The battle between two of the state's premier ice skating programs over ice time at Edina's Braemar Arena may not be over yet.
Facing increasing demands for ice time from a thriving youth hockey association but wary of hurting its nationally prominent figure skating club, the Edina City Council voted 3-2 this week to give the Edina Hockey Association more hours at its city-owned arena.
But it didn't give the hockey group anywhere near the additional hours city staff had recommended, and council members suggested that the issue be revisited in a couple of years to see how the reduction in hours affects the Braemar City of Lakes Figure Skating Club.
"We'll get this figured out, but we need to figure it out together," Mayor Jim Hovland said Monday night after the vote at City Hall. "We need to hang together as a community."
The two skating groups are deeply split over the issue. In 10 hours of meetings last month with city officials who tried to mediate, the groups were unable to agree on a new policy for Braemar ice time.
Both groups have deep roots in the city and have made Braemar their home since it was built in 1965. One council member said the Skating Club was invited to make the arena its base to help make it financially feasible.
The 1,316-member hockey association has 10 times more members than the Skating Club, and more than 99 percent of hockey participants are from Edina. Just under half of the Skating Club members live in or attend school in Edina, but the group has national and international standing.
Ice time came up because of a City Council directive to set priority-use policies for city-owned facilities like the arena. Those policies give preference to groups that have a high percentage of Edina residents.