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It’s the first day of school for most Minnesota students. Here’s what to expect.

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Call it Academic Opening Day. Or the great School Tip-Off. Maybe kickoff?

Tuesday marks the first day of school for most Minnesota students — more than 800,000 kids are heading back into the classroom for a new year.

At Eagle Ridge Middle School in Savage, Samiya Maow said she couldn’t sleep the night before she started sixth grade. She was nervous, excited and a little afraid of the new schedule of moving from class to class, unlike elementary school.

“You don’t have to go to just one class,” she said. “It’s a lot.”

Tim Lundahl, who teaches sixth grade science at the middle school, greeted new students as they stepped off the bus.

Seventh and eighth grade students start the school year at Eagle Ridge virtually so that sixth-graders have the campus to themselves. The younger students begin their day with an assembly where eighth-graders tell them what to expect and how to navigate the transition from elementary to middle school.

“It gives them a greater level of comfort,” he said of the first day’s structure.

Free meals for all

The day at many schools kicked off with breakfast — now free for all students, as is lunch — after the state Legislature passed a bill making meals free for students in public schools and some private institutions.

As first graders filtered into the cafeteria at Hidden Valley Elementary in Savage for lunch, a nutritional worker asked for a PIN before handing them a tray and ushering them into line. The numbers help school staff keep track of how many meals they serve so they can get a federal reimbursement.

Hidden Valley Principal Kristine Black said the school has always had a high proportion of students who qualify for free lunch. But rolling out the free meals program, particularly the expanded breakfast offerings, reduces the stigma often attached to school meals. It’s also less paperwork for families and it ensures every pupil returns to class ready to learn.

“This is going to take away so many barriers,” Black said. “It’s a blessing for students and it’s a blessing for families. They learn better when they eat well.”

Building culture for academic success

Educators are still grappling with slides in math and reading proficiency that preceded the pandemic but were exacerbated by the extended length of time students were out of the classroom. Legislators and educators hope a renewed focus on phonics in the classroom and a slate of state-approved reading programs reverse the trend.

In Savage, Eagle Ridge Principal David Helke said educators expect students have some catching up to do academically. A big step toward that comes through making the school a place students want to be.

He’s looking forward to helping students at start their own affinity groups — a rarity at the middle school level. Building that community helps mitigate disruptive behavior, he said, and sets students up for academic success, too.

“So much of our work here has to be rooted in supporting them in this way so they can succeed academically,” Helke said.

More changes for a new year

The new school year will also bring a host of other changes.

Bathrooms will be stocked with free menstrual products as a result of legislation aimed at reducing inequity among students who can’t afford pads and tampons. And some school safety drills will look a little different than they did before — students will undergo an hour of violence prevention training during the year and teachers must host classroom discussions after lockdown and lock-out drills.

School resource officer programs will also look different on some campuses amid debate over a controversial new law that limits student restraints. The disagreement prompted law enforcement to pull officers from schools in Moorhead, among other districts. Anoka-Hennepin, the state’s largest district, lost all but one of its school resource officers.

In places such as the Rochester, Bloomington and South Washington County districts, however, police departments will still station officers in middle and high schools.

Up early for a fresh start

In Minneapolis, more than 200 freshman trickled into Edison High School on Tuesday morning as staff waved pompoms and greeted them in a variety of languages. Upperclassmen were set to come later in the morning.

Principal Eryn Warne helped direct buses and cars and waved at parents as they dropped off their students.

Many of the parents tried giving last minute advice — “Make the most of it!” — out the car windows as their teens headed inside. Few of them even looked back.

A few students lingered on benches by the front door, heads bent over their cell phones. Warne greeted them cheerfully, asking, “When was the last time you were up this early?”

Wendy Bonete, a bilingual assistant at Edison, helped a handful of new students get their schedules and navigate their first morning at an American high school. Many of them moved to the U.S. over the summer, mostly from Ecuador. Others came from Somalia and Afghanistan.

“It’s exