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2010-11-05 Friday NewsrAno AAAA 5, 2010 Congratulations Congratulations go out to Mayor -Elect Sandra Krebsbach and City Council Members -Elect Ultan Duggan and Liz Petschel for their victories on Tuesday. The terms for the newly elected city council will begin in January 2011. The swearing in of these election winners will take place on Tuesday, January 4, 2011 as a part of the first city council meeting of the year. Sandra's election to mayor will leave a vacant seat on the city council in 2011. The four members of the 2011 city council will appoint someone to fill out the remaining two years on that term. The council can use any process they would like to fill this position. This issue will be on the January 4, 2011 city council agenda. Congratulations again Sandra, Ultan and Liz! FWhen Do You Hold a Recount With the results of the mayoral race being so close this year a number of people have Rinquired if there is going to be a recount. There are no automatic recounts in municipal elections. A losing candidate may request a manual recount of the votes ' cast in the election if the difference between the votes cast for that candidate and for a winning candidate is less than one-half of one percent of the total votes counted for that office or if the difference between the votes cast for that candidate and for a winning candidate is ten votes or less and the total number of votes cast for the D election of all candidates is no more than 400. A losing candidate can request a manual recount, at the losing candidates expense, when the vote difference is A greater than one-half of one percent. The request for a recount must be submitted in writing to the city within seven days of the canvass of the general election. The City Council will canvass the results of the 2010 election on Friday, November 5, 2010. YThe winning margin in the 2010 Mendota Heights mayoral race was 0.6% Chamber of Commerce Awards On Wednesday morning, Jake Sedlacek attended the 2010 Survive and Thrive Business Awards breakfast put on by Dakota County Regional Chamber of Commerce. This year's awards event was smaller than last year, with approximately 60 attendees, there were a handful of Mendota Heights businesses in attendance. Six chamber E businesses were awarded for innovation which has helped them not just to survive, but to actually grow in this economic downturn. Ruthie Batulis, Dakota County Regional Chamber President reminded the crowd to keep it local when making purchases and Wlooking for professional services. SBonfire Succesm The annual Halloween Bonfire was held last Sunday night at the Plaza. A big thank you goes out to the Public Works, Police and Fire Departments for all of their work in making this event happen again this year. Your efforts are very much appreciated! November 5, 2010 Notes • Mendoberri will be holding their ribbon cutting ceremony on Thursday, November 18, 2010 at 4:00 p.m. City council and city staff members have been asked to attend this event. • Residents who are interested in serving on one of the three citizen advisory commissions should submit a letter of interest to the city administrator by Friday, December 10, 2010. • Reminder that a thank you reception will held in honor of John Huber and Mary Jeanne Schneeman on Tuesday, December 21, 2010 from 5:00 p.m. to 7:00 p.m. at City Hall. • The City Council meeting on Tuesday, November 16, 2010 will feature a number of police department awards. Thank You A big thank you goes out to all of the election judges and city staff members who helped make the election process in Mendota Heights a big success. There were a few long days and nights, but the work paid off with only a few minor glitches that were easily resolved. Voters were able to get in and out of polling places in a timely fashion. While it looks like a recount may happen with the Governor's race, the 2010 general election was administered successfully. Thanks again to all of those who played a role in this very important process. Dates To Remember Parks and Recreation Commission Meeting Airport Relations Commission Meeting Veterans Day (City Offices Closed) City Council Meeting Planning Commission Meeting City Council Meeting 11-9-2010 6-30 p.m. 11-10-2010 7:00 p.m. 11-11-2010 11-16-2010 7:00 p.m. 11-23-2010 7:00 p.m. 12-7-201 7:00 p.m. City Hall will be closed on Thursday, November 11, 2010 in observance of Veterans Day. Attachments The Pipeline, Just the Facts, Dakota County Sheriff The Front Row, Airport Relations Commission Meeting Agenda, Election Thank You TwinCities.com Article "Pay more for less water in St. Paul? What's the deal?" November 5, 2010 N E W S LETTER Public