The Minneapolis Park and Recreation Board will continue to keep more than 20 miles of parkways closed off to vehicles so pedestrians have more room to spread apart at popular lakes and trails during the coronavirus pandemic.
On Wednesday night, the Park Board voted to allocate $250,000 to keep the parkways closed for the foreseeable future, with parks officials estimating the money will last at least through June.
"We all know what the next step in the dance is," Commissioner Brad Bourn said. "Let's get this as far as the $250,000 will go, which sounds like it could probably get us to the end of June."
Seven commissioners voted in favor of the extension. Commissioners Kale Severson and Londel French, who said opening parkways was only creating more space for people to gather in public, abstained from the vote.
The Park Board was initially voting to extend the closures until June 7 and spend up to $250,000 to do so. Instead, Bourn offered an amendment to keep parkways closed for as long as that amount of money allows.
"As long as there is guidance for social distancing, I think that there is need for additional space," President Jono Cowgill said during the meeting.

The Park Board has barricaded 21 miles of parkways for pedestrians since late March. This includes roads around the Chain of Lakes, Lake Nokomis Parkway and significant stretches of E. and W. River Parkway typically used by vehicles.
It is now renting hundreds of tube delineators and dozens of barricades from a contractor, said Michael Schroeder, the board's assistant superintendent for planning services. It was paying a daily rental rate for the materials, he said, as officials thought they would only need them until the beginning of May, when the statewide stay-at-home order was expected to end.