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Bloomington City Council — June 15, 2026

6 agenda itemsWatch the full meeting ↗
  • Lobbyist: Bloomington won $4M for sewer project, new golf course liquor license in 2026 legislative session

    City lobbyist Katie Senn reported Bloomington secured $4 million in state bonding for the North Central Sanitary Sewer project, a liquor license allowing full alcohol sales (not just 3.2 beer) at Dwan Golf Course, and a share of $10 million in Metro Regional Parks and Trails funding. A second bonding priority for Old Shakopee Road did not receive funding, and statewide measures on local gun control, HOA restrictions, and corporate home ownership limits failed to pass.

    Watch @ 11:30 ↗
  • External audit: city receives clean opinion, one finding on housing voucher program

    Auditor Andy Hearing of Redpath and Company reported an unmodified ("clean") opinion on the city's 2025 financial statements with no findings on internal controls or state legal compliance. One federal compliance finding was noted in the Section 8 Housing Choice Voucher program — missing tenant file checklists and incorrect utility/income calculations totaling $4,184 in questioned costs — a repeat finding from 2024 that staff say is being corrected. The council voted 7-0 to accept the 2025 annual comprehensive financial report; general fund balance stood at $55.3 million.

    Watch @ 19:38 ↗
  • Subdivision plan near Bush Lake held over after resident pushback

    Council Member Nelson pulled item 3.4 (a preliminary/final plat for a lot near Bush Lake) from the consent agenda after residents raised concerns about a new house being squeezed onto a large lot, out of character with the neighborhood, and inadequate notice. The council voted 7-0 to lay the item over to the June 29 meeting so residents can register to speak at the listening session first.

    Watch @ 37:39 ↗
  • Council adopts new corner lot zoning standards, 6-1

    The council approved an ordinance reducing setbacks (30 ft to 20 ft) and minimum lot size/width requirements for corner lots to encourage infill development and accessory dwelling units. A resident, Brian Sevick, testified against the change, arguing it strips neighbors' input rights that used to require a variance process. Council Member Loman cast the lone dissenting vote; the rest of the council approved 6-1.

    Watch @ 49:27 ↗
  • Telegraph Hill Office Park rezoned from R1 to B1, unlocking daycare and retail uses

    Council voted 7-0 to rezone four office buildings at Telegraph Road from an unusual R1-planned-development designation to B1 neighborhood commercial, matching decades of actual office use. One property owner (7805 Telegraph Rd) was excluded because they could not be reached for consent; staff said the city could initiate a cleanup rezoning on that parcel later. The change allows uses like daycare and limited retail that were previously barred.

    Watch @ 1:13:35 ↗
  • Park & Fly airport parking site: contentious rezoning debate, no consensus

    Council debated rezoning and a conditional use permit for the 3700/3750 American Boulevard Park and Fly lot (over 2,000 stalls), which would lock in roughly 9 acres of permanent surface parking while requiring only a 2.75-acre parcel be reserved for future high-intensity development within 10 years. Council Member Nelson strongly opposed the plan as inconsistent with the South Loop District Plan and comprehensive plan, arguing it permanently cements surface parking the city has never previously allowed; Council Members Loman and D'Alessandro expressed reservations but leaned toward supporting it, citing litigation risk and lack of alternatives. The applicant's existing interim use permit expires August 8, 2027; discussion was ongoing without a recorded vote in this session.

    Watch @ 1:24:56 ↗

More Meetings

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  • City CouncilJune 29, 2026

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  • HRAJune 23, 2026

    HRA backs Adora Apartments, up to $300,000 in financial assistance approved

  • Planning CommissionJune 18, 2026

    Planning Commission approves Seagate campus expansion, 5-0 · Commission pushes back on proposed cuts to open-space and setback standards · Commissioners want deeper affordability targeting in Opportunity Housing Ordinance changes · Commission backs 150-foot odor buffer requirement for cannabis cultivation/manufacturing · Staff floats new zoning definition allowing car detailing businesses in commercial/industrial districts · Commission rejects staff proposal to lower ground-floor window transparency requirement to 25%

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  • HRAJune 9, 2026

    City proclaims June 2026 'Homeownership Month' in Bloomington · HRA approves $500K gap-funding deal for two Outlaw Development affordable homes · HRA weighing redesign of St. Mark's site toward duplexes/triplexes under new 'missing middle' ordinance · Board tables Habitat for Humanity down-payment assistance contract amid transparency concerns · Annual 'All Things Housing' report shows rising rents, low vacancy, persistent racial homeownership gap · HOA law changes and property-management updates highlighted in administrator report · HRA to add special meeting June 23 for tax-credit housing project deadline

  • Planning CommissionJune 4, 2026

    Dance school home business approved for Mount Curve Road garage · Second cannabis facility (cultivation) approved near residential area · City presents 20-year Urban Forest Master Plan, citywide tree canopy at 35% · New planning commissioners appointed; upcoming agenda items previewed · City Council approved Gallery Apartments at 7900 Xerxes

  • City CouncilJune 1, 2026

    Council splits 6-1 on Human Rights Commission appointment · Council questions reserve-fund flexibility and recurring arts funding requests · Council unanimously approves five charter amendment ordinances · 270-unit Gallery Apartments project approved near I-494 · Contentious quasi-judicial hearing opens on Underdog Recovery Homes housing limit appeal