Woodbury, Minnesota
Próximas reuniones
City Council
El Concejo Municipal llevará a cabo una audiencia pública y considerará aprobar una enmienda al plan integral, recalificación y plano preliminar/final para el proyecto Bailey West, cambiando el área de comercial a uso mixto y residencial. También fijarán una audiencia pública para el Proyecto de Reconstrucción Vial 2027 y aprobarán varias subvenciones y pagos.
- Recalificación de Bailey West de Campus Comercial a Residencial Urbano y Centro Comercial Planificado
- Fijar audiencia pública para el Proyecto de Reconstrucción Vial 2027 el 22 de julio de 2026
- Aceptar subvención de $104,994 del Metropolitan Council para mitigación de entrada/infiltración
- Aprobar resumen de facturas por un total de $5,729,862.06 (12 de junio) y $2,075,776.20 (19 de junio)
- Juramentación del nuevo oficial de policía Matthew Berg
City Council - Workshop Meetings
El Concejo Municipal discutirá el Plan Financiero a Largo Plazo inaugural 2027-2036, una proyección integral de 10 años de ingresos, gastos y saldos de efectivo. También revisarán el Plan de Personal a Largo Plazo 2027-2031 y recibirán una actualización sobre la iniciativa de seguridad pública Safer Community. No se tomarán votos formales; el taller es para discusión y creación de consenso.
- Presentación del Plan Financiero a Largo Plazo 2027-2036 por Abdo, contratado por $40,000
- Revisión del Plan de Personal a Largo Plazo 2027-2031 para su inclusión en el presupuesto propuesto de 2027
- Actualización sobre la Iniciativa Estratégica de Seguridad Pública: Safer Community a través de Cultura, Conexiones y Prevención del Delito
- Primer análisis financiero a largo plazo de este alcance para Woodbury
- Sin acciones formales; taller solo para discusión y dirección del personal
Reuniones recientes
Planning Commission
La Comisión de Planificación considerará una enmienda al plan integral, la rezonificación y la parcelación preliminar para el desarrollo Bailey West en aproximadamente 185 acres. El proyecto incluye comercio minorista, industria ligera, viviendas multifamiliares y la expansión de New Life Academy. El personal recomienda la aprobación con varias condiciones.
- Desarrollo Bailey West: enmienda al plan integral, rezonificación y parcelación preliminar para 185 acres
- Rezonificación de BCD a B-3 (Centro Comercial Planificado) y R-4 (Residencial Urbano)
- Expansión de New Life Academy en un lote de aproximadamente 30 acres
- Parcelación preliminar que crea un lote parcelado y cinco sublotes, incluido un estanque regional de aguas pluviales
- Mejoras de intersección financiadas por el desarrollador en Bailey Road, incluida la señalización
Housing and Redevelopment Authority
La Autoridad de Vivienda y Redesarrollo de Woodbury considerará adoptar HRAD-1.7, una política que establece un programa de préstamos a bajo interés para el desarrollo de viviendas asequibles utilizando fondos de la Ayuda Local para Vivienda Asequible (LAHA). La política prioriza unidades de alquiler para hogares que ganan el 50% o menos del ingreso medio del área y requiere convenios de asequibilidad por 30 años. La reunión también incluye la aprobación de las actas de la reunión anterior.
- Considerar la Resolución 26-04 que adopta la Política de Asistencia para el Desarrollo de Vivienda Asequible
- Política financiada por el impuesto a las ventas metropolitano de la Ayuda Local para Vivienda Asequible (LAHA)
- Préstamos para nueva vivienda de alquiler que atiende a hogares con ingresos iguales o inferiores al 50% del AMI
- Menciona la pérdida de la designación de Área de Desarrollo Difícil de HUD para el código postal 55129, lo que aumenta las necesidades de financiamiento local
- Aprobación de las actas de la HRA del April 8, 2026
City Council - Workshop Meetings
El Consejo discutirá un nuevo proceso de planificación estratégica de $30,000 para 2027. También están revisando las tarifas de permiso propuestas para solicitantes y discutiendo alternativas para una ordenanza de gallinas de traspatio.
- Presupuesto propuesto de $30,000 para la Planificación Estratégica 2027
- Propuesta de tarifa de permiso individual para solicitantes de $70
- Propuesta de tarifa de permiso comercial para solicitantes de $100
- Borrador de Enmiendas a la Ordenanza de Permiso para Solicitantes
- Alternativas para la Ordenanza de Gallinas de Traspatio
City Council
El Concejo Municipal votará sobre una gran venta de bonos y la adopción del Plan de Mejoras de Capital 2027–2031. El cuerpo también considerará una nueva licencia de licor para un restaurante y la adopción del Plan Maestro Bailey West.
