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Longtime Minneapolis Park Board workers say they’re fed up with low wages and morale

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Brothers Dana and Jason Hendrickson have spent three decades as arborists taking care of the trees in the award-winning Minneapolis park system. It’s a family profession; their father was an arborist starting in the 1970s. Jason’s wife worked for the Park Board writing grants for invasive species removals, and Dana’s daughter has cut grass at Bryn Mawr Park.

The Hendrickson brothers, both in their 50s, say looking after the urban canopy has long been good, honest work. The arborist position was competitive in their father’s day, and his pay afforded them a comfortable childhood, with a house in Linden Hills. But in recent years, inflation has consistently outpaced wage growth, leaving the Hendricksons worried for younger colleagues starting families and unable to afford living in the city they serve.

“There’s not a whole of speakers for the trees out there and I was happy to be one,” said Dana Hendrickson, who fondly recalls his father quizzing him on the scientific names for trees and proudly believes being an arborist runs in his blood. “But our buying power is not what it used to be. We want to be moving forward, not backwards. I feel like there was more dignity in the position back then.”

Many frontline park workers like the Hendricksons say the job has gotten tougher, with challenges ranging from emerald ash borer infestations to homeless encampments developing — and being cleared from — Minneapolis parks. And with tight budgets and higher inflation cutting into pay, tensions have been rising between Park Board management and workers organized with the Laborers International Union of North America (LIUNA).

Contract negotiations have been ongoing since December without agreement. The union filed for mediation in February, and lately a small army of LIUNA members have been turning up at Park Board headquarters, holding informational pickets and giving commissioners an earful.

“When I look around at staff, I see people who are really passionate about what they do,” horticultural crew leader Matt Gassman said at Wednesday’s board meeting. “You’ll also hear from those folks that some of us are on food assistance. I’ve heard people who say they’d like to start a family but that’s financially out of reach … People are hurting, basically.”

In a statement, Park Board spokeswoman Robin Smothersacknowledged its a tough moment for the agency’s budget.

“Unlike the City of Minneapolis, our funding sources are limited. Considering the recent news that property tax collections are down, budget constraints are tighter than ever,” she said. “The Park Board is committed to a culture of transparency, communication and listening.”

The Park Board’s latest wage offer is a 2.75% raise in 2024 without market adjustments, according to LIUNA. Inflation is currently at 3.15% after rising as high as 9% in the summer of 2022, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics’ Consumer Price Index. Wage keep limping behind inflation. Since COVID-19, annual raises for Minneapolis park employees have ranged from 1.5% to 2.5%.

Workers’ purchasing power has diminished, and they say their wages are no longer competitive with those of many other park systems. Under their 2023 contract, top-scale Minneapolis “parkkeepers” earn $30.99 an hour. Data from the League of Minnesota Cities’ 2023 local government salary survey shows 20 suburbs, from Apple Valley to Woodbury, paying “park maintenance workers” $35.55 to $44.98 an hour.

The Park Board is aware of the League’s survey results, but prefers its own analysis of salary comparisons, which show that Minneapolis park salaries are at or above those of similar organizations, spokeswoman Smothers said. The Park Board’s internal wage analysis is not public data because it was created for union negotiations, she said.

Union business manager AJ Langeblames noncompetitive wages for turnover and burnout among the workers who remain. Rules prohibiting workers from criticizing the Park Board and employee discipline perceived as unfair or retaliatory have also sunk morale, he said.

In December, the Park Board required forestry employees to sign new work rules banning certain speech: “Employees should never speak negatively about the MPRB &/or the Forestry Department when communicating with the public. Doing so has the potential of degrading public support which can have budgetary implications.”

Some workers thought the new work rule was related to increasing pressure from north Minneapolis environmental activists questioning the Park Board’s approach to ash tree condemnations. The union called it illegal and filed a unfair labor charge with the state Bureau of Mediation Services.

The Park Board ultimately rescinded the directive. The work rule was never enforced, and park employees have been notified that is it no longer in effect, Smothers said.

