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Agenda - Council - 02/23/2016
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Agenda - Council - 02/23/2016
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3/17/2025 3:47:31 PM
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Meetings
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Agenda
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Council
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02/23/2016
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File Location: Pbrama>HDrive>Legislativelnitiatives>2016 <br />LEGISLATIVE PRIORITIES ENDORSED BY THE CITY OF RAMSEY <br />2016 LMC LEGISLATIVE PLATFORM <br />(5) Funding for Non -Municipal State Aid City Streets <br />ISSUE: Minnesota has over 141,000 miles of roadway, and more than 22,500 miles—or 16 percent --are <br />owned and maintained by Minnesota's 853 cities. The Minnesota Constitution limits eligibility for <br />dedicated Highway User Tax Distribution Fund dollars to up to twenty percent of streets in cities with <br />populations over 5,000 (147 of 853 cities). This means almost 85 percent of municipal streets are ineligible <br />for municipal state aid (MSA) funds and must be paid for with property taxes and special assessments. <br />Funding challenges are compounded by city cost participation requirements in state and county highway <br />projects, which divert resources from city -owned streets. <br />Recognizing the unique street funding needs in cities under 5,000 population, the 2015 legislature created <br />the Small Cities Assistance Account (Minn. Stat. § 162.145). Funds in the account are distributed through a <br />formula to all cities under 5,000 population for street maintenance and reconstruction. Unfortunately, <br />funding for the account was only provided for one year. <br />Maintenance costs increase as road systems age, and no city --large or small—is spending enough on <br />roadway capital improvements to maintain a 50 -year lifecycle. For every one dollar spent on maintenance, <br />a road authority --and therefore taxpayers --save seven dollars in repairs. According to a report released in <br />late 2012 by the governor's Transportation Finance Advisory Committee, cities collectively need an <br />additional $400 million per year to bring city streets up to an economically competitive standard. <br />RECOMMENDATION: City streets are a separate but integral piece of the network of roads supporting <br />movement of people and goods. Cities need greater resources and flexible policies in order to meet <br />growing demands for street improvements and maintenance. The City of Ramsey supports: <br />A. a dedicated and sustainable state funding source for non -MSA city streets in large and small cities <br />statewide; <br />B. enabling legislation that would allow cities to create street improvement districts (similar to sidewalk <br />improvement districts already allowed under Minn. Stat. § 435.44); <br />C. and the creation of a new fund within the Local Road Improvement Program that would provide grants to <br />cities burdened by cost participation requirements related to trunk highway and county state -aid projects. <br />Similar language as 2016 LMC Legislative Platform, LE -38 <br />2016 City of Ramsey Legislative Platform Page 8 of 9 <br />
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