 1,695 (358,305)0.47% Restaurant Sales 1,592,200 85,897 205,360 (1,386,840)12.90% Winter Activities 0 1,536 11,246 11,246 Other Revenue 119,300 7,613 36,174 (83,126)30.32% Interest Earnings 15,000 0 0 (15,000)0.00%(1) Total Revenue 3,856,000 96,327 254,868 (3,601,132)6.61% Expenses: Golf Operations 893,375 34,775 91,320 (802,055)10.22%(2) Course Maintenance 1,107,115 49,618 156,390 (950,725)14.13% Pro Shop 107,500 22,928 25,242 (82,258)23.48% Grill 1,529,985 88,832 230,798 (1,299,187)15.08% Driving Range 86,550 352 717 (85,833)0.83% Par 3 Course 29,320 458 1,468 (27,852)5.01% Lawn Bowling 42,570 2,184 4,871 (37,699)11.44% Total Expenses 3,796,415 199,147 510,806 (3,285,609)13.45% (1) Interest Earnings are allocated at year-end. (2) Depreciation is allocated at year-end. Course opened April 8. Further information about projects and financing are located in the 2022-2031 CIP and 2022-23 Budget. City of Golden Valley Quarterly Budget Report - Brookview Golf Course Enterprise Fund March 2022 (unaudited) Over 2022 September YTD (Under)% Budget Actual Actual Budget Current Revenue Interest Earnings 7,500 0 0 (7,500)0.00%(1) Charges for Services 525,025 22,095 81,346 (443,679)15.49% Total Revenue 532,525 22,095 81,346 (451,179)15.28% Expenses: Motor Vehicle Licensing 545,630 35,952 96,512 (449,118)17.69% Total Expenses 545,630 35,952 96,512 (449,118)17.69% (1) Interest Earnings are allocated at year-end. City of Golden Valley Quarterly Budget Report - Motor Vehicle Licensing Enterprise Fund March 2022 (unaudited) Over 2022 March YTD (Under)% Budget Actual Actual Budget Current Revenue Interest Earnings 50,000 0 0 (50,000)0.00%(1) Interest Earnings-Other 0 0 0 0 Henn County Grant-Decola 0 0 0 0 State DNR Grant 1,300,000 0 4,682 (1,295,318) State DEED Grant-Globus 0 0 0 0 Storm Sewer Charges 2,775,000 202,236 649,667 (2,125,333)23.41% Hennepin County 0 0 0 Bassett Creek Watershed 700,000 0 0 (700,000) Miscellaneous Receipts 185,400 5,000 5,000 (180,400) Total Revenue 5,010,400 207,236 659,349 (4,351,051)13.16% Expenses: Storm Utility 5,735,740 74,194 119,689 (5,616,051)2.09% Street Cleaning 157,970 22,840 34,640 (123,330)21.93% Environmental Control 545,760 21,055 74,352 (471,408)13.62% Debt Service Payments 182,900 0 154,350 (28,550)0.00%(3) Total Expenses 6,622,370 118,089 383,031 (6,239,339)5.78%(4) (1) Interest Earnings are allocated at year-end. (2) Depreciation is allocated at year-end and. (3) Debt service payments and Medicine Lake Rd Improvements will be reimbursed by TIF. (4) Reserves are being used that were planned. Further information about projects and financing are located in the 2022-2031 CIP and 2022-2023 Budget. City of Golden Valley Quarterly Budget Report - Storm Utility Enterprise Fund March 2022 (unaudited) 2022 Equipment Replacement Fund (CIP) - Fund 5700 2022 March YTD Budget Total Actual Remaining Revenues: Sale of Assets 50,000 0 0 (50,000) Truckster/Toolcat Trade-ins 150,000 0 0 (150,000) General Fund Transfer 1,100,000 0 0 (1,100,000) Miscellaneous Receipts 0 0 0 0 Interest Earnings (allocated at year end)20,455 0 0 (20,455) Total Revenues 1,320,455 0 0 (1,320,455) Expenditures: Program #Project Number Project Name V&E-001 Marked Squad Cars (Police)120,000 0 6,979 113,021 V&E-002 Computers and Printers (Finance)95,000 613 5,407 89,593 V&E-008 Pickup Truck-Engineering 35,000 0 0 35,000 V&E-012 Asphalt Paver 250,000 0 0 250,000 V&E-053 Dump Truck (Street)285,000 0 0 285,000 V&E-100 Pickup Truck (Park)60,000 0 0 60,000 V&E-107 Bobcat Toolcat (Park)55,000 0 0 55,000 V&E-116 