MANKATO — It doesn’t take a marriage counselor to know that Gov. Tim Pawlenty and Minnesota’s mayors are on the rocks.
The city officials say Pawlenty — proposing deep cuts in state aid to cities — is unfairly pushing the state’s budget problem down the line, and that he is going to be responsible for idled snowplows after blizzards, laid-off cops and firemen, and higher property taxes.
Pawlenty responded by accusing the city officials of “whining,” saying they are unwilling to make the sort of tough budget decisions he’s making at the state level.
Mankato City Manager Pat Hentges has noticed Pawlenty bristles when asked to respond to city officials.
“The governor tends to get a little sensitive when people throw things back,” Hentges said.
North Mankato Mayor Gary Zellmer, who has been active in the Coalition of Greater Minnesota Cities, has noticed, too.
“The open warfare between the cities and the governor is getting really fierce,” Zellmer said at a recent City Council meeting. “It’s almost comical.”
What won’t be funny for cities is if the growing hostility affects how the governor chooses to reduce the state budget.
Pawlenty is planning to make somewhere around $1 billion in spending cuts to eliminate projected red ink in the upcoming two-year budget. Local Government Aid, which goes to all but the wealthiest cities in the state, is destined for cuts, as is state assistance for counties, social programs and colleges, according to Pawlenty.
The precise size of the cuts to cities is the unanswered question and the answer could have a substantial impact on city budgets in the next two years. Pawlenty said before the latest round of squabbling that the cuts were likely to be somewhere between what he proposed in his original budget plan and what the DFL-controlled Legislature suggested — with the final number probably being closer to his.
It’s a big difference. Pawlenty proposed large cuts for the fiscal year beginning July 1 and even steeper reductions in 2010. The 2010 cuts would be more than $2.1 million for Mankato, $706,000 for North Mankato and $490,000 for St. Peter.
Even smaller towns would take big hits in 2010. It would be $154,000 for Janesville, for instance, and $172,000 for Lake Crystal.
The amounts proposed by the Legislature — and vetoed by the governor — are smaller. The House and Senate cut aid for 2009, but the Senate holds the LGA allocations steady in 2010. The House cuts for 2010 are $684,000 for Mankato, $216,000 for North Mankato, $97,000 for St. Peter, $21,000 for Janesville and $28,000 for Lake Crystal.
Because Pawlenty decided to make unilateral reductions known as unallotment — rather than negotiate with the Democratic-dominated Legislature in a special session — cities can’t turn to their traditional allies.
“Democrats right now are kind of irrelevant to the process,” Hentges said.
With smaller outstate cities facing extremely difficult budget choices if Pawlenty cuts aid deeply, Hentges is hopeful that Republican lawmakers might influence the governor to ease up.
“Marty Seifert and Bob Gunther and Julie Rosen and Tony Cornish, I think they should be concerned if the governor is disproportionately focusing his cuts on LGA and the cities they represent,” Hentges said, listing veteran Republican lawmakers from southern Minnesota.
Gunther, R-Fairmont, hopes the LGA cuts are closer to the House level than to Pawlenty’s original budget proposal, saying the governor will be “a gold-plated hero” if he can figure out a way to ease the reductions to that level. Gunther also told Pawlenty administration officials it would be better to target larger cities, which have more flexibility in their budgets, and suburban communities that receive other sorts of state aid.
“I said, hit the bigger cities the hardest and the smaller cities the least,” Gunther said. “And everybody has to feel the pain, so Market Value Credit (to suburbs) has to be in there.”
Still, cities have reason to be concerned, Gunther said, especially since Pawlenty isn’t running for a third term and won’t face the potential political repercussions of cuts that affect municipal services or property taxes.
“I’d be worried to heck about somebody like that,” he said.
But Gunther also echoes Pawlenty’s criticism that cities haven’t made the difficult choices required during tough economic times.
“A lot of people say there’s little evidence of cities cutting back,” he said.
Local News
Friction builds over city cuts
Governor says cities 'whining'
- Local News
-
-
Laundry thieves sought
The Mankato Department of Public Safety is seeking the public's
assistance in finding two suspects: Robert Blair Olsonoski, age 27 of
Bloomington, and an unknown male accomplice.
-
Today's Currents stories
Thursday's Currents stories include: A preview of Highland Summer Theatre's "Love, Sex and the IRS"; a short story about this weekend's All Breed dog show; and Tanner Kent's column about digital music killing local band reunions; as well as the weekly entertainment and art exhibit calendars.
-
Half pound of pot found after police respond to domestic call
Jessie Alan Wiebke was arrested after about $1,200 in cash was found in his possession.
-
Barn restored to early glory to be site of service
An ecumenical church service and old-fashioned potluck dinner will be held at a renovated barn on Sunday.
-
Update: Storm causes damage throughout New Ulm area
-
Regional school, university to focus on work-skills education
The university will be corporate-sponsored, although none has officially signed on yet. The charter high school — which will be modeled in part after the New Country School in Henderson but with a “business twist” — will focus on hands-on lessons for alternative learners.
- Settlement reached in 2009 railroad, county worker crash
-
Nicollet County to start from scratch to fill top post
The County Board on Wednesday opted to re-open the application process when its five commissioners split their views on the two finalist candidates.
-
Former resort owner arrested again on meth charges
Mary Louise Pepper, 65, of Sleepy Eye was stopped on Highway 60 east of Madison Lake Thursday for driving 60 mph in a 55-mph zone. The Blue Earth County sheriff’s deputy who stopped Pepper reported seeing what he believed to be a meth pipe in her purse.
-
Blue Earth County Board approves eviction proceedings
Eviction proceedings for unpaid taxes are rare — county officials can’t remember any happening in the past few decades.
- More Local News Headlines
-
Laundry thieves sought

