Light rail is a long, long way from St. Bonifacius, a tiny city whose uptown and downtown are but a block apart.
The city of 2,300 sits in Hennepin County's far southwest corner, close to Carver County -- so close, in fact, that its officials are exploring how it might switch counties.
They say Carver County has lower taxes, more responsive law enforcement and no multimillion-dollar stadiums. The last straw: the new transit sales tax, which Hennepin adopted and Carver did not.
"Our tax dollars seem to find their way, very quickly, to Minneapolis and its pet projects," said Mayor Rick Weible. "I think the idea is, look, we're feeling a little left out here."
They wish the snow plows came a bit sooner and fear losing local businesses to the siren song of lower taxes just down the road.
It's a complaint that's been heard before from citizens of the rural communities of western Hennepin County.
They sometimes resent the higher cost of living they help support in the eastern big cities and suburbs.
Still, few have gone so far as to suggest changing county boundaries. And none, despite petitioning and lobbying and lawmaking, has succeeded.