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Minneapolis Riverfront News

Covering life, work, and play in the Historic Mill District and Downtown Minneapolis Riverfront neighborhoods. Have an opinion, local news or events to share?  Contact us.

Entries from December 1, 2019 - December 31, 2019

Tuesday
Dec312019

Mill District Resident, Kathy Franzen, One of Ten Artists Featured in Upcoming James J. Hill House Botanical Exhibit, Art from the Edge of the Boreal Forest: Reflecting Biodiversity

Exhibit runs from January 18 - June 21, 2020 at the James J. Hill House, 240 Summit Avenue, St. Paul

Ten Minnesota botanical artists working with a forest ecologist, an ornithologist and an entomologist have created a visual archive of ten trees in Minnesota’s northern boreal forest most vulnerable to climate change. The Art from the Edge of the Boreal Forest: Reflecting Biodiversity exhibit opens soon at the James J. Hill House in St. Paul and will feature 120 original works of art. The birds, insects and plants associated with the trees, plus those expected to migrate into the forest are also included, as are several decorative wood vessels created by Bob Carls, woodturning artist and co-owner of the Ripple River Art Gallery in Aitkin, MN.

This collection is important as an archival record because the ecology is undergoing slow, silent but significant change due to disturbances caused by fire, invasive insects and stressful climate conditions. The ecosystems on the lower edge of the boreal forest, such as those in northern Minnesota, are much more susceptible to these environmental disturbances.
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Below are five samples of the botanical art you'll see at the Art From the Edge of the Boreal Forest: Reflecting Biodiversity exhibit:
Marj Davis, Hexagonal-pored Polypore Mushroom, Polyporus alveolar
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Kathleen Franzen, Two Spot Sphinx Moths: male, Smerinthus jamaicensis
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Julie Martinez, Bay-breasted Warbler, Dendroica castanea
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Mary Anne O'Malley, Black Ash Branch in Summer, The Intertwining, Fraxnux nigra
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Bruce Wilson, Pitcher Plant, Purple or Side-saddle Flower, Sarracenia purpurpea

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The exhibit runs from January 18 - June 21, 2020. The James J. Hill House is located at 240 Summit Avenue in St. Paul. Admission to just the gallery is free. The $6/$10 admission fee for the House includes the gallery. Minnesota Historical Society members are free. The exhibit opening reception will be in the spring. To keep informed on current events, programs, and special offers related to the exhibition, subscribe to the MNHS e-newsletter.

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Editor's Note: 

Our Mill District neighbors Kathy Franzen and her husband Phil Hage are world travelers, and every year Kathy sketches plant life at the location they're visiting. Kathy has gifted us with a frameable image, complete with the history of the land and flora, every Holiday season for a number of years. We treasure these works of art and hope you have the opportunity to view her work at the upcoming Art From the Edge of the Boreal Forest: Reflecting Biodiversity exhibit. (An added bonus is touring the spectacular James J. Hill House!)

Saturday
Dec282019

Firefighters For Healing Ends 2019 on a High Note

A recent e-newsletter from Firefighters For Healing reminded me of the incredible work this organization does to assist victims of fire, including the residents displaced by the recent Drake Hotel fire. If you would like to help further their work, please donate online or send a check to: Firefighters for Healing, PO Box 374, Champlin, MN 55316.

While they are busy all year long, here are some highlights of how they ushered out 2019:
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On December 17, Firefighters for Healing hosted their 8th Annual Operation Christmas Blessing at the Hennepin Healthcare Burn Center by delivering gifts for patients, meals for staff, 1000 socks for the homeless and joy to all. The Burn Center provides intensive, acute and rehabilitative burn care to children and adults from the Twin Cities and surrounding states who have sustained burn injuries and other complex wounds.

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On December 7, over $750,000 was raised at the Red Tie Gala. These funds will go towards providing for burn survivors and their families, the Camp RED campers who have survived burn trauma, and the firefighters who need support.

At the Gala, Dr. Jon Gayken (above, middle) received the 2019 Red Heart Award for his dedication, leadership and constant pursuit of excellence. Hennepin Healthcare's Burn Center is one of the busiest centers in the nation. It is verified by the American Burn Association and the American College of Surgeons. At Hennepin Healthcare, Dr. Gayken leads a highly trained team who work closely with patients and families in a supportive, state-of-the-art environment to meet their unique needs and achieve the highest level of functioning.

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Broken Clock Brewing Cooperative has released Code 3: Back Draft with a portion of the proceeds going to benefit Firefighters for Healing.

This brew is described as is a sweet stout infused with Morita peppers and a touch of lactose to mellow the pepper. 6.5% ABV, 32 IBU.

This is a limited run, available at the following locations:

On Tap at:
Broken Clock Brewing Coop
Bluenose Gopher
Bunny’s NE
Tasty Pizza

In Stores at:
1010 Washington Wine & Spirits
Blue Max Liquors
Brooklyn Center Liquor
Central Ave Liquors
Fridley on University
Haskells Fairbault
Haskells Maple Grove
Hyvee Brooklyn Park
Hyvee Cottage Grove
Hyvee Eagan
Hyvee Maple Grove
Hyvee New Hope
Hyvee Oakdale
Hyvee Plymouth
Lowery Hill Liquors
Lunds Golden Valley
Lunds Saint Louis Park
MGM Minnetonka
MGM Roseville
Ombibulous
Savage Wine and Spirits
Sentryz
Stinson Wine and Spirits
Top Ten Andover
Top Ten Chanhassen
Top Ten Saint Louis Park
Top Valu Liquors

 

Thursday
Dec262019

Scam Alert from the MPD 1st Precinct

Via a December 26 e-announcement from the Minneapolis Police Dept. 1st Precinct:

Periodically, we get calls and/or reports of suspected scam activity or a theft by swindle.

Additionally, we get reports, often after the fact, of individuals soliciting fraudulent funds from well-meaning people. Many times, using youth as a “prop”.

Scams happen frequently this time of year and often in the busy skyways downtown.

PLEASE BE AWARE

Two of the primary ways people are relieved of their money are through direct face to face contact and electronic calls/emails.

