The Curse on the Cubbies has finally lifted. Next comes White Bear Lake.
The major lakefront transformation that city has dreamed of since at least the 1980s appears close to locking its last major piece in place: A restaurant overlooking the city's marina, in a prominent space that has long sat empty.
But the City Council is hardly in a celebratory mood. Council members are not really getting what they wanted, and they're being asked to help furnish the unfinished space with a low-interest $150,000 loan.
After seeking far and wide, developers turned to the owners of the small restaurant next door, Acqua, who propose a Japanese sushi place — if they get some financial help. The upstairs would become a yoga studio.
But the city still hasn't landed quite what it wanted, the breakfast/lunch/dinner/drinks venue that officials dreamed of. Grumbled City Council Member Dan Jones: "The developer was not in my opinion terribly favorable to having a restaurant there."
That means still more ill feeling over a patch of land that's the gateway to downtown, greeting everyone headed north into the busy town center on Hwy. 61.
"Why are we in this position?" said Council Member Bill Walsh. "This council is being asked to act like a bank and I'm not qualified to do that. We're betting on, can it succeed or fail? This is uncomfortable."
Mayor Jo Emerson, at a meeting to consider the terms of the deal late last month, responded that the previous City Council had created the conditions they're now trying to deal with. "It's not our council," she said.