Works Engineering Code Enforcement Public Works The CHANGE YOUR CLOCK 12 1 - CHANGE YOUR BATTERY Pipeline November 5, 2010 The Parks Crew moved things back into the water tower from the back parking lot. A fence was repaired at the old fire hall site. The general skating rink at Ivy Falls Park was leveled out after enlarging it. The pedways were surveyed. Rich prepared the air conditioning and heating for the winter at the Mendota Heights Road lift station. He put on new belts, filters and greased the bearings. He met with Patterson Dental about the fat, oil, & grease that should not be dumped into the sanitary sewer line. He inspected sewers on Waters Drive. Mulched leaves at the Veronica lift station. The Streets Crew brought brush to the Halloween bonfire that was collected on Sutton Lane at Marie Avenue and Junction Lane. The fence, post and gate were taken down from the bonfire. Tim helped Cliff put new brakes on dump truck 303. A TV was picked up from Spring Street. Engineering Highway 55/Mendota Heights Road Intersection- Private Utility relocations are complete, and the contractor has been working on the road base. Pavement is expected to begin next week (11/8). Once the first lanes of pavement are installed, traffic will be diverted onto the new asphalt and work will continue in the traffic free areas. Curb & Gutter installation is ongoing. As always weather will determine the amount of work that can be accomplished and will largely drive the construction schedule. Residents should be aware of traffic revisions at this intersection due to construction through the end of December. 2011 Street Reconstruction Project (Wagon Wheel Trail) - Staff held an information neighborhood meeting on the upcoming project on Thursday (10/28) evening at the Holy Family Church on Lexington, across form City Hall. Roughly 40 residents attended. Concerns from attendees centered around speed and/or volume of traffic, storm water drainage, trail construction, stop signs, and assessment valuation and payment. A summary will be presented as part of the formal Public Hearing before City Council scheduled for the November 16th Council meeting. Notices have been sent to the affected property owners informing them of the Public Hearing. Project is proposed to reconstruct Wagon Wheel Trail from Lexington Avenue to Dodd Road, install storm sewer with curb & gutter, and provide for a pedestrian trail along the length of the project. Also proposed are the rehabilitation (mill & overlay) of Alice Lane, Rodgers Court, and Swan Court, along with improvements to Rogers Lake Park. 2011 Water Rate Increase (FINAL REMINDER) - Saint Paul Regional Water Service has notified the City that the Board of Water Commissioners has approved a proposed rate increase for 2011. The proposed increase is roughly 5.45% over the existing rate. The rate increase was heard by the Saint Paul City Council on Wednesday November 3rd. Staff has not yet received a report from Saint Paul Regional Water Service as to the outcome of the meeting. Trail Gap & Repair Prioritization Meeting - Engineering, Planning and Public Works Staff met on Thursday morning to go over an analysis of the City Trail System. Gaps in the system were identified, and PW Staff provided a condition assessment of the trails. Engineering Staff will compile the information in to a list of projects prioritized into three groups: immediate need, short-term need, and long-term need. This list will then be presented to Council for commend and/or concurrence. Once the list is approved, Staff intends to develop a Trails plan similar in nature to the Street Improvement Plan. 7)-�elatest sieu�s j ry the Ne�R&A �feiylits �vlite �eyart�nesit G 11/5/2010 MIJ The Fraud Alert! Mendota In this fast -paced world, we tend to become complacent and less vigilant when using technology. Remember: security with technology Heights and your information begins with you. We've been seeing more victims Police of email scams. Example: an email (or a phone call) from a name you Department know/recognize, asking for money because they are stranded in a foreign country, experiencing some form of "drama," and need money Support to "get home." DO NOT reply, send money via any wire transfer Staff Kim Henning system or give out an a of information via email or hone without y g y type p Sandie Ristine first confirming the person/story and getting a second opinion. The real Susan Donovan friend has already been a victim — don't be next! Talk to your kids, your Cathy Ransom older friends and relatives - take your time, be vigilant and wise. Becky Pentel Police Officers Civil Assist Thursday 1430 hours Jerry Murphy Officer John Larrive stood by while Excel Energy attempted