- Venta de $41,295,000 en Bonos de Ingresos por Impuestos a las Ventas de Obligación General, Serie 2026A
- Adopción del Plan de Mejoras de Capital 2027–2031
- Solicitud de licencia de licor para Hazelwood Food and Drink en 9240 Hudson Road
- Adopción del Plan Maestro Bailey West
- Aprobación de facturas por un total de $3,099,164.54 de mayo y junio de 2026
Economic Development Commission
La Comisión de Desarrollo Económico revisará el video promocional 'Destination: Woodbury sizzle reel' y los resultados del boletín electrónico, escuchará una presentación de la Agencia de Desarrollo Comunitario del Condado de Washington sobre programas económicos y consultará sobre estrategias de marketing, incluyendo la co-marca con Explore Minnesota y eventos locales. La comisión también discutirá oportunidades para atraer visitantes para el NFL Draft 2028 en Minneapolis.
- Revisar los resultados de la producción del video promocional y priorizar ubicaciones/eventos de Woodbury
- El boletín electrónico 'Know & Go' superó las metas: 238 suscriptores, 62% de tasa de apertura, 22% de clics
- Presentación de Washington County CDA sobre programas de desarrollo económico y Open to Business
- Campaña de co-marca con Explore Minnesota dirigida a Wisconsin, Illinois, Iowa
- Consultar sobre estrategias para el NFL Draft 2028 para atraer visitantes de otros estados a Woodbury
Comprehensive Plan Task Force Meetings
El Grupo de Trabajo del Plan Integral 2050 llevará a cabo un ejercicio de visión para desarrollar principios rectores para el plan a largo plazo de la ciudad. También recibirán una descripción general de la Ley de Reuniones Abiertas, revisarán datos de contexto comunitario y recibirán una actualización sobre el plan de participación comunitaria.
- Presentación de la Ley de Reuniones Abiertas por parte del Abogado de la Ciudad
- Ejercicio de visión para identificar brechas en los principios rectores de 2040
- Revisión del entorno construido, la demografía y las tendencias económicas de Woodbury
- Actualización del plan de participación comunitaria basada en el mapeo de partes interesadas
Planning Commission
La Comisión discutirá un plan maestro integral para el área de Bailey West para guiar el desarrollo a largo plazo. El plan incluye usos residenciales, comerciales e industriales, así como infraestructura para aguas pluviales y peatones.
- Plan Maestro propuesto de Bailey West de 185 acres (Proyecto 19-2025-00603)
- Reorientación de la propiedad del norte de 'Lugares para Trabajar' a Residencial de Baja Densidad para el Plan Integral 2050
- Modificaciones al Plan Integral 2040 para apoyar la adquisición de la propiedad de New Life Academy
- Diseño de Century Avenue según los estándares de carreteras del Condado de Washington
- Establecimiento de un corredor verde de 100 pies que conecta Bailey Road con Carver Lake Park
City Council - Workshop Meetings
El Council revisará recomendaciones para mantener el financiamiento actual de mantenimiento de calles sin un nuevo grupo de trabajo. También discutirán el borrador del Capital Improvement Plan 2027–2031, que describe los principales proyectos de la ciudad y las necesidades de equipo.
- Actualización del estado del Street Reconstruction/Maintenance Fund
- Propuesta de continuación del aumento anual del 5.5% del street levy
- Revisión del Borrador del Capital Improvement Plan 2027–2031
- Total de $262,106,000 en proyectos de capital propuestos durante cinco años
The council reviewed the draft 2027-2031 Capital Improvement Plan and provided specific direction on several projects, including adjusting funding for recycling receptacles, moving a mower purchase, renaming a fire station project, and setting a new amount for safe streets. They also decided not to create a task force for street reconstruction funding at this time.
- Adjusted Parks Recycling Receptacle Conversion to $100,000/year from CIF for 5 years
- Moved new mower purchase from 2027 to 2028
- Renamed Afton Rd Fire Station project to Afton Rd Fire Station Parking Lot
- Adjusted Safe Streets Priority Projects to $200,000 in 2027, with staff to report back
- Directed staff to provide trail design and public engagement for Powers Lake Trail before construction
- Council declined to create task force for street reconstruction funding
- No adjustment to Powers Lake Trail Connection project in CIP
City Council
El Concejo Municipal de Woodbury considerará una agenda de consentimiento que incluye la aprobación de un contrato laboral de los sargentos de policía, la renovación de un acuerdo de servicios de inspección eléctrica y la aceptación de una subvención de la fundación comunitaria. No se programaron audiencias públicas ni puntos de discusión.