Face to face contact is a more elaborate form of panhandling for an immediate cash gain.

Many panhandling type solicitors will approach busy people as they move along the street or skyway, or may door-knock, asking for donations to phony youth sports teams, to support a charity or request assistance for a benefit fundraiser. This is a common scam.

All will have a very good, convincing and sometimes tragic story and many will have phony paperwork to support their mission. The goal is to take your hard-earned money. If you feel compelled to give, ask for organization information and donate through the proper channels and not to individual Pal-pal type accounts. Do your research. Legitimate organizations (like the bell ringers) will gladly supply the information you request and will have other avenues in place for you to contribute to their cause.   The others are there to only make money by your immediate, emotional response to help and most likely only benefits that one individual.

The other known scams are through phone calls or email and are either after your personal financial information or access to gift card numbers.

Phone/email scams have two main goals. One is you must make a payment by providing a credit/debit card number or bank account number. Typically, these payment methods are different from your normal payment method. They may also request that you buy gift cards and then submit the gift card numbers to rectify your “arrears”. The other is for you to give up a piece of information: a password, PIN, date of birth, social security number, account number or a device number - like a serial or registration number from your computer or phone.

If you receive a phone call NEVER assume the caller ID is correct.

Scammers use a variety of tactics and they will create a sense of urgency.

They may ask you to help someone in need or claim one of your loved ones is hurt or in jail; often impersonating a relative to generate an “emergency”.

A scammer may offer an incentive or something of value in return for your personal information (you send us this and we will give you this). There will be a message of insistence or that the offer is good for a limited time. If it seems like a good deal, inevitably, it is not.

Scammers will impersonate government agencies (IRS, Police or SSA). They may say your taxes are past due, you have outstanding unpaid violations or your Social Security number has been compromised. For example, they will threaten that you will lose your utility service if you don’t act now or that an arrest warrant has been issued if you don’t pay. The IRS, Police or SSA will not call you, will not ask you to pay over the phone and along with utility providers, they DO NOT accept gift cards as a form of payment. NEVER WIRE MONEY to someone you don’t know.

They will also frequently reference computer vulnerabilities by saying, “your device needs new software”, or “your computer has a virus” many times referencing Microsoft or Apple.

If you receive a suspicious call, hang up or delete the email without opening it. Do not give out any information. Do not make any payments or give out your banking information. If you receive a voice message, don’t return the call. If you have doubts, contact the company you have a business relationship with, directly. Get the company’s contact information from a separate source (off a billing statement or the back of your card. Don’t use any number or email given to you by the caller.

Remember these scams are to evoke a physical or emotional reaction from you. Some will attempt to instill fear or to catch you unaware, others will play on your caring, emotional sense of wanting to help. Many will pressure you to act quickly. Stop a minute and think logically. Remain calm. Take a breath. Ask yourself and the caller questions. Make donations only through reputable charities. If you have given any financial information out, contact credit monitoring and your financial institutions immediately.

REPORT. Whether you are approached and asked for money by someone representing what seems like a fake organization and their activity raises your suspicion or you have been a victim of a swindle; PLEASE report it to Law Enforcement by calling 911.

A scam is theft – do not become the next victim

For questions, contact:

Renee Allen, Crime Prevention Specialist
Minneapolis Police Department, First Precinct
renee.allen@minneapolismn.gov
(612) 673-5163

Sunday
Dec222019

January at the Dakota

We've been going to the Dakota for years, and are sharing this list of January shows in case anyone out there wasn't aware of this local treasure. Every month you'll find a varitey of local, national and international music genres.  Photo: Meet Minneapolis

Monday, January 13 - Peter Asher: A Musical Memoir of the 60s and Beyond - Multimedia Retrospective Experience

Sunday, January 19 - Delvon Lamarr Organ Trio Soul Groove Jazz  

Thursday, January 23 - Kneebody Explosive Exploratory Jazz  

Saturday, January 25 -Rebirth Brass Band Incomparable NOLA Brass  

Saturday
Dec212019

New program - Nature Connections - Welcomes Adults 55+ for Free Activities This Winter

Via an e-newsletter from the Minneapolis Park and Rec Board:

Join MPRB naturalists at Loring Park or Matthews Park

This January, the Minneapolis Park and Recreation Board (MPRB) launches Nature Connections, a new program designed for adults 55 & up.

  • Enjoy varied activities focused on nature, including bird-watching, winter tree identification and flower arranging
  • Get insights from an MPRB naturalist
  • Choose outdoor or indoor sessions —  or both!

Outdoor Sessions

Enjoy a stroll or a snowshoe around the park and neighborhood. Walking poles and ice cleats available for use. Sessions focus on topics such as birdwatching and winter tree identification. Time outside depends on the weather, and we'll warm up with a beverage afterward.

Indoor Sessions

Bring nature inside with activities like birdwatching, floral arranging and growing indoor plants.

Nature Connections program details

All sessions for adults 55+ and Free

Loring Park (Downtown) - meet at Loring Community Arts Center1382 Willow St.

January 7 to February 13

Indoors: Tuesdays, 2 - 3 pm

Outdoors: Thursdays, 2 - 3 pm 

Matthews Park (Seward) - meet at Matthews Recreation Center2318 S 29th Ave.

January 9 to February 14

Indoors: Thursdays, 10:30 - 11:30am

Outdoors: Fridays, 10:30 - 11:30am

Registration encouraged / Walk-ins welcome!

Go online: bit.ly/MPRBnatureconnections

Call Matthew Recreation Center: 612-370-4950

Call Loring Community Arts Center: 612-370-4929

Questions? Email LBretheim@minneapolisparks.org

Friday
Dec202019

December 2019 E-Newsletter from 3rd Ward Council Member Steve Fletcher

Thursday
Dec192019

Pre-registration is Now Open for the 2020 Community Connections Conference

Two significant moments for democracy are coming up soon: the 2020 census and the presidential nominating primary. Connect with others in our community to discuss how the census and primary election will affect you, your family and your community on February 1, 2020, at the Community Connections Conference from 9am-4pm. Networking and light refreshments start at 8am.