The union says the Park Board is also asking for certain contract concessions this year, including: eliminating transfer rights from forestry to park maintenance, a longtime pathway to promotions; limiting subjects permitted in bargaining such as scheduling and staffing levels, and taking away professional development opportunities. The Park Board is also seeking limits on “detail” worker provisions that set pay for people temporarily filling in on high-paid roles.

Park Board leaders declined to discuss concessions, saying they are a part of “confidential” negotiations, but Smothers described the union’s characterizations as “misleading.”

“Respect in the workplace is key,” said Mitch Clendenen, a south Minneapolis crew leader who said he’s tired of his workers getting stuck with discarded needles while cleaning parks.

“Treat your workers with respect and stop treating them like they are blue collar trash,” said arborist Scott Jaeger at a Park Board meeting last month. “We are human beings, thank you.”

The next mediation session between the Park Board and union is scheduled for April 16.



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Winona-area House seat — one of the last DFL rural holdouts — could be key to legislative control

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Rep. Gene Pelowski retired from the Legislature earlier this year, creating a must-win seat for DFLer Sarah Kruger and Republican Aaron Repinski.



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Blaine mayor, council election offers different visions for growth

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Saroya has had a turbulent term on the council, representing the 1st Ward in southern Blaine since the beginning of last year. And now she faces a tough contest from retired Rochester fire Captain Chris Ford.

Earlier this month, the council censured Saroya for violating the city’s code of conduct regarding working with city staff. That came after two employees filed formal complaints, substantiated by an outside investigator.

One complaint stemmed from Saroya speaking during public comments at an April planning commission meeting about an apartment proposal. At the meeting, she echoed resident concerns, and also accused officials and staff of “rubber stamping” such items and ignoring neighbors. City rules advise council members not to attend commission meetings, or only do so as an observer, due to concerns about using their position to influence decisions.

At a later meeting, some on the council disagreed with the way she addressed staff. Saroya defended herself, arguing she has been repeatedly retaliated against for voicing concerns. She called on residents from the dais to vote out the council unless they want more “apartments, car washes and all this junk in our city.”

Saroya’s supporters appreciate that she has been a vocal critic of council actions and frequently raised questions about transparency, conflicts of interest and spending. But others argue her approach is harming relationships and could lead to turnover at City Hall.

Saroya, the council’s first Muslim member, views the censure as a “badge of honor.”



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Russia is behind viral disinformation targeting Walz, intelligence official says

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WASHINGTON — Groups in Russia created and helped spread viral disinformation targeting Democratic vice presidential candidate Tim Walz, a senior U.S. intelligence official said Tuesday.

The content, which includes baseless accusations about the Minnesota governor’s time as a teacher, contains several indications that it was manipulated, said the official with the Office of the Director of National Intelligence.

Analysts identified clues that linked the content to Russian disinformation operations, said the official, who briefed reporters on the condition of anonymity under rules set by the office of the director.

Digital researchers had already linked the video to Russia, but Tuesday’s announcement is the first time federal authorities have confirmed the connection.

The disinformation targeting Walz is consistent with Russian disinformation seeking to undermine the Democratic campaign of Vice President Kamala Harris and Walz, her running mate. Russia also has spread disinformation aimed at stoking discord and division ahead of voting, officials said, and may seek to encourage violent protests after Election Day.

Last month, analysts at Microsoft revealed that a viral video that baselessly claimed Harris left a woman paralyzed in a hit-and-run accident 13 years ago was Russian disinformation. More recently, a video surfaced featuring a man claiming to be a former student of Walz’s who accused the candidate of sexual misconduct years ago. Private researchers at firms that track disinformation, including NewsGuard, already have concluded the video was fake and that the man in the footage isn’t who he claimed to be.

Some researchers have also suggested the video may contain evidence that it was created using artificial intelligence, but federal officials stopped short of the same conclusion, saying only that the video contained multiple indications of manipulation.

China and Iran also have sought to influence the U.S. election using online disinformation. While Russia has targeted the Democratic campaign, Iran has gone after Republican Donald Trump with disinformation as well as hacking into the former president’s campaign. China, meanwhile, has focused its influence efforts on down-ballot races, and on general efforts to sow distrust and democratic dissatisfaction.



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