For decades boats have moored at a discreet landing in Minneapolis extending from the western shore of Nicollet Island into the Mississippi River, where they can be seen from the Hennepin Avenue Bridge.
Earlier this month, the Minneapolis Park and Recreation Board ordered them gone, removing an electrical line that served houseboats at the location. Park staff also barred the stairs leading from W. Island Avenue down to the landing, citing their "extremely poor condition" and lack of disability access, and they are considering whether to remove the river access point entirely.
The crackdown on unpermitted mooring has also prematurely ended the Minneapolis Water Taxi's business season.
The taxis, which offered cruises north of St. Anthony Falls by the hour, had moored for years at the so-called "Nicollet Island Quay". Two houseboats also docked there. One is the home of the taxis' owner, Capt. Cory Parkos.
Parkos moved his three taxis into storage as told. But in an act of defiance, he now anchors his houseboat straight in the river, where it continues to sit in the exact same spot — just technically beyond the Park Board's jurisdiction.
"We lost probably 150 cruises that were already reserved, not including how many more might have been reserved up until the end of next month when we close [for the year]," he said.
Essential to the dispute around the quay is "who controls MPRB property," said Park and Recreation spokesperson Dawn Sommers. "The MPRB has an ordinance that prohibits anyone from docking a boat on MPRB property without a permit," she said. "The City Charter is clear that parkland is under the exclusive control of the MPRB."
Nicollet Island power struggle
The Nicollet Island Quay was built by developer John Kerwin of Nicollet Restoration Inc., who has repeatedly run afoul of the Park Board's efforts to exert sole control over its land the past 40 years.