Star Tribune
Owner of Burger Moe’s wants to tear down St. Paul’s historic Justus Ramsey house
The Justus Ramsey House, built in 1852, sits on the patio of Burger Moe’s on W. 7th Street in St. Paul.
It’s one of the oldest houses in the city and the oldest surviving limestone house from St. Paul’s pioneer era, and it’s listed on three historic registers — including the National Register of Historic Places.
But recent damage has prompted the stone cottage’s owner to seek its demolition.
Neighbors say the owner apparently wants to add more tables to his patio.
“That’s what Moe always says,” said Dave Thune, a longtime area resident and business owner. ” ‘I could get four more tables in there.’ “
Contacted by phone Friday, Burger Moe’s owner Mojtaba Sharifkhani — who uses the name Moe Sharif — was asked why he applied to knock down St. Paul’s oldest stone house.
“I’m not in position to talk about it,” he said.
Asked if he would be willing to sit down and discuss it later, he said, “I don’t need to talk to you.” When asked for the name of his attorney or representative, Sharifkhani said, “No.”
“Moe’s been wanting to get it out of there for eight years,” said Thune, the area’s former City Council member. “He’s been asking me, and I have been saying, ‘Moe, this is an incredible asset. This could be a wedding chapel.’ “
Thune added: “He just doesn’t see it as an option for him. It’s hard to keep a building upright if the owner doesn’t want it.”
Sharifkhani’s move to raze the 16.5-by-34-foot cottage has mobilized preservationists to save another historic building in city’s most historic neighborhood, said Tom Schroeder, an attorney and area resident. The Historic Irvine Park Association, Historic Saint Paul, the Little Bohemia Neighborhood Association and the West 7th/Fort Road Federation have joined in the effort.
Schroeder said preservationists filed an emergency petition with the state Environmental Quality Board for an environmental assessment in order to “stop the clock” on demolition. It was accepted for review.
Because the Justus Ramsey House is a local Heritage Preservation site — on the state and national historic registers — demolition permits must go to the Heritage Preservation Commission for review and approval.
A hearing before the city’s Heritage Preservation Commission has been scheduled for Nov. 7.
Questions about damage
According to Crystal King, a spokeswoman for the city’s Department of Safety and Inspections, Sharifkhani submitted a standard demolition application on June 29. DSI inspectors wrote condemnation orders on Sept. 21 and Oct. 10.
“This means that the house and the patio cannot be occupied,” King wrote in an email.
Schroeder, who owns the historic Waldmann Brewery nearby, and Jim Sazevich say they wonder how such a historic building so quickly came to warrant demolition.
One of five surviving pioneer stone houses in St. Paul — a list that includes Waldmann — the Justus Ramsey House has been extensively reviewed and inspected over the years, Schroeder said. As recently as 2015, it was in “perfect condition.” Now, there is a hole in the roof, the interior has been damaged, and part of an exterior stone wall has collapsed.
Sazevich, a historian with an encyclopedic knowledge of St. Paul’s oldest houses, said he’s known Sharifkhani from when he was “slinging hash” at the diner across the street from Burger Moe’s. That diner is now the Downtowner — also owned by Sharifkhani.
The little cottage is an aggravation, Sazevich said.
“He came to me and said he wanted to tear it down or change it to better serve him,” Sazevich said.
As the owner of an historic property, Sharifkhani should have been required by the city to keep it in good repair, Schroeder said. He wonders why that didn’t happen.
“That’s a great question,” Schroeder said, adding he is required to do so for Waldmann.
Schroeder and others are raising the alarm on a fellow business owner because they say preserving even a few historic sites enriches the entire community.
“I don’t know Moe very well, but I know him enough to know he’s a good person,” he said. “His values may not lie in preservation. Clearly not. I mean, he’s applied for a demolition permit for this structure.”
What now?
In an email, a spokesman for Mayor Melvin Carter wrote that “the mayor is aware of the issue and is monitoring with city staff.”
City Council Member Rebecca Noecker, who represents the area, helped broker a deal in 2016 that saved St. Paul’s Hope Engine Co. No. 3 fire station from being razed. It is now the Hope Breakfast Bar. Preservationists have asked Noecker to intercede again.
“I’ve heard a lot of concern from the community, from neighbors. I’m working to slow [demolition] down,” Noecker said. “Often, we can find more creative solutions than it originally appears.”
She pushed for an independent review of the structure, which has been cordoned off to keep the public away. The cottage’s future, she said, is likely somewhere else.
“Everybody agrees this isn’t the best location,” Noecker said.
Neighbors have suggested moving it to other sites, including several vacant lots in the area or to open space near Keg & Case Market, on the grounds of the former Schmidt Brewery. A meeting is set for 7 p.m. Thursday at Waldmann to discuss alternatives.
Has she heard from the mayor’s office?
“I have heard nothing from the mayor so far,” Noecker said.
The small house was built in 1852 for Justus C. Ramsey, brother of Alexander Ramsey, who owned the property jointly with Alexander and others from 1849 to 1852, according to Sazevich. The first known resident was Robert A. Smith in 1853. Smith would later become St. Paul’s longest-serving mayor.
