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Community responds to Minneapolis teachers union post on Israel

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The JCRC of Minnesota and the Dakotas sent a letter to the district’s superintendent and school board, calling the resolution “anti-Semitic.”

MINNEAPOLIS — Exactly one week ago, the Minneapolis Federation of Teachers shared a resolution on Israel and Palestine that’s been met with plenty of criticism.

“My reaction was shock. My reaction was dismay,” said Jeremy Cohen, who has an elementary-aged child enrolled in Minneapolis Public Schools. “

Abigail Loyd’s kids are also in the district but in middle and high school. Both parents are Jewish and say they believe it wasn’t MFT’s place to take a stance on the war.

“I didn’t understand why a teachers union who is tasked with the responsibility of educating kids and keeping them safe would weigh in to such a divisive topic,” said Cohen.

“I’m also personally hurt that, as a family who is a union family actually and a family that was out there on the picket lines last year with the union, that this is kind of what this union is now coming out and standing for,” said Loyd.

Their names are two of the nearly 800 signatures on a letter the Jewish Community Relations Council of Minnesota and the Dakotas sent to the district’s superintendent and school board Monday, calling the resolution “anti-Semitic.”

“The statement is anti-Semitic,” Cohen said. “And had they come out on the complete opposite end of this topic, I would have just as much of a problem with it.”

The letter also demands the district publicly distance itself from the resolution, and allow the JCRC to lead a district-wide conversation with educators on Jewish Identity and Antisemitism. 

“And what’s the tradition or the history of the union coming out for topics like this that aren’t really in the purview of the teacher’s union?” Cohen asked.

“As a labor union, we have been on the forefront throughout the history of this country, in attempting to guide this country into doing the right thing,” said Marcia Howard, MFT acting president. “And so calling upon our government to divest from the machines of war I think is right in the same wheelhouse that this particular union has continued to maintain.”

Howard says it was a member, not herself, who introduced the resolution and that it passed with a small group abstaining to vote, and an even smaller group voting no. 

“I believe at least three members spoke to it and no one spoke against that resolution,” Howard said.

While some argue full membership wasn’t present, Howard says full membership is rarely present, even though meetings are always available on Zoom.

The parents say they’re disappointed in the timing of the resolution. 

“Three-hundred thousand Jews were gathered on the mall in Washington D.C. for a peaceful gathering, and right when that gathering was beginning, they blasted it across their social media,” Cohen said.

“We had a regularly scheduled member meeting in October and that’s when the resolution was brought forth,” said Howard. “We have another meeting in November that we encourage our members to show up for. If they have resolutions, they know the procedures to put that on the agenda. So it wasn’t as if that was intentional timing. At no point since October 7th will there be such a thing as good timing. People are hurting right now.”

Minneapolis Public Schools has yet to respond to KARE 11’s request for comment.

Watch all of the latest stories from Breaking The News in our YouTube playlist:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=videoseries





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Former MN State Trooper Shane Roper, charged with manslaughter, requests case dismissal

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The former state trooper is charged with the killing of 18-year-old Olivia Flores.

ROCHESTER, Minn. — Editor’s Note: The above video first aired on 8/26/2024.

The former Minnesota State Patrol trooper charged with the killing of an 18-year-old girl is asking for his case to be dismissed and a change of venue for it to be moved out of Olmstead County. 

The former trooper, Shane Roper, and his attorney argue that the “extensive and regional media coverage” jury pools are likely tainted and a fair trial could not be conducted in Olmstead County. 

According to a criminal complaint, Roper was driving 83 miles an hour, full throttle with his lights and siren off when he sped through the busy Rochester intersection by the mall and slammed into 18-year-old Olivia Flores.

Records show he’d been suspended twice and reprimanded twice more for similar behavior.

The order from Roper’s attorney also asks the court to preclude the introduction of any evidence related to prior speeding or traffic incidents involving Roper. 

Roper and his attorney are asking for charges 1-8 to be dismissed for “lack of probable cause.”



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‘This doesn’t change anything’ Biden apology for Native American boarding schools draws mixed reaction

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For the very first time, a sitting President has apologized for boarding schools that tore Native Americans apart and led to countless cases of abuse and death.

MINNEAPOLIS — During his first presidential visit to Indian Country on Friday, Joe Biden delivered a historic and emphatic apology, acknowledging 150 years of abuse, trauma and death inflicted by Native American boarding schools.

“I formally apologize, as President of the United States of America, for what we did,” Biden said. “It’s one of the most horrific chapters in American history,” said President Biden.

