Statewide blog

Statewide: April 14, 2011 Archive

"Hundreds" of mining projects underway

Posted at 7:59 AM on April 14, 2011 by Michael Olson
Filed under: Around MN

mine.jpg
Various mining interests gathered in Duluth yesterday to learn more about the state of mining in the Iron Range. After bottoming out, mining on the range is entering a boom cycle. Demand is at a global high and as the Iron Range Resources and Rehabilitation Board commissioner Tony Sertich told the Northland News Center there are "hundreds" of mining projects underway. It's a bit tricky to determine how those projects add up to hundreds.

The IRRRB wasn't able to produce a master list of projects, but they do point to a a few sources that provide project details. The Laurentian Vision Project has the most comprehensive map of projects. The Range Readiness Initiative maps 7 major projects and 3 proposed projects. Some of the major projects have multiple projects that could be counted within them. But with all the discussion of boom time, the publicly available information available online about projects is scant.


Share your information on mining projects in the comments.

Also on MN Today

Budget deal hits Minnesota hard Government shutdown averted. Now come the details (Star Tribune).

Senator Franken calling for investigation into PBGC
A management company, hired on the Iron Range in 2009, had a history of poor job performance, according to U.S. Senator Al Franken from Minnesota (Northland News Center).

St. Cloud school board cuts $3M from budget
In all, what amounts to 38 licensed positions will be eliminated and 14 of those are regular classroom teachers. Of the positions lost, 15 are people who are retiring and will not be replaced (St Cloud Times).

DNR confiscates dead cub from Ely researcher
The Minnesota Department of Natural Resources will conduct its own necropsy to determine the cause of death, and the carcass then will be returned to researcher Lynn Rogers if he obtains a permit (Duluth News Tribune).

Fire in UMC sheep facility appears to kill some animals
A fire broke out early Wednesday afternoon in the sheep facility on the University of Minnesota, Crookston campus. The smoke was apparently too much for some of the lambs and possibly other sheep, too, as bystanders reported that some animals perished (Crookston Times).

Lourdes High drumline competes in Ohio
The Lourdes High School drumline starts competition at the Winter Guard International's Percussion Championships in Dayton, Ohio, on Thursday in what will be the school's first appearance at the national level.

"We know there's going to be a lot of nerves. We just tell them to relax and enjoy the moment," said the drumline's director, Lee Krueger, who started Lourdes' drumline program in 2003 and is the percussion teacher for Rochester Catholic Schools (Rochester Post Bulletin).

Photo of the day
Industrial Distress
This was the first time I tried crossprocess in the Lubitel and it came back as my weirdest roll yet. Not one picture was consistent with the next. I had colors from blue, green, pink, yellow and purple. Every one of them different. Almost like they all came from different kinds of film. Very Strange! Photo Credit: Flickr/Trisha V

Insight NowIssue of the day

Time for raising taxes on consumption - Your thoughts

We asked you to talk about whether Minnesota should follow up on proposals to broaden sales taxes to currently exempt items, like clothing, and to raise it on Internet sales.

We got back some great comments. Brian Bergs (@brian_bergs) gave us a brief history lesson on the sales tax in Minnesota - including that it was a Republican governor who created what would have been a temporary sales tax in the state.

Rick Morris (@Rick_Morris) said that he'd be fine with expanding the tax to exempt purchases, but it needs to happen along with an end to the corporate tax in the state.

Jennette Gudgel (@jennette_gudgel) says raising any taxes at a time like doesn't make sense. But she also concedes that if in-store purchases are taxed, then online purchases should be as well.

Alan Shilepsky (@alan_shilepsky) wrestled with the fairness of an Internet sales tax. At first, he liked the notion of taxing online sales because he dreads losing the brick-and-morter stores. But later, after talking with his wife who sells craft kits over the Internet, he realized that taxing online purchases might hurt the small business person, as opposed to the big Internet sales companies.

Now, you might notice that those voices are relatively new to the Insight Now community. I welcome them... and hope you see how the conversations you conduct here have brought other thoughtful folks into the fold. Thank you.

Now let's continue talking sales taxes in Minnesota.

Read more then comment

Islamic center opens in Mankato

Posted at 1:31 PM on April 14, 2011 by Elizabeth Baier (3 Comments)
Filed under: Central Minnesota

Mankato_mosque.jpg
(Photo courtesy of the Mankato Islamic Center)

Mankato's Muslim residents now have a new mosque to call home.

Until recently, the only mosque in town was located inside a small, nondescript building set up in the late 1990's.

"There was really no parking. It was leaking at the roof. It had no windows," said Abdi Sabrie, a leader in the Somali community, whose family moved to the area two years ago after living in Atlanta for 20 years. "It was very cramped and small. It was really not serving the community well."

Late last month, after raising $50,000 for the down payment of the new center, Somali and Muslim community leaders bought a three-story, historic building in town to house the Mankato Islamic Center.

The new center is already open, and includes a prayer room, and several other spaces for community classes and a library, Sabrie said.

"It's going to be a community center in addition to serving the faith needs of the community," he said, adding that volunteers have been working to complete minor repairs on some of the rooms of the new center.

For years, the greater Mankato area has hosted international residents, mainly students studying at the Minnesota State University campus. But in the last decade, the area has attracted thousands of East African refugees and Latin American immigrants who are putting down roots and calling Mankato home.

The demographic change has come fast for the area. Since 2000, the non-white population in Blue Earth County and neighboring Nicollet County has increased by nearly 50 percent, from 3,186 to 4,770. Most of the growth has been from refugee and immigrant families. Officials estimate Blue Earth County alone is now home to as many as 500 refugee families.

For Sabrie, the new mosque is a sign the community is here to stay.

"The community is really very excited," he said.

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