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From YouTube: Council Work Session Meeting 01 19 2016
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A
Are
we
ready?
Are
you
ready,
Rea,
okay,
well,
welcome!
Welcome
to
the
Tuesday
January
19
2016
Watertown
city
council
work
session
at
this
time,
I
will
call
the
meeting
to
order,
and
the
first
thing
on
our
agenda
is
discussion
on
what
on
stormwater
drainage
issues
and
she
and
I'm
gonna.
Let
you
just
kind
of
light
this
up.
A
This
is
something
I'll
give
a
little
heads
up
that
we've
been
concerned
about
for
water
tone
for
some
time
now
where
water
tends
to
back
up
in
areas
and
and
he's
going
to
show
you
those
concerned
areas
and
what
we
can
do
it
that
kind
of
came
to
light
again.
You
know,
as
we
were
talking
on
the
on
the
Rovi
Creek
flood
thing,
the
other
night,
which
I
thought
went
extremely
loud
and
Sarah.
Thank
you
again
for
doing
that
was
a
lot
of
work
and
so
Shane
tala
I'll.
Let
you
go
thank.
B
You
mayor
yeah,
one
of
the
key
jobs
I've
been
trying
to
get
done
since
I've
arrived
about
six
months
ago
was
initially
when
I
came,
I
started
receiving
some
phone
calls
on
different
drainage
issues
in
town
and,
of
course,
we've
got
about
five
sub-watersheds.
You
know
we
have
a
watershed
for
the
lake
comp
Eska
one
for
Lake
Pelican,
one
for
the
Big
Sioux
River,
Rabi,
Creek
and
Willow
Creek,
and
essentially
all
of
those,
of
course
are
subsets
of
the
Greater
Big
Sioux
River
drainage
basin,
and
they
each
have
their
own
unique
attributes
and
and
places.
B
You
know
that
of
need
in
each
of
those
watersheds.
What
I
really
want
to
kind
of
do
is
do
a
quick
overview
and
can't
give
you
an
idea
of
what
has
happened
in
the
not
so
recent
past
with
regarding
these
issues
and
then
kind
of
speed
you
forward
where
we
are
today.
So
each
of
these
watersheds
that
you
see
on
the
screen,
there's
row:
B
Creek.
Of
course
that's
the
center
of
the
city.
It
it
does
include
all
of
Northridge.
It
does
extend
over
to
the
slightly
to
the
east
of
19th
Street
and
then
I.
B
Ultimately,
it
of
course
outlets.
Oops,
that's
fast.
You
know
it
outlets
pass
them
all
down
down
in
a
man-made
channel,
essentially
from
that
point
down
to
the
Big
Sur
River,
one
of
the
other
ones,
Lake
Pelican
watershed
actually
covers
a
surprising
portion
north
of
212.
It
comes
all
the
way
up
by
the
airport
as
you
follow
my
cursor
around.
It
even
includes
a
part
of
what
we
call
the
Derby
down
subdivision
and
all
the
way
out.
You
know
to
about
a
mile
west
of
town
here.
B
So
that's
that's
the
major
sheds
in
2006,
a
manual
was
put
together
and
that's
what
these
are
all
excerpts
out
of
that
manual
and
in
2006.
The
storm
water
needs
for
financial
reasons
were
estimated
at
just
over
12
million
dollars
and
then
subsequently
in
2011
are
heading
into
the
2011
season
city
staff.
All
the
sinks
crash.
C
B
B
Some
of
this
work
is
probably
being
completed,
but
there's
always
something
that's
me
needed
and
is
falling
back
in
place
in
in
these,
in
to
kind
of
give
you
a
more
specific
idea
of
what
what
some
of
those
needs
are,
and
this
is
one
that
we're
kind
of
trying
to
coordinate
a
little
bit
with
the
highway
212
improvements
is.
This
is
what's
referred
to
as
the
south
highway
81
system.
This
is
81
coming
into
town
from
the
south.
B
B
B
And
you
know
the
river
is
just
out
of
view
down
here
to
the
south,
but
there's
also,
these
properties
here
that
are
developing
in
this
old
channel
has
either
been
partially
filled
or
not
maintained
so
that
it
drains
well,
and
so,
when
we
start
to
look
at
developing
an
improving
role,
it's
like
Jensen
Avenue
was
kind
of
on
our
radar
for
improvements
these
streets,
as
they
start
to
come
out
here
into
the
cross.
This
watershed
piece
aren't
accommodating
that
drainage.
That
needs
to
be
managed,
and
so
that's
a
high-dollar
project.
B
We
don't
even
have
a
solid
estimate
or
what
that
project
would
be
right
now,
but
we
need
to
make
sure
that
we
address
this
water
drainage
way
through
here
and
and
or
take
part
of
it
over
to
the
swill
Aerobie
Creek
piece
here.
So
that's
just
an
example
of
a
project.
That's
probably
going
to
be
a
high
priority
in
the
near
future.
B
B
B
There
is
a
fair
amount
of
storm
sewer
in
this
neighborhood,
but
some
of
it's
probably
under
sized
and
then
there's
reaches
of
the
neighborhood,
that
for
economic
reasons,
originally
one
that
developed
stormwater
just
wasn't
extended
into
it.
One
Road
in
particular
is
there's
a
seraph
remaining
Karen
Street
and
that
that
actually
has
a
bottom
that
doesn't
really
have
an
out.
The
only
outlet
to
the
street
drainage
is
a
culvert
that
crosses
at
mid
block
between
two
houses
and
when
it
rains
hard.
B
You
know,
and
with
a
little
bit
more
rainfall
or
a
longer
rainfall,
wouldn't
take
much
to
push
that
water
into
somebody's
driveway
or
garage,
and
you
know,
maybe
even
into
their
basement,
depending
on
how
well
sealed
up
their
basement
is
so
that
is
a
large
dollar
project,
because
you
basically
have
to
start
at
the
bottom
of
the
watershed
here
at
Highland
Park
and
build
storm
sewer
all
the
way
out
to
intercept
that
storm
sewer
water
runoff.
So
those
are
two
really
good
examples
of
projects
that
will
need
a
large
infusion
of
funding
and
I.
Guess.
B
I
just
want
to
kind
of
map
this
out
so
that
we
as
a
city
going
forward,
identify
these
and
find
a
way
to
fund
projects
and
know
what's
out
there
that
we
can
manage
or
handle
in
the
future.
So
there's
other
projects
out
there
in
each
of
these
watersheds,
there's
stormwater
ponds
that
should
be
developed
in
certain
regions
and
other
other
things
that
are
out
there
is.
We
should
probably
create
a
get
a
stormwater
comprehensive
plan
piece
put
in
place
for
the
whole
community.
We
have
bits
and
pieces
of
it.
B
We
have
three
studies
done
on
Willow
Creek
for
it,
for
example,
we
have
now
aerobic
Creek
flood
plain,
that's
been
redefined
projects
like
that
or
still
are
good
and
they're
moving
things
forward,
but
they're
not
getting
it
all
done.