- Aprobar el contrato laboral con el sindicato de sargentos de policía de Woodbury (Resolución 26-73)
- Renovar el acuerdo de servicios de inspección eléctrica con Kohout Inspections, LLC (julio de 2026 – junio de 2031)
- Aceptar la subvención de la Fundación Comunitaria de Woodbury y aprobar la modificación presupuestaria (Resolución 26-72)
- Aprobar el resumen de facturas por un total de $12,745,356.25 para mayo de 2026
The council unanimously approved the consent agenda, which includes a five-year electrical inspection services agreement with Kohout Inspections, acceptance of a Woodbury Community Foundation grant, the 2026 first quarter budget report, a labor contract with the Woodbury Police Sergeants union (Resolution 26-73), designation of deputy clerks, and abstracts of bills totaling $12,745,356.25. No public hearings or discussion items were held.
- Approved 5-year electrical inspection contract with Kohout Inspections (5-0)
- Accepted Woodbury Community Foundation grant and budget amendment (5-0)
- Reviewed and accepted 2026 First Quarter Budgeted Fund Summary (5-0)
- Approved labor contract with Woodbury Police Sergeants union (5-0)
- Designated Deputy Clerks as Responsible Authority (5-0)
- Approved abstracts of bills totaling $12,745,356.25 (5-0)
- Approved council workshop and regular meeting minutes (5-0)
Parks & Natural Resources Commission
The Parks and Natural Resources Commission revisará y recomendará la aprobación del Woodbury Heritage Society Post Office Replica Project en Marsh Creek Park. También escucharán actualizaciones sobre la planificación de Creek to Croix Regional Trail, el informe anual de NPDES, una actualización financiera hasta abril de 2026 y la participación comunitaria para el reemplazo del área de juegos de Powers Lake East Park. Los temas de discusión incluyen actualizaciones de proyectos de parques y el Parks and Facilities Long Range Plan.
- Actualización de planificación a largo plazo de Creek to Croix Regional Trail
- Reunión pública del informe anual de NPDES sobre los logros de 2025
- Revisión y recomendación del Woodbury Heritage Society Post Office Replica Project en Marsh Creek Park
- Actualización financiera preliminar hasta abril de 2026
- Participación comunitaria para el reemplazo del área de juegos de Powers Lake East Park
City Council - Workshop Meetings
El Concejo Municipal escuchará una presentación del Washington County Assessor sobre las valoraciones de propiedades para 2026 de Woodbury y el condado. Esta discusión es informativa y servirá para informar el próximo proceso presupuestario de 2027, incluyendo una actualización del Plan de Mejoras de Capital en junio y una revisión presupuestaria en julio. No se tomará ninguna acción formal.
- Valor mediano de vivienda unifamiliar: $521,800 (+1.8%)
- Nuevas construcciones agregaron $156 millones en valor
- Inicios de nuevas viviendas bajaron un 37.9% en comparación con el año anterior
- El asesor del condado explicará el proceso de valoración y las tendencias
- Parte de la preparación para el proceso presupuestario de 2027 con oportunidades de participación pública
The Woodbury City Council held a workshop meeting on May 27, 2026. The only substantive discussion was an informational presentation on 2026 city and county property valuations by the Washington County Assessor. Council provided no direction and took no votes or formal actions. The meeting was adjourned after administrative updates and council comments.
City Council
El Concejo Municipal de Woodbury considerará los elementos rutinarios de la agenda de consentimiento, incluyendo la compra de un vehículo policial, solicitudes de subvención para proyectos de carreteras y senderos, y una ordenanza sobre tarifas de franquicia de CenterPoint Energy. Se llevarán a cabo audiencias públicas para las licencias de licor en tres negocios: 3rd Act Brewery, Life Time y Main Event. La reunión también incluye reconocimientos para residentes y una presentación para el administrador de la ciudad.
