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.re <br />a esn't thuik Israel <br />is decided on an at- <br />ck yet. A4 <br />last ends <br />tstody case <br />id apparently kills <br />mself, sons in <br />ga that began with <br />an's wife mysteri- <br />Lsly vanishing, A3 <br />Dm", news <br />torn], chaser <br />les in Oklahoma <br />innesota rnan's <br />ngerous career <br />ided not in a toma- <br />1, but a crash. A7 <br />ervices set for <br />tip's victims <br />hite Bear Lake <br />3idents Gerald <br />,d Barbara Heil <br />sre among those <br />tt when the Costa <br />ncordia sank. A9 <br />usiness <br />rum fight <br />ironic problem <br />mpanies pushing <br />velope on wound <br />re say it's often <br />rdto.get paid. Di <br />Ohm <br />f /l <br />STAR TRIBUNE E}LCLUSIVE 0 SECOND OF TWO PARTS <br />FOR RESI JENTS, STREET WORK <br />A FINA\CIAL POTHOLE <br />JEFF WHEELER jeffwheeIer@startribune.corn <br />Soon after Scott Strand and MC Thomson bought a starter home in Edina, they were handed a $16,Soo bill for street reconstruction. <br />• Edina homeowners cover 100% of the tab, a policy the city's rethinking amid huge bills. <br />By MARY JANE SMETANKA <br />smetan@startribunp.com <br />Newlyweds Scott Strand and MC <br />Thomson were delighted to close last <br />fall on a modest rambler in Edina, where <br />they both grew up and wanted to live af- <br />ter they got married. <br />At the end of the year, though, the <br />young couple got what Strand calls "a <br />New Year's surprise" — a notice that <br />they faced a $16,800 bill for street recon- <br />struction, "We were shocked," he said. <br />"If that assessment was known to us pri- <br />or to buying the house, T don't luiow that <br />we would have bought it:" <br />After the couple and other upset Rich- <br />mond Hills neighbors swarmed a City <br />Council meefing last month, the city is <br />('THIS JUST FEEL3 <br />LIKE.A GAME <br />CHANGER� )) <br />Edina homeowner Scott Strand <br />considering revisiting its longstanding <br />street -assessment policy. The policy, <br />which even the mayor calls "brutal," has <br />left some homeowners stuck with bills as <br />high as $22,900. "It's a thorny problem," <br />Mayor Jim Hovland said, debating the fair- <br />ness of changing the policy when so many <br />have already paid frill price. "I just can't see <br />where the 100 percent assessment policy <br />is sustainable over time, Things axe not go- <br />ing to get cheaper." <br />Assess continues on Al2 r <br />election. 2012 <br />