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GOP leaders call new state flag ‘an insult’

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GOP Chairman David Hann and Deputy Chairwoman Donna Bergstrom are blasting the state’s new flag, saying Democrats are trying to “erase our history.”

ST PAUL, Minn. — Editor’s note: The video above aired on Dec. 19, 2023. 

Minnesota GOP leaders are blasting the state’s new flag while launching an effort to “save” the old one. 

Chairman David Hann and Deputy Chairwoman Donna Bergstrom sent out a press release denouncing the new flag, which was approved in December by the State Emblems Redesign Commission. The Republican leaders say the old flag holds great historical importance and maintain that, contrary to the views of their Democratic rivals, it unites Minnesotans by recognizing the people and events that helped create Minnesota. 

“The flag the DFL eliminated was a version of the historic flag our regiments fought under during the Civil War,” Hann said in a released statement. “Minnesota was the first state to offer troops to the Union cause in 1861, beginning a long tradition of leading the nation in confronting injustice. The DFL quest to erase our history is repugnant and should be rejected.”


“Keeping the current flag would have been a powerful acknowledgment from the Walz Administration and the DFL that our Native contributions are valued,” added Bergstrom, pointing to her status as a Native American and tribal member. “The new flag erases every trace of our contributions and every trace of us. With eleven federally recognized Tribes who call Minnesota home, the DFL flag design is an insult and an affront to the sacrifices and contributions we have made to our state.”

In an attempt to reject the new flag and save the old one, Hann, Bergstrom and other GOP-ers have launched a website that sells t-shirts, asks supporters to sign a petition supporting the old flag, and take part in a poll. 

The GOP leadership isn’t the first political voice to challenge Minnesota’s new flag. The Crow Wing County Board blasted the change at a meeting in late December, with one board member calling the new flag a “whitewashing” of Minnesota’s history. 

The current flag was adopted in 1957 with slight changes from one adopted in 1893. It features the official state seal on a blue field. Some Native American groups have said the seal’s imagery is offensive, depicting an Indigenous person riding off into the sunset as a white settler plows a field with a rifle nearby.

State lawmakers will have the final say when they assemble for the 2024 legislative session. 

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Itasca County woman accused of filling out deceased mother’s absentee ballot

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An Itasca County woman is facing three felony charges after allegedly filling out her mother’s absentee ballot, which arrived at their home after she passed.

ITASCA COUNTY, Minn — A northern Minnesota woman is facing multiple felony charges after allegedly filling out the absentee ballot of her mother, who passed away in August. 

According to the criminal complaint for Danielle Christine Miller, the Itasca County Auditor noticed the discrepancy on Oct. 9. The ballots were not opened, but flagged for fraud because one had the signature of a deceased person on the envelope.

Absentee ballots were sent out on Sept. 20, but the criminal complaint states Miller’s mother died on Aug. 31. 

When a sheriff’s office lieutenant spoke with Miller, she told them she filled out her mother’s ballot and signed her mother’s name on the envelope, the criminal complaint alleges. 

“The Defendant admitted her deceased mother was an avid Donald Trump supporter and had wanted to vote for Trump in this election but had passed shortly before the absentee ballots were received,” the court document states.  

If convicted, the maximum sentence is 15 years in prison. A first appearance is scheduled for December. 



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Cleanup underway at old MPD Third Precinct building

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More than four years after it was torched and ransacked following the murder of George Floyd, cleanup is underway.

MINNEAPOLIS — Contractors and security crews methodically worked to remove razor wire and large sections of security fencing around Minneapolis’ former Third Police Precinct building on Monday.

The site has been sitting, seemingly untouched, since it was torched and ransacked by protestors after the murder of George Floyd in 2020.

The sight of movement at the site was so surprising for some, that it elicited claps and photos from passersby.

“If they are taking the fences down, it must mean something is happening,” said Marne Detmar, who has spent years walking by the building. “It’s coming back and that’s such a good thing after the devastation that was what happened.”

Detmar, like others in the community, is hopeful the building will be used as a community space in light of that devastation and the years of inaction that followed.

“It’s a painful reminder to this community of what everybody went through,” she said.

“I feel like it’s more a punishment if you think about it,” said Zyanna Goode, who also lives in the neighborhood. “You know, they’ll fix a pot hole that’s inconvenient for early commuters but for our community it’s been like four years. What took so long?” 

The community around the building has seen many changes in that time.

Janice Downing helped lead the transformation of the nearby Coliseum Building, which nearly burned down during the rioting in 2020. Four years later, the Coliseum re-opened as a space for local businesses, non-profits and community members. 

“As we brought our building up, we were like, ‘What about you? Do you. Do it,'” Downing said.

Now, she says they are anxious to hear more about what comes next… next door.

“The city has done multiple listening sessions and I’m like, ‘How many times to do you have to listen in order to get the message that people want you to make this a community-based event center that people can come and use,'” Downing said.

