Minneapolis Budget Committee Meeting — November 17, 2025
Discussion Breakdown
Summary
Minneapolis Budget Committee Meeting — November 17, 2025
The Minneapolis City Council Budget Committee met on Monday, November 17, 2025 (afternoon meeting; called to order by Chair Aisha Chughtai) to consider a single ordinance-related item: an inflationary adjustment to the 20-Year Neighborhood Park Plan guaranteed minimum annual funding amounts for 2027–2031. The committee received a staff presentation from Finance & Property Services and approved the item by voice vote for consideration by the full City Council.
Discussion Items
- 20-Year Neighborhood Park Plan — guaranteed minimum annual amounts (2027–2031 inflationary adjustment)
- Presenter: Liam O’Brien, Senior Budget Analyst, Finance & Property Services Department.
- Background/ordinance framework:
- Established in 2016 (Municipal Code Chapter 16, Article 14) to provide guaranteed minimum annual allocations over a 20-year period to address gaps in neighborhood parks and streets infrastructure.
- Requires the City and Minneapolis Park & Recreation Board (MPRB) to collaborate every five years to review and adjust amounts using a mutually agreed-upon objective measure of inflation.
- Prior adjustment: First adjustment approved December 15, 2021, providing a 3% inflationary increase for 2022–2026.
- Funding context and projections (parks infrastructure component):
- Ordinance originally required $10.5 million annually for park development and rehabilitation (noted as provided from 2016–2020).
- With the prior inflationary adjustment, annual funding is expected to reach $13.1 million by 2026.
- Proposed new adjustment: 4% annual compounded increase for 2027–2031.
- Based on that rate, $13.1 million (2026) is projected to grow to approximately $15.9 million by 2031, with the increase planned to be covered through increased capital bonding.
- Clarifications from staff (project description vs. purpose):
- Staff stated the increase is not intended to increase the number of park projects, but to account for construction inflation costs associated with planned projects and maintain the effectiveness of allocated funding.
- The resolution does not program or appropriate funding at this time; after approval, staff will coordinate with MPRB to incorporate the escalator into the park capital program beginning in 2027.
- Basis for the 4% escalator (collaboration and analysis):
- MPRB submitted a consultant letter from Rockwise Strategies recommending a 4% annual cost escalator based on multiple quarterly construction cost index reports.
- The City Budget Office reviewed non-residential construction cost indices and calculated year-over-year increases from 2023–2025, finding:
- National non-residential construction costs rose 3.8% over the period.
- Twin Cities costs increased 3.4%.
- Staff noted some city capital estimating practices typically use 3% annual inflation, but cited current conditions (including tariffs for construction goods) and concluded 4% is reasonable.
- Ordinance-driven timeline and next steps:
- Concurrent City and MPRB resolutions must be approved by December 15, 2025.
- MPRB approved its resolution on November 5, 2025.
- If advanced, the full City Council was stated to be scheduled to vote on November 20, 2025.
Public Comments & Testimony
- No public comment/testimony was reflected in the provided transcript.
Key Outcomes
- Approved the proposed inflationary adjustment resolution (4% compounded annually for 2027–2031) by voice vote (ayes heard; no nays or abstentions stated).
- Next meeting announced: Wednesday, November 19, 2025 at 6:05 p.m., for the committee’s third public hearing on the 2026 budget.
Meeting Transcript
Good afternoon. My name is Aisha Chugtai and I'm the chair of the budget committee. I'm going to call to order our meeting for Monday, November 17th, 2025. Before we begin the meeting, I want to offer a friendly reminder to all members, staff, and the public that these meetings are broadcast live to enable greater public participation. These broadcasts include real-time captioning as a further method to increase the accessibility of our proceedings to the community. Therefore all speakers need to be mindful of the rate of their speech so that our captioners can fully capture and transcribe all comments for the broadcast. We ask all speakers to moderate the speed and clarity of their comments. At this time I'll ask the clerk to call the roll so we can verify the presence of a quorum. Councilmember Payne. Present. Wansley is absent Rainville present Vita present Allison is absent Osmond present Cashman present Jenkins is absent Chavez present Chowdhury Palmasano present vice chair Kosky present and chair Chukty present that is 10 members present let the record reflect that we have a quorum I'll also remind my colleagues that we will be using speaker management today so please make sure to sign in we have one item on our agenda today which is the 20 year neighborhood park plan guaranteed minimum annual amounts I'll invite the budget team to join us and begin their presentation welcome good afternoon councilmembers my name is Liam O'Brien I'm a senior budget analyst with the Finance and Property Services Department. Today I will provide an overview of the proposed inflationary adjustment to the parks infrastructure component of the 20-year neighborhood park plant ordinance. This will be a brief presentation where I will provide an overview of the ordinance, explain the key technical details of the resolution we are discussing today, describe the collaborative process between the city and the Minneapolis Park and Recreation Board, and outline the ordinance driven timeline for this resolution. In 2016 In through Chapter 16, Article 14 of the Municipal Code, the city established guaranteed minimum annual funding allocations to address identified gaps in neighborhood parks and streets infrastructure over a 20-year period. The ordinance requires the City of Minneapolis and Park Board to collaborate every five years to review and adjust these funding amounts using a mutually agreed-upon objective measure of inflation. The first such adjustment occurred on December 15, 2021, when the City and Park Board approved a 3% inflationary increase from 2022 to 2026. For context, the ordinance originally required the City to contribute $10.5 million annually for park development and rehabilitation. This was done from 2016 to 2020. Due to the inflationary adjustment agreed to in 2021, the annual funding provided has risen to $13.1 million by 2026. Looking ahead, within our resolution, the City and Park Board have agreed to a 4% annual compounded increase from 2027 to 2031. Based on this rate, the $13.1 million budget for 2026 is projected to grow to approximately $15.9 million by 2031, which we are planning to cover through increased capital bonding. I want to highlight that this inflationary increase is not intended to increase the number of projects the Park Board will complete, park board will complete but to account for construction inflation costs associated with planned projects and to ensure the effectiveness of the funding that we allocate to implement this adjustment both the city and park board must adopt concurrent resolutions detailing the inflationary adjustment and the resulting funding increase it's important to note that this resolution does not program our appropriate funding at this time once approved city staff will coordinate within with the park board to incorporate this inflationary increase into the park capital program beginning in 2027. I'll take a moment to summarize the collaborative work completed so far between the city and Park Board. In the spring the Park Board submitted a letter from Rockwise Strategies, a consultant specializing in construction cost estimating. The letter