Star Tribune
Balloon release honors MN crash victims
Dozens wept and embraced before releasing scores of balloons Saturday over north Minneapolis to remember two community pillars who were killed in a fiery car accident.
The crowd gathered near 26th and Emerson avenues to remember Esther Jean Fulks, 53, and Rose Elaine Reece, 57. They died on Dec. 16 when Teniki Latrice Elise Steward, 38, allegedly drove through a red light and struck their vehicle. A teen waiting at a nearby bus stop also was injured.
Fulks and Reese “gave their love and their hard work and dedication to the community. And as you can see, there’s people out here for them,” said Fulks’ daughter, D’Nia. “I’m going to miss my mom. That was my world, I was with her day in and day out. I was hoping to come home to my mom and it didn’t happen.”
“It means a lot,” Esther’s son, Joseph Loyd, said of neighbors attending the balloon release. “It shows what they contributed to the community and how much they meant to people. Not just their own families, but they touched countless other families and helped people.”
Emmary Thomas set a candle down at a bus stop during a balloon release Saturday for Esther Fulks and Rose Reece at 26th and Emerson avenues in north Minneapolis. Fulks and Reece died in a crash at the intersection on Dec. 16. (Ayrton Breckenridge/The Minnesota Star Tribune)
Flowers, balloons, candles and pictures sat at a bus stop during a balloon release Saturday for Esther Fulks and Rose Reece in north Minneapolis. Fulks and Reece died in a crash at the intersection on Dec. 16. (Ayrton Breckenridge/The Minnesota Star Tribune)
Drakarr Lobley hugged a supporter during Saturday’s balloon release for Esther Fulks and Rose Reece in north Minneapolis. Fulks and Reece died in a crash at the intersection on Dec. 16. Lobley is Reece’s son. (Ayrton Breckenridge/The Minnesota Star Tribune)
Family and friends said Fulks and Reece were pillars of the community who treated strangers like family and brought love to those around them. Both had worked as navigators for the Minneapolis Cultural Wellness Center since 1998, connecting residents to food, clothing, shelter and other resources.
“They reminded us daily of the transformative power of service, love, and cultural connection,” Elder Atum Azzahir, executive director of the Cultural Wellness Center, said in a statement. “They were not just navigators — they were beacons of hope, guiding people toward brighter futures.”
At the crash scene Saturday, loved ones embraced while shedding tears and sharing memories. Anthony Hamilton’s “I Can’t Let Go” played as passing motorists shouted condolences and words of support. Caution tape strung to a traffic cone near the intersection fluttered in the wind.
Star Tribune
Party City to shutter hundreds of stores across the U.S., including 10 in Minnesota
Hit by headwinds including inflationary pressures, competition from e-commerce sites, big box retailers, pop-up stores and even a helium shortage, Party City is going out of business.
The closing of the nation’s largest party supply store, reported by CNN on Friday, is expected to shutter more than 700 retail stores in North America by the end of February, including 10 stores in Minnesota.
According to the company’s website, Party City has outlets in Apple Valley, Bloomington, Chanhassen, Coon Rapids, Maple Grove, Maplewood, Roseville, St. Cloud, St. Louis Park and Woodbury. Employees contacted at stores in Roseville, St. Cloud and Apple Valley said they had heard of the closing but could not comment.
Party City, which sells everything from balloons, costumes and birthday banners to gender reveal props and New Year’s Eve tiaras, filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in January 2023. That resulted in the cancellation of nearly $1 billion in debt.
The 38-year-old New Jersey-based company exited bankruptcy after naming a new CEO, Barry Litwin, in August. But the company was still contending with more than $800 million in debt, according to CNN. The New York Times reported the company employed more than 16,000 people.
Star Tribune
Panel warns against vitamin D, calcium use to prevent falls in older adults
A panel of independent health experts recommended this month against older adults using vitamin D and calcium supplements to prevent falls and fractures, citing inadequate evidence to support their effectiveness.
The guidance from the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force underscores the risks of supplementation without prior testing and diagnosis for a vitamin D deficiency or for osteoporosis.
While vitamin D and calcium are important for bone health and muscle function, the task force, a blue-ribbon panel of experts in disease prevention and evidence-based medicine, said the supplements do little to reduce falls or fractures, and they may increase the risk of kidney stones.
The task force said the recommendation applies to people living at home, including women who have gone through menopause and men 60 years and older. It does not apply to people in assisted living or nursing homes because people living in those facilities may be more prone to health complications, including risk of falls.
Patients whose medical providers have suggested supplements as part of their clinical regimen are recommended to continue with that guidance.
The task force assigned a grade of D to the recommendation, indicating that it advises against use of the supplements because of moderate or high certainty that they provide no net benefit or that the harms outweigh the benefits — discouraging its use.
Falls are the leading cause of injury-related death among people 65 and older, a problem that increased steadily from 2012 to 2021. In 2020, health care spending related to falls in older adults that did not result in death was $80 billion, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
John M. Ruiz, a task force member, said the answer to minimizing the risk of falling does not lie in vitamin supplementation. He said a review of research by the health experts found no dose of vitamin D with or without calcium was useful in preventing falls and fractures.
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