- Aprobación de la compra del Ford Utility Police Interceptor por $83,865 y enmienda presupuestaria
- Autorización de solicitudes de subvención para la conversión de carriles de Lake Road 4-3 y el Hudson Road Trail Gap
- Adopción de una ordenanza que deroga y recrea el cronograma de tarifas de franquicia de gas de CenterPoint Energy
- Audiencia pública sobre la licencia de licor para 3rd Act Brewery en 4120 Radio Drive
- Audiencias públicas sobre licencias de licor para Life Time en 675 Commons Drive y Main Event en 540 Bielenberg Drive
The City Council approved the consent agenda (8 items) unanimously, including replacement of a police vehicle, grant applications, budget amendments, and an ordinance amendment. A public hearing resulted in approval of expanded liquor licenses for 3rd Act Brewery. No action was taken on the ICE Resolution discussed during Open Forum.
- Approved consent agenda (8 items) unanimously
- Approved replacement Ford Police Interceptor up to $83,865 (Resolution 26-65)
- Authorized grant applications for Lake Road lane conversion and Hudson Road Trail Gap (Resolution 26-66)
- Accepted Coordinated Capital Improvement Program grants for street sweeper, hydromulcher, parking lot, and roadway pre-treatment (Resolutions 26-67 through 26-70)
- Authorized stormwater lift station use of trunk sewer fund (Resolution 26-71)
- Adopted Ordinance 2078 amending CenterPoint Energy franchise fee schedule
- Approved 2025 4th Quarter Budgeted Fund Summary
- Approved abstract of bills totaling $3,053,771.58
City Council - Workshop Meetings
The City Council will discuss an update on the Public Safety Department's participation in the Minnesota LEAP accreditation program. A major landowner (Fredin Family) has requested to delay development on 196 acres for 10-15 years, prompting staff to seek alternatives to maintain housing production. Council will also consider options for alcohol and tobacco compliance enforcement.
- Public Safety update on MN LEAP accreditation process
- Fredin Family delays development on 150 acres in Sub-Phase 2D and 45 acres in Phase 3
- Staff to identify alternate 150 acres to ensure steady housing production
- Discussion of alcohol/tobacco compliance options: maintain current practices, use non-sworn officers, or amend enforcement via Council Directive
- Fines for alcohol violations: $500-$4,500; tobacco: $75-$250
The council discussed public safety accreditation, development phasing, and alcohol compliance. No formal votes were taken; staff received directions on future actions. Council also expressed support for a future review of allowing chickens on regular lots.
- Directed staff to identify 150 acres of Phase 3 properties for movement into current development phase
- Directed sunset of 'Protect your Business' manual and drafting of new council directive on alcohol/tobacco compliance
- Supported development of a high-level resource list for businesses
- Directed staff to recommend updates to fee schedule for licensing compliance
- Majority supported further staff review of allowing chickens on regular lots
City Council
The City Council will consider issuing $41.3 million in general obligation bonds for capital projects, adopt the Cottage Grove Drive Master Plan, and change polling locations for six precincts. The consent agenda includes a $354,396 contract for Edgewater Park construction, a goldfish management agreement, and employee insurance benefits. A public hearing will consider an intoxicating liquor license for City Walk Cafe.
- Edgewater Park construction contract, $354,396
- Change polling locations for Precincts 1, 2, 3, 5, 6, and 13
- Cottage Grove Drive Master Plan adoption
- General Obligation Bonds Series 2026A for $41,295,000
- On-sale intoxicating liquor license for City Walk Cafe & Bar
The Council approved the consent agenda en bloc, which included awarding a road contract for Edgewater Park, adopting the 2026 Annual Action Plan, accepting grants, changing polling locations, and approving group medical and dental insurance plans. No other substantive decisions were made.
- Awarded $354,396.21 contract to Minnesota Roadways for Edgewater Park site improvements (consent agenda)
- Approved Settlers East 4th Addition final plat (consent agenda)
- Adopted 2026 Annual Action Plan and amended 2025-2029 Consolidated Plan (consent agenda)
- Approved cooperative agreement with South Washington Watershed District for goldfish management (consent agenda)
- Authorized Native Plant Rebate Pilot Program with Washington Conservation District (consent agenda)
- Accepted DNR Conservation Partners Legacy Grant and budget amendment (consent agenda)
- Approved group medical insurance renewal with Medica (consent agenda)
- Authorized self-funded dental insurance with HealthPartners (consent agenda)
Comprehensive Plan Task Force Meetings
This is the first meeting of the 2050 Comprehensive Plan Task Force. Members will receive an overview of the planning process, hear from the Metropolitan Council, participate in a visioning exercise to identify community priorities, and begin identifying interested parties for engagement.
