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Twin Cities tourism biz braces for Uber impact

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Visitors who pour by the thousands into Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport have long been able to take for granted that fleets of rideshare drivers will be ready to pick them up at the flick of a smartphone and ferry them around the Twin Cities.

In a month’s time, that option could disappear. It’s got local tourism industry leaders more than a little nervous.

“It’s just crazy to think about,” said Angie Whitcomb, CEO of Hospitality Minnesota, a nonprofit group that represents restaurants, lodging and resorts throughout the state.

Minneapolis hospitality and tourism agencies are anxiously contemplating a future without rideshare services, even as they remain hopeful for a resolution to the dispute between the Minneapolis City Council and two rideshare giants over driver pay that has Uber and Lyft vowing a May 1 departure from Minneapolis.

That would leave a big hole in the local transportation system and inflict even more harm on an already struggling hospitality industry, especially hotels, said Adam Duininck, president and CEO of the Downtown Council and Downtown Improvement District.

“We need to build up businesses and not lose more businesses,” he said. “We need to look for more ways to move people around downtown, not less.”

In 2023, there were nearly 1.9 million stays at Minneapolis hotels, an increase of 15% over the year prior, according to Meet Minneapolis. This year is off to a busy start for travel, with 49,190 people passing through Transportation Security Administration checkpoints on March 21 — the second-busiest day at MSP since the start of the pandemic. The busiest day in that period was during MEA week last fall.

The hospitality industry itself is supported by many workers who rely on rideshare access to get to and from work after late shifts. “Our businesses operate on extended hours and at 2 in the morning you can’t be guaranteed there’s going to be public transportation at the front door of your place of business to get you safely home,” Whitcomb said.

Many of Lyft’s top pickup and drop-off locations are hospitality and tourism locations like Hilton Minneapolis, the Minneapolis Convention Center, Hyatt Regency-Minneapolis, and the Hewing Hotel, according to data shared by the rideshare company. While Lyft says it intends to only depart the Minneapolis market, Uber says it will pull out of the Twin Cities entirely.

Duininck decried the Minneapolis City Council’s decision without a plan in place if Uber and Lyft follow through on the promises to leave.

“That is like if the airport shut down Delta and said we can find you rides on American or Spirit,” he said. “It’s irresponsible and it will affect our city, events and tourism.”

Large-scale events rely on ridesharing options for attendees. Ensuring seamless transportation is essential to enhance participants’ overall experience and make Minnesota a premier travel destination, Lauren Bennett McGinty, executive director of Explore Minnesota, said in a statement.

“Ensuring a diverse range of transportation choices is paramount for Minnesota to remain competitive, particularly in major metropolitan areas like Minneapolis,” she said.

A lack of options could potentially jeopardize the millions of dollars the state has invested in the revitalization of downtown Minneapolis post-pandemic and post-George Floyd’s murder, just as some momentum is building toward recovery, Whitcomb said.

“We’re finally having meeting planners from across the country really look at Minneapolis for their events and conventions, but they’re looking at the cost from a holistic perspective,” Whitcomb said. “And if rideshare’s going to be hard to get, or it’s going to be the most expensive in the country … that’s going to impact their decision to come here.”

Hope for statewide rideshare plan

Still, industry leaders are holding out hope for fair wages and assurances that travelers and industry workers will have transportation options that meet their needs.

“We are hopeful that a solution can be found so that any impact to rideshare users — including out-of-town visitors, convention attendees and tourism and hospitality workers — is negligible,” Kathy McCarthy, a Meet Minneapolis spokesperson, said in a statement.

The hospitality industry will never be on the wrong side of wanting people to have the ability to make a living wage and take care of their families, Whitcomb said: “It’s just unfathomable to imagine that we’re solving a problem we think we’re solving and OK with causing so many other problems.”

Whitcomb and Duininck said they are hopeful the Legislature and Gov. Tim Walz can solve the dilemma and keep Uber and Lyft running. Duininck said it’s a truly open question how people, and especially visitors with little knowledge of local routes and regions, will get around efficiently.

“We need to solve this issue,” Duininck said. “It is not good for our city.”



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494 highway closure in Bloomington, Richfield coming this weekend

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Another closure of I-494 in the south metro will put thousands of motorists on detour this weekend.

The eastbound lanes of the freeway will be shut down between Hwy. 100 and Cedar Avenue/Hwy. 77 and westbound lanes between Cedar Avenue/Hwy. 77 and Interstate 35W from 10 p.m. Friday to 5 a.m. Monday, the Minnesota Department of Transportation said.

Some ramps leading to I-494 will start closing at 8 p.m. Friday. Motorists will be directed to use Crosstown Hwy. 62 to get around the closure, the agency said.

American Boulevard, which runs parallel to I-494, will be closed starting Monday through Nov. 11 between Hwy. 100 and France Avenue in Bloomington.

American Blvd. is closed to through traffic in both directions between Hwy 100 and France Ave

The closures are related to construction in which MnDOT is adding an EZ Pass lane on I-494 between I-35W and Hwy. 100, rebuilding the I-35W/I-494 interchange and replacing bridges over I-494 at Portland, Nicollet and 12th avenues.

In the west metro, westbound Hwy. 55 remains closed through Nov. 1 between Hwy. 169 and Interstate 494. Motorists can use I-394 as a detour MnDOT said.



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In northern Minnesota, DFL tries to win back long-held House seat it lost last election

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Retired judge, Democrat Mark Munger, challenges Republican Natalie Zeleznikar.



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How Minnesota’s schools are serving millions more free breakfasts

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Serving hundreds more meals each day brings other logistical challenges, too.

Blaine High School is transitioning from a once-a-week food deliveries to a twice-a-week delivery schedule. The school was running out of storage space for the volume of food it was getting to meet demand, said Noah Atlas, Anoka-Hennepin’s director of child nutrition. Such a shift, he said, might soon be needed at Coon Rapids Middle School, where delivery time requires the Tetris-like strategy of fitting boxes of juice and milk into the cold storage room.

Schools also now have to be pushier about asking parents to fill out paperwork that once determined whether a family qualified for free or reduced-price lunch. Those forms are no longer required to get lunch or breakfast, but they are still used to calculate how much state funding districts receive for other programs, including extra support for students learning English, for example.

“Nutrition programs have had to work all through these challenges,” Peterson said. “But in the end, the payoff is that we’re seeing better behavior of the students, and their attention span has increased because they’re not hungry.”



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