Statewide blog
Statewide: March 21, 2012 Archive
House passes Voter ID amendment; MN-08 DFL candidate debate; BWCA smog
Posted at 7:39 AM on March 21, 2012
by Michael Olson
(1 Comments)
Filed under: Around MN
House GOP passes voter ID amendment
Capitol View: "Republicans in the Minnesota House passed a proposed voter ID constitutional amendment early this morning on a 72 to 62 party line vote, after nine hours of debate.If the Senate follows suit, the question will appear on the statewide ballot in November." Hometown Source: Rep. Mary Kiffmeyer, R-Big Lake, proposed the bill said during floor debate, "We don't say close enough is good enough." Pioneer Press: "Democratic Rep. Steve Simon of St. Louis Park said voting requirements should be changed by laws that the Legislature can amend, not by a constitutional amendment that could only be altered by voters. 'Amending the constitution should only be done when absolutely necessary to accomplish a goal - not because you can, not because it feels good, not because you have the votes, not because you feel passionately about an issue. That's not good enough,' Simon said. While 16 other states require voters to show photo IDs, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures, Simon said only one other state, Mississippi, has set that requirement in its constitution."
MPR News Primer: Voter ID
Minnesota Today: Voter ID news
DFLers Nolan, Anderson and Clark debate
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TPT Almanac: "The top three Democrats who want to represent congress from Minnesota's 8th District joined Cathy and Eric on the couch. Rick Nolan, Jeff Anderson and Tarryl Clark faced off."
Rep. Cravaack talks oil, politics, PolyMet
TPT Almanac: "Last week we heard from his DFL challengers and this week Rep. Chip Cravaack (R-8th District) sat down at the Almanac table with Cathy and Eric."
Superior police captain Chad La Lor resigns
Duluth News Tribune: "The separation comes after La Lor was accused of providing untruthful testimony during a Police and Fire Commission hearing in November."
No answers yet in death of 27-year-old Fargo man found near railroad tracks
Forum of Fargo Moorhead: "Family and friends of a 27-year-old Fargo man whose body was found Monday along the railroad tracks between Glyndon and Hawley, Minn., said Tuesday that Jared Nilles was a good-natured theater lover who left many friends behind."
Faribault City Council tries to close smoking loophole by banning "tobacco sampling"
Faribault Daily News: "The administrative mess that would come with introducing regulation was deemed too much. A ban settles the issue, which councilors believe the state will get involved with in the future. Tobacco sampling uses a sort of loophole in the Minnesota Clean Indoor Air Act, which prohibited smoking in many indoor places statewide -- even though the Freedom to Breathe Act, added in 2007, expanded those restrictions, according to a report from the Minnesota Department of Health."
Environmentalists take on MPCA over pollution in BWCA and northern parks
MinnPost: "The view in the BWCA isn't what it used to be. The air, vaunted as some of the cleanest in the world, is growing more polluted. Sunsets and sunrises are dimmed by haze."
Wadena, Minn., seeks aid as residents, businesses leave
West Central Tribune: "'Wadena is losing residents and businesses, city leaders told a Minnesota Senate committee Monday in seeking state aid to rebuild facilities lost in a 2010 tornado. 'We have been planning for 21 months,' Mayor Wayne Wolden told members of the Senate committee that recommends public works project funding. 'This is the time to complete this.' Four businesses have closed in the past six months and it is hard to attract new ones, he said, partially because amenities such as offered in a community center and swimming pool were destroyed."
Op-Ed: Protect Minnesota's environment and mining, too
Rep. Mindy Greiling writes in the Star Tribune: "For years, companies have routinely understated the cleanup costs of nonferrous metallic mineral mines. Often it takes years after these mines have shut down for the damage they inflict to become apparent. To get out of these exorbitant costs, the companies will simply declare bankruptcy and leave the taxpayers holding the tab. For instance, in Montana, the Zortman-Landusky Mine left residents with a $33 million bill. In Colorado, Summitville Mine's tab is $185 million and growing. In South Dakota, unpredicted acid drainage problems and failed containment liners left local streams unable to support aquatic life. The company declared bankruptcy in 1999 and left taxpayers on the hook for millions of dollars in cleanup costs."
Op-Ed: Bills should broadly deter shutdowns
Star Tribune: "It's better to spare all from the pain than to exempt some."
Michigan event puts electric snowmobiles to the test
Highwire: "Each year in early March, teams of college students from across the country converge on Houghton, Michigan to compete in the Society of Automotive Engineers Clean Snowmobile Challenge."
Marshall hotel owner urges caution on development
Marshall Independent: "He's not against economic growth or development in Marshall, Scott Hicks said, but plans to bring growth to the area need to take the survival of existing businesses into account."
Farm Family of the Year
Albert Lea Tribune: "Andy Bakken is the fifth-generation in his family to work on the farm and has spent the last 13 years doing so. Bakken and his wife, Jody, have used the farm as an opportunity to teach their four children responsibility and the difference between right and wrong."
Don Shelby leaves MinnPost for news aggregator Bring Me The News
The prom and the porn star
News Cut: "Mike Stone, allegedly from Oakdale and allegedly a senior at Tartan High School (I've been unable to confirm this), has been asking porn stars on Twitter to be his date for the senior prom."
Mayo clinic lobby as concert hall
Posted at 4:00 PM on March 21, 2012
by Dan Olson
(1 Comments)
Filed under: Minnesota Sounds & Voices
I took this snapshot of Rochester resident Jane Belau recently playing the Bosendorfer in the Gonda building lobby at the Mayo Clinic. Twice a week, Monday and Thursday, she performs for and with Mayo staff, community members and, of course, patients.
Maybe this happens everywhere. I'd be interested to hear other stories about live music at medical centers. I remember a friend, a mom, giving birth to a child at a St. Paul hospital years ago and the nurses going around the maternity ward singing to the families.
The music at Mayo Clinic occupies its own niche in part because of the sheer number of visitors and their unusual composition. The people are from all over the world and from all walks of life. And the people are living with all kinds of medical conditions.
The lobby scene the day I visited was probably no different from any other. Nurses mingled with medical doctors alongside patients next to visitors of all kinds. They bustled through the basement level warren of walkways that link the Mayo complex.
There were folks in wheelchairs, on walkers, and many stopped to take in a few minutes of the music. It's a moment of therapy offered along with all the other medical marvels at Mayo.
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