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Ramsey County Fair canceled for 2023 as talks break down

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Unable to resolve a long-running dispute with Ramsey County leadership, operators of the Ramsey County Fair have called off this year’s fete and say they will explore other options for its possible return in future years.

The Agricultural Society of Ramsey County said it cannot operate a fair under the “impossible demands” of Ramsey County commissioners and may have to move from Maplewood to another location or merge with another county fair to keep the 110-year event alive.

“It is very clear they do not want a County Fair,” the society’s Board of Directors wrote in a press release posted on its website last weekend. “We are considering our options.”

The Ramsey County Fair was last held four years ago. At that time, the county informed the Society it would no longer be able to use the second floor of a large brick barn for exhibits. The county cited concerns about structural deficiencies of the access ramp and the building lacked fire protection, according to a news release posted on the county website Monday.

The county in 2019 also raised concerns about insurance limits for the fair’s vendors and contractors and noted this would need to be addressed.

The fair, which moved from White Bear Lake to its current home near Aldrich Arena on White Bear Avenue in Maplewood, was canceled in 2020 due to COVID-19.

While the fair was on hiatus, Ramsey County reviewed the services it provides for events and found the Ramsey County Fair was getting benefits other events were not. Those benefits included staff time to help with set-up and teardown, recycling and trash, and utilities that in 2023 would be an estimated $25,000, the county said.

The county began drafting a policy to govern how it supported external events and required the Agricultural Society Board to follow practices applied to other organizations that partner with the county, including carrying necessary insurance and paying costs associated with producing the event.

“These requirements would bring the Agricultural Board into an arrangement that is consistent with other organizations partnering with Ramsey County while ensuring Ramsey County taxpayers are not being burdened with the costs associated with event production,” the County said.

The County and the Agricultural Society have been in discussions for the past three years

As for the future, county officials say they are open to future partnerships with the Agricultural Society.

Agricultural Society officials say the county’s demands are too steep.

“We have always been a great, free family fair managed totally by volunteers,” the Board wrote. “We can not operate a fair under the conditions and demands from Ramsey County Commissioners.”



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Star Tribune

The story behind that extra cheerleading sparkle at Minnetonka football games

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Amid the cacophony and chaos of the pregame preparation before a recent Minnetonka High School football game, an exceptional group of six girls is gathered together among the school’s deep and talented cheerleading and dance teams.

The cheerleaders, a national championship-winning program of 40 girls, dot the track around the football field. As the clock ticks down to kickoff and their night of choreographed routines begins, the six girls, proudly wearing Minnetonka blue T-shirts emblazoned with “Skippers Nation” and shaking shiny pom-poms, swirl around the track, bristling with excited energy.

Their circumstances are no different from any of the other cheerleaders with one notable exception: The girls on this team have special needs.

They’re members of the Minnetonka Sparklers, a squad of cheerleaders made up solely of girls with special needs.

A football game at Minnetonka High School is an elaborate production. The Skippers’ recent homecoming victory over Shakopee brought an announced crowd of 8,145. And that is just paying attendees; it doesn’t include school staffers, coaches, dance team, marching band, concession workers, media members and others going about their business attached to the game.

The Sparklers program, now in its 12th season, was the brainchild of Marcy Adams, a former Minnetonka cheerleader who initiated the program in her senior year of high school. Adams has been coach of the team since its inception, staying on through her tenure as a cheerleader at the University of Minnesota.

She started the program after experiencing the Unified Sports program at Minnetonka. The unified sports movement at high schools brings together student-athletes with cognitive or physical disabilities and athletes with no disabilities to foster relationships, understanding and compassion through athletics. Many Minnesota schools offer unified sports.

“I grew up in a household that valued students with special needs and valued inclusion,” Adams said. “I saw a need to give to those students. At Minnetonka, we have a strong Unified program, and this was a great opportunity to build relationships and offer mentorship opportunities.”



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Here’s how fast elite runners are

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Elite runners are in a league of their own.

To get a sense of how far ahead elite runners are compared to the rest of us, the Minnesota Star Tribune took a look at how their times compare to the average marathon participant.

The 2022 Twin Cities Marathon men’s winner was Japanese competitor Yuya Yoshida, who ran the marathon in a time of 2 hours, 11 minutes and 28 seconds, for an average speed of 11.96 mph. He averaged 5 minutes and 2 seconds per mile.

That’s more than twice the speed of the average competitor across both the men’s and women’s categories, of 5.89 mph, according to race results site Mtec. The average participant finished in 4 hours, 26 minutes and 56 seconds. That comes out to an average time of 10 minutes and 11 seconds per mile.

And taking it to the most extreme, the fastest-ever marathon runner, Kelvin Kiptum of Kenya, finished the 2023 Chicago Marathon in 2 hours and 35 seconds, for an average pace of about 13 mph. Kiptum averaged 4 minutes and 36 seconds per mile.

Here is a graphic showing these differences in average marathon speed.



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Liberty Classical Academy sues May Township after expansion plans put on hold

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The school said in its lawsuit that both Hugo and May Township consider the land rural residential zoning, and that the codes identify a school as a conditional use. Hugo officials have generally supported the LCA plan, granting a building permit in 2022 that allowed LCA to invest $2.1 million into the former Withrow school for renovations.

The school said in its lawsuit that the existing septic system is failing and needs to be replaced, regardless of expansion plans.

The school said it notified neighbors of the property in 2022 and again in 2023 about its land purchase. About 50 residents in total attended those meetings, and just two expressed concerns over the issues of traffic and lights, according to the suit. The school met with the May Township board in May of 2023, and minutes from that meeting show that the board had no concerns beyond lighting at the time, according to the suit. The board asked if the school could use “down lighting” for its athletic fields and the school said it would.

In June, Hugo City Council approved a conditional use permit for the school, but the May Township board voted to extend the decision deadline to early August.

The suit says it was at a subsequent meeting in July that May Town Board Chairman John Pazlar objected to the plan for the first time, saying “the main concern, based on public comment, is to keep Town of May rural.”

The school said its plans for the May Township portion of its property had been submitted eight months prior to the July meeting, and that its plans met requirements of the Minnesota Pollution Control Agency.



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