Pre-registration is now open here, and breakout sessions and bilingual community dialogues will be announced shortly.

This conference is a free, public event that brings together residents of Minneapolis, community groups, neighborhoods and decision-makers to connect, learn and address community issues.

The conference will feature:

  • Free food.
  • Performances by local artists.
  • Kids activities, pickup soccer and goodie bags.
  • Bilingual community dialogues on topics including violence prevention and recovering lost wages due to wage theft.
  • Resources for maintaining or purchasing a home.
  • Job training opportunities and small business assistance.
  • Health and addiction treatment resources.
  • Free and low-cost legal aid.
  • Information about elections and a preview of the 2020 census questions.
  • Presentations and success stories from organizations doing census outreach and voter registration.

Find out more about the conference including breakout sessions, lunch vendors and exhibitors once information becomes available at: minneapolismn.gov/connectionsconf.

About the Census

April 1, 2020, is census day in the United States. This vital count of the population determines funding for important things such as schools and cities, as well as how many representatives we get in Congress. It is critical for everyone in Minneapolis to answer the census questionnaire, and we must work to ensure that no one goes uncounted because of fear, misinformation, language barriers or any other barriers. At the Community Connections Conference, you can learn about the census, how to get involved, how to complete the census, how we use its data, the challenges Minneapolis faces, and how we’re working to ensure that everyone counts in 2020.

Sign up here for conference updates.

Get Involved!

There are many ways to get involved in the Community Connections Conference. You can volunteer, exhibit or sponsor the conference.

Thursday
Dec192019

Hennepin Avenue Downtown Reconstruction Project Update

Hennepin Avenue Downtown Reconstruction Project

Hennepin Ave. reconstruction project, led by City of Minneapolis Public Works, will be reconstructed between 12th Street and Washington Avenue beginning Spring 2019.  The project will reconstruct the pavement from building face to building face, including improvements to public and private utility infrastructure, and improved infrastructure for pedestrians, bicycles, transit, and vehicles.
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Latest Project News

Winter has come but the work continues.  Xcel Energy continues to progress in multiple areas along the corridor.

What's Coming Up 

Not much is changing with regards to what contractors are working and where over the next couple months.  Xcel Energy will continue work through the winter months.

See update attached

Hennepin_Update_Vol19.pdf

For more information on this project contact: 

Construction Manager, hennepinCM@minneapolismn.gov or 612-225-4049

www.hennepindowntown.com

Wednesday
Dec182019

Doug Verdier Shares His Latest Progress Photos of the Water Works Project

Editors Note: Mill District resident Doug Verdier continues to document the progress of the Water Works project. 

Per Doug, watching them unload the 14,000 pound (each) poured concrete blocks with the crane was the most exciting activity. 

Positioning the crane along 1st Street S in preparation for unloading cast concrete blocks.

Flatbed trucks loaded with concrete blocks being positioned for unloading. Crane is on the right of photo.

Workers attaching cables from concrete blocks to crane preparatory to lifting from truck bed.

Concrete block being lifted from flatbed.

Blocks are stacked along 1st Street perimeter of park site, awaiting final placement. Each block weighs 14,000 pounds.

Block marked with recognition of Bank of America City Steps.

Despite snow and sub-freezing temperatures, work continues on the former Bassett and Columbia Mill structures:

On December 18, another crane arrived on the Water Works site, and workers began placing precast concrete sections on the historic ruins of the Bassett Mill, which will become a new park pavilion, housing event spaces and The Sioux Chef restaurant. The following photos show the careful lifting and placement of the sections.


Tuesday
Dec172019

First Thursday Films at North High presents LOVE THEM FIRST: LESSONS FROM LUCY LANEY ELEMENTARY with Conversation Leaders Lindsey Seavert and Ben Garvin, January 2

First Thursday Films at North High presents
LOVE THEM FIRST: LESSONS FROM LUCY LANEY ELEMENTARY
With Conversation Leaders Lindsey Seavert and Ben Garvin
7pm Thursday, January 2
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MSP Film Society, in partnership with the Capri Theater and the Minnesota Historical Society, presents the 2019 MSPIFF Winner for both Best Minnesota Made Documentary and Audience Choice New American Visions Documentary Feature, Love Them First: Lessons from Lucy Laney Elementary, at 7pm Thursday, January 2, at North Community High School, Door 18, 1500 James Avenue North in Minneapolis. North High serves as the alternate location for this film series while the Capri Theater is closed for expansion and renovation.  A map and directions to North High are available online at thecapritheater.org. 

Tickets to First Thursday Films are $5 and can be purchased in advance at mspfilm.org or at the door the night of the show. 

With unprecedented access over the course of a year, Love Them First: Lessons from Lucy Laney Elementary follows the determination of a charismatic north Minneapolis school principal, Mauri Melander Friestleben, as she sets out to undo history. With Lucy Laney at the bottom of the state's list of underperforming schools for two decades, standardized test scores from most black students began rising for the first time under Friestleben's leadership. However, when the school encounters a heartbreaking setback, Friestleben is forced to confront the true measure of student success at Lucy Laney in this story of inspiration, heartbreak, perseverance and the power of love.

Each First Thursday Films screening is followed by a fervent discussion of the movie, this month led by Love Them First directors Lindsey Seavert and Ben Garvin. After graduating from Indiana University's Ernie Pyle School of Journalism and working as a reporter at five news stations stretching from Northern Minnesota, to Nevada and Ohio, Seavert has been a reporter at Minnesota-based news station KARE 11 since 2012. Garvin, a photojournalist for KARE 11, was named 2011 Journalist of the Year by the Minnesota Chapter of the Society of Professional Journalists. In 2017 he served as president of the Minnesota Society of Professional Journalists where he helped overturn a ban on photography in state prisons. Both Seavert and Garvin have received Emmy and Edward R. Murrow awards for their work. 

The First Thursdays series continues with Harriet Tubman biopic Harriet on February 6, featuring discussion leader Professor John Wright, and Cine Latino Audience Award runner-up The Radical Monarchs on March 5.