to turn the Scott Patrick gas back on at a residence. The service tech was not able to restore John Larrive Bobby Lambert the natural gas service to the home as the homeowner had damaged Tanner Spicer the meter. They will have to return at a later date. Todd Rosse Chad Willson Missing Child Thursday 1815 hours Jeff vonFeldt Parent reported that their middle school son didn't come home after Denise Urmann school. They advised Officer Willson that they had just checked at Michael Shepard school and the boy was not there. As Officer Willson was talking with Peyton Fleming mom the son walked up the driveway. Apparently he got on the wrong Jenny Fordham School Resource school bus. As soon as the rest of the kids were dropped off the driver Officer delivered him to his front door. Now that's good service. Steven Meyer Investigations Warning Friday 0040 hours Mario Reyes You always hear the stories about the woman in labor, the husband Tanner Spicer speeding to the hospital, and the officer handing out a ticket. Well, in Sergeants this story, Officer Urmann simply provided a verbal warning to the Neil Garlock stressed hubby along with a safely -paced escort the rest of the way to Brian Convery the hospital. Eric Petersen E Reserves Randy Pentel DUI Saturday 0207 hours Gino Messina Officer Denise Urmann was parked near the Town Centre shopping Jesse IVtettner area when she watched a car roll to the shoulder and then put the 4 - Andrew Quinlan way flashers on. She had watched the same car about a Y2 hour earlier Chief pull into the drive up lane at McDonalds then leave without purchasing Mike anything. Upon approach, the driver advised the battery died; she Aschenbrener could clearly smell alcohol on the driver's breath. The driver first said --11 — 11/5/2010 he hadn't been drinking, then indicated with his fingers, just a pinch. After failing all of the SFST's, the driver was given a PBT which revealed a BAC of .126 (1 guess "just a pinch" is loosely defined) he was arrested and transported to MHPD. At the PD he was read the MN Implied Consent Advisory but he needed additional decision assistance. A phone book was provided but he thought if he could just get on the internet and access Facebook, he'd find an attorney. That didn't work either. He finally decided to provide a urine sample and was soon after given a ride to the Dakota County Jail. Charges pending results from BCA testing. AOA (Car vs. Semi) Saturday 0808 hours Car vs. semi -truck in the intersection of Hwy 13 and Hwy 55. Officer John Larrive was the first to arrive on scene he immediately asked MHFD to respond and shortly after that he requested an ambulance. The MN State Patrol Commercial vehicle unit arrived to write the crash. The driver was extremely fortunate. Harassment Saturday 1132 hours Resident called seeking advice about a neighbor who calls the police every time they have a recreational fire. Officer Scott Patrick spoke with the caller who has had multiple police and fire visits in the past year and each time, but is always ordinance compliant. Unfortunately the neighbor believes recreational fires are not good for the environment and calls every time the resident starts one. Options given. Crash Sunday 1241 hours Officer Scott Patrick met the victim of a H & R (hit and run) in the lobby at the PD. The driver reported they were driving down the road when a car pulled out onto Victoria, struck their car and continued driving as is nothing happened. Officer Patrick located the vehicle and the driver seemed aware of what he was talking about, except he were positive he didn't hit anything. Examination of the car made it very clear to all that a crash had occurred. The damage was minor, and both drivers nicely agreed resolve it with each other. The confused driver was referred for a driving evaluation. Theft Monday 0042 hours Witness reported to Sergeant Eric Petersen that they watched a man load three rolls of orange snow fence from the construction site near the bonfire and leave with it. The witness wished to stay out of it, but provided a vehicle license number along with a suspect description. Eagan PD went to the thief's house, spotted the truck and the snow fence leaning on the side of the garage. The thief admitted to his actions and responded first thing the next morning to both MHPD and the construction company office to apologize. When interviewed by Investigator Reyes he readily admitted to taking the fence; he thought it had been discarded. The construction company called later, saying they wouldn't pursue charges - all was good with them. Injured Turkey Monday 1215 hours Officer Bobby Lambert would be the first Officer in memory to have to dispatch an injured turkey. The