The two highest-profile public officials on the U.S. Bank Stadium oversight commission stepped down Thursday amid growing legislative and public pressure over their use of two luxury suites to host friends, family and political allies at games and concerts.
Michele Kelm-Helgen, chairwoman of the Minnesota Sports Facilities Authority (MSFA), announced her resignation early in the day, saying the decision was her own. By early afternoon, Executive Director Ted Mondale resigned rather than face an impending vote to remove him.
The departures came as state legislators move to overhaul the MSFA's structure, claiming lax management and oversight by the pair. Gov. Mark Dayton, who had been supportive of the two, said their resignations would "enable the authority to move ahead and, hopefully, allow everyone to regain perspective" on the stadium.
The DFL governor praised Mondale and Kelm-Helgen for "commendable" and "exceptional" work and pledged to work with legislators on the future of the MSFA.
"Everybody's still kind of taking stock of what's occurred" in the past 24 hours, Dayton said.
Mondale and Kelm-Helgen faced cascading criticism and scrutiny since the Star Tribune reported in November that they and other MSFA commissioners hosted friends, family and well-connected DFLers at two 18-person luxury suites at the stadium during Vikings games and at several concerts. The two said the state-owned suites were needed to market the building, but an investigation by Legislative Auditor James Nobles revealed the suites were used mostly for entertainment by the MSFA commissioners and staff.
At a four-hour joint hearing on the release of Nobles' report last week, Mondale and Kelm-Helgen faced hours of blunt questions from Republicans who didn't buy their explanations.
Dayton said he didn't ask for either resignation. But supporting them grew politically difficult after a House committee voted 17-1 to support a bill to reshape the MSFA, with all but one DFL lawmaker joining Republicans in support.