Two days before his date with the workhouse, James Barth made one final bid for freedom.
He told a Hennepin County district judge that he had cleaned up the scrap wood, ladders and other odds and ends on his property. The city of Orono agreed: Barth's yard passed inspection.
The judge wouldn't relent. On July 19, Barth reported to the Hennepin Adult Corrections Facility for a five-day stay, the ultimate punishment for violating Orono's rules on "exterior storage."
Minnesota cities have the power to put people in jail for zoning violations. It doesn't happen often, and for good reason: Imprisoning property owners makes it more than a little hard for them to mow their weeds, paint the garage or take stuff to the dump.
Barth calls the city's enforcement a "witch hunt." Given the zeal of Orono inspectors, it's easy to see why.
Orono is best known to outsiders for sumptuous homes whose green lawns slope down to docks on Lake Minnetonka. That's not Barth's world. He's an over-the-road trucker who lives with his brother John at 3725 Togo Road, an old house on a leafy lot that's a little more than half an acre. He's actually one of triplets: James, John and Jeff are 49 years old. They're speaking with one voice about what they see as a city going overboard in punishing a property owner.
"He shouldn't be going to jail for ladders and firewood," Jeff Barth said. "It's just outrageous."
Soren Mattick, the city attorney for Orono, said the workhouse sentence was the decision of a judge, after a missed court date, a bench warrant and a recent inspection that revealed continuing code violations.