So
what
we
need
to
do
is
just
identify
these
issues
and
kind
of
plan
for
the
future.
So.
A
E
A
To
share
with
you
guys
tonight
is
that
we
do
have
some
issues
with
water
and
getting
some
water
out
of
here,
whether
we
have
small
retention
ponds
or
large
retention
ponds
or
move
it
into
the
rivers.
We
need
to
do
that
so
I
wanted
you
guys
to
be
aware
of
something
like
this,
where
Shane
is
going
to
be
Shane
and
Sara,
be
putting
this
together
and
they're
gonna
come
back
to
us
with
a
priority
list.
You
know,
where
is
the
where's
our
biggest
priority
that
we
have
to
work
on?
A
The
problem
that
we're
gonna
run
into
is
really
finding
a
funding
vehicle
to
do
this,
and
based
on
that
also,
you
know,
there's
there's
ideas
out
there
being
floated
that
we
can
use
and
can't
use,
and
but
it's
important
that
that
the
people
in
town
know
that
we
need
to
address
these
water
issues.
Brookings
had
this
type
of
a
problem
just
a
short
number
of
years
ago,
and
they
solved
it,
they
solved
it
very
easily
and
they
they
did
some
things.
That
I
think
was
very
good
for
the
city
and
it
turned
out
extremely
well.
A
F
B
B
That
will
be
one
of
the
biggest
things
that
I
want
to
look
at
a
stormwater
comprehensive
plan
pieces
so
that
we
can
prepare,
maybe
for
some
regions
that
better
fit
a
regional
pond.
Rather
than
have
you
know,
small
developments
come
along
that
all
of
them
need
a
pond.
Maybe
we
have
better
identified
location
to
take
and
build
a
bigger
pond,
rather
than
have
10
or
15
small
ponds
along
the
way,
and
so
a
comprehensive
plan
pieces
is
very
key.
B
There's
a
couple
of
things
I'd
like
to
have
that
plan
kind
of
identify
and-
and
these
are
kind
of
items
that
go
hand-in-hand
with
being
in
the
low
area-
is
we
have
a
lot
of
wetlands
and
if
something
needs
to
be
that's
important
or
a
priority
that
needs
to
impact
a
wetland.
If
we
have
our
own
city
wetland
bank,
that
a
project
can
buy
from
or
borrow
to,
you
know
get
some
wetlands
built
up
around
the
city,
I
mean,
and
then
along
with
that,
of
course,
a
key
thing
is
to
try
to
make
them
not.
H
B
B
Okay,
so
so,
if
we
have
a
project,
that's
gonna
that
we
knowingly
it's
going
to
impact
existing
wetlands
when
we
go
in
there
and
fill
that
area
for
whatever
public
use
we
need
to.
We
need
to
offset
that
on
a
two
to
one
ratio.
So
if
we
take
an
acre
of
wetlands
from
one
location,
we
have
to
recreate
two
acres
in
another
location,
and
ideally
we
would
do
that
within
watersheds,
but
that's
not
always
easy
to
do.
B
So
so
we
do
any
day
identify
that
as
a
potential
cost
savings
need,
because
if
you
develop
those
banks
in
advance,
it
can
speed
up
your
project
and
it
can
cost
a
lot
less
if
you
already
have
it
developed.
So
those
are
very
unique
needs.
You
know
some
communities,
don't
have
those
issues
at
all
because
they're
up
on
a
bluff
and
they
just
don't
have
them
but
we're
in
a
low
area.
We've
got
wetlands
all
around
the
city
and,
as
we
train.
B
I
F
B
I
B
B
Okay,
so
the
11th
Street
intersection
is
right
here.
This
is
the
mall
and
that
drainage,
Robie,
Creek
drainage
channel
comes
down
past
the
wastewater
plant
and
into
the
Big
Sioux
River
down
here,
and
essentially
you
know,
this
is
the
new
softball
complex
over
here.
These
were
old
sewer
lagoons
that
I
assume
maybe
still
get
used
for
an
overflow
situation,
but
but
generally
don't
treat
the
sewer
they
just
kind
of
hold
it
until
it
can
be
run
through
the
plant.
B
So
yeah
there's
some
I,
even
if
we
owned
properties
down
along
here,
those
are
locations
where
we
can
enhance
areas
to
create
wetland
banks
or
other
enhancements
that
treat
stormwater
accordingly.
I
mean
we
have
a
lot
of
plans
that
are
out
there
in
studies
and
so
forth
to
identify
future
pond
sites,
but
a
lot
of
them
aren't
built
yet
and
and
of
course,
we
try
to
incorporate
some
type
of
buyback
component
if
we
did
create
them
and
somebody
needed
to
buy
a
wetland
credit
from
the
city,
we
could
even
entertain
those
kind
of
buybacks.
B
I
B
B
D
Because
we
really
need
to
look
at
not
only
the
existing
issues
we
have,
but
you
know
as
our
community's
growing
and
try
to
be
proactive
in
those
areas.
But
so
when
would
something
like
that
be
able
to
be
done
because
it's
hard
to
move
forward
with
much
of
anything
without
a
plan
correct
when
would
something
like
that?
Is
that
a
six-month
project
is
that
a
year
from
now
we'd
be
talking
about
looking
at
that?
Well,.
B
I,
don't
have
to
some
consultants
to
kind
of
get
that
figured
out.
I
would
think
that
it
would
probably
at
least
a
year
type
of
timeframe.
I
mean
we
wouldn't
be
ready
to
do
anything
with
it.
You
know
in
the
first
year
after
it's
done
until
you
know
what
projects
you're
gonna
take
on
and
and
fund
right.
A
But
if
I
may
you
know
one
of
the
things
that
we
need
to
do
as
a
city
is
to
to
have
enough
vision
to
see?
How
are
we
going
to
finance
this
because
Shelley
just
has
a
struggle
right
in
that
check
every
time,
I
don't
get
it
you
know,
but
we
do
need
to
look
at
that
and
we're
one
of
very
few
cities
that
have
a
comprehensive
plan
for
storm
water
that
we
do
not
have
George
so
Steve's.
A
Suggestions
I
mean
I,
didn't
really
want
to
get
into
the
financial
side
of
it
tonight.
I
wanted
to
bring
you
up
to
speed
on
some
of
the
concerns.
We've
got
we'll
be
bringing
something
forward
by
by
our
March
first
meeting.
That
will
show
how
we
could
fund
projects
like
this
and
how
we
could
get
it
done
so.
B
C
It
seemed
part
of
this
plan
would
help
with
what
we
probably
already
are
working
on
new
new
things.
But
it
sounds
like
we
have
issues
and
older
other
parts
of
town
that
weren't
delos
before,
and
that
seems
like
that,
whatever
the
process
for
that
might
be
a
war
for
like
a
better
way
saying
a
one-term
thing,
or
at
least
when
it's
done
it's
done
and
then
from
going
forward.
