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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 March 1, 2020 - March 31, 2020

Wednesday
Mar042020

DMNA Approves Resolution to Fund Mill District Police Substation 

At its February 24, 2020 meeting, the Downtown Minneapolis Neighborhood Association (DMNA) unanimously approved a resolution to fund a police substation on South Second Street in the Mill District.  Working with Sherman Associates, owner and developer of the Vicinity, and the Minneapolis Police Department (MPD), Joe Tamburino, former chair of the DMNA, spent several years making the police substation a reality. 

The DMNA will be signing a five-year license giving the MPD’s Homeless Initiative officers a base of operations.  It is hoped that having the substation in the neighborhood will assist with local outreach and provide an enhanced police presence in the neighborhood. The substation will be available for use by any licensed Minnesota peace/police officer.

Pam McCrea, chair of the DMNA, applauded the work that went into making the substation happen with “special thanks to Joe Tamburino who took the leadership and never dropped the ball.” Steve Fletcher, city council member and neighborhood resident, when asked about the substation, noted that the anticipated use of the space would put eyes on the street without drawing resources away from higher priority tasks.

Tuesday
Mar032020

Meet Minneapolis Coronavirus Update

Via a March 3 e-announcement from Melvin Tennant of Meet Minneapolis:

In mid-February, we shared initial information on COVID-19 (also commonly known as the Coronavirus). Today, I’d like to provide you with an update, as our Meet Minneapolis team continues to monitor, prepare and navigate new developments locally, nationally and internationally.

Over the next 90 days, approximately 140 meetings and conventions booked Meet Minneapolis are scheduled to take place. Currently, there have been no cancellations at the Minneapolis Convention Center (MCC) due to COVID-19, and we have only learned of one reported meeting cancellation at a local hotel. What we have encountered, thus far, are more than a dozen inquiries from groups looking for on-the-ground information on what we are doing.

How is Meet Minneapolis addressing COVID-19?
  • We have been proactively gathering information from multiple entities and providing details to meeting planners with groups scheduled to be Minneapolis.
  • We are in regular communication with our main tourism assets and organizations to learn about the proactive and preventative measures they are taking. More details can be found below.
  • We added information to the MCC website, which can be found here.
  • We are responding to media requests with the facts and not speculation. (We have had two requests so far.)
  • Internally, we are reviewing our business continuity plans and addressing the needs of our staff members, as it is essential for Meet Minneapolis to remain operational should circumstances deteriorate. 
Organizationally, Meet Minneapolis is committed to providing accurate information to and about our tourism and hospitality community.
We are also making sure our customers know that, currently, no cases of COVID-19 have been identified in the Minneapolis-St. Paul region or the state of Minnesota. We are emphasizing that there are no domestic travel advisories or restrictions. Plus, we are providing customers with information from the MDH, CDC and WHO.

Our tourism and hospitality industry supports more than 37,000 workers in Minneapolis. We know COVID-19 has the potential to greatly impact the lives of our residents and the livelihoods of many others. 
Tuesday
Mar032020

Helpful 2020 Census Information from the City of Minneapolis

The 2020 Census is almost here!

Ten Days Away:

  • As of March 2nd, we are only ten days away from the 2020 Census going live and being able to complete the 2020 Census. According to the U.S. Census Bureau, on March 12th, the community will be able to visit My2020Cenus.gov to complete the census questionnaire.
  • Invitations to respond to the 2020 Census will arrive between March 12-20 with instructions for responding online.
  • You can respond online or by phone.

Where can I get help completing the census?

  • If you need assistance to complete the 2020 Census, we encourage you to visit one of our Trusted Spaces questionnaire assistance centers (QAC). Our QAC's are community spaces staffed by familiar faces available to assist you with completing the 2020 Census. For more information about locations and hours please click here.
Census Bureau video guide to completing the census  

Click to watch a short video on how to complete your census questionnaire online. 

What questions will you be asked on the 2020 Census?

  • The U.S. Census Bureau has provided the questions that they will ask here.

 

U.S. Census Bureau's Why We Ask factsheet  

Click to view the U.S. Census Bureau's "Why We Ask" factsheet

How will people experiencing homelessness be counted?

  • In 2020, the Census Bureau will devote three days to counting people who are experiencing homelessness across the country. These days follow months of outreach and coordination with local census offices, partners, shelter directors, service providers and others. The dates are as follows:
    • March 30, 2020: Counting people who are in shelters.
    • March 31, 2020: Counting people at soup kitchens and mobile food vans.
    • April 1, 2020: Counting people in non-sheltered, outdoor locations, such as tent encampments and on the streets.

How to avoid census scams online:

Phishing is a criminal act in which someone tries to get your information by pretending to be an entity that you trust. Phishing emails often direct you to a website that looks real but is fake—and may be infected with malware.