Bobcat Toolcat (Park)55,000 0 0 55,000 V&E-118 Sidewalk Tractor (Street)170,000 0 0 170,000 V&E-135 Body Cameras (Police)24,070 0 0 24,070 V&E-136 Zodiac Boat (Fire)5,500 0 0 5,500 V&E-137 Outdoor Motor (Fire)5,500 0 0 5,500 V&E-145 Skid Steer Loader (Street)65,000 0 0 65,000 V&E-152 Passenger Vehicle (Fire)40,000 0 0 40,000 V&E-153 Equipment Trailer (Street)20,000 0 0 20,000 V&E-159 Salt Brine Production Equipment (Street)50,000 0 0 50,000 V&E-192 Unmarked Vehicle (Police)40,000 0 0 40,000 V&E-195 Unmarked Vehicle (Police)40,000 0 0 40,000 Prior Year Expenditures 117,970 123,268 (123,268) Total Expenditures 1,415,070 118,583 135,654 1,402,684 (1) Computers are replaced every 4-5 years and purchased throughout the year based on available time. Further information about projects and financing are located in the 2022-2031 CIP and 2022-2023 Budget. Over 2022 March YTD (Under)% Budget Actual Actual Budget Current Revenue Brookview CC Rentals 211,000 62,432 90,341 (120,659)42.82% Backyard Play Area 239,325 (398)(398)(239,723)-0.17% Miscellaneous Revenues 0 0 0 0 Interest on Investments 0 0 0 0 (1) Total Revenue 450,325 62,034 89,943 (360,382)19.97% Expenses: General Area Rooms 439,195 29,807 83,919 (355,276)19.11%(2) Indoor Play Area 90,050 2,822 7,641 (82,409)8.49% Total Expenses 529,245 32,629 91,560 (437,685)17.30% (1) Interest Earnings are allocated at year-end. (2) Staff Time/Supplies for Brookview Rental City of Golden Valley Quarterly Budget Report - Brookview Center Special Revenue Fund March 2022 (unaudited) Over 2022 March YTD (Under)% Budget Actual Actual Budget Current Revenue Pull Tab (10%) Revenues 35,000 6,475 6,751 (28,249)19.29%(3) Fundraisers 16,000 2,390 5,895 (10,105)36.84%(4) Interest on Investments 750 0 0 (750)0.00%(1) Total Revenue 51,750 8,865 12,646 (39,104)24.44% Expenses: Supplies 18,100 0 600 (17,500)3.31%(4) Allocations 60,000 0 60,000 0 100.00%(2) Total Expenses 78,100 0 60,600 (17,500)77.59% (1) Interest Earnings are allocated at year-end. (2) Allocations in 2022 are $60,000. (3) Pull Tab revenues are thru February. (4) Solicitation Letters are $1,660(net). (4) Run/Walk- April 23, 2022 $3.635(net). (4) Golf Tourney/Lawn Bowling -August 14-$(net) Fund Balance at 12/31/21 was $163,070. City of Golden Valley Monthly Budget Report - Human Services Commission March, 2022 (unaudited) 2022 Building Improvement Fund (CIP) - Fund 5200 2022 March YTD Budget Total Actual Remaining Revenues: Transfer from General Fund 500,000 50,000 500,000 0 (1) Interest Earnings (allocated at year end)22,574 0 0 (22,574) Total Revenues 522,574 50,000 500,000 (22,574) Expenditures: Project Name Generators 50,000 0 0 50,000 Facility Analysis Assessment 2,000 2,000 (2,000) Installation of Building Security Systems 30,000 0 0 30,000 Council Chambers Remodeling 0 15,000 28,500 (28,500) City Hall Boiler 350,000 0 0 350,000 10th Avenue Storage 125,000 0 0 125,000 Brookview Shelter Sewer Service Repair 50,000 0 0 50,000 Park Shelter Building Improvements 200,000 0 0 200,000 Furnaces-Various Buildings 30,000 0 0 30,000 Street Maintenance Garage Door Expansion 75,000 0 0 75,000 City Hall Lunchroom Remodel 50,000 0 0 50,000 Total Expenditures 910,000 15,000 30,500 881,500 (1)Transfer will be made in June. 2022 Park Improvement Fund (CIP) - Fund 5600 2022 March YTD Budget Total Actual Remaining Revenues: Transfer from General Fund 400,000 400,000 400,000 0 Park Dedication Fee 0 0 0 0 Hennepin County Youth Sports Grant 0 0 0 0 Little League/Youth Associations/Play Eq Grants 0 0 0 0 Other