News Cut

News Cut: August 8, 2008 Archive

How we get our jollies

Posted at 7:04 AM on August 8, 2008 by Bob Collins (1 Comments)

No doubt, it's all just coincidence, but two prominent news stories in the local paper this morning prove unnerving on two fronts.

At a state operated home for military veterans in Hastings, a 44-year old man is charged with continually stomping on the head of a man.There was no arguing heard ahead of time and there was no apparent reason for the incident. The victim may die. (Read the complaint here)

ufc.jpgMeanwhile, the Star Tribune today has the second in its three-part series on the popularity of Ultimate Fighting, posting its second picture in two days of Brock Lesnar, who for some reason needed to go to the University of Minnesota to learn how to make a living out of beating somebody for no apparent reason. The UFC holds its first event in Minnesota Saturday.

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The 'we matter' index

Posted at 7:40 AM on August 8, 2008 by Bob Collins (6 Comments)
Filed under: Politics

With Barack Obama's dash-for-cash on Wednesday and pancakes stop on Thursday, let's update the Visit-o-Meter.

In other political "we matter" news, the New York Times today has a profile of Gov. Tim Pawlenty, hot on the heels of his political cotillion at the National Press Club this week.

It's an interesting profile, and a reminder that even though he's been governor here for almost six years, and served in the House before that, and even though he has a penchant for dropping tidbits about his daughter into political speeches, and even though we know he likes hockey, we really don't know much about the personal life of Tim Pawlenty.

After reading the article, we still don't.

By the way, the governor's official biography on the state's Web site has been updated recently. Among other changes, this first line was added:

TIM PAWLENTY is regarded as one of the nation's most innovative, energetic, reform-minded and accomplished governors.

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The fall of Glen Taylor?

Posted at 2:12 PM on August 8, 2008 by Bob Collins (1 Comments)
Filed under: Crime and Justice, Sports

Taylor_Glen.jpgIt wasn't that long ago that the proposed solution to every sports team's ownership misery in Minnesota -- specifically the Twins and Vikings -- was to have Glen Taylor buy it. Back then, though, the Timberwolves were good and Taylor was "one of us."

Taylor is still "one of us" but the bloom is off the successful-franchise-owner rose and now the guy's personal reputation isn't so great either.

The Minneapolis-St. Paul Business Journal details a lawsuit filed by four women against one of Taylor's companies, alleging discrimination.

The suits also allege that "sexual favoritism" at the company, where female employees were retained due to their appearance or personal relationships with managers, extended to two employees who had personal relationships with Glen Taylor. The filings say that "it is common knowledge in the workplace" that one employee is on Taymark's payroll because she bore Taylor's illegitimate daughter and that Taylor placed her with the company rather than pay her child-support payments. The daughter, now an adult, also is on the company payroll, the court filings say, adding that the two women were not "held to the same work standards as other employees."

It's a damning article about a court case whose allegations, we have to point out, have not been proven. The allegations alone, however, may expedite Taylor's fall from sports grace.

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From the ashes in Minneapolis

Posted at 5:00 PM on August 8, 2008 by Bob Collins

urban_homeworks.jpg

When I stopped in to visit Russ Barclay this afternoon, he was working on the finishing touches of a new home (above) in North Minneapolis. It was built on the foundation of one of 8 homes destroyed by arson not long ago. Hundreds of volunteers have worked on the project, under Urban Homeworks, a faith-based initiative that provides homes for low-income families.

It's an apt metaphor for what's happening in Minneapolis. As the foreclosure crisis has ripped home ownership from hundreds of people, non-profit groups are helping people, who couldn't afford a home before, buy a home for their family. Urban Homeworks has teamed with The City of Lakes Community Land Trust on this project. CLCLT helped Barclay buy a home just down the street. Behind the idea of helping people buy a home, is the goal of helping the people in those homes build -- rebuild -- their community.

The City of Lakes Community Land Trust started five years ago as a response to the "incredible increase in home values," according to Jeff Washburne, its director, who gave me a tour of some of the organization's efforts today. A home on a block in Minneapolis might have been affordable once, but when property values shot up, it was not affordable the next time it came on the market.