caller reported it lying in the street, struggling. Officer Lambert relieved the turkey of its pain. Injured Goose Monday 1519 hours We can't make them up. The next call after the turkey was an injured goose. Officer Todd Rosse received the call and upon checking the area he located a badly hurt goose that was also dispatched. Both animals were disposed of by public works employees. -2- Crash (Straight Truck vs. Train trestle) Tuesday 1113 hours Sergeant Neil Garlock received a call of a crash no injuries when he arrived he found a roll- off container in the road on the north side of the bridge and for the first time in recent memory, the trestle was heavily damaged. The railroad was notified and a parade of employees began showing up. Train traffic was being held and rerouted from as far away as Iowa. Inspection showed serious damage to the track. The road was closed and heavy equipment was brought in to straighten the tracks and repair the trestle. MHPD reserves were called in to assist with blocking traffic until late into the night. By morning the road was open and the trains were rolling again. Theft from Vehicle Tuesday 1817 hours Officer Rosse responded to an overlook park to take a report of theft from/damage to vehicles. Two different vehicles had been broken into while they were at the park and both had belongings stolen from them, including various ID's and credit cards. Both parties also later reported their credit/debit cards were used for purchases in St Paul. Forwarded to investigations. Missing Person Tuesday 1150 hours Officer Petersen took a report of a missing person. Evidently their daughter, whom they stated has various issues, was thought to be heading to visit an out-of-state uncle; however, she never arrived. Soon after entering her in the system, Officer Petersen learned she had been stopped in Iowa and Wyoming before the alert went out. The parents did locate her in Montana and they wanted her brought home. However, the daughter is an adult and was not a danger to herself or others. Person removed from NCIC. ...Another Injured Turkey Thursday 0800 hours Records staff received a phone call about yet another injured turkey in the middle of the road. Public works was notified and handled. Have we mentioned lately how much we appreciate our fellow City employees? He's Got a Hatchet! Thursday 1545 hours Officer Lambert responded lights and sirens to a call for help about someone trying to enter their residence using a hatchet. The unknown male reportedly went to find other tools also and now had a wire cutter or screwdriver as well. Officer Lambert didn't quite know what he'd find upon arrival; thankfully he soon learned the suspect was simply trying to access the home to retrieve some equipment within. He knew the daughter, had thought no one was home and he made a poor choice on how to gain entry. After a nice chat about how to legally get back your property and the seriousness of the decision he had made, the young man was able to retrieve his property from the homeowner and all was peaceful in the neighborhood again. Aam 4tmot /#1A & A�, -3- Volume 6, Week 20 October 18, through October 24, 2010 Featuring Sheriffs Administrative, Communications, Support, and Parks, Lakes, and Trails Staff. Administration Fran Bakke Julie Ecker Detention Services Support Staff Sandy Burke Desiree Chartrand Jennifer Harrington Melanie Heltne Molu Jolly Kathy Karnick Amanda Llamas Jamie Maiser Janelle Mayer Mary McPhetres Minnie Murphy Holly Ruiz Andrea Strenke Betsy Winter Emergency Preparedness Dave Gisch Operations Support Staff Carmen Brown Ana Estrada Julie Fischer Pam Hinton Linda Mischke Shona Murphy Jesse Monahan Andrea Olson Carole Sieben Fay Wallin Parks. Lakes. and Trails Salah Ahmed Michael Myres Dave Bailey Ryan Bollig DAKOTA COUNTY SHERIFF The Front Row A',4 front raw seat to the greatest show on earth... Dave Bellows, Sheriff Tim Leslie, Chief Deputy Thank You for AR Your Work... On Saturday evening the fall jail meeting was held at the Sheriff's Office. The '^ event is a 000,' C combination of taking annual photos of the •� '' j Detention Services staff, recognizing staff for their work over the past year, and a guest speaker. Z A plaque was also presented to Correctional ` Sergeant ]udy Burrows (Retired) for her 25 years of service. The award for Correctional Correctional Sergeant Judy Burrows was recognized for 25 years of service to Dakota County. Shown with Sergeant Burrows are (lett to Deputy of the Year right): Chief Deputy Tim Leslie, Sheriff Dave Bellows, Correctional was actually given to Lieutenant Lawrence Hart, and Commander John Grant two members, Correctional Deputies ]ulienne Oppong and Ryan Fitzgerald, with