The finance committee reviewed a pending item, Resolution 45‑198, concerning an offer from Laurel Park LLC and whether the city should accept an offer, purchase property to end litigation, or continue legal action to enforce a lien.
City administration described the offer as effectively expired and outlined options: negotiate a settlement (for a sum likely far less than the city's demolition and related costs), buy the property to resolve the city’s part of the litigation, or pursue lien enforcement and possible foreclosure—a process that could take several years and incur substantial attorney fees. Committee members repeatedly emphasized the complexity of the matter and the need to consider taxpayer impact.
One committee member referenced an appraisal “somewhere around $300,000,” and other members noted the substantial costs the city has already incurred, including demolition expenses discussed in the record (a committee speaker said the city had spent roughly "3.25 million" tearing down the building). City legal staff clarified that if the city purchased the property that would end the city's portion of litigation with Laurel Park, while separate litigation between Laurel Park and OneMain remains on appeal; the city’s answer in the appeal process is due Feb. 1, a deadline staff said was agreed to in exchange for service acceptance.
A motion to postpone consideration of Resolution 45‑198 indefinitely was made and the committee engaged in extended discussion about settlement strategy, counsel hiring and scheduling next steps. Several members suggested negotiating a range for settlement and returning promptly (the next finance meeting was cited as the 13th). The transcript records the motion and debate but does not include a final recorded vote on the postponement in the provided excerpt.