Topical and relevant in these turbulent times, First Thursday Films aims to create a space for dialogue and better understanding.  Come for the movies. Stay for the conversation.

Tuesday
Dec172019

Holiday Shopping and Disposal Tips from Hennepin Green Partners

Via a December 16 e-newsletter from Hennepin Green Partners

Shopping and disposal tips for the holiday season

It’s that time of year – string lights are blinking, trees lots are selling out, and menorahs are on sale. The holiday season often contains a substantial amount of consumption and waste for many Americans. So making low waste and sustainable choices during the holidays is a lofty and sometimes daunting goal.

Planning ahead is an important part of sustainability during the holidays – many shopping decisions made early in the season have a big impact on what you’ll need to dispose of after the holidays.

Here are a few shopping and disposal tips for commonly asked about items during the holiday season:

Gift Wrap

Wrapping paper is problematic in the recycling process. A lot of it contains glitter, foil, or plastic and it may be covered in bows or ribbons – all of which makes it not recyclable.

Balled up wrapping paper is also an issue. Recycling sorting facilities are set up to sort flat or slightly crunched up paper, so balls of paper likely won’t get sorted correctly.

There are a lot of good alternatives to wrapping paper, including gift bags, cloth wrapping, and decorative reusable boxes. If you do use paper to wrap gifts, use plain paper, avoid anything with glitter, foil, or plastic, and flatten it before recycling. And save those bows and ribbons to reuse next year.

Cards

When purchasing cards, buy or order cards printed on recycled-content paper, consider using a postcard to reduce paper use and avoid envelopes, and opt for cards printed on plain paper so they can be recycled.

Cards that have glitter, foil, or plastic pieces or cards printed on photo paper cannot be recycled. Any cards that make sounds or light up have a battery that should be removed and recycled – batteries are accepted at Hennepin County drop-off facilities.

After the holidays, consider saving cards that have holiday or winter decorations to reuse as gift tags next year!

Trees

Shop at thrift stores for artificial trees – many locations stock up on these this time of year (which also means it’s a good time to donate anything you no longer use).

For real trees, visit a nursery or farm that supports organic and sustainable growing or harvesting practices. After the holidays, check with your hauler or city to see if they offer special pickup options or bring trees to a yard waste site.

String Lights

String lights and cords cannot go in your recycling at home because they get tangled in the equipment at recycling sorting facilities. But they are accepted for recycling at Hennepin County drop-off facilities.

Decor

It’s a bummer when your favorite light up Christmas tree or musical carolers display stopped working, but there’s a good chance you can fix it! If you need help, consider visiting a Fix-It Clinic to get free, guided assistance from handy volunteers.

If you’re shopping for décor to make your home more festive, visit a local thrift store. Many of them have a great selection of holiday decorations for a fraction of the price.

Disposable plates, cups, utensils, or napkins

It’s so tempting to purchase disposable plates, cups, utensils, or napkins with cute holiday and winter designs, and it seems like they’ll make your holiday party much simpler and convenient.

But most of this stuff is not recyclable or compostable (unless you choose certified compostable products and have organics recycling), and you still have to deal with all that extra trash.

Monday
Dec162019

MCBA Presents the Minnesota Book Artist Award Winners

Via a December 16 Press Release

The Friends of the Saint Paul Public Library has named a collaborative group as the winner of the 2020 Minnesota Book Artist Award for their collective efforts on the new artist’s book My Mighty Journey: A Waterfall’s Story. This annual award is presented as part of the Minnesota Book Awards with Minnesota Center for Book Arts (MCBA), and recognizes a Minnesota book artist or book artist collaborative group for excellence in new artistic work. Winners also demonstrate depth of knowledge and quality in the book arts through supporting previous work, as well as significant contributions to Minnesota's book arts community.

My Mighty Journey, written by John Coy and illustrated by Gaylord Schanilec, is the story of the only major waterfall on the Mississippi River – and the changes it has witnessed over twelve thousand years. The idea was originally conceived twenty-three years ago as Coy worked for the Minnesota Historical Society, guiding Minneapolis Riverfront tours. Through his words, and eventually his own participation in image creation, text composition, and printing, he brings to life the geology, history, and people of this place, told from the waterfall’s perspective.

Enhancing this dramatic story are stunning images created by a collaboration of book artists using materials collected along the riverbank: wood and bark from fallen trees, fossil- encrusted limestone, discarded bricks, and even a long-dead dogfish. Collected materials were prepared for direct printing, creating type-high printing blocks, inked and impressioned using Vandercook cylinder printing presses. The illustrations show the progression of the waterfall – eventually known as St. Anthony Falls – as it moved fifteen miles upriver from present-day Saint Paul to its current location in downtown Minneapolis. My Mighty Journey helps viewers realize that most of us are newcomers and that there is so much to learn about the waterfall, the land, the people who have been here, and our relationship to them.
 
The weight and impressive scale of the work fits with the subject. “It couldn’t have been any other way,” stated one juror.

Members of the award committee praised the way that the book clearly demonstrated the great amount of thought and detail that went into every aspect – from the illustration and words to the binding, paper, and typeface – and how the book itself exists as a kind of community, honoring everyone’s best abilities. The committee also commented on how the weight and impressive scale of the work fits with the subject. “It couldn’t have been any other way,” stated one juror.

Anchored by internationally acclaimed artist Gaylord Schanilec, the image development, composition, printing and binding team grew over the five years of this collaboration to include artists Sorcha Douglas, Barbara Eijadi, Paris Fobbe, Ellen Janda, Hans Koch, Greta Lapcinski, Monica Edwards Larson, Rayan Macalin, Kerri Mulcare, Paul Nylander, and Emily Pressprich, as well as papermaker Amanda Degener. 