Donations-Benches. etc 0 0 2,675 2,675 Interest Earnings (allocated at year end)4,840 0 0 (4,840) Total Revenues 404,840 400,000 402,675 (2,165) Expenditures: Project Name Bleacher, Soccer, Benches, Picnic Tables 13,000 0 0 13,000 Outdoor Hard Surface Replacement 12,000 0 0 12,000 Park Trail and Parking Lot Improvement 120,000 0 0 120,000 Play Structure Replacement 65,000 0 2,910 62,090 Dugout, Fence & Field Replacement 25,000 0 0 25,000 Hockey Rink Replacement 75,000 0 0 75,000 Park LED Light Replacements 25,000 0 0 25,000 Sand Volleyball Courts 15,000 1,440 1,440 13,560 Community Gardens 45,000 0 0 45,000 Sun Shelter Replacements & Additions 35,000 4,740 4,740 30,260 Total Expenditures 430,000 6,180 9,090 420,910 Further information about projects and financing are located in the 2022-2031. Over 2022 March YTD (Under)% Budget Actual Actual Budget Current Revenue Property Tax Revenues 210,400 0 0 (210,400)0.00%(1) Total Revenue 210,400 0 0 (210,400)0.00% Expenses: Housing 210,400 10,865 38,606 (171,794)18.35% Total Expenses 210,400 10,865 38,606 (171,794)18.35% (1) Interest Earnings are allocated at year-end and property tax payment (July, Dec, Jan). City of Golden Valley Quarterly Budget Report - HRA Housing Fund March 2022 (unaudited) Golden Valley City Council Meeting May 3, 2022 Agenda Item 3. I. City Classification Structure Adjustments, Resolution No. 22-048 Prepared By Kirsten Santelices, Deputy City Manager/Human Resources Director Summary Since the City Council’s approval of the City’s Compensation and Classification structure in December 2021, the City experienced a few staffing changes, which resulted in the reclassification of the following positions: • Deputy Fire Marshal, NEW position • Sustainability Specialist, NEW position • Water and Natural Resources Specialist, former title: Environmental Specialist To ensure consistency within its compensation and classification structure, the City engaged its consultant David Drown and Associates (DDA) to review each position and grade them accordingly. Deputy Fire Marshal The Fire department has carefully reviewed it structure to ensure it can most efficiently meet the needs of the City and recommends replacing a Fire Inspector position with a Deputy Fire Marshal. This structure creates supervision over the main functions of the department, including inspections, and frees the Fire Chief to focus more on strategy, budget, policy and procedure development, and emergency management systems. Sustainability Specialist and Water and Natural Resources Specialists In order to meet the goals established by the community and City Council, the Engineering division has expanded its environmental initiatives over the past several years. In addition to the increasing compliance responsibilities, the division has also taken on significant projects such as Partners in Energy/Energy Action Plan, curbside organics collection, and GreenStep Cities. As a result of these important initiatives, the City recommends the following: a. Add a Sustainability Specialist to the Engineering division. The Sustainability Specialist will focus on initiatives such as climate adaptation and mitigation, recycling, organics, Partners in Energy, energy action planning, B3 Benchmarking, SolSmart, and education and outreach to businesses and multifamily properties. b. Restructure the current Environmental Specialist position to a Water and Natural Resources Specialist position. This position will focus on coordinating the City’s MS4 General Permit and City Council Regular Meeting