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Bloomington City Council — May 4, 2026

6 agenda itemsWatch the full meeting ↗
  • Council approves amended Smith Park shared-use agreement with Darul Farooq, ending city upkeep of football field

    After Council Member Rivas raised concerns from residents about scheduling and asked for more public input, staff explained the field (owned by Darul Farooq, not the city) sees only about 50 reservations a year versus 300 for comparable fields. The council voted 6-0 to authorize the mayor and city manager to execute an amended shared parking/use agreement, saving the city an estimated $6,000-$8,000 annually while keeping public tennis/basketball court access intact; no reservations are booked at the field this summer.

    Watch @ 41:02 ↗
  • Council adopts ordinance allowing existing cell towers to remain at redeveloped former church/assembly sites

    Following a public hearing with no speakers, the council voted 6-0 to adopt a privately initiated ordinance amendment (Ch. 21) allowing existing camouflaged towers (e.g., steeples) to remain when a former 'place of assembly' site like St. Mark's (86th & Xerxes) is redeveloped into another allowed use, clearing a hurdle for a residential redevelopment by Beacon Interfaith/BHA. A companion resolution for summary publication also passed 6-0; staff noted the change could affect up to four other Bloomington churches with similar tower arrangements.

    Watch @ 51:22 ↗
  • Consultant presents early findings on Bloomington Center for the Arts strategic plan, flags no mission statement and cost-recovery gaps

    Consultant Duncan Webb presented a SWOT analysis of BCA as part of a year-long strategic plan/operations study, noting the facility has no formal mission or vision statement, cost recovery around 24%, and untapped potential in education studios and off-site programming for space-intensive activities. Council members Delisandro and Lehman pushed back on comparing BCA to for-profit metrics, emphasizing the venue's public-good and economic-development value; final recommendations, including new cost-recovery targets, are expected in 4-5 months.

    Watch @ 1:04:58 ↗
  • Update: Senior programming transition from Creekside to Logan Lodge largely successful; boutique sales down

    Staff reported that Creekside senior center closed in May 2025 after 50+ years, with 95% of programming relocated to Logan Lodge (opened June 2025) and attendance holding steady or increasing; some programs (woodshop, rock shop) moved to partner facilities in Eden Prairie and a Twin Cities makerspace. The senior artisan boutique, now operating from a mobile cart at Civic Plaza, has seen declining sales and will get a prominent location when it moves into the new Community Health and Wellness Center.

    Watch @ 1:46:28 ↗
  • Community Health and Wellness Center pro forma updated: projecting 90% cost recovery in year one, 106%+ by year five

    Staff presented a revised financial pro forma for the new Community Health and Wellness Center after adding back a third gym and adjusting for a phased revenue ramp-up (sponsorships, naming rights, large events); cost recovery is projected at roughly 90% in the first full year (2028) rising above 106% by year five. Council members asked about staffing for room changeovers to accommodate senior programming and expressed satisfaction with the conservative assumptions.

    Watch @ 1:49:34 ↗
  • Council opens study session on rightsizing Bloomington's off-street parking requirements

    Planning staff Alicia Odden kicked off a study item noting the city's parking standards date to 1958 and haven't kept pace with changing demand, transit availability, and frequent developer requests for parking reductions/flexibility. The project aims to benchmark Bloomington against peer cities and consider reducing minimum parking requirements; this was an informational discussion with no vote taken (a related item on on-street parking policy followed).

    Watch @ 1:56:12 ↗

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