It is important to know that the Census Bureau will not send unsolicited emails to request your participation in the 2020 Census. Further, during the 2020 Census, the Census Bureau will never ask for:

  • Your Social Security number.
  • Your bank account or credit card numbers.
  • Money or donations.

    In addition, the Census Bureau will not contact you on behalf of a political party.

What’s at stake?

The responses to the 2020 Census will determine how the federal government will distribute billions of dollars to community. We invite you to view and share the following 2020 Census videos, featuring local community members speaking about what’s at stake for Minneapolis communities:

  1. VJ-African American Community
  2. Cassandra-Native American Community
  3. Ser Lee-Hmong Community
  4. Bihi-Somali Community
  5. Rico-Latinx Community
  6. Bosteya-Somali Community
  7. Nadia-Latinx Community

Census Events/News

Census Statistics in the Schools week  

Learn about Census Statistics in Schools (SIS Week)

Getting an accurate count video  

Click to view the "Getting an Accurate Count" video

What Will you do After High School video  

Click to view "What Will you do After High School?" video

Census 101 for students factsheet  

Click to view the Census 101 for students factsheet

  • March 2nd-March 6th is Census Statistics in the Schools
  • March 12th – Don't forget to apply for $750 in Grant money from the State of MN via The Minneapolis Foundation for census engagement.
  • Minneapolis Complete Count Committee Meeting, Tuesday March 17: Are we ready for the census?
  • Census on the radio
    • La Raza (95.7 FM) March 3 and March 31, 3:00-4:00pm
    • KALY (101.7 FM) March 12, 2:00-3:00pm
    • KMOJ (89.9 FM) March 25th, 1:30-2:00pm
  • The National League of Cities has just announced an open call for proposals.
    • Grants of $2,500-$40,000 are available for cities, towns, villages, and their local partners to improve or increase Get Out The Count activities that target historically under-counted and hard-to-count communities.

Translated materials and resources

Tirokoob 101 Somali Census 101 brochure preview

The City of Minneapolis has translated census outreach materials into additional languages not available on the Census Bureau website.

Visit minneapolismn.gov/census/wecountresources for information in:

  • Hmong
  • Lao
  • Somali

The resources page also includes existing translations on the US Census website in:

  • Spanish
  • English
  • Other major languages.

We Count placards held by community members  

More information about the City of Minneapolis We Count campaign:

Read more about the Minneapolis We Count campaign, including materials, resources and door-knocking and volunteer opportunities at wecountminneapolis.org

Follow the City of Minneapolis on our platforms and help us to spread the word about being counted by sharing our videos and resources:

Monday
Mar022020

MSP Film Announces Wicked Women Screening Series

In celebration of the upcoming release of breakthrough filmmaker Rose Glass’s divine horror tale SAINT MAUD, MSP Film presents the Wicked Women Screening Series, including SUSPIRIA on 3/18, ROSEMARY'S BABY on 3/25, and a free advance screening of SAINT MAUD on 3/31. Admission for the retro titles are just $5. St. Anthony Main Theatre, 115 Main Street SE.

SUSPIRIA -  In Dario Argento's horror classic, an American newcomer to a prestigious German ballet academy comes to realize that the school is a front for something sinister amid a series of grisly murders.
.
ROSEMARY'S BABY - A young couple moves in to an apartment only to be surrounded by peculiar neighbors and occurrences. When the wife becomes mysteriously pregnant, paranoia over the safety of her unborn child begins to control her life.
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SAINT MAUD - The debut film from writer-director Rose Glass, Saint Maud is a chilling and boldly original vision of faith, madness, and salvation in a fallen world. Maud, a newly devout hospice nurse, becomes obsessed with saving her dying patient’s soul — but sinister forces, and her own sinful past, threaten to put an end to her holy calling.
Sunday
Mar012020

Soccer in the Twin Cities

Article by Michael Rainville, Jr.

The twenty-fifth season of Major League Soccer has officially begun. Our team, Minnesota United FC, is opening this milestone season on the road for two games, against the Portland Timbers and San Jose Earthquakes, before their home opener at Allianz Field against the New York Red Bulls. While there is a lot of hype and excitement around Minnesota United, the state’s history of professional soccer stems back to 1976 and beyond.

1925 photo of two local soccer clubs facing each otherBefore a professional team called Minnesota home, many immigrant communities started their own clubs dating back to the 1880s. Amateur teams like the Minnehaha Thistles and St. Paul F.C. played across the Twin Cities and Upper Midwest, and every year starting in 1888, they competed for the Shaw Cup, the state’s first prestigious soccer trophy.