We'd
have
some
other
solution
as
far
as,
if
you
had
these
regional
ponds,
there'd
be
some
type
of
fee
and
to
the
developer
to
drain
to
them.
A
B
You
know
well
and
one
of
the
facets
that
and
I'll
just
make
this
a
really
brief
comment,
but
I
mean
some
of
the
initial
storm
sewer
stuff
was
designed
and
developed
in
at
the
turn
of
the
19th
century.
You
know
so
what
they
used
for
design
standards
then
are
different
than
what
we
expect
for
performance
today.
So
we
need
to
look
at
the
entire
footprint
of
the
city
and
just
decide
our
priorities
on
that,
and
you
know
you
know
some
of
those
areas
that
do
have
storm
sewer
may
not
be
adequately
performing
today.
A
A
Things
like
that
that
change
bringing
forward
that
I
think
something
in
the
city
is
lacked
for
a
long
time,
because
you
can't
afford
to
build
a
road
and
then
have
the
water
just
destroy
it
in
two
or
three
years,
and
do
it
again
there's
ways
we
can
stop
that
and
I
think
this
is
one
way
we
got
to
get
going.
Okay,
good
enough!
Thank
you.
Thanks,
Shane
yeah.
J
A
Wanted
to
mention
a
couple
other
things
I
know
they're
not
on
the
agenda,
but
it's
just
open
things
that
have
kind
of
gone
on
in
in
the
area
I
wanted
to
mention.
One
here
is
an
idea:
I
thought
was
kind
of
cool
and
you
guys
know
how
I
like
ideas
and
you
throw
them
against
the
wall
and
see
if
it
sticks
or
not,
but
I
was
visiting
with
Don
Eggert
the
other
day
out
at
the
radio
station
and
Don
was
asking
me:
what's
our
plans
to
increase
our
air
service
in
town
I
thought?
A
Well,
you
know
we
were
planning
on
advertising
and
and
we're
bringing
in
this
airplane
and
in
March,
so
that
the
public
can
get
out
there
and
take
a
look
at
it
and
see
it,
and
he
said
what
did
you
everything
about
having
and
and
just
tell
me
if
you
guys
think
it's
a
good
idea,
a
bad
idea.
That's
why
we're
throwing
it
out
here.
Do
you
ever
think
about
having
a
kind
of
a
big
heavy
hors
d'oeuvre,
something
out
at
the
airport?
A
Whenever
it
does
and
I
thought
you
know,
that's
a
pretty
good
idea,
so
we
could
I'm
kind
of
kicking
it
around
that
when
we
bring
that
airline
in
and
in
March
to
bring
the
airplane
here
that
that
embryo
I
forget
the
number
of
it.
But
it's
50
passenger
jet,
so
I
think
we're
gonna
have
a
kind
of
a
party
out
there.
No
booze,
it's
a
public
place,
so
it's
city-owned
there,
so
there's
no
booze,
so
anybody's
got
to
have
it
stay
home,
so
it'll
be
a
lot
of
our
d'oeuvres.
A
C
But
if
we
can
get
started
the
quicker
we
can
get
people
on
track
and
start
to
use
that
the
the
quicker
the
better
the
service
will
get,
and
hopefully
the
potential
of
expanding
on
the
services
out
there
will
will
come
quick
or
two,
because
you
know
that's
one
of
the
comments
as
Denver,
which
I
think
is
going
to
be
fine,
but
they
commented
to
us.
If
that
goes
good,
then
he's
gonna
look
at
the
possibility
going
the
other
direction
at
some
time.
A
Think
so
you
know
in
visit
with
Mickey,
it
sounds
like
he
would.
He
would
give
up.
You
know
1012
free
round-trip
air
tickets
to
to
Denver.
You
know
if
we
have
a
little
drawing
out
there
during
this
thing
and
just
kind
of
get
people
involved
in
it
and
get
folks
out
there
to
to
get
excited
about
this.
New
airline
coming
and
and
I
will
tell
you
that
it's
going
to
be
pretty
cool
to
have
that
50
seat.
A
Cheddar
come
in
here,
billboard
issue
I
wanted
to
just
mentioned
that
Tim
l'olam,
upstairs
in
the
in
the
building
service
area,
he's
going
to
be
working
on
this.
For
me
we're
putting
together
a
group.
If
you
haven't
been
notified
already,
you
will
be,
but
Bruce
is
going
to
be
on
there.
Mike
is
going
to
be
on
there
and
the
reason
I
asked
those
two
guys
is
that
they
were
extremely
involved
prior
to
the
to
the
Billboard
and
to
the
sign
issue
in
Watertown.
That
was
a
number
of
years
ago.
A
It
had
to
be
10
years
ago.
Wasn't
it
Mike,
atleast,
Bruce,
10
years
or
so,
and
I
think
it's
important
that
we
kind
of
step
back
and
take
a
look.
What's
that
who's
had
here,
that's
mean
yeah
so
and
then
we're
gonna
have
first
District
down
there
myself
Shane
will
be
there
from
engineering
Tim,
of
course,
will
kind
of.
He
knows
the
rules
inside
and
out
on
the
current
way,
but
first
district
also,
you
know
they
had.
A
A
You
know
when
you
drive
in
and
make
something
look
better
than
just
a
lot
of
gray,
concrete,
so
I
believe
it
was
l'olam
there
too.
Wasn't
it
wasn't
Tim,
but
his
brother
Kyle
Kyle
is
going
to
spearhead
that
group
for
the
h2o
20
will
be
very
involved
in
that,
so
we're
gonna
just
see
if
there
isn't
something
that
we
can
do
now
as
a
city
to
kind
of
change.
The
looks
of
how
212
will
look
when
you
come
in
from
from
the
east
or
the
west
doesn't
make
any
difference
so
I
want
to.
A
Let
you
guys
know
that
that
is
going
on.
I
also
wanted
to
bring
up.
We
had
a
meeting
I.
Think
Don
you
were
there,
I
was
there
Jim
I,
see
Jim's
in
the
audience
from
glacial
lakes.
Energy
they're
in
this
meeting
I
just
wanted
to
bring
you
up
to
speed
on
on
what
we
talked
about.
We're
kind
of
you
know
we're
talking
about
the
closure
of
Broadway.
What
happened
was
and
and
Shane
was
there.
You
can
step
in
any
time.
If
you
want
to.
A
We
talked
about
the
bridge
we
had
Joel
jumped
on
the
on
the
line
from
Pier
with
the
d-o-t.
We
talked
about
the
bridge,
which
is
a
major
discussion
point
for
Hesco
Hesco.
As
you
know,
they
currently
come
in
to
their
business
with
semi
loads
of
product
and
in
those
particular
semi
loads.
They
bring
in
are
too
heavy
for
the
for
the
current
bridge
on
the
north
side
by
a
Little
River
City.
A
So
what
we're
looking
at
is.
We
were
currently
thinking
that.
