Donning her uniform neon windbreaker Wednesday morning, Ashley Borud pushed a cart of cleaning supplies and trash bags down St. Paul's W. 7th Street.
She used a trash picker to grab a coffee cup lid and a cigarette butt. She scrubbed fresh graffiti off a parking meter. She stopped to ask a man sleeping on the ground outside the Holiday Inn if he was OK.
Though her route was new, the shift was as typical as any for Borud, the operations manager for St. Paul's Street Team, which launched in 2021 with the goal of a cleaner, safer downtown. Starting last week, the team's geographic footprint expanded to several blocks in the W. 7th neighborhood after commercial property owners petitioned the city to join the downtown improvement district.
The privately funded and operated improvement district provides special services — including Street Team patrols and a safety communications center — in exchange for annual assessments. Downtown businesses banded together to create the district to respond to needs in St. Paul's urban core that fell outside of government purview, or that weren't being addressed quickly and regularly.
Pat Boemer admitted he was feeling a little salty on Wednesday. The owner of Patrick McGovern's Pub & Restaurant said he'd just paid his annual property tax bill, about $180,000.
"Don't get me started," he said, talking about what he considers inadequate service from the city in exchange for what he pays. "As a taxpayer, it's really kind of pathetic. If these people were in private industry, they'd all be fired."
But when Boemer was asked about the prospect of joining the downtown improvement district, he said he'd happily foot the extra expense — about $7,000 a year — to enhance his street's cleanliness and public safety.
"As much as I take care of my property, and most of us do down here on 7th, it's just nice to have them doing this," he said. "Picking up trash, removing graffiti. If you're going to make the city a little better, it's worth it to me."