HomeMy WebLinkAbout2026/02/26 - ADMIN - Minutes - City Council - Study SessionOfficial minutes
City council workshop
St. Louis Park, Minnesota
Feb. 26 and 27, 2026
February 26, 2026: The workshop convened at 4:04 p.m. at Westwood Hills Nature Center.
Council members present: Mayor Mohamed, Sue Budd, Tim Brausen, Paul Baudhuin, Daniel
Bashore, Jim Engelking
Staff present: City manager (Ms. Keller), deputy city manager (Ms. Walsh), organizational
development coordinator (Ms. Smith)
Guest: Dave Unmacht, consultant
Mayor Mohamed welcomed the city council members to the workshop.
Ms. Smith presented on the True Colors inventory and how our colors show up in decision-
making and under stress. The council participated in a conversation regarding their personality
assessments and communication styles.
Mr. Unmacht presented on the concept of local government governance along with roles and
responsibilities and facets of a premier council. Following his presentation, city council norms
were reviewed and discussed. One norm was added to read, "Do assume staff are providing
their best recommendation and have good intentions.”
The council and Mr. Unmacht discussed what is working and what opportunities exist between
council and staff interactions. Staff’s professionalism and responsiveness was noted, as well as
the thoroughness of agenda packets and the pre-meeting question and answer protocol.
Opportunities to continue strengthening the relationship include encouraging both staff and
council to ensure clarity of inquiries before spending staff time creating a response.
Council members also encouraged each other to be mindful of the power dynamic inherent in
being a council member and to ensure staff members are not put on the spot or in difficult
positions when questions are asked during council meetings.
The workshop adjourned at 7:50 p.m.
February 27, 2026: The workshop convened at 8:15 a.m. at STEP
Council members present: Mayor Mohamed, Sue Budd, Tim Brausen, Paul Baudhuin, Daniel
Bashore, Jim Engelking
Staff present: City manager (Ms. Keller), deputy city manager (Ms. Walsh), organizational
development coordinator (Ms. Smith), finance director (Ms. Cruver), administrative services
director (Ms. Brodeen), engineering director (Ms. Heiser), communications and technology
director (Ms. Smith), parks and recreation director (Mr. West), public works director (Mr. Hall),
community development director and interim building and energy director (Ms. Barton), city
clerk (Ms. Kennedy), fire chief (Mr. Hanlin), police chief (Mr. Kruelle), human resources director
(Ms. Vorpahl)
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City council workshop -2- Feb. 26 and 27, 2026
Guests: Todd Graham, Metropolitan Council; Edwin Nelson and Nadia Akhtar, TerraLuna
Collaborative; Rochelle Younan-Montgomery, The Reset.
Following brief welcome from Ms. Laura Smith at 8:15 a.m., city council members and city
leadership staff participated in the following workshop discussion topics:
Facilitated conversation with consultant – current and future demography of St. Louis Park
community
Mr. Graham presented demographic forecasts for the Twin Cities region and St. Louis Park. The
region expects to gain 660,000 people and 320,000 households between 2020-2050. Growth is
slowing due to declining birth rates and limited domestic migration. The senior population (65+)
will double by 2030 and continue growing.
St. Louis Park specifically will gain approximately 19% population growth with most increases in
older age groups. Senior citizens over the age of 65 will grow by 73% while other age groups
show minimal growth.
Mr. Graham explained workforce shortages will persist for 15 years as the traditional working-
age population remains flat. Foreign-born workers and delayed retirement will help fill
employment gaps. Housing demand will shift toward apartments and condos which will
comprise 52-61% of new construction while single-family homes will be only 30-35% of new
units.
Council members asked questions about household definitions, housing supply constraints and
regional economic impacts. Mr. Graham clarified that demographic trends drive housing
demand patterns rather than local zoning restrictions alone.
Strategic priorities discussion
Mr. Nelson and Ms. Akhtar facilitated discussions on strategic priorities derived from the Vision
4.0 community engagement process. Five draft priority areas were presented: welcoming and
vibrant community, safe and connected community, diverse affordable housing options, natural
spaces and environmental stewardship, and good governance.
Council discussed including good governance as a strategic priority rather than treating it as an
overarching value that belonged in a mission or vision statement. Environmental stewardship
was discussed as potentially needing expansion to reflect the city's leadership in sustainability
initiatives.
Council members completed individual reflection exercises and used a scale rating system to
indicate support levels for each priority. Most priorities received middle-to-high ratings,
indicating general support with reservations requiring discussion.
The session transitioned into carousel-style small group discussions where council members
rotated between stations to refine priority language. Staff facilitated conversations focused on
what resonates with council members, identifying missing or problematic words, and
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City council workshop -3- Feb. 26 and 27, 2026
determining necessary changes for council support. The goal was to produce revised priority
statements that council could support.
The council engaged in extensive discussion to develop strategic priority statements. Staff
facilitated small group conversations with council members to refine language and concepts.
The process involved council members working with staff to develop five strategic priority
areas. Each group presented their priority statement for council feedback using an informal
scale to gauge support levels.
The good governance priority generated discussion about fiscal responsibility language. The
final draft statement read: “A city that delivers reliable services, operates transparently, uses all
city resources sensibly and responsibly, and builds strong relationships with residents "
The draft welcoming and safe community priority was refined to: "An inclusive, equitable and
vibrant city where everyone feels safe and experiences a strong sense of belonging."
The draft environmental stewardship priority became: "Advance sustainable practices that care
for people and the planet, including well-maintained parks and natural resources."
The draft infrastructure priority was stated as: "Safe and reliable infrastructure that connects
neighborhoods, people and places "
The draft housing priority was titled "Diverse, affordable and dignified housing options" with
the statement: " A range of quality, affordable and attainable housing options for all residents
and people who want to reside here.”
Council members noted the value of working directly with staff during the priority development
process and felt the iterative approach helped move toward consensus efficiently. As next
steps, the consultants will refine the draft priority language for readability and return to council
at a future meeting for further review and discussion.
Facilitated Training with Consultant – REI Topic "Difficult Conversations and Hurt vs. Harm"
Ms. Younan-Montgomery led a training session on accountability practices and managing
difficult conversations.
The session included mindfulness exercises with guided meditation and breathing techniques.
Council members participated in group discussions about times they feel most supported by
colleagues and how they typically respond to challenges or criticism. The training covered the
reset method focusing on inner change as prerequisite for outer change. Components included
rest and recharge, explore values, simplify, embrace boundaries and truth-telling.
Ms. Younan-Montgomery facilitated exercises where participants mapped accountability
breakdowns and distinguished between hurt and harm in interpersonal situations. Council
members identified patterns where accountability breaks down, including people going quiet
which can result in breakdown of trust, deflection and disengagement.
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City council workshop -4- Feb. 26 and 27, 2026
The session concluded with introduction of restorative dialogue techniques using the "open the
front door" method for structured difficult conversations.
Debrief And Farewell
The retreat concluded with closing remarks and distribution of evaluation surveys. Participants
reflected on the collaborative process and strategic priority development work.
The workshop was adjourned at 2:45 p.m.
______________________________________ ______________________________________
Melissa Kennedy, city clerk Nadia Mohamed, mayor
These minutes were created with the assistance of a generative AI transcript service, then edited
and finalized by a city staff person.
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