Well,
we
had
to
build
a
big
1.1
or
1.2
million
dollar
bridge
and
in
visiting
with
Joel
and
Laurie
Schultz
Laurie
made
the
comment
she
says
well,
if
you're,
if
it's
only
serving
one
entity,
you
know
you're,
probably
looking
at
between
500
and
700
thousand
dollars
for
a
bridge
to
repair
it
and
then
what
you
do
is
not
have
a
40-foot
wide
bridge,
but
you
would
take
it
down
to
20
foot
made
sense
to
me.
A
My
conversation
today
with
with
Jim
siren
in
the
audience
is
that
he
visited
with
mark
Junkers
from
us
and
engineering
mark
is
the
one
that
did
the
inspections
on
that
bridge
and
he's
the
one
that
actually
lowered
the
rating
on
the
bridge
to
where
it
is
today
should
have
50
tonne
I
believe
to
get
these
things
going
across,
and
it's
rated
rated
for
22
ton
I
believe
what
we're
looking
at
is
actually
the
the
pilings
are
good
on
the
bridge.
So
there's
not
an
issue
with
the
actual
foundation
of
the
bridge.
A
What
we
are
looking
at
is
the
decking
and
the
girders
that
I
believe
that
is
the
problem.
Right
now
and
Mark
made
the
comment
to
to
Jim
that
he
feels
as
though
anywhere
between
300,000,
possibly
up
to
400,000,
with
our
engineering
costs
that
are,
there
could
actually
alleviate
that
problem.
So
we
will
be
talking
to
the
GED
4
on
behalf
of
glacial
lakes,
energy
and
with
our
water
tone
development
company,
just
to
see
where
they're
at
on
that
on
help
fund,
this
particular
project
eschol,
Brad
Hendrix's
concern
really
was
he
had
three
major
concerns.
A
One
was
security.
You
know
people
getting
into
his
building
and
and
or
to
the
business
I
think
we
have
that
settled
that
wasn't
an
issue
now
emergency
access,
one
of
his
biggest
concerns,
is
his
insurance
costs
would
go
up
dramatic
if
he
didn't
have
a
second
way
out
of
his
business.
You
know
if
you
only
have
to
come
from
the
north
you're
kind
of
screwed,
because
you
know
if
you've
got
a
fire
there,
you
got
to
get
out
to
South.
A
He
can't
do
it,
but
glacier
Lakes
Energy
said
that
they
will
have
a
road
that
goes
all
the
way
around
for
the
railroad
around
their
track,
and
there
will
be
a
gate
there.
That
can
be
opened
up
to
have
that
access
to
go
out
the
south
if
they
need
it
and
that
will
that
really
took
care
of
Brad's
Brad's
concern
on
that.
A
One
of
the
other
things
then
Brad's
concern
was:
is
that
it
need
the
bridge
needs
to
be
fixed
and
done
before
access
can
be
eliminated
from
the
south
because
he's
bringing
in
truckloads
of
things
from
the
south
because
he
can't
come
to
the
north.
That's
what
I'm
talking
about
on
the
weight
with
Mark
Jungers
today
he
made
the
comment
that
really
a
bridge.
If
you
use
the
current
foundation,
that's
there,
the
pilings.
You
could
probably
get
this
thing
done
in
30
to
45
days,
I,
don't
I!
Don't
disagree
with
that!
A
I
think
it's
a
it's
an
aggressive
plan,
but
it
can
be
done
so
that's
kind
of
where
we're
at
on
that
I
wanted
to.
Let
you
guys
know
some
of
the
things
that
are
happening
out
there.
One
of
the
other
concerns
on
that
whole
glacial
lakes,
thing
and
I
think
it's
I
think
it's
kind
of
working
out
is
Little
River,
City,
Little,
River
City
is
nervous
and
their
concern
I.
A
Don't
disagree
that
they
will
lose
some
business
if,
if
Broadway
is
closed,
so
that
needs
to
be
addressed
and
I
did
have
a
conversation
with
John
today,
John
Dale
I'm
sure
you
all
know
I
mean.
Does
he
didn't
feel
real
comfortable
coming
here
and
speaking
tonight,
but
he
will
come
probably
to
the
Planning
Commission.
So
what
we
did
just
to
give
you
a
real
quick
synopsis
of
the
timeframe.
A
A
Okay,
they're
gonna
go
February
the
4th
to
the
Planning
Commission.
The
Planning
Commission
will
take
a
look
at
this
and
see
if
they
want
to
move
it
forward
to
the
City
Council.
At
that
time,
you
guys
are
gonna
have
to
look
at
this
a
little
heavier
because
there
any
other
thing
any
other
way.
We
got
to
look
at
this
well.
B
A
C
That
comes
forward,
then,
is
it?
Is
it
going
to
be
tied
to
some
type
of
plan
with
the
bridge?
Then
it
it
seems
like
it's
got
to
be
part
of
the
process.
So
glacial
lakes
knows
the
time
frame.
When
they
can
start
I
mean
I
could
I
could
envision.
It
could
probably
be
starting
on
part
of
it
without
closing
off
of
the
Broadway,
but
at
the
same
time
there's
got
be
the
commitment
that
the
bridge
is
going
to
get
done
and
so
on.
In
order
for
all
that
to
take
place,
yeah.
E
A
B
B
D
A
A
A
It's
kind
of
just
extremely
quiet
right
now,
yeah,
so
hopefully
you
know
we
can
get
things
squared
away.
I
really
have
some
some
great
ideas
for
highway
212,
just
to
touch
on
that
again.
I
think
that's
kind
of
fun
to
see,
and
hopefully
the
state
has
open
arms
and
yeah.
We're
gonna.
Do
sure
we'll
do
this,
for
you
Steve
and
for
the
city
of
Watertown.
We
love
you
all
that
kind
of
stuff
mayor.
F
A
Housing
easier
said
than
done,
thanks
for
bringing
that
up,
I
should
have
had
that
written
down.
We
had
a
great
meeting,
I
thought
it
was
a
very
good
Glen
was
there
and-
and
we
talked
about
well-
that
was
joy.
Nelson
was
there
and
Shane
was
there
I
was
there
Randy?
Was
there
Beth
was
there
we
had
just
a
super
meeting
and
we
talked
about
affordable
housing
in
Watertown
and
and,
as
you
know,
we
talked
about
I
threw
it
out.
A
Another
nice
thing
that's
happened
is
that
rely
aback,
Chua
Lee
came
in
and
and
hew
Bartles
brought
some
literature
for
us
and,
and
they
actually
want
to
be
a
supporting
bank
for
affordable
housing
and
and
they're,
asking
us
to
help
look
at
a
grant
for
five
hundred
thousand
dollars.
That
could
help
for
any
infrastructure
and
anything
like
that.
So
it's
exciting
where
this
can
go
to
I,
think
it's
it's
pretty
cool.
A
A
A
L
I
attended
a
meeting,
and
it
was
just
a
preliminary
meeting
to
talk
about
the
potential
of
this
gun
range
that
we've
talked
about
for
quite
a
while
and
I
was
thinking
initially
that
that
was
going
to
be
for
the
police,
but,
as
the
conversation
went
on
and
I
can
just
for
the
sake,
so
I
can
give
you
some
of
the
people
that
are
really
interested
in
it.