Though plans for the building do include a community space, many questions remain about what it will look like and whether the city council will support plans to turn some of it into an early voting center, which acts as a central location for city elections staff, training and equipment.

“We are a bit a ways away from exactly what it’s all gonna look like,” said Public Works Director Margaret Anderson Kelliher. “But we have heard loud and clear by a 3 to 1 ratio. People really like this idea of a democracy center with community space. And that is our goal is to achieve that.”

In the meantime, community members hope cleanup will finally move quickly, so healing can follow.

“I do not think that it should be used as a political backdrop. It has nothing to do with national politics,” Detmar said. “But I have my thoughts about the city council and some of the city council members and the fact that they have not stepped up when it comes to the police force in general and the police precinct that still stands the way that it is.”

“I think it’s about being a part of the solution,” said Kamal Allah, who also lives nearby. “The talk is cool. Everybody has something to say, but who is going to do something? Who is going to be part of the change, who is going to actually going to stick their neck out and be a part of it.” 



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New Rochester Symphony music director finds path

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Rochester Symphony has a new music director for the first time in more than 40 years. Chia-Hsuan Lin’s journey to conducting came after a life-altering incident.

ROCHESTER, Minnesota — In Carlos Simon’s “Fate Now Conquers,” the composer was inspired by a journal entry from Ludwig van Beethoven in 1815 that read, “Iliad. The Twenty-Second Book But Fate now conquers; I am hers; and yet not she shall share In my renown; that life is left to every noble spirit And that some great deed shall beget that all lives shall inherit.”

“When you think about fate, there’s so much unknown; there’s so much uncertainty. And then you just kind of have to go through with it and then really experience it yourself,” said Chia-Hsuan Lin, Rochester Symphony’s new music director. 

Lin can relate. Her journey to conducting came after a life-altering incident. But Lin has always been passionate about music. 

“I was a kid and I was watching TV. It was a piano concerto. And then I saw the pianist on stage doing this… fingers flying on the black and white keys. I was mesmerized. I loved it,” Lin recalled. 

Her parents fostered her curiosity, putting her in piano lessons at the age of 3. 

While growing up in Taiwan, Lin studied piano in elementary school and then percussion. She majored in percussion performance at National Taiwan Normal University. 

“After college, I was applying for graduate programs in the United States and then I was hit by a car. So that kind of changed the trajectory of my career,” Lin said. 

While riding her scooter home to meet a student for a music lesson, a car turned left on a red light and crashed into Lin’s scooter. Lin broke her left wrist and suffered internal bleeding. 

During her time in the hospital and while recovering at home, Lin felt restless. 

“Something was missing and I couldn’t imagine what life would be like without playing music,” she said. 


Not able to play percussion with a broken wrist, Lin said, “I was looking for something during my recovery time after the accident and I thought, let me try conducting.” 

Even though Lin’s wrist healed, by then she was fully focused on conducting — a path she’s not sure she would have taken had it not been for the accident. 

“It really was a big turning point for me,” Lin said. “For me, that was such an important time that changed how I perceive music and also how I perceive life in general. I think it makes me really, really treasure every time that I get to be whether on the podium or be with friends and especially be able to perform with a group of musicians who also love this art.” 

The Rochester Symphony celebrated its season opener earlier this month with Lin as the new music director. The former director, Jere Lantz, retired in 2022 after more than 40 years. 

For the 2023/2024 season, final candidates were invited to conduct a concert. 


“There’s just something compelling about the way she conducts. She’s very efficient and precise. You know what she wants. She shows it really quickly which all of us who are pros really appreciate. Let’s get it done,” said Karen Hansen, a clarinetist who has been with the Rochester Symphony since 1991. 

Hansen also served on the search committee. 

“She’s very passionate and I felt even when she was doing her audition time that she really drew a lot of out of the orchestra, musically, just by what she shows. Now as we’re working with her, we get more into the details of things she wants to tweak and shape,” Hansen said. 

For the season opener, the Rochester Symphony’s program, “Immortal Beethoven” showcased “the exhilarating power of music.” The program included Simon’s “Fate Now Conquers,” Max Bruch’s Violin Concerto No. 1 and Beethoven’s Symphony No. 5. 


“Music creates this unlimited space and place for imagination. How I feel might be different from how you feel, but I really want to… create that joined moment that we’re all here and to go through the struggle, the intimate moment and the unknown, and then see where Beethoven take us to that triumph, celebratory last movement in Beethoven 5. I want to share that there might be struggle, you might feel there’s fate, but Beethoven conquered it all with his art. I really want to share that with everybody,” Lin said. 

When asked if she saw parallels between the program and Lin’s own life, she smiled and said, “Maybe. Maybe unconsciously. I didn’t think about it that much at the time when we were looking at the program, but maybe unconsciously something is there inspiring me.”

Rochester Symphony’s next concert, “Sleepers Awake” is November 16 and will feature the Rochester Symphony Chorale. 

Lin also does some guest conducting in the Twin Cities. In December, she will conduct Tony DeSare with the Minnesota Orchestra. 



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