Gov. Tim Walz said Friday he wants to spend more than $300 million to replace aging infrastructure and upgrade water treatment facilities across the state.
To underscore the need, Walz donned a yellow hard hat and a safety harness, stepped into a metal basket and was lowered down a 90-foot shaft for a tour of Minneapolis stormwater tunnels.
The $300 million proposal is part of a $2 billion borrowing package Walz is rolling out over several days. The package is expected to be the focus of much of the upcoming legislative session.
After arriving in the cavernous and mostly empty tunnel, the governor learned firsthand what Minneapolis officials deal with when it comes to clearing the streets of stormwater.
The tour was taken at a time of year when the tunnel is generally safe to visit. Spring rains can fill the tunnel to its ceiling, city officials said.
It's a piece of the city that taxpayers rely on but rarely or never see, said Walz. So much of water infrastructure is "out of sight, out of mind," he said.
"There's been generations of investment in infrastructure," he said. "This stuff is 100 years old in many cases. It's not going to get cheaper to do it. We're in a position in the state where we have the capacity to do it, and these are the things that each generation needs to invest in.
"I think that's why it's important to get out here, see these projects firsthand, put that information out to the public so they understand."