An exhibition celebrating My Mighty Journey will be on display February 7–March 22, 2020 in the Main Gallery at Minnesota Center for Book Arts, located in Open Book (1011 Washington Avenue South, Minneapolis). A reception will take place on Thursday, February 13 from 6–8pm in MCBA’s Main Gallery, with an artist talk in the Target Performance Hall at 7pm. The group will also receive special recognition and an award at the 32nd annual Minnesota Book Awards Celebration on Tuesday, April 28, 2020 at the Ordway in downtown Saint Paul, sponsored by Education Minnesota.
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About the Minnesota Center for Book Arts (MCBA)
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Minnesota Center for Book Arts (MCBA) is a visual arts nonprofit organization that supports creative expression through traditional and contemporary book arts, including papermaking, bookbinding, and letterpress printing. MCBA’s philosophy and artistic vision challenges its artist community to think beyond the traditional notion of the “book.” Today, books can be bound and unbound, fabricated into sculptures, interpreted as metaphor, experienced as installation or performance, and interacted with virtually. What unites this varied work is a focus on the interdisciplinary expression of narrative.
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About The Minnesota Book Awards
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The Minnesota Book Awards is a year-long program of The Friends of the Saint Paul Public Library that connects readers and writers throughout the state with the stories of our neighbors. The process begins in the fall with book submissions and continues through winter with two rounds of judging. Winners are announced at the Minnesota Book Awards Ceremony each spring. Woven throughout the season are events that promote the authors and connect the world of Minnesota books – writers, artists, illustrators, publishers, editors, and more – to readers throughout the state. In recognition of this and its other statewide programs and services, the Library of Congress has recognized The Friends of the Saint Paul Public Library as the state’s designated Center for the Book. For more information visit thefriends.org/mnba
Sunday
Dec152019

Jamie Malone’s Eastside Restaurant is Offering a 50% Bonus on Holiday Gift Cards Thru Dec. 24

Via a December Press Release:

From now until December 24, Chef Jamie Malone’s Eastside and Grand Café restaurants are offering gift givers a whopping 50% bonus on Holiday gift card purchases.

For every $100 purchase of Eastside or Grand Café Holiday gift cards, shoppers receive a $25 Bonus Card for that restaurant – plus a $25 Eastside Sunday Brunch gift card. Holiday gift cards can be purchased online or in person at each restaurant.

The Holiday gift cards can be redeemed after December 25th. The $25 Eastside Sunday Brunch Gift Card can be redeemed right away.

When Malone took over Eastside restaurant, 305 S Washington Avenue, Food & Wine called it a “massive win” for the city. And in the year since, Malone has augmented its downtown chic with world-class cooking, including a series of family-style offerings ranging from Whole Wood Roasted Duck to Pork Schnitzel and Smoked Ribs. In partnership with executive chef Ryan Cook, she has also given the restaurant its own version of the Happy Hour Snack Attack, and recently launched one of the city’s most inventive Sunday Brunches.

About that Eastside Brunch

The perfect bridge between breakfast and lunch, Eastside’s Sunday Brunch offers guests a multitude of paths to gustatory bliss. Start with Buttermilk Biscuits with Apple Butter – or tease the palate with Island Creek Oysters with seaweed mignonette and cocktail sauce. Ease in with a Spinach Salad, gently tossed with warm bacon vinaigrette, red onion and salsify – or dive into Fried Chicken with honey and espelette B&B pickles.

More traditional main courses range from an Omelette du Jour and Eggs Benedict (elevated by house-smoked pork coppa) to a Blueberry Dutch Baby with maple syrup and vanilla ice cream. They’re complemented by unexpected offerings including Braised Beef Shortrib with black pepper dumplings and fried egg, Spaghetti Carbonara, and a supremely shareable Lobster Thermidor with French fries.

Brunch is offered every Sunday from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.

Two distinct experiences. One extraordinary talent. 

When Jamie Malone took over the much-loved South Minneapolis restaurant, Grand Café, 3804 Grand Avenue S, recognition came quickly. Food & Wine named it “Best New Restaurant” for 2018. And the magazine further credited Jamie for creating its “Dish of the Year” (her sweet & savory Paris-Brest: “a swirl of choux pastry painted with black honey sandwiching ethereal chicken liver mousse.”

Grand Café’s menu changes often, but patrons can count on Malone for offering inventive takes on French classics, heavy on flavor, light on pretense. Adding further intrigue to the menu: the chef’s unique take on Happy Hour fare: her multi-dish Snack Attack offering, featuring a succession of small shareables that can be paired with select $25 bottles of wine.

About Jamie Malone

Jamie received her first James Beard Award nomination in 2013 when she was named a “Rising Star Chef” semifinalist. This was followed by “Best Chef Midwest” nominations in 2014, 2015 and 2018. Food & Wine magazine named her as “Best New Chef” in 2013, and subsequently singled out Grand Café as “Best New Restaurant” in 2018, serving its 2018 “Dish of the Year.”

Saturday
Dec142019

Celebrate Responsibly this NYE with Miller Lite Free Rides on Metro Transit

MILLER LITE® RINGS IN THE NEW YEAR BY GIVING FREE RIDES TO PARTYGOERS ON METRO TRANSIT

Miller Lite is Providing Free and Safe Rides on all Metro Transit Routes on New Year’s Eve

For the ninth consecutive year, Miller Lite is proud to continue its partnership with Metro Transit and J.J. Taylor Distributing to encourage the Twin Cities community to Celebrate Responsibly® and let Metro Transit be their designated driver. Miller Lite Free Rides will provide safe and free rides on all Metro Transit routes starting at 6pm on Tuesday, December 31 until 3am.

The Free Rides program has provided more than 6.7 million people in 28 communities safe rides as part of an ongoing commitment to helping consumers Celebrate Responsibly®. The program encourages partygoers to have good taste and not drink and drive. 

“Miller Lite believes that the only way to ring in the New Year is to do so responsibly,” said Diane Wagner, alcohol responsibility manager for MillerCoors. “Through our partnerships with Metro Transit and J.J. Taylor Distributing, we are making sure that beer drinkers in the Twin Cities have a range of options to get home safely and prevent drunk driving.”

Miller Lite Free Rides has provided more than 1,494,337 safe rides to residents and visitors of Twin Cities since the program began locally in 2011.