In the 1900s, the sport continued to make strides and gain popularity. In 1952, the Minnesota Soccer Association, now the Minnesota Amateur Soccer League, was founded. The next decade saw the Minnesota Youth Soccer Association begin, who is now the host association of the Western Hemisphere’s largest youth soccer tournament at the National Sports Center in Blaine, the USA Cup. If you’re interested in learning more about the beginnings of soccer in Minnesota, check out this article by Brian Quarstad of FiftyFive.One, an online local soccer magazine.

Minnesota Kicks, 1977 

The first professional soccer team in the state came in 1976, the Minnesota Kicks, when the Denver Dynamos moved to Metropolitan Stadium. During their six years in the North American Soccer League, the Kicks made the playoffs every year, and made it to the final of the Soccer Bowl in their first year. They even became the first team to win four straight NASL division titles. When stars like Pelé came to town, the Met was rocking and raucous with 45,000 fans in attendance. People would even go just to tailgate outside of the stadium, a tradition that Minnesota United fans are trying to continue on. Unfortunately, the team ran into financial problems and folded after the 1981 season even though they planned to move into the new Metrodome the next year.

In 1984, Minnesota once again fielded a team in the NASL when the Fort Lauderdale Strikers moved to the Metrodome. This would be the last season of the NASL, and the Minnesota Stickers would move to the Met Center and join the Major Indoor Soccer League for four seasons before folding.

Minneapolis City Soccer Club logo

A couple years later in 1990, the head coach of the St. Paul Academy boys soccer team, Buzz Lagos, rounded up the top amateur players in area and the Minnesota Thunder came to be. In 1994, the Thunder joined the U.S. Interregional Soccer League and a year later, the team turned pro. During this era, the Thunder helped the careers of future US Men’s National Team players, Tony Sanneh and Manny Lagos, the current chief soccer officer and sporting director for Minnesota United. The Thunder would go on to play in the United Soccer League, the second tier on the US soccer pyramid, and created great rivalries that have stuck around to this day against the Montreal Impact, Portland Timbers, Seattle Sounders, and Vancouver Whitecaps.

The 2005 season was historic for the team. In that year’s iteration of the US Cup, a tournament with competitors from every tier of the US soccer pyramid, the Thunder defeated three MLS teams before getting knocked out of the tournament in the semi-finals by the LA Galaxy. 2009 ended up being their final season, when financial problems once again became the final blow. That season, a ninth grade Michael attended a match against the Puerto Rico Islanders with his teammates and coaches of DeLaSalle High School’s ninth grade soccer team, also known as the Islanders. With the help of the Dark Clouds, the Thunder’s supporter group, we chanted throughout the match “our Islanders are better than yours.” Good times.

Thankfully, a few people decided that professional soccer in Minnesota should stick around, and the year after the Thunder folded, the National Sports Center in Blaine created the NSC Minnesota Stars. The stars would join the second iteration of the NASL, this time a second-tier league, in 2010 with former player and Minnesota soccer legend, Manny Lagos, as their head coach. A year later, the National Sports Center did not meet the financial criteria to be able to continue to own and operate the Stars, so the NASL stepped in and ran the team, which would be known as Minnesota Stars FC. The 2011 season saw the Stars become champions. In 2012, the team would play a few games in the Metrodome, and would eventually make it back to the final. The Stars couldn’t pull off a win this time around, but in attendance was Dr. Bill McGuire who would purchase the team very soon after.

Minnesota United inaugural home opener ticket from 2017Now rebranded as Minnesota United with the state bird, the loon, as a focal point in their marketing, professional soccer in Minnesota was here to stay. By uniting soccer fans from across the Twin Cities and state, Minnesota United grew at a quick pace. Fan favorites Christian Ramirez won the Golden Boot, most goals scored in a season, in 2014 and 2016, and Miguel Ibarra earned the Golden Ball, league MVP award, and a callup to the US Men’s National Team in 2014 after an amazing season.  The success of Minnesota United saw their fanbase grow and new supporter groups popping up to join the Dark Clouds, such as True North Elite.

In 2017, Minnesota United made the jump to Major League Soccer, and are coming off a 2019 season that saw them make the playoffs for the first time and open a brand-new soccer specific stadium, Allianz Field. Because of the stadium’s high quality and the atmosphere the fans and supporter groups have created, Allianz has already hosted men’s and women’s national team matches. If you haven’t been to a Minnesota United match at Allianz Field yet, you won’t be disappointed and are guaranteed to have a blast. If smaller crowds are your thing, but still want to have a fun time, check out Minneapolis City SC, a local team that plays in the National Premier Soccer League, the fourth tier of the US soccer pyramid, with home matches at Augsburg’s Edor Nelson Field. They’re a club that is going above and beyond for the sport in Minneapolis and have developed local talent who have gone on to play professionally in MLS, Canada, and Sweden. 

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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.

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