their families in attendance. Other award winners included Correctional Sergeant Chuck Stemig with the Innovation Award and members of the Jail SRT, FTO, and Power Volume 6, Week 20 October 18, through October 24, 2010 Jacob Coulson John Grimes Chris Haars Michael Mandel Jon Reiners Joshua Schauer Cha In ains Jim ezoskie Vern Hildebrandt Clayton McDougall Eddie Nestingen Cory Voll Don Voll Questions? Comments? Please contact the Dakota County Sheriff's Office at 651.437.4700 or any of the following by email: dave.bellows@ co.dakota.mn.us julie.ecker@ co.dakota.mn.us DAKOTA COUNTY SHERIFF The Front Row �.4 front row seat to the _qreatest show on Garth... Dave Bellows, Sheriff Tim Leslie, Chief Deputy Users for the new Jail Management System all received recognition awards. A number of staff received Years of Service Awards: Correctional Corporal Gary Millbach and Correctional Deputy Joe Engesser for 18 years of service; Correctional Corporals Deb Fyten and Sheila Hamilton for 15 years of service; Correctional Deputy Cheri Johnson for nine years with the DCSO; Correctional Deputies Muhammed Jackson, Ryan Fitzgerald, and Tchad Guckin with six years of service; and Correctional Deputies Vallie Bissonette, Adam Henry, Sara Steinhoff, Nick Johnson, Farrel Byrd, and Audra Rawlings with three years of service. Special thanks to all the Program Services Assistants for their work in making this a really great event. Pop Corn? Last week Deputies Amber Hentges and Bruce Lohmann were dispatched to two fires in cornfields. Due to the recent lack of moisture, fields have become very dry. The fires are believed to have started as a result of equipment in the field harvesting the crops. In both cases, the fires were extinguished quickly with little loss. Well, Blow Me Down... The heavy winds caused havoc across Dakota County this past week. In one case, a semi tractor trailer was blown over on Highway 52 near County Road 46. Deputy Matt Wayne assisted the Minnesota State Patrol with traffic. There were no injuries as a result of the incident. Behind the Bars... Over the past week the jail held on average 243 inmates per day. For the month, we have been averaging 246 per day. On the Road... Members of the Transportation Unit logged over 2,100 miles last week moving inmates. In addition to routine inmate moves, 28 transports involved warrants from other counties, 12 inmates were boarded, and four were transported to St. Cloud to begin prison sentences. Click here to subscribe to this newsletter electronically. Page 2 1. 2. 3. 4. 5 Cel 7. CITY OF MENDOTA HEIGHTS AIRPORT RELATIONS COMMISSION AGENDA November 10, 2010 — 7:00 P.M. City Hall Council Chambers Call to Order - 7:00 p.m. Roll Call Approval of the Minutes from the October 13, 2010 Airport Relations Commission Meeting Unfinished and New Business a. Airport Noise Report and NOISE b, Minneapolis 60 DNL Issue C. December 2010 Meeting d. NOC Meeting Update e. Updates for Introduction Book Acknowledge Receipt of Various Reports/Correspondence: a. Monthly Statistical Review b. September 2010 ANOM Technical Advisor's Report C. September 2010 ANOM Eagan/Mendota Heights Departure Corridor Analysis d. September 2010 Runway 17 Departure Analysis Report e. Airport Noise Report, October 8, 2010 £ Airport Noise Report, October 15, 2010 g. Airport Noise Report, October 22, 2010 h. Airport Noise Report, October 29, 2010 Other Commissioner Comments or Concerns Upcoming Meetinj4s MAC Meeting City Council Meeting NOC Meeting 8. Public Comments 9. Adjourn 11-16-10 1:00 p.m. 11-16-10 7:00 p.m. 11-17-10 1:30 p.m. Auxiliary aids for persons with disabilities are available upon request at least 120 hours in advance. If a notice of less than 120 hours is received, the City of Mendota Heights will make every attempt to provide the aids. This may not, however, be possible on short notice. Please contact City Administration at (651) 452-1850 with requests. Election Thank You!! The 57 residents who served as election judges did an outstanding job in the General Election. All the judges did a wonderful job!! There were also many incredible staff people who volunteered time and worked extra hours on Election Day and the Saturday before the election assisting with the election process. Many thanks to Kathy Swanson, Becky Pentel, Tom Olund, Mike Albers, Bobby Crane, Linda Shipton, Pam Deeb, Ryan Ruzek, Sharon Hinze, Sandie Thone, Kristen Schabacker, David McKnight, Jake Sedlacek, Mike Aschenbrenner, and anybody else I may have forgotten to mention for all of their help. There was a total of 76.01 % Mendota Heights voter turnout and 671 absentee ballots. htt-p://www.twincities.com/localnews/ci—I 6495030 fiml , 1 1i By Dave Orrick