“Metro Transit’s partnership with Miller Lite encourages residents and visitors of the Twin Cities to celebrate one of the biggest nights of the year responsibly,” said Metro Transit General Manager Wes Kooistra. “Metro Transit’s bus and train operators are all proud to be your designated drivers this New Year’s Eve.”

“Through our partnership with Miller Lite, we’re proud to kick off the new year by providing free, safe and convenient transit to the Minneapolis-St. Paul community,” said Billie Jo Smith of J.J. Taylor Distributing.

This national program supports Molson Coors Brewing Company’s 2025 goal to implement impactful programs to prevent drunk driving in every market where the company sells beer.

Miller Lite is supporting a national holiday program where consumers 21+ can pledge to be responsible and enter for a chance to win Rides with Uber for a Year. To date, over 280,000 pledges have been received for the four promotional windows they were available for, including the holidays.

Wednesday
Dec112019

Downtown Section of West River Parkway Reopens December 16

West River Parkway will reopen between Fourth Avenue North and Portland Avenue on Monday, Dec. 16, 2019. The parkway and adjacent trails will remain open throughout the winter.

The parkway closure was necessary to accommodate work on Water Works, a new riverfront park project currently under construction.

The Minneapolis Park and Recreation Board appreciates everyone's patience while this exciting new waterfront amenity is constructed.

About this project

Water Works is a transformative park development project adjacent to St. Anthony Falls and the Stone Arch Bridge that will bring significant new historic, cultural, and recreational amenities to one of the most iconic locations in Minneapolis.

Wednesday
Dec112019

A Fort in Paradise: Part I

Article by Michael Rainville, Jr.

Fort Snelling and the surrounding land it sits on are home to some of the most important moments in our history. The beginning of cities, states, and a nation started in this small, yet vital area. The historic fort and state park are going through a transformation over the course of the next few years; transitioning from informing visitors about the importance of the fort itself to telling the many stories of not only the soldiers, veterans, and their families, but also enslaved and free African Americans, Japanese Americans and their roll in WWII, and Native Americans, whose land we occupy. With the coming changes, there is no doubt that Historic Fort Snelling will continue to educate the public on the very diverse history of that land.

1848 paintings by Seth Eastman, "The St. Peters River near its Confluence with the Mississippi"

"Pilots Knob. Mouth of the St. Peters River" by Seth Eastman - 1846-48

For over 12,000 years, Native Americans have traversed the waterways of the Upper Midwest and have called this vast area home; where the forest ends, and the prairie begins. The confluence of the Minnesota and Mississippi rivers was, and still is, the most important spot in the world to the Dakota people. According to their oral traditions, this is the very site where life began for them. Known as Bdote, or “where two waters come together,” many Dakota believe that spirits came down from the Spirit Road, Caŋku Wanaġi, also known as the Milky Way, and when they arrived on Earth, the Creator shaped the first people from the clay of Maka Ina, “Mother Earth.” These people were the Oceti Ṡakowiŋ, or Seven Council Fires, historically known at the Sioux.

Carver's Cave, 1913

The Mdewakanton Dakota consider this area to be their “Garden of Eden.” The center of the world is not the only sacred place located in the surrounding area. The village of Kaposia, Taku Wakan Tipi, or Carver's Cave, Mni Sni, or Coldwater Spring, and Oheyawahi, or Pilot Knob are all located within a mile or so from Bdote. Thousands of years of building a culture and community with Bdote as their paradise, the origin of their people, would be briefly disrupted as colonizers in the east were slowly encroaching.

Portrait of Lieutenant Zebulon Pike, 1810French Canadian fur traders frequented these waterways starting in the 1600s, but it wasn’t until 1805 when the course of Dakota history would change forever. In the summer of 1805, Lieutenant Zebulon Pike was ordered to locate the source of the Mississippi River, explore the northern portion of the newly created Louisiana Territory, and expel Canadian fur traders who were illegally conducting business within the borders of the United States. On August 9th, he began his journey up the Mississippi from St. Louis. His first major stop was in Prairie du Chien, now in Wisconsin, where he was joined by guides who were familiar with the upper Mississippi and a half-French Canadian half-Mdewakanton Dakota translator, Joseph Renville, my first cousin, nine times removed.

Almost a month later on September 21st, Pike and his crew arrived at Bdote. Unfortunately, without permission, he negotiated a treaty that would hand over land at the mouth of the St. Croix River, the land around Bdote, and land up the Mississippi to St. Anthony Falls, Owamni. In total, the treaty gave the United States over 150,000 acres of Dakota land. Only two of the seven Dakota leaders present signed the treaty. It took Washington DC another three years to finally address Pike’s unapproved treaty discussions. With no Dakota representatives present, the Senate agreed to give the Dakota $2,000, or over $31,500 after inflation, even though Pike initially valued the land to be worth $200,000, or over $3,150,000 after inflation. In other words, the Senate agreed to give the Dakota $3,118,500 less than what was agreed upon when they signed the treaty.

Even though the U.S. Senate knew the treaty was invalid, because Pike never had permission to negotiate, they continued to act as though it was a legally binding document and set plans in motion to go forward with putting a military fort somewhere on that land. The need for a fort in this area was immediate. The United States was struggling to keep British Canadian fur traders off U.S.-claimed soil as the nation was trying to expand to the west, but the lack of military forts in the northern frontier made that task almost impossible.

The British claimed land in what is now northern Minnesota, and tensions were rising between the Dakota and Ojibwe because of the pressures the westward expansion of the U.S. was putting on them, so many Native Americans joined the British cause during the War of 1812. This meant that building a fort on the Pike-negotiated land was put on the back burner until the U.S. and British could come to an agreement on their shared border. Bdote, a beautiful land, a sacred land, a land that is the center of the world for the Dakota, will be untouched for the time being, but the arrival of soldiers and settlers is imminent.

Stay tuned for Part II of the story!

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About Michael Rainville, Jr.

A 6th generation Minneapolitan, Michael Rainville Jr. received his B.A. in History from the University of St. Thomas, and is currently enrolled in their M.A. in Art History and Certificate in Museum Studies programs.

