Author: <span>Griff Wigley</span>

Civic Orgs Gov't & Policy Reflection

Linda Seebach joined the Northfield blogosphere recently with her blog titled The Eclectic Linda. Linda just moved here from Denver where she’d been an editorial writer for the Rocky Mountain News…

Blogosphere

The Wed. Nlfd News had this editorial, Don’t forget that alcohol is a drug, too, which referenced last weekend’s story, Teens arrested at party: Northfield Police charged 18 area teens…

Gov't & Policy

Adam Gurno’s one-year anniversary blog post on Northfield.org prompted me to do the same. Here are my favorites of the photos I took that day: L to R: the fog…

Photos Video

A group of young people gathered on Bridge Square this afternoon to protest what they say is the unfair profiling of youth by the Northfield Police Department. (Profiling is when…

Gov't & Policy

There’s some spiffing up for Defeat of Jesse James Days (DJJD) apparent downtown. Left: new (aren’t they?) wooden hitching posts in front of the NHS bank museum site. Right: new…

Civic Orgs

Environment Podcasts

According to the weather database at Carleton, we’ve gotten 8.39 inches of rain since Aug. 10. Areas in the Cannon River watershed have received much more, so the Cannon is…

Environment

In today’s Nfld News: Rental code passes first read: Ordinance faces final approval Sept. 10

With a 5-2 majority, the Northfield City Council approved the first reading of a long-awaited rental ordinance, leaving it just one vote away from final passage… Among other things, the ordinance as passed Monday would mandate the following for rentals:

  • No more than 20 percent of the homes in a block would be allowed to be rental properties. This would not apply to housing now owned by the colleges, and blocks with higher densities would not be affected until a rental property is sold. Rental licenses would not be transferable to a new owner.
  • No more than three unrelated adults would be allowed to live in one rental unit, unless the owner obtains a conditional use permit for up to five occupants where the building inspector deems there is space. Already established college-owned housing would be exempt.
  • Contact information for the owner and/or rental agent of each property would have to be clearly posted within close proximity to the main entrance.
  • A rental housing board of appeals would be established.
  • Administrative fines would be established, in addition to any other legal remedy.

Councilmen Jon Denison and Jim Pokorney cast votes against the ordinance. Denison expressed concern about the negative impact it could have on renters, while Pokorney was uncomfortable with controlling the number of rentals per block.

See P. 25 of the council packet (PDF) or the text below. The draft of the 39 page ordinance does not appear to be available on the City’s website.

Gov't & Policy