It
was
Lake
area,
Technical,
School,
Doug
sharp
attended,
and
he
was
very
interested
in
doing
work
on
that.
L
Jandy
Berg
was
interested
from
the
community
foundation
side
and
when
I
save
from
their
side.
This
is
just
people
that
are
they're
interested
in
pursuing
this
gun
range
and
the
gun
range
would
be
south
of
the
softball
fields
and
they're
gonna
put
it
up
there.
It's
going
to
be
projected
to
be
south
of
the
fields.
B
L
There
we
had
league
able
is
there
from
the
county
and
of
course,
you
think
about
that
they
go
someplace
up
by
Florence
to
do
their
shooting
the
president
of
the
lake
area,
pistol
and
rifle
club.
They
talked
about
4-h
clubs
using
it.
There
was
just
a
lot
of
the
game,
fish
and
parks.
People
were
there.
M
L
L
People
promised
this
and
promised
that
well,
no,
but
they're
all
going
to
look
into
it
and
there
were
several
people
that
had
jobs
to
do
before
we
meet
again
next
Friday
I
think
it's
the
29th
that
we're
going
to
meet
again
at
the
police
department
so
more
to
follow,
but
just
to
kind
of
let
people
know
that
the
discussion
is
happening
and
it
was.
It
was
really
pretty
exciting.
I
thought
that
all
these
different
entities,
all
of
a
sudden,
they're
saying
oh,
we
could
do
this.
L
We
could
do
that
and
you
know
they're
talking
about
actually
having
somebody
professionally
out
there
that
might
sell
guns
and
ammunition
and
working
with
the
kids
making
sure
that
they
have
an
area
that
they
can
hunt
in
archery
arche
was
brought
up
as
a
possibility,
and
now
again
you
go
back
to
a
chain
saying
is:
where
is
it
how
much
area
it?
Can
there
be
a
walking
trail
there?
You
know
I
mean
I,
don't
know
a
walking
trail
and
guns
and
its.
L
A
A
I
would
also
just
kind
of
tag
on
that
a
little
bit
since
Shane's
got
that
spot
up
there
right
by
his
pool.
Cue
he's
got
37
acres
there
to
the
left
is
97
acres
and
the
city
owns
all
those
the
ones
on
the
left
is
we
were
taking
the
the
berms
out
and
that's
what
we
put
up
on
the
ball
diamond,
but
I
just
want
to
let
you
know
also
in
visiting
with
the
game,
fish
and
parks.
There
is
a
new
Secretary
of
game
fish,
mr.
A
Hepler,
and
he
has
a
top
list
of
four
things
that
he
wants
to
get
done
in
the
state.
The
number
one
on
his
list
is
to
get
a
new
game,
fish
and
parks,
building
and
and
here
in
Watertown,
so
we're
kind
of
looking
at
you
know
areas
that
that
would
work
for
them.
You
know
if
you've
got
a
gun
range
right
there
next
door.
Would
it
work
in
that
area?
I,
don't
know
it's
just
things
that
are
being
thrown
around
if
we
would
be
willing
to
possibly
sell
him
15
acres,
they
talked
about
building
trails.
A
D
All
of
the
prefab
work
is
done,
they've
been
diligently
working
on
the
roofing
system
and
that's
done.
The
heat
will
go
in
and
then
they'll
start
pouring
all
the
the
main
floors
into
the
facility
and
then
once
that's
done,
then
they'll
start
building
the
individual
rooms
in
there
that
are
not
on
on
we
that
are
not
load-bearing
rooms.
So
they
can
build
a
lot
of
rooms.
Then
that
will
be
on
file
on
the
flooring
itself.
So
but
it
was
a
very
good,
very
good
tour.
D
D
L
A
Thanks
Mike,
it
was
a
good
and
they
said,
there's
there's
probably
close
to
two
foot
of
frost
in
the
ground
is
with
and
when
they
get
the
heat
going
in
there,
what
they
say
seven
inches
a
day,
it
goes
down.
Yeah,
I
I
do
have
a
video
here,
I'd
like
to
play
for
you
guys.
This
came
from
one
of
the
architects
and
it's
on
the
softball,
complex
Helms
associates
and
artists.
Architects
I
wanted
to
show
you
this.
A
F
A
It
goes
down
about
16
feet
and
they
come
already
with
a
concrete
around
them,
so
they
drill
the
hole
they
put
it
down
with
the
two
feet
of
ice
that
they've
got
in
the
ground
right
now
they
were
thought
up
about
a
foot
up,
but
they'll
drill
them
this
year,
this
about
a
month
and
month
and
a
half
from
now
they're
gonna
drill
them
they'll
put
them
in
and
then
they'll
set
them.
I
was
concerned
about
that
I
thought.
Well,
they
can't
do
that.
Mike.
A
You
probably
have
more
information
on
this,
but
I
talked
to
Pitt's
construction
today,
I
said.
Is
that
something
that
works?
He
says
absolutely
so
we're
looking
and
what
we'd
like
to
do
is
it
gets
some
of
that
end
get
the
boring
done
for
the
electrical
through
there.
So
next
year,
when
they're
grading
that
ground,
we
don't
have
all
that
big
heavy
equipment
driving
on
it.
So
it's
just
a
little
update
on
the
ball.
Ballparks,
okay,
I
think
that's
all
I
got
I
ran.
I
Off
I
got
one
other
thing:
I,
don't
know.
If
anybody's
noticed
for
gone
down
highway
212
and
seen
the
new
banners
up,
they
replaced
the
holiday
banners
with
the
Redland
banners
thank
to
Julie,
random
and
and
the
red
limb
family
has
allowed
us
to
use
some
of
their
artwork
and
in
putting
a
lot
of
hard
work
and
Megan
kind
of
coordinated
it
from
the
chamber.
With
the
utilities.
They'll
soon
go
up,
uptown
I
thought
they
looked
pretty
great
out
there.
So.
A
F
J
F
A
Sheldon,
just
for
the
record
John
is
that
the
tourism
conference
in
Pier
and
he'll
be
there
till
Friday.
So
the
first
thing
is
approval
of
consent.
Agenda
I
would
like
to
get
a
motion,
a
second
motion
by
Bruce
second,
by
Beth,
any
questions
on
this
hearing.
None
I'll,
look
for
council
action,
all
those
in
favor,
say
aye
opposed
motion
carried
number
to
approve
the
agenda.
Look
for
a
motion,
a
second
motion
by
Randy.
A
Second,
by
Bruce,
any
questions
hearing,
none
I'll,
look
for
council
action,
all
those
in
favor,
say:
aye
opposed
motion
carried
number
three
application
for
a
new
retail
on
off
sale.