Michael is also an intern at the Hennepin History Museum and a lead guide at Mobile Entertainment LLC, giving Segway tours of the Minneapolis riverfront for 7+ years. Contact: mrainvillejr@comcast.net.

Click here for an interactive map of Michael's past articles.

Tuesday
Dec102019

Mill City Summer Opera Announces 2020 Production

Via a December 10 News Release:

Katherine M. CarterMill City Summer Opera (MCSO) announced today that its 2020 main stage production will be Verdi’s Rigoletto, directed by dynamic stage director Katherine M. Carter.

Six performances of the operatic masterpiece will be presented in July at Paikka, a unique 200-seat performance/event space in the Midway neighborhood of Saint Paul. The industrial chic venue, located in an historic mattress factory, features both an interior and courtyard space, creating an al fresco feel. 

“It’s going to be another thrilling summer of opera. With Katherine’s bold vision paired with an acclaimed cast of artists, Season 9 promises to be our most imaginative yet!”
Cory Johnson, MCSO Executive Director
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Carter’s production of Rigoletto will be faithful to the text and music of the classic 1851 opera while setting the action within a new contemporary backdrop – a celebrity fashion product launch event – and framing the story in the context of modern-day issues of consent and power. Carter will bring an innovative approach to reveal a more nuanced story behind one of the world’s most beloved operas, highlighting its relevance to today’s world while avoiding clichés of villains and victims. 

Director Carter has long admired the strong Twin Cities arts community and said she is thrilled to be making her debut here with Rigoletto and MCSO. “I look forward to the opportunity to connect with vibrant, engaged audience members who have shown themselves to be energized by seeing opera in non-traditional venues. This site-specific version of Rigoletto, where the performers can move throughout the space, will change the way they see opera yet again with an intimate, immersive experience,” she said.

The cast includes Eric McKeever (Rigoletto), Amy Owens (Gilda), Daniel Montenegro (Duke), and Hidenori Inoue (Sparafucile). The role of Maddalena will be played by Metropolitan Opera star, Renée Tatum. Conducting sensation, Emily Senturia, boasting recent performances with Opera Philadelphia and Boston Lyric Opera, will lead a 12-member orchestra.
MCSO also confirmed that it will again perform at the Icehouse after a successful run with La Serva Padrona last year. In 2020, the company will present The Impressario, Mozart’s one-act comic opera, at the Minneapolis music space/bar/restaurant. 
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TICKETS
Rigoletto Opening Night tickets ($200), which include a gala reception, reserved seating for the performance and a dazzling after-party with the cast, will be on sale at 10am on Monday, February 3 online at millcitysummeropera.org or through MCSO at 612-875-5544. 
Tickets for all other Rigoletto performances ($30-$125) will be available for purchase for donors of $250 or more beginning 10am on Monday, May 4, online at millcitysummeropera.org or through MCSO, 612-875-5544. Tickets for both Rigoletto and The Impressario will be on sale to the general public at 10am on Monday, May 11 through MCSO, 612-875-5544, or online at millcitysummeropera.org.
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PERFORMANCE DATES AND TIMES
Rigoletto
Paikka, 550 Vandalia St., Saint Paul
- Friday, July 17, Opening Night – gala reception at 6 pm, performance at 7:30 pm, with after-party
- Saturday, July 18 at 7:30pm
- Sunday, July 19 matinee time TBD
- Tuesday, July 21 at 7:30pm
- Wednesday, July 22 at 7:30pm
- Thursday, July 23 at 7:30pm
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The Impressario
The Icehouse, 2528 Nicollet Ave., Minneapolis
- Monday, July 27 at 6:30pm and 9:00pm
- Wednesday, July 29 at 6:30pm and 9:00pm
For more on Mill City Summer Opera, visit millcitysummeropera.org or connect on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram: @mcsummeropera.
Tuesday
Dec102019

Become a Winter Sports Coach with MPRB

Via a December 9 e-newsletter from the Minneapolis Park and Rec Board:

The Minneapolis Park and Recreation Board (MPRB) is seeking enthusiastic volunteer coaches for youth hockey, basketball and wrestling.

  • Practices start in December
  • Athletes are ages 6-18 
  • Teams practice 1-2 times per week
  • Games are scheduled for a weeknight and/or Saturdays (January-February or March)
  • MPRB will provide orientation for all new coaches
  • Can't coach this winter? We'll need coaches for Baseball, Softball, T-ball, and Track & Field next spring/summer

Click here to receive more information or to express interest in MPRB volunteer opportunities.

Contact (612) 230-6493 or recvolunteers@minneapolisparks.org.

Monday
Dec092019

City Council & Mayor Frey Agree to Public Safety Amendments to Mayor's Proposed 2020 Budget

Via a December 9 e-newsletter from 3rd Ward Council Member Steve Fletcher:

On Friday, the City Council debated and unanimously passed a series of amendments to Mayor Frey’s Recommended 2020 budget. These amendments represent weeks of challenging, productive, and collaborative work between the Council and Mayor. It resulted in an agreement that honors Mayor Frey’s proposed investment in the police force while improving the way we budget for MPD staffing to be more predictable and transparent in the future, and that renews and expands our investments in violence prevention.

The Mayor had proposed adding 14 officers to the police department. However, as I have noted to many of you over the last few months, no matter how we voted on that proposal, no additional officers above our current authorized force of 888 would have been in the field next year, due both to the length of our training timeline and the fact that MPD is projected to be behind the staffing curve; MPD is currently projecting we’ll be about 50 officers below our current 888 in June of 2020. If we voted for 14 new officers, MPD planned to use that extra money to fund a bigger recruit class. 

Every time a constituent called me to ask me to support the Mayor’s 14 new officers because we need them on the street this summer, it reminded me that we had work to do to align the public conversation about our budget with the way the Department would actually spend the money we allocate. This isn’t the fault of Mayor Frey or Chief Arradondo - MPD’s staffing curve has been a curious puzzle for outsiders to unravel through many Chiefs and many Mayors. I wrote an op-ed several months ago in the Star Tribune outlining the problem, and started talking with my colleagues and the Mayor’s office about solving it. Mayor Frey and my colleagues listened, and together, we found a way to improve the Mayor’s proposal. 

