Stressing economics over neighborhood politics, the Minneapolis school board agreed Tuesday to move the school district's headquarters from its northeast home of 50 years to a new $27.5 million facility on the city's North Side.
For weeks, and again in public testimony Tuesday, the action was promoted by North Side advocates and district administrators as a means to help spur a W. Broadway revival.
But with its 5-2 vote, the board made nary a mention of the headquarters as an economic development tool, focusing instead on the immediate need to reap savings on capital and operating costs for its far-flung administrative offices.
"The time is right," board Chairman Tom Madden said.
But board member Jill Davis, who along with colleague Carla Bates voted against the proposal, said the proponents should gird themselves for criticism from outstate legislators. "Wow," she envisioned the legislators saying in a future Minneapolis push for funding. "Look at how you manage your resources."
Bates said she could not support having the district's most up-to-date facility be geared toward administrative rather instructional purposes.
Neighborhood tussle
Two weeks ago, the district delayed a scheduled vote on the North Side move to allow developers to promote alternative plans to the public.