Malt
beverage
license
in
South
Dakota
Farm
wine
license
to
the
cognitive
County
Historical
Society,
doing
business
as
Carrington
County
Historical
Society
that
27
First
Avenue
southeast
at
this
particular
time.
I
will
open
the
public
hearing
if
there's
anyone
that
it
wants
to
speak
in
favor
of
or
against
this.
This
is
your
opportunity.
A
H
H
A
F
I
A
Know
we
had
and
we
talked
about
the
transfer
and
the
transfer
which
I
think
300
bucks.
If
I'm
not
mistaken,
isn't
it
$300
to
have
a
one-time
transfer
and
they're
gonna
do
a
fundraiser
and
for
$250
they
can
get
the
license.
But
you
know
we
do
the
same
thing
for
the
zoo
and
for
other
facilities.
So
it
just
kind
of
goes
right.
Along
with
it
and.
J
H
H
D
A
D
It
just
seems
odd
to
me
that
I
mean
you
receive
money
from
the
city,
don't
you
from
its
budget
year,
but
then
we
turn
around
and
take
it
back
when
you're
trying
to
do
things
that
raises
money
for
you
to
be
more
self-sufficient.
It's
yeah
I
still
think
that
there
is
a
place
for
a
waiver
of
fees
in
certain
applications.
A
A
D
It
just
seems
like
that's
still
something
that
you
get
looked
at.
It
just
seems
a
little
crazy
to
me,
but
good
luck
with
your
doing
license
if
you
get
it,
but
it
just
seems
like
we
shouldn't
be
worrying
about
places
like
the
zoo,
which
is
our
own
entity,
the
the
museum
which
we're
supporting
you
know
significantly
financially.
D
It
just
seems
like
in
those
applications.
We
should
be
able
to
come
up
with
the
definition
of
where
it's
where
it
should
be
allowed,
instead
of
just
I,
don't
think
it's
a
all-or-nothing
deal
I
think
there's
certain
things
that
could
be
done,
but
we'll
look
at
this
for
right
now,
but
I
think
that's
something
that
we
should
bring
up
and
definitely.
A
You
know
that
that's
not
so
crazy
if
you,
when
they
come
forward
to
the
city
next
year
and
you
you're
looking
for
X
amount
of
dollars,
add
in
250
bucks
and
see
if
they'll
approve
it
I'm
serious.
Okay,
it's
worth
a
shot.
You
know,
and
you
could
do
that
for
any
of
them
and
unless
you
guys
want
to
address
this
at
a
later
time
and
take
a
look
at
you
when.
I
D
A
A
All
right,
thank
you
for
being
here:
okay,
moving
on
number
four
application
for
a
temporary
location,
transfer
and
return
of
a
retail
on
sale,
liquor
license
owned
by
Zeus,
incorporated
doing
business
as
second
Street
station
as
follows.
For
the
period
of
3
p.m.
January,
22nd
of
2016
to
2:00
a.m.
generate
23rd
2016
from
15,
2nd
Street
Southwest
to
19:10
West
Kim.
At
this
time,
I
will
open
the
public
hearing.
If
there's
anyone
that
wants
to
speak
in
favor
of
or
against
this
hearing,
none
I'll
close
the
public
hearing
I
will
look
for
a
motion.
A
A
Oh,
oh
my
it
was
a
good
one.
Any
other
questions.
Hearing
not
now
look
for
counsel
action.
All
those
in
favor
say
aye
aye
opposed
motion
carried.
Then
we
have
to
transfer
it
back
so
for
the
period
after
201
a.m.
January,
23rd
of
2016
from
1910
West
Kemp
to
15-second
Street
Southwest.
This
is
a
public
hearing.
I
will
open
that
if
there's
anyone
that
wants
to
speak
in
favor
of
or
against
this
hearing,
none
I'll
close
the
public
hearing
I'll
look
for
a
motion,
a
second
for
discussion,
so.
A
By
Rick
Glen,
second,
by
Bruce,
any
questions
on
this
hearing,
none
I'll,
look
for
counsel
action,
all
those
in
favor,
say:
aye
opposed
motion
carries
first
reading
ordinance
number
1601
amending
section,
21.5
402
of
the
revised
ordinances
of
the
city
of
Watertown
Shane.
If
you
want
to
give
us
just
a
little
heads
up
what
we're
talking
about
here,
yes,.
B
Thank
you
mayor
and
city
council.
This
is
a
ordinance
that
is
unique
to
the
Gateway
overlay
district
and
essentially,
what
this
ordinance
revision
does.
Is
it
takes
items
which
previously
non-conforming
items
were
brought
to
the
Planning
Commission
and
now
what
the
revisions
of
this
would
be
is
it
brings
it
to
a
committee,
that's
been
formed.
We
we
meet
weekly,
it's
a
Planning
and
Zoning
committee
for
operations
in
the
city,
and
we
would
take
on
those
non-conforming
issues
at
that
level
of
our
city
government
and
then
bring
those
forward
to
the
Planning
Commission.
B
A
M
B
A
Know
you
know
we
could
but
I
think
we
need
to.
We
need
to
be
open
for
other
things,
and
this
was
brought
up
to
us
from
the
on
the
Planning.
Commission
is
who
would
like
to
see
this
done?
So
everything
doesn't
come
in
front
of
them.
These
small
fiddly
little
things
so
I'd
say:
let's
we'll
work
on
the
name,
get
something
figured
out
and
bring
it
forward
to
you
guys
here
at
the
next
meeting.
If
that's
okay,.
D
B
Where
this
discussion
I'll
give
you
the
long
answer,
not
real
long
answer,
but
the
discussion
was
this
was
a
Planning
Commission
decision.
Then
it
got
boiled
on
to
the
building
official
decision
and
and
he
wasn't
really
comfortable
having
all
of
the
decision
power
beyond
his
shoulders.
So
we
decided
to
expand
that
out
to
our
group
that
meets
weekly
to
have
more
discussion
amongst
the
a
larger
group
pertaining
to
those.
So
really,
this
is
just
a
defining
a
group
that
would
review
minor
altercations
from
this
ordinance.
So
if,
if
they.
B
D
A
A
A
E
B
And
we
would
also
include
the
Planning
Commission
needs
to
be
comfortable
with
this
language
as
well.
So
this
was
run
by
the
Planning
Commission
for
their
recommendation
to
bring
to
you
folks
so
will
will
fine-tune
this
language
and
bring
it
back
to
you
with
some
more
input,
and
you
can
make
the
change
whatever
changes
you
want
to
the
with
this.
Without
going
back
to
the
Planning
Commission
main.
A
D
A
Let's
move
on
that
was
first
reading,
we'll
bring
that
forward.
Shane
will
make
the
changes
and
then
we'll
have
much
more
discussion
on
it.
Number
six
resolution
number
1607
approving
the
settlement
of
the
collective
bargaining
negotiation
between
the
city
of
Watertown,
a
local
union,
two
four,
eight,
eight
of
the
American
Federation
state
county
and
municipal
employees
afl-cio
at
this
time,
I
will
look
for
a
motion
in
a
second
for
discussion
motion
by
bill
second
by
Beth.
