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<br />. <br /> <br />e <br /> <br />. <br /> <br />MINUTES <br />New Brighton Economic Development Commission <br />Regular Meeting - August 8, 2006 <br />7:00 a.m. <br /> <br />MembersILiaisons Present: Gina Bauman, Gene Delaune, Dennis Flahave, Linda Harmon, <br />Lisa Harreld, John Kaufuold, Steve Larson, Jim Sculthorp, and Gary Stang. <br /> <br />MembersILiaisons Absent: Bob Benke, Mark Nelson, and Bruce Nustad. <br /> <br />Staff Present: Jeanna Troha, Grant Femelius, Grant Wyffels, David Black, and Jennifer <br />Lavandowska. <br /> <br />Others Present: Jon Hom (Kimley-Hom and Associates) <br /> <br />Call to Order <br />Linda Harmon called the meeting to order at 7:00 a.m. <br /> <br />Approval of Minutes <br />No minutes of the July 11,2006 meeting were available. The Commission accepted as record of <br />the meeting the agenda presented for references as documentation of the meeting. <br /> <br />Old Highway 8 <br /> <br />Grant Wyffels, Public Works Director, and Jon Horn, Kimley-Hom and Associates presented <br />two options for the Old Highway 8 reconstruction. The road will be redesigned from the I-694 <br />bridge to the Long Lake Regional Park entrance, which is roughly 2600 feet. The options were <br />designed with the Northwest Quadrant Design Guidelines in mind and will include medians, <br />boulevards, and lighting. Wyffels added that this design will be presented to all commissions, <br />and their recommendations will be considered. <br /> <br />Horn reported that the design is based on the traffic study that was completed in 2006. Currently <br />there are 9,700 vehicles per day using this road and it is anticipated that by 2030 there will be <br />over 20,000 vehicles. Because this is an arterial roadway they have strived for a design that will <br />slow and calm traffic. The road will continue to have two lanes each way, but a landscaped <br />median will be added. As development occurs potential signal lights may also be added. <br />Bicycle lanes are included in Option 1, while in Option 2 there are no bike lanes, but the <br />boulevards are larger and more space is available for landscaping. Both options allow for <br />parking on both sides of the street. <br /> <br />Stang inquired if the bike paths would be made of asphalt or concrete; he indicated that he is <br />uncomfortable bicycling on concrete. Kaufuold asked if the bike lanes could pass through the <br />commercial area instead of along the highway. Harmon replied that she would not encourage <br />biking through that area. Stang inquired how the bike paths will work with the parking on the <br />street. Hom replied that Selby Avenue in St. Paul has a similar configuration and it works well. <br />