But here's the news: At what appears to be the depths of the foreclosure crisis, Washburne tells me he's feeling "bullish" about things. More people in the last six weeks, he says, are approaching his organization to help buy a home. "I think a lot of folks that were boxed out of buying homes the last six years, who had good credit, but don't make a lot of money, they're seeing a great opportunity right now." (Listen)

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Take Leticia Brown (shown above with Washburne), who bought her home in North Minneapolis, last year. "If you're not purchasing to make a profit, then the program is good for you. I'm not trying to make a huge return on the house should I ever decide to sell, I just wanted a place of my own." (Listen)

The housing market was a little better when she purchased her home in May 2007, which means Brown wouldn't have been able to buy her home without the Land Trust. I was able to get a really good house in the market that suits my needs," she said.

Under the Community Land Trust plan, a home stays affordable. Take a home selling for $200,000. The Community Land Trust puts up $50,000 of a down payment. The homeowner gets a loan for $150,000. When the home is sold, the $50,000 downpayment is applied to the next buyer -- making the home affordable again -- and the seller gets 25 percent of any increase in value. The rest goes to reducing the cost of ownership for the next buyer.

People like Barbara Lightsy, described by Washburne as "the matriarch of North Minneapolis," sees home ownership for low-income Minneapolitans as essential if her neighborhood is to survive. (Listen)

"It's sad. Many of the people who lost their homes were people my age," she told me during a stop at her home. "They were people who were part of the community. They didn't just live in the community. They were the community. All of those people are displaced."

When she wanted to buy a home a few years ago, she says, her Social Security income wouldn't cover the cost of the mortgage. Under the Community Land Trust program, she received $65,000 -- the maximum amount available . "It made it not just possible,it made it real," she said. That $65,000 will be available for the next owner, too. And the one after that.

As more people move back from the suburbs into the city, Barbara says good property in the area is most vulnerable to being unattainable by low and moderate income residents.

"What we found is as people lose their homes, many times investors buy the homes, who don't live in the city, and they'll rent to anyone who can pay the rent, so you may not be getting a very good neighbor. If the homes are being purchased by families or individuals, I consider that new growth and I hope these homes will be available to people who want to be part of the community."

The average sale price of a home purchased through City of Lakes Community Land Trust is $125,198. The average household income of the buyer is just under $31,000.

The Edwards affair

Posted at 5:57 PM on August 8, 2008 by Bob Collins (8 Comments)
Filed under: Media, Politics

That's a fascinating local angle -- or maybe it's only fascinating to media types -- surrounding the affair that John Edwards has finally admitted to with vlogger Reille Hunter.

Local filmmaker Chuck Olsen (The Uptake) had some footage of Hunter in a film he shot. He posts a still image of her here, and wrote:

She was very outgoing, maybe even flirtatious, but really nice. I asked how she got the gig filming webisodes, and she said she met him in a bar and they clicked, and she proposed some online documentary showing his authenticity. She told me about some Hollywood sitcom writing and other weird projects she'd been involved with - nothing I'd ever heard of.

Chuck's Twitter page documents how quick the big media moves in to wrap up the rights to the photo.

Edwards statement on the subject reads like a Microsoft Word template for political apologies. There isn't one, of course, but there probably should be.

In 2006, I made a serious error in judgment and conducted myself in a way that was disloyal to my family and to my core beliefs. I recognized my mistake, and I told my wife that I had a liaison with another woman, and I asked for her forgiveness. Although I was honest in every painful detail with my family, I did not tell the public.

I was and am ashamed of my conduct and choices. With my family, I took responsibility for my actions in 2006, and today I take full responsibility publicly.

As for Ms. Hunter's video capabilities, judge for yourself:

Where men are concerned, there really are two Americas: those who cheat and those who don't.

Edwards isn't running for anything now, of course. But a lot of folks saw him as an attorney general candidate in a Barack Obama administration.

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