A
I
just
wanted
to
mention
that
when
Shelly
and
I
worked
on
on
all
three
unions,
this
is
the
last
one
to
come
in
I'm,
pretty
proud
of
the
fact
that,
unlike
Mitchell,
who
was
going
through
a
real
tough
time
with
their
their
unions,
this
went
through
extremely
well
and
I.
Think
the
union's
themselves
looked
at
as
something
that
we
could
work
with.
A
A
So
if
there
aren't
any
questions
on
that,
we
had
just
a
couple
of
minor
changes
in
the
union
contract
and
it
all
went
well
if
no
questions
I'll
look
for
council
action,
all
those
in
favor
say:
aye
opposed
motion
carried
number
7
resolution
number
1602,
providing
for
the
classification,
the
salaries,
a
certain
city
of
Watertown
employees
and
officer
for
the
period
commencing
January
1st
2016.
At
this
time,
I
will
look
for
a
motion,
a
second
for
discussion.
Mr.
L
Mayor
I
would
like
to
make
a
motion
with
one
change
on
it
and
that
would
be
to
add
five
thousand
dollars
to
the
salary
of
the
mayor.
With
that
being
do
old
job
I
think
that
maybe
that
should
have
a
little
bit
of
a
higher
order
than
you
know
when
I
think
it
should
be
more
of
a
job
where
they
gets
closer
to
other
department
chairs
realizing.
This
is
not
a
department
chair
job.
It
still
has
a
lot
of
the
expectations
of
department,
chair
and
so
I
would
just
make
that
as
a
motion,
all.
A
A
D
J
A
F
J
M
A
Motion
carries
number
eight
resolution
number
1603
providing
for
the
classification
salaries,
a
certain
city
of
Watertown
employees
for
the
period
commencing
January
1st
2016
at
this
time.
I
look
for
a
motion,
a
second
for
discussion
motion
by
Randy
second
by
Beth.
Are
there
any
questions
on
this
one
hearing,
none
I'll,
look
for
council
action,
all
those
in
favor,
say:
aye
opposed
motion
carries
number
9
authorization
to
for
Mayor
to
sign
the
Rodolphe
professional
agreement
with
Pearson
Golf
Management
I'll.
Look
for
a
motion,
a
second
for
discussion
on
this
motion
by
Mike.
Second,.
L
A
By
Don
this
is
actually
also
Jay.
If
you
want
to
come
up,
there
might
be
some
questions.
This
went
very,
very
well.
The
couple
little
changes
that
were
made
on
on
Levi's
golf
contract
is
he
got
a
three
year
contract,
so
I
think
that
really
gave
him
some
stability.
So
he
knows
that
he's
going
to
be
in
charge
of
this
golf
situation
for
the
next
three
years.
A
A
It
was
important
that
Levi,
since
he
works
with
the
marshals,
all
the
time
that
really
Todd
our
our
groundskeeper
shouldn't,
be
finding
the
the
marshals
and
and
getting
them
out
there
when
there's
a
golf
tournament
or
something
so
Levi
is
going
to
take
those
over
and
then
his
people
will
also
put
the
carts
away
and
bring
him
out
and
take
care
of
that
kind
of.
Basically,
the
only
changes
is
it
not
Jay.
That's.
N
D
A
N
A
It
went
well
so
I
do
have
a
motion,
a
second
on
the
floor.
If
there's
no
more
questions,
I'll
look
for
council
action,
all
those
in
favor,
say
aye
opposed
motion
carries
thanks.
Jay
for
doing
that,
I
think
that
turned
out
extremely
well
and
I
think
leave
lives,
happy
and
and
relate
to
him
that
we're
happy
that
he's
on
board
now
for
three
more
years
for
sure.
Thanks.
N
A
Right
and
you
hang
on
because
we
got
another
one
here
next
year
for
you
number
10
authorization
for
the
mayor
to
sign
an
agreement
for
engineering
services
for
the
foundation
field
lighting
project
in
the
amount
of
nine
thousand
four
hundred
fifty
dollars.
This
time,
I'll
look
for
a
motion
in
a
second
for
discussion
motion
by
Beth
second
by
Glen.
Are
there
any
questions
on
IRA?
Maybe
Jay
go
ahead
and
just
give
a
little
up
to
date
on
that.
Well,.
N
This
is
for
the
engineering
services
to
get
the
foundation
field.
Lighting
project
kicked
off
the
intention.
The
budgeted
project
in
2016
is
to
light
the
Northwest
field
that
foundation
field.
That's
real
number,
four
and
I
know.
The
baseball
community
is
very
anxious
to
get
this
project
going
and
hopefully
be
able
to
use
the
lights
out
there
this
summer.
So
we
want
to
get
it
kicked
off,
so
the
engineers
can
get
to
work,
and
hopefully
we
can
get
the
project
going
and
possibly
even
work
with.
N
M
F
M
A
I
A
O
A
L
D
I
got
a
question
for
you,
it.
It
seems
like
for
the
last
several
years,
probably
the
last
three
or
four
years.
When
we
go
out
for
police
vehicles,
we
get
one
bit.
Yes,
have
we
painted
ourselves
into
a
corner
on
our
requirement?
That's
getting
us
into
a
one
bid
situation,
or
why
is
there
no
other
interest
in
bidding
these
vehicles?
I.
O
Think
it's
because
of
the
industry
police
vehicles
have
special
options
that
limits
which
manufacturers
are
able
to
provide
vehicles.
Chevy
basically
has
a
couple
vehicles:
they
have
a
Tahoe
version
and
a
Impala,
and
then
Ford
has
the
Taurus
and
Explorer
and
Dodge
has
the
Dodge
Charger.
So
essentially,
there's
not
a
lot
of
vehicles
out
there
to
choose
from,
and
in
some
cases
you
know,
agencies
might
request
that
to
be
a
we'll
drive
or
something
something
different
than
than
what's
a
standard
option.
O
The
other
thing
is:
agencies
tend
to
pick
the
same
type
of
vehicle
year
after
year
after
year,
and
the
reason
for
that
is,
there's
anywhere
from
you
know
two
to
five
thousand
dollars
worth
the
equipment
that
needs
to
be
transferred
from
the
old
vehicle
to
the
new
vehicle.
So,
for
example,
if
you
move
from
a
Dodge
Charger
to
a
Ford
Explorer,
all
that
equipment
has
to
be
purchased
new
again.
So
that's
some
of
the
reason
why
you
know
agencies
tend
to
stick
with
the
same
type
of
vehicle.
A
O
This
is
for
a
police
car,
and
this
happens
to
be
a
Dodge
Charger
that
we
received
a
bid
for
and
I
should
mention
all
these
are
within
our
budget
allowance
that
we
we
had
for
this
year.
The
darts
Dodge
Charger,
it
is
an
all
wheel,
drive
vehicle
and
that
will
have
the
the
bigger
v8
engine,
but
it
gets
comparable.