Christine Diindiisi McCleave, former CEO of the National Native American Boarding School Healing Coalition, spent years documenting the stories of boarding school survivors and advocating for justice and accountability by the US leaders.

“My family has two generations of boarding school history that I know of,” McCleave said, during an interview for the KARE 11 Series “Lost History,” which detailed the impact of boarding schools in Minnesota.

During his speech on Friday, President Biden acknowledged the work of the Native American Boarding School Healing Coalition and efforts to better understand the horrors and generational trauma the schools inflicted.

“Generations of Native children stolen, taken away to places they didn’t know,” Biden said. “Children abused emotionally, physically and sexually abused, forced into hard labor, some put up for adoption without the consent of their birth parents. Some left for dead in unmarked graves.” 

Christine Diindiisi McCleave: “I struggle with what I’m supposed to say and what I really feel.”

Kent Erdahl: “Why do you say that?”

McCleave: “Well, because today is historic and while I am grateful to see this progress being made. I am also realizing just how short it falls… from real reparations, from real healing.”

She knows she’s not the only one who feels that way. The National Native American Boarding School Healing Coalition surveyed survivors in 2016.

“The thing they wanted the least was an apology because, while it is an acknowledgement, it doesn’t change anything,” McCleave said. “The majority of them said they wanted a truth commission. Trying to find out exactly how many boarding schools existed, how many children went to those boarding schools and how many children died at those schools.” 

She says an investigation led by Interior Secretary Deb Haaland, whose grandparents and mother were among those sent to these schools did help better understand that impact, but it only scratched the surface.

“They were only able to investigate the Federal Government’s records,” McCleave said. “Half of these schools were run by churches, of various denominations, and so a truth commission would be able to look into those records as well.”

“Nearly one thousand documented Native child deaths, though the real number is likely to be much, much higher,” Biden said on Friday.

Bills in both the House and the Senate could make that commission a reality, but until that happens, Christine says she can’t ignore the politics of an apology that took place in a swing state, just days before an election.

McCleave: “This apology doesn’t change anything for my mother, who was abused as a child. Of for my grandfather who was a abused at a Catholic Indian Boarding School.”

Erdahl: “Do you hope that this isn’t just an election ploy?”

McCleave: “I hope that this apology actually helps that bill get passed. Native American people are no stranger to being political pawns, so you know what, if this is an election ploy so be it, I hope something good comes out of it.”



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Hazelden addiction, recovery experts host first cannabis summit

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Researchers spoke about increased THC potency and the impact on youth brain development.

ST PAUL, Minn. — Whether purchased from dealer or dispensary, weed has become more potent over the years. In 2022, the federal government reported THC levels more than tripled since 1995.

Hazelden Betty Ford Foundation Graduate School addressed this Friday at its first cannabis summit. Attendees primarily  included the nonprofit’s graduate students as well as undergraduate students from nearby universities.

Speakers included researchers from the University of Minnesota, Hamline University, Mitchell Hamline School of Law and others.

Ken C. Winters, is a senior scientist at the Oregon Research Institute’s Minnesota location and a consultant for the University of Iowa’s Native Center for Behavioral Health. 

He covered the interplay between youth, cannabis and health.

“It’s not your grandparents’ marijuana these days,” Winters said to the students.

The Hazelden Betty Ford Foundation Graduate school offers a 2-year program, in which students like John Ryan and William Barksdale are earning counseling degrees in substance use and mental health.

“The takeaway would be that you’ve seen potency levels increase quite a bit, and the research is trying to keep pace with that,” Barksdale said.

“As we saw today, marijuana use has gone up in the last couple years such that it’s eclipsed alcohol use in terms of daily users in the United States,” Ryan added. “It’s is much more concerning now because there is such a higher degree of potency that’s available on a wider basis.”

Ryan says it’s especially concerning for youth.

“The subject of the last presentation, which I found quite engaging, was the specific effects on adolescents,” he said. “So, teenagers and people within that young adult range, the 18 to 25-year-olds because that’s generally the period the most brain development takes place. So that’s the area of concern … but it’s still something that I think is being studied and being observed in the first stages of that.”

Kevin Doyle provided opening remarks. He has more than 35 years of experience as a licensed professional counselor. Today, he’s president and CEO of the grad school.

“Potency, dosage, frequency of use, availability, legal cutoffs in terms of age, all those things need to be talked about,” Doyle said. “Adolescent brain development. We know more and more about that every year. Sometimes it seems like every day we learn more about that.”

“How do we as a treatment community need to be prepared to respond?”

The summit comes as Minnesota works to set rules for the cannabis industry after legalizing the drug for recreational use last year. A public comment period is expected later this fall.



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