- Visioning exercise to define guiding principles for the 2050 plan
- Identification of interested parties for community engagement
- Presentation by Metropolitan Council on regional planning context
- Task Force overview: scope, timeline, and member expectations
Parks & Natural Resources Commission
The Parks and Natural Resources Commission will discuss an update to the Parks and Facilities Long-Range Plan, which guides future park projects. They will also receive an update on the Environmental Stewardship Plan implementation, including a new dashboard, and review the annual Parks and Recreation report. Discussion items include e-transportation ordinance updates and project status updates.
- Parks and Facilities Long-Range Plan update (Memorandum 26-05)
- Environmental Stewardship Plan implementation update with new dashboard
- Parks and Recreation Annual Report (Memorandum 26-04)
- E-transportation update following council ordinance direction
- Project status update on park improvements and trail projects
Planning Commission
The Planning Commission will discuss a master plan for a 370-acre area in southeast Woodbury. The plan provides guidelines for future residential development, including housing types, roadway design, and stormwater management.
- Cottage Grove Drive Master Plan (Project No. 2025-00604)
- Proposed mix of 50% single-family and 50% multi-family housing
- Lot sizes ranging from 45-foot minimums up to 100+ foot custom lots
- Regional stormwater management system covering approximately 249 acres
- Proposed neighborhood park and greenway corridor connecting to Andy's Bark Park
The Planning Commission reviewed the proposed Cottage Grove Drive Master Plan for approximately 370 acres. Staff recommended approval. Commissioners asked questions about road improvements, stormwater, housing diversity, and oak tree preservation. No motion or vote was recorded; the item was discussed only.
City Council - Workshop Meetings
The Woodbury and Cottage Grove City Councils will hold a joint workshop meeting. They will receive updates from South Washington County Schools, True Lens Media, the HERO Center, and the South Washington Watershed District. City staff will provide updates on water treatment, public safety, and development/planning. The meeting also includes a trivia competition and dinner.
- South Washington County Schools update by Superintendent Julie Nielsen
- True Lens Media annual report by Executive Director Ann Schweisguth
- HERO Center annual report by Manager Dan Anselment
- Water treatment update by Public Works Director Mary Van Milligan and Ryan Burfeind
- Public safety update by Directors of Public Safety/Police Chiefs Jason Posel and Brad Petersen
The Woodbury City Council held a joint workshop meeting with the Cottage Grove City Council. The meeting featured updates from various partners and city staff, but no formal decisions or votes were taken. The only action was a trivia trophy awarded to Cottage Grove.
- No substantive decisions were made
Economic Development Commission
The Woodbury Economic Development Commission will discuss changes to the meeting format, review the first-year performance of the Destination: Woodbury tourism program including a 70% hotel occupancy rate, and consider 2027 budget priorities with $700,000 in lodging revenue. They will also review an economic indicator dashboard comparing Woodbury to peer cities and plan the next Mayor's Business Outreach meeting focused on the retail sector.
- Hotel occupancy reached 70% in 12-month average, a post-pandemic milestone
- 2027 DMO budget includes $700,000 projected lodging revenue and $152,100 for advertising and promotion
- Wi-Fi sponsorships launched at Central Park and M Health Fairview Sports Center
- Explore Minnesota grant of $2,000 used for AudioEye web accessibility tool
- Content creator platform Shrpa selected for producing tourism visual content
The Economic Development Commission received informational updates on the Destination Woodbury marketing efforts, including website analytics, hotel occupancy, and upcoming campaigns. Staff presented a new meeting format to increase engagement. No formal actions or votes were taken; the commission deferred approval of prior minutes and continued two agenda items to the next meeting.
- No formal votes or approvals recorded
City Council - Workshop Meetings
The Woodbury City Council will receive an update on the drinking water treatment strategic initiative, including pipeline installation progress (61,467 feet installed), 2027 water rate recommendations (8% increase for water, 9% for sewer), and a letter expressing concerns about the White Bear Lake Area Comprehensive Plan Workgroup. They will also consider an ordinance requiring helmets for e-bike riders under 18. No formal votes will be taken at this workshop.
- Update on water treatment plant construction (32% complete) and pipeline phasing with road closures
- 2027 water rate recommendation: 8% increase for water and 5% increase for sewer plus 4% MCES pass-through (9% total)
- City sent letter to White Bear Lake workgroup opposing potential funding burden on cities
- Consideration of ordinance to require helmets for e-bike users under 18
- Project costs estimated at $20 million for city-funded portion
Council directed staff to implement annual water rate increases of 8% and sewer rate increases of 5% for 2027 as part of a 5-year plan, with a 4% MCES pass-through for a total 9% sewer impact. The e-bike helmet ordinance for riders under 18 was tabled pending further staff review and a memorandum. No consensus was reached on a proposed ICE-related resolution.
