This story was originally published by Iron Range Today.
BIWABIK — City councilors in Biwabik approved a 24.7% property tax levy increase Wednesday after finding minimal adjustments to the 2026 budget, which they ultimately reduced by 4.9% over the last week.
Officials were hesitant to bake a potential revenue source into the budget, and four of the five council members didn’t commit to leaving a public works position open for the year as ways to reduce the levy further.
A sale of city land is in the works — about $191,000 — but City Administrator Michael Schultz cautioned it wasn’t “cash in hand” for the city and could still face challenges.
Similarly, the council on Wednesday approved a separation agreement with a public works employee that leaves the fourth position open into May of next year.
That represents a break-even on the budget for the city, and committing to a full year of a three-person team would have saved about $63,000. Schultz said the move would still put the levy over 19%.
“I’m already nervous about not having a mechanic on staff until May,” said Mayor Steve Biondich. “I’m concerned how much it’s going to cost us outsourcing mechanic work and overtime. It’s easy to commit to cut something, but there’s consequences.”
Councilor Dan Berg, who sits on the budget committee, said the city has kept a four-person public works crew without analysis supporting it. He said he was willing to “take the risk” in cutting the position and adjusting next year if it became needed.
“We just said we had four in the past so let’s keep four,” Berg said. “I think our performance on our crew is going to change drastically starting in January, to the positive side.”
Biwabik’s levy increases represents one of the largest in the region, on top of a 12% increase levied by St. Louis County this week.
-
Plus: Minnesota nonprofit offers $25K reward for information on Wadena disappearance; and Bemidji Mayor Jorge Prince accepts award for disaster leadership.
-
Bemidji Mayor Jorge Prince accepted the Tommy Longo Disaster Leadership Award from LeadersLink during the Bemidji City Council meeting on June 15, 2026.
-
Carla Beth Anderson, a 23-year-old woman, was last seen nearly 40 years ago at her Wadena apartment. Despite hundreds of leads and interviews, no arrests have been made in her disappearance.
-
Plus: Itasca County reuses flag poles to fly new and old state flags; Crow Wing County adds 10 license plate readers to Flock Safety network; and Red Lake County takes 2nd in state baseball tourney.
-
The county avoided buying new flag poles by flying the current and former Minnesota flags on poles that were previously used for a memorial.
-
The formal move on June 8, 2026, follows discussion on the perpetual vacancies and rising costs of operating a rural police force.
-
The Rebels entered the tournament as the No. 2 seed and defending champions. South Ridge, Grand Rapids and Aitkin also competed in the tournament.
-
The St. Louis County Sheriff's Office identified William Helgemoe, 56, as the rider killed on Industrial Road on June 12, 2026.
-
This is the Up North Lookback, where we’re digging into the local news archives from 50 years ago — the year KAXE was born. It’s the week of June 15.
-
And: COVID learning woes still haunt MN kids' well-being.