The wealthy Lake Minnetonka suburb of Orono has long been the genteel home to Minnesota dynasties such as the Pillsburys, Crosbys and Daytons, a place where power brokers worked quietly behind the scenes.
But in recent months, an ongoing clash between city officials and a determined group of critics has turned typically dull City Council meetings into dramatic confrontations featuring shouting, threats and displays of theatrical defiance by both sides.
In recent council meetings, Orono Mayor Dennis Walsh has cursed a member of the public and sneeringly called former city officials "clowns." He pounds his gavel furiously when a speaker's allotted three minutes expire during public comment sessions.
At a June meeting, when Jay Nygard — a former Orono council member and one of Walsh's loudest critics — got up to speak, Walsh opened a newspaper and buried his nose in it for Nygard's entire three minutes.
The clashes revolve largely around a series of land deals the city has recently made or attempted to make, as well as criticism of Walsh's plan for Orono to start its own fire department after more than a century of using the service from neighboring Long Lake.
Walsh says the furor is the work of a small group of "crazies," some of whom have threatened him. At Monday's regular council meeting, Walsh took time to publicly describe some of the "dark, threatening" attacks that he said have left him fearful for the safety of his family, the city staff and fellow council members.
"This is about to take a real nasty turn, the kind you do not recover from," Walsh read aloud from an email he had received.
Some of the texts he's received are of such a vile, sexual nature that he couldn't read them out loud, Walsh said, adding that he's turned those texts over to the city attorney.