Gov. Mark Dayton has a 30-year reputation as a government boss who asks a lot of his employees, and generally gets it. Still, I doubt he's ever asked as much as he's asking of Transportation Commissioner Charles Zelle this summer.
Then again, I wonder if any governor has had a transportation chief better suited to the politically charged assignment Zelle has been handed: Go sell a multiyear batch of transportation tax increases to Minnesotans, with special focus on — gulp — the state's leading business organizations.
Those would be the very organizations that are starting to amass a multimillion-dollar war chest to unseat Dayton in the 2014 election, mostly because they don't like the governor's willingness to raise taxes.
They're also the very organizations in which Zelle was a transportation policy leader for years, until he threw in with the Dayton administration six months ago. As the longtime president and CEO of Jefferson Lines bus company, Zelle was chair of the Minneapolis Regional Chamber of Commerce and cochair of the Itasca Project Transportation Initiative. He's still listed as a member of the state Chamber of Commerce board of directors.
That means that on June 13, when Zelle walked into the state Chamber policy board's inner sanctum, he was a familiar figure. Whether he was received as an old friend or a new enemy — or both — is hard to discern (especially since journalists were not invited). Chamber staffer Kate Johansen would only say afterward that the big business group's thinking about state transportation needs is "in process."
"There's interest but hesitation" in what Zelle was selling that day, Johansen said. As for Zelle, "he's been a wonderful chamber member," she said. But the state's business leaders "want the governor to talk to them. They want to see a plan."
The Dayton transportation plan has this much in common with business thinking: It's "in process." Zelle isn't out selling a specific blend of taxes and fees — not yet. But as he contemplates a rigorous summer and fall schedule of appearances around the state, he intends to formulate that plan based on what he hears, he allowed in a recent conversation.
Zelle uses the words "comprehensive," "statewide" and "competitive" to describe what's coming. "World-class" slips in, too. I take that as a clue that he's not thinking about just a few more cents on the gas gallon, or a fraction on the metro sales tax, or a few high-tech toll roads or wheelage fees or license tab hikes. The Dayton/Zelle plan may well contain all of the above and more.