Instead of adding 14 new positions, Mayor Frey offered an amendment to keep our authorized sworn force at 888 and instead take the $2.4 million proposed for those new positions and put it towards a new, ongoing training investment. Next year, the department will add an additional academy class to get caught up, which, to be clear, is exactly what MPD would have done in 2020 if we had approved Mayor Frey’s original proposal. It is neither an increase nor a cut to the Mayor’s budget proposal for sworn staffing. By budgeting this way, we’re hoping that residents understand more clearly how their investment is being spent, and we’re taking a step toward ensuring that in future years the department will be able to keep a more stable number of officers in the field.

I have also heard from constituents calling for more emphasis on community-based violence prevention. I agree, and I’m committed to getting upstream to address the root causes of crime, and work to prevent the circumstances of poverty, addiction, mental health crises, and desperation that result in crimes in the first place. Council Member Cunningham and I worked with Mayor Frey and our colleagues on the Council to make critical investments of nearly $500,000 in violence prevention. As evidence of their support for these efforts, Mayor Frey and Chief Arradondo collaborated to contribute $242,000 of that from non-critical items in the MPD budget. 

I offered an amendment with Council Vice President Jenkins to restore $142,000 to the Office of Violence Prevention (OVP), $105,000 of which is ongoing funding. Council Member Cunningham added $150,000 to the Group Violence Intervention program and partnered with Council President Bender to allocate $50,000 towards a new Intimate Partner Violence Prevention initiative.  Council Member Warsame added additional funds to OVP and the Youth Coordinating Board (YCB) for targeted neighborhood work. The Mayor and the Council working together, unanimously, to invest in the Office of Violence Prevention, and in a holistic range of violence prevention strategies sends an undeniable signal that we consider violence prevention central to the values, vision, and work of Minneapolis.   

Council Member Goodman and I wrote a separate amendment allocating $267,000 to the Downtown Improvement District for collaborative public safety strategies, including a Late Night Ambassadors program next summer, and funding for groups like Mad Dads and YouthLink for outreach and de-escalation. Knowing that MPD will be on the low end of the staffing curve heading into the summer, it is critical that we invest in violence prevention initiatives -- in downtown and across the city -- to help shoulder the load of public safety work and let the police department focus on what they are able to do best. 

Finally, Council Members Ellison, Johnson, and Schroeder offered an amendment to fund one of the recommendations of this year’s 911/MPD Workgroup, continue that workgroup in 2020, and fund an outside evaluation of the police department’s budget and staffing to make sure we are running it efficiently.  Building on the budgeting improvements we made this year, I believe these efforts will provide much-needed transparency and data to inform future decisions, and help us respond to every emergency call with the right resource funded at the right level to meet our public safety goals.   

I’m proud of the role I played in these negotiations, and of the result, and I’m grateful to my colleagues - especially Mayor Frey and Council Members Cunningham and Goodman for their willingness to debate, listen, compromise, and work to bring the best ideas we all brought to the table into the budget. I hope people are reassured by both the outcome and the process that the entire city is prioritizing public safety, and doing the hard work of collaborating and compromising for the good of Minneapolis.

There’s more work ahead, and there are more good ideas that didn’t make it into this year’s budget, or that aren’t yet sufficiently developed for investment this year. I’ll continue prioritizing public safety, and collaborating with anyone and everyone who has ideas to offer.  We have one more public hearing on the amended budget before we take our final vote, this Wednesday, December 11 at 6:05 P.M. If you have feedback on these amendments, or ideas you’re still hoping to get in this year’s budget, I encourage you to bring them forward there. If you want to be part of the ongoing work of improving our city’s approach to public safety, I’m happy to have your energy and ideas as we continue the momentum of this season’s work into 2020.

Saturday
Dec072019

Mill District Residents Adapt a Houseful of Holiday Cheer to Condo-sized Christmas Wonderland

Article and photos by Becky Fillinger

What to do if you really, really love decorating for the holidays but you’ve moved from a large single family home in the Maplewood suburbs to a Mill District condo? You learn to curate your collection to fit your new space – and do it with panache!

Randy Goetz, now a resident at The Legacy, grew up in Halliday, N.D. In the late 50s early 60s, the North Dakota prairie town of a few hundred people strung colored lights from street lamp to street lamp. Randy’s father built a large wooden star decorated with blue C9 bulbs for display outside the home. Randy took over tree and other interior decoration duties in the 5th grade. “I remember the decorating as a time of family engagement – Dad and I could bond over our plans for the holiday season."  

Jump forward to Randy’s home in Maplewood in the 1990s. He would put up three 7-foot fully decorated trees, and every room would be tastefully decked out for Christmas. He would begin decorating the Friday before Thanksgiving and it would take three full days to finish. Moving to the Bridgewater Lofts 10 years ago presented a dilemma for Randy. It was necessary to cull his collection by half. A subsequent move to The Legacy required another downsizing. As a result, this year it took Randy only 4 hours to decorate, but the outcome is still spectacular.

In addition to a beautiful white flocked Christmas tree with red decorations, his display this year includes Christopher Radko bottle brush trees, vintage tulle and aluminum trees, Gurley candles and a fresh advent wreath. Randy prefers vintage ornaments to mass produced items – finding many of them online at Etsy and eBay. Organic, fresh floral arrangements are also on display throughout the holidays. 

Why does he continue the traditions? “It makes me feel good. I have wonderful memories of decorations in my childhood and later on in my adult homes, and even going to Minneapolis to look at Dayton’s displays.” Randy and his husband, Kevin, have another Christmas tradition. They make cookies, and a lot of them.  This year cookie day was December 6, during which 22 varieties were baked for a grand total of 1,314 Christmas cookies!

How do you celebrate the winter holidays? Do you have long-standing traditions you'd like to share with Mill City Times readers? Let us know via our Facebook page.