Executive Summary City of Golden Valley May 3, 2022 2 Storm Water Pollution Prevention Program and preparing and managing the City’s water and natural resources grants, projects, and programs. Financial Or Budget Considerations 2022 Impact Deputy Fire Marshal: 2022 salary and benefits of $14,394 absorbed in the Fire department budget. Sustainability Specialist – 2022 salary and benefits of $104,686 (annually) will be funded 85% through the Stormwater budget (7303) and 15% through the recycling account (7001). Water and Natural Resources Specialist: A 2022 projected increase of $9,908 in salary and benefits for this reclassified position will be funded through the Stormwater budget (7303), where the Environmental Specialist position is currently funded. Recommended Action Motion to approve Resolution No. 22-048 adopting updated Classification Table. Supporting Documents • Resolution No. 22-048 – Amending 2022 Wages and Salary for Reclassifications and 2022 Budget Amendment (2 pages) RESOLUTION NO. 22-048 RESOLUTION AMENDING 2022 WAGES AND SALARY FOR RECLASSIFICATIONS AND 2022 BUDGET AMENDMENT WHEREAS, in 2020, the City conducted a full compensation and classification study (the “Study”) to ensure the City is paying competitive and fair wages to its employees; and WHEREAS, on December 15, 2020 the City Council approved implementation of the Study; and adopted the compensation grid for the City: WHEREAS, on December 15, 2020 the City also adopted a Classification Table that assigned a grade to each position within the City; and WHEREAS, positions are routinely reviewed and reclassified according to position responsibilities; and the Council approved changes to the classification table by Resolution 21-13 on March 16, 2021; and by Resolution 21-38 on May 18, 2021; and by Resolution 21-114 on December 21, 2021; and WHEREAS, in 2022, the need for a personnel reclassification of the Water and Natural Resources Specialist (formally Environmental Specialist), the addition of a Sustainability Specialist position, and the promotion of a Fire Inspector to Deputy Fire Marshal position, and NOW THEREFORE BE IT RESOLVED by the City Council of the City of Golden Valley, Minnesota, that the classification of the following positions is as follows: Grade Title 7 Sustainability Specialist 10 Water and Natural Resources Specialist 12 Deputy Fire Marshal BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED by the City Council of the City of Golden Valley, Minnesota, that the 2022 Budget is amended as follows and hereby given final approval. • Deputy Fire Marshal: 2022 salary and benefits of $14,394 absorbed in the Fire department budget. • Sustainability Specialist – 2022 salary and benefits of $104,686 (annually) will be funded 85% through the Stormwater budget (7303) and 15% through the recycling account (7001). • Water and Natural Resources Specialist: A 2022 projected increase of $9,908 in salary and benefits for this reclassified position will be funded through the Stormwater budget (7303), where the Environmental Specialist position is currently funded. Resolution No. 22-048 continued Adopted by the City Council of Golden Valley, Minnesota this 3rd day of May, 2022. _____________________________ Shepard M. Harris, Mayor ATTEST: _____________________________ Theresa Schyma, City Clerk Golden Valley City Council Meeting May 3, 2022 Agenda Item 6. A. Second Consideration of Ordinance No. 738 Amending the 2022 Master Fee Schedule for Outdoor Service Areas in Targeted Zoning Districts Prepared By Sue