Gas
mileage
is
what
the
v6
does
so
we're
comfortable
with
that,
and
we
do
feel
that
the
all-wheel
drive
has
some
benefits
here
in
Watertown
South
Dakota,
during
the
middle
of
winter.
Okay,.
M
M
O
M
O
Think
we
are
working
in
that
direction,
Bruce.
The
reason
why
this
one
is
a
Dodge
Charger
is
because
we
currently
have
a
Dodge
Charger
that
were
taken
out
of
service
and
all
that
equipment
will
fall
right
into
this
new
vehicle.
Now
we
could
have
received
a
bid
for
a
Chevy,
Caprice
or
Ford
Taurus
and
we'd
have
certainly
looked
at
those
bids
and
then
calculated
that
into
the
cost
of
switching
over
all
the
equipment.
O
G
O
G
O
Well,
we
do
have
one
all-wheel
drive,
Dodge
Charger
right
now
that
we
had
purchased
last
year
and
this
new
one
is
an
all-wheel
drive,
Dodge
Charger,
so
they
do
have
the
four-wheel
drive
capabilities.
Just
like
the
Explorers
I
guess.
The
difference
is,
is
just
the
amount
of
headroom
in
the
vehicle
for
some
drivers
that
are
taller,
you
know.
So
really
it
works
out
to
have
a
couple
of
each
but
I
think
down
the
road.
O
We
would
look
at
trying
to
move
towards
that
SUV
route,
just
because
of
all
the
equipment
is
then
inside
the
vehicle
versus
in
the
trunk,
which
gets
cold
in
the
trunk,
so
I
think
we
are
moving
that
direction,
but
right
now
we
just
have
too
much
equipment.
That's
too
new
to
you
know
to
dispose
of,
and
and
it
just
works
for
us
to
triangle
for
another
charger
again
this
year.
A
L
I,
don't
necessarily
have
business
other
than
I.
Think
just
publicly
I'd
like
to
think
Dan
I've
worked
with
him
a
lot
of
times
on
Aero
education
foundation.
News
articles
we
see
is
reporting
here
on
different
things,
he's
always
here
and
I
just
publicly
like
to
thank
him
for
doing
what
he
does,
and
there
was
a
little
mix-up
last
last
couple
of
weeks
ago,
certainly
wasn't
intended
toward
Dan.
It
was
just
whatever
and
and
I
just
appreciate
the
fact
that
and
the
job
that
you
do
and
I'd
like
to
thank
you
for
and.
K
Some
old
business
I'd
like
to
bring
up
it's
about,
you
know
only
see
her
softball
diamonds
progressing
so
good
down.
There
I
worry
about
traffic
being
able
to
turn
left.
You
know
all
the
traffic
we're
gonna
be
generating
over
there
and
I
was
just
driving
out
there
looking
around
what
what
can
we
do?
You
know
we've
talked
to
the
state,
they
won't.
Let
us
put
lights
in
places.
You
know,
as
you
know,
just
trying
to
throw
something
off
the
wall
and
see
if
it
sticks
right.
K
I
think
I
heard
it
earlier,
but
is
there
any
way
that
we
could
go
by
the
you
know
on
14th
there
by
strewed
events?
Is
there
a
way
we
can
go
behind
there
by
the
pipeline
and
join
up
with
19th
Street?
There
is
you
know,
so
we
can
divert
traffic
that
way
right.
A
Anybody,
okay,
there
you
go
Shane.
Can
you
can
you
zoom
in
on
that
14th
I
think?
But
what
brad
is
insinuating
or
saying
is
that
when
we
get
this
new
ball
diamond
going
and
we
get
the
new
ice
fields
going,
you
got
the
soccer
going,
you
got
a
gun
range
going
and
you
possibly
have
other
businesses
going
down
there,
that
roads
going
to
be
pretty
darn
busy
and
that's
on
17th,
Street
and
I.
Think
what
you're
asking
Brad
is.
A
You
know:
14th
goes
straight
up
yeah
because
we
put
in
the
new
14th
Street
down
there,
that'll
go
straight
up
and
then
you've
got
17th
Street
there,
which
is
going
to
be
a
nightmare
to
get
on
to
highway,
212
I
believe
so
then.
What
you're
saying
is:
is
there
a
way
that
we
could
talk
to
the
d-o-t
or
somebody
and
get
either
a
light
on
14th
to
do
some
work
with
Jake
Larson
or
get
a
road
built
over
to
19th
Street,
which
goes
out
through
that
Menards
corner?
If.
A
B
I'll
give
you
the
broad
shot.
We
did
have
a
discussion
with
d-o-t
about
moving
this
light.
That's
located
here
in
front
of
the
mall
at
13th
Street
over
to
14th
Street,
and
they
weren't
very
receptive
at
this
time,
and
there's
are
some
geometry
issues
with
the
intersection
of
14th
regarding
the
building.
That's
their
14th
Street
will
be
extended
south
into
the
softball
complex
and
reconnected
over
to
17th
Street.
B
What
could
possibly
be
a
future
plan
if
the
d-o-t
doesn't
want
to
relocate
a
light
up
along
212
at
this
time
is
we
could
maybe
plan
on
blazing
a
path
across
the
north
end
of
the
soccer
fields
and
reconnect
up
in
this
old?
It
looks
like
old
railroad
grade,
or
something-
and
right
here
is-
is
where
the
back
yard
yard
entrances
to
Menards.
D
B
L
Problem
is
they're,
counting
becomes
kind
of
you
know
not
really
accurate
either,
because
every
time
you
go
in
that
area,
so
it
looks
like
that.
Stoplights
really
be
heavily
used.
Well,
it
is
because
you
can't,
if
you
go
up
to
the
high
V
cornered
to
water,
come
for
any
of
these
places.
You
just
well
no
you're
gonna
turn
right,
so
you
don't
get
a
very
accurate
count
as
people
avoid
that
those
other
sections
or
ingress
points
right.
A
I'd
like
to
just
share
I,
had
the
d-o-t
give
me
a
road
count,
estimate
of
what's
going
to
be
coming
off
of
the
softball
fields
and
the
ice
fields
and
and
everything
they
expect
on
17th
Street
that
there
will
probably,
when
we
get
them
built
close
to
forty
two
to
forty
three
hundred
cars
a
day
will
be
going
up
and
down
that
road.
That's
that's
what
they
gave
me
for
our
number.
E
I
A
A
A
A
E
I
just
wanted
to
comment
on
the
CVB.
The
convention
Bureau
has
men,
you
probably
have
heard
there's
a
new
director,
Julie
Knudsen
got
hired
for
that
job.
The
assistant
of
that
department
has
resigned
so
she's
kind
of
flying
solo.
Right
now
she
is
out
appear
at
the
tourism
conference,
but
just
that's
up
and
running
that
she's
going
as
fast
as
she
can
to
catch
up,
and
then
she
just
didn't
make
a
comment.
Everybody's
been
really
helpful
to
get
her
started.