dorrick@pioneerpress.com Updated: 11/01/2010 11:32:09 PM CDT Thanks to lower -flow showerheads and a growing sense of thrift when it comes to watering lawns, water conservation is working around the Twin Cities. People are using less water. And the reward? Higher water bills. St. Paul Regional Water Services, which serves the capital city and several surrounding communities, h as proposed a rate increase of roughly 5.5 p ercent, which would cost the average family $10.56 next year, according to the department's estimates. The St. Paul City Council will hold a public hearing Wednesday. Minneapolis has proposed a 4.9 percent hike, which would cost users of its water — including suburbs such as Bloomington, Golden Valley and Columbia Heights — about $14.40 a year, if approved, according its department's estimates. In both cities, the past several years have shown a steady trickle of rate increases. In a trend that's playing out across the country, municipal water departments are tapping their customers for more Page 1 of 4 money to use less water, according to officials and studies. The paradox — that widespread conservation is not leading to lower bills — is the result of underlying infrastructure demands and the nature of water utilities, especially in the water -rich Midwest, water officials and experts say. Meanwhile, conservation advocates say they hope utilities will change their billing structures to at least penalize those who don't conserve — something water agency officials say they're strongly considering. In St. Paul, the average water rate (winter and summer rates differ) has increased every year since 2005, records show. In 2005, 100 cubic feet of water — about 748 gallons — cost $1.61 on average. In 2011, that amount would cost $2.32 on average under the current proposal, an increase of 44 percent over the years, according to the agency's figures. (Minneapolis proposes increasing the rate to $3.20.) During that period, water use has generally fallen in the agency's communities of St. Paul, Falcon Heights, Lauderdale, Maplewood and West St. Paul. This year, when a particularly damp summer didn't require much lawn -watering, is likely to result in the lowest water consumption since the 1960s. But almost everything else the utility spends money on — materials, fuel, treatment chemicals and labor — costs more today than back then. And unlike other agencies, the water department has no other sources of revenue besides water rates and nowhere to cut but water services, said Pat g3 _ t L, IC -11J) i i jr-f C t,, [.i.I ¢ i' I� ''.{... 3: �.i Print Powered By http://www.twincities.com/fdcp?1288723227416 11/2/2010 http://www.twincities.com/localnews/ci—I 6495030 Page 2 of 4 Twin CitiesIscom Harris, a St. Paul City Council member who chairs the water agency's board of directors. RISING COSTS "When usage is down, revenue is down, but you still have all the same infrastructure," Harris said. "We can't say we've got less money, so we're going to clean the water less. The water utility exists to provide clean and available water to the public. You do that at a cost that does that and nothing above that." Harris and water agency Executive Director Steve Schneider point out that the utility has cut staffing — from about 330 full-time employees in the late 1980s to about 250 now. Next year's budget assumes no wage increases except step increases for unionized workers or for department brass. But the department's costs are still rising. Among the increases are $1.29 million for personnel, largely from a projected increase in health insurance costs, and $441,000 in debt service payments to maintain $30 million in taxpayer - backed loans for capital programs. The two biggest capital programs are $6.5 million to demolish the outmoded Dale Street Reservoir and $20 million to replace nearly every water meter in its s ervice area, a multi-year effort that began last month and, eventually, should save the agency money. Harris and Schneider also defend the proposed budget as not including as many capital improvements as they would prefer, such as additional money to replace old cast-iron mains at the same time as St. Paul street crews dig up residential streets to replace curbs and gutters. "People hate having their street dug up a second time for that," Harris said. "But we don't have the money to avoid it every time." PUSH TO CONSERVE There's little question that conservation — not the current recession, changing commercial uses or a few damp growing seasons — is driving the decrease in water use, officials say. They point especially to winter water use, which has been steadily decreasing for years and is obviously not subject to the whims of quenching a lawn's