- Directed 8% water rate increase for 2027
- Directed 5% sewer rate increase plus 4% MCES pass-through (9% total sewer impact)
- Tabled e-bike helmet ordinance for staff memorandum and further review
- No consensus on ICE-related resolution
City Council
The City Council will consider awarding a $5.69 million contract to McNamara Contracting for the Woodlane Drive pavement rehabilitation project from Bailey Road to Wooddale Drive. They will also hold public hearings on special assessments for the project and on amending CenterPoint Energy's gas franchise fee. Consent agenda includes approvals for a final plat, recycling grants, budget adjustments, and vendor payments totaling over $5.7 million.
- Award $5,687,344 contract to McNamara Contracting for Woodlane Drive pavement rehabilitation
- Approve special assessments for 2026 Pavement Rehabilitation Project – Woodlane Drive
- Amend Chapter 9 Franchises for CenterPoint Energy gas franchise fee (Ordinance 2077)
- Approve Westwind Fourth Addition final plat and development agreement
- Accept $4,718,610.44 and $1,010,163.83 in abstract of bills
The Woodbury City Council held a regular meeting with proclamations and public comments. No ordinances, contracts, or policy resolutions were approved, denied, or tabled. The only council action was a motion to extend open forum from three to six speakers, which passed unanimously.
- Extended open forum to six speakers (5-0)
Housing and Redevelopment Authority
The Housing and Redevelopment Authority will vote on a resolution authorizing an application for 2026 Livable Communities Act Development grant funds. The meeting also includes approval of previous meeting minutes as part of the consent agenda. No public hearings or discussion items are scheduled.
- Consider Resolution 26-03 to authorize 2026 Livable Communities Development Grant application
- Approve minutes from January 28, 2026 meeting
The HRA approved the consent agenda, including the previous meeting's minutes and HRA Resolution 26-03 authorizing application for 2026 Livable Communities Act Development grant funds. The vote was 4-0 with one absent. No other substantive decisions were made, and the meeting adjourned shortly after.
- Approved minutes of January 28, 2026 HRA meeting (4-0)
- Approved HRA Resolution 26-03 authorizing application for 2026 Livable Communities Act Development grant funds (4-0)
City Council - Workshop Meetings
The City Council will hold a closed session to discuss the status and settlement of Raymond Lee v. City of Woodbury regarding the jointly-owned 9.1-acre parcel at 8130 Afton Road. They will also review the 2025 social media audit and provide feedback on the city's social media strategy. No formal votes will be taken.
- Closed session on litigation over 8130 Afton Road property (50% city-owned)
- Review of 2025 social media audit – engagement doubled on Instagram, tripled on Facebook
- Consultant recommends more recap and people-first content, fewer event promotions
- City seeks direction on social media strategy for 2026
The Woodbury City Council held a workshop meeting with no substantive decisions. They entered closed session for litigation status and strategy regarding a lawsuit, and reviewed a social media audit with discussion only. No votes were taken on any action items.
City Council
The City Council will vote on a proclamation affirming city values on immigration enforcement and opposing a federal immigration detention center. They will also hear a closed session report on litigation status in a case against the city. Consent agenda includes accepting $95,000 in donations from off-road cyclists and Rotary Club, approving a road intersection improvement project on Bailey Road and Settlers Ridge Parkway, and awarding contracts for vegetation restoration and asphalt rejuvenation. A public hearing will open a 30-day comment period on the 2026 Community Development Block Grant Annual Action Plan.
- Proclamation opposing federal immigration detention center in Woodbury
- Closed session report on Raymond Lee v. City of Woodbury litigation
- Acceptance of $40,000 from Minnesota Off-Road Cyclists and $55,000 from Woodbury Rotary Club
- Approval of Bailey Road and Settlers Ridge Parkway intersection improvement project with county agreements
- Award of 2026 Asphalt Rejuvenator Project contract to Corrective Asphalt Materials, LLC
The City Council issued a Proclamation affirming city values and opposing a federal immigration detention center in Woodbury, but did not adopt a binding resolution restricting use of city property. No other substantive decisions were made; the meeting included recognition of an essay contest winner and a closed session report on litigation.