Virnig, Finance Director Summary Staff will be presenting the second consideration of a fee for outdoor service areas in targeted zoning districts. Council approved an Ordinance Amending Chapter 113: Zoning to Allow for Outdoor Service Areas in Targeted Zoning Districts on March 15, 2022. An additional ordinance must be adopted to amend the 2022 Master Fee Schedule that was approved by Council on November 3, 2021. The approval of Ordinance No. 738 will allow for new application and renewal fees to be charged. Staff is recommending a $200 application fee and $100 annual renewal fee. Financial Or Budget Considerations The application fee covers staff time working with the facility. Recommended Action Motion to adopt Ordinance No. 738 Amending the 2022 Master Fee Schedule for Outdoor Service Areas in Targeted Zoning Districts Fees. Supporting Documents • Ordinance No. 738 Amending the 2022 Master Fee Schedule for Outdoor Services Areas in Targeted Zoning districts Fees (1 page) ORDINANCE NO. 738 AN ORDINANCE AMENDING THE CITY CODE Amending the 2022 Master Fee Schedule for Certain Fees for Outdoor Service Areas in Targeted Zoning Districts The City Council for the City of Golden Valley hereby ordains: Section 1. The City Code requires that certain fees for City services and licenses be established from time to time by the City Council. Section 2. The 2022 Master Fee Schedule of the City Code is hereby amended by adding the following new fees for Outdoor Service Areas In Targeted Zoning Districts: Outdoor Service Area in Targeted Zoning $200 Districts Application Renewal Fee $100 Section 3. This ordinance shall take effect from and after its passage and publication as required by law. First Consideration April 19, 2022 Second Consideration May 3, 2022 Date of Publication May 12, 2022 Date Ordinance takes effect May 12, 2022 Adopted by the City Council this 3rd day of May 2022. _____________________________ Shepard M. Harris, Mayor ATTEST: _____________________________ Theresa Schyma, City Clerk REVIEW OF COUNCIL CALENDAR Event Event Time Location MAY Wednesday, May 4 Zane Avenue/Lindsay Street Reconstruction Open House 2:30 PM - 6:30 PM Brookview Wirth Lake Room Tuesday, May 10 HRA Work Session 6:30 PM Hybrid - Council Conference Room Council Work Session 6:30 PM Hybrid - Council Conference Room Wednesday, May 11 Peace and Love: Reaching Community Balance in Golden Valley 6:30 PM – 8:30 PM Spirit of Hope United Methodist Church, 7600 Harold Avenue Tuesday, May 17 City Council Meeting 6:30 PM Hybrid - Council Conference Room Thursday, May 19 Trivia Night Fundraiser for Struthers Parkinson’s Center 5:30 PM Chester Bird Post 523 American Legion, 200 Lilac Dr N Thursday, May 19 Building An Equitable Golden Valley Quarterly Conversation: Environmental Justice 6:00 PM - 7:15 PM Virtual Event Saturday, May 21 Celebrating Women-Owned Businesses Expo 10:00 AM - 2:00 PM Church of the Sacred Heart 4087 West Broadway Ave, Robbinsdale Thursday, May 26 Golden Valley Business Council Meeting 8:30 AM - 9:30 AM Hybrid Brookview - Valley View Room Monday, May 30 City Offices Closed for Observance of Memorial Day JUNE Tuesday, June 7 City Council Meeting 6:30 PM Hybrid - Council Conference Room Tuesday, June 14 Council Work Session 6:30 PM Hybrid - Council Conference Room Tuesday, June 21 HRA Meeting 6:30 PM Hybrid - Council Conference Room City Council Meeting 6:30 PM Hybrid - Council Conference Room Thursday, June 23 Golden Valley Business Council Meeting 8:30 AM - 9:30 AM Hybrid Brookview - Valley View Room