thirst. "It's all those plumbing fixtures," said Bernie Bullert, director of water treatment and distribution for Minneapolis' water department. "Over the years, the toilets, showers, dishwashers, laundry machines, they all get replaced, and all the new ones use less water." Of course, that's a good thing, said Anne Hunt, sustainability coordinator for St. Paul Mayor Chris Coleman. Like most elected officials, Coleman has an official policy of discouraging waste of natural resources. But such policies aren't currently reflected in water pricing as they are with, say, electricity use. "It took a long time for regulators to correctly set financial incentives so that publicly traded energy companies could encourage conservation, and right now we're in the same old paradigm for water," Hunt said. That's especially the case in the Midwest, where, whether it's Great Lakes -gulping cities such as Milwaukee and Chicago, or Mississippi River - slurping cities such as St. Paul and Minneapolis, water has seemed unlimited — and cheap. "It was backwards for a long time," said Joel Brammeier, president of the conservation -minded The Daily Deal r70 } ParkSmartMPLS Minneapolis I 9t Paul : $54 for One Month of Parking at Park9martMPLS (Up to a $199 Value) or $75 for a Multi - Pass. Choose One of Eight Options. Get this and other Daily Deals at: Print Powered By ,;u i r4 t i cic,� , http://www.twincities.com/fdcp?1288723227416 11/2/2010 http://www.twincities.com/localnews/ci—I 649503 0 Page 3 of 4 Alliance for the Great Lakes. "For years, in Midwest communities where water was plentiful, people paid less for the more they used. That gave people a completely false sense of the cost of sustaining the drinking water supply. The reality behind what comes out of your tap is that somebody is paying money to get you that water. It's the end of miles and miles of pumps and pipes and filters, and somebody needs to pay for those." Minneapolis and St. Paul charge the same rate for water regardless of how much a customer uses. They also get kudos from watchdogs for generally not hiding the true costs of their operations behind other revenue, such as property taxes. For example, St. Paul's campaign to replace old lead water mains is paid for by its water rates. WE DRINK CHEAP St. Paul residents, in particular, enjoy some of the cheapest water prices in the country for major cities, well below those of Seattle, Boston, New Orleans and St. Louis. That's a double-edged sword when it comes to conservation, though, Brammeier cautions, because the underlying costs of running the utilities aren't falling, and using less water doesn't mean, for example, fewer pipes to maintain. "Ultimately, everybody's going to have to pay a little bit more, but we have to make sure that money is going to be charged fairly," he said. Water officials noted that if a St. Paul family uses 5 percent less water next year, the bill wouldn't go up a dime, but Bullert acknowledged that in the core cities, there isn't a ton of room for conservation. "It's not like in the suburbs where you have huge lots," he said. "In old cities, you've got small lots with big old trees, so there's less room to water your lawn, and less opportunity for evaporation." CHANGING RATE STRUCTURES There is a way to change how we're billed for water that would discourage heavy use — or at least make those users pay a greater share — and both cities are thinking about it. Under what's known as an "inclining block -rate structure," homes and businesses would be charged a higher rate for each gallon of water above a certain threshold. Advocates such as Brammeier say it's a smart and fair move. St. Paul is likely to study that option, as well as an option to increase the minimum amount billed as a way to cease the current pattern of increasing rates every year, or finding late budget surprises because a year was wetter than projected. "It's something we definitely want to look at before next year's budget," Schneider said. "We just want everyone to understand that we're not expanding our customer base like a power company. We have costs, and we have to meet them." $1.61 Average 2005 St. Paul water rate (per 100 cubic feet) $2.32 Average proposed 2011 rate 20,619,077 2007 water consumption 19,000,000 Print Powered By Yrs rrli w4, http://www.twincities.com/fdcp?1288723227416 11/2/2010 http://www.twincities.com/localnews/ci-16495030 a Estimated 2010 consumption IF YOU GO St. Paul will hold a public hearing on a proposed water rate hike of about 5.5 percent at 5:30 p.m. Wednesday in City Council chambers, third floor of City Hall, 14 W. Kellogg Blvd. Page 4 of 4 Print Powered By '. Nina `�i s http://www.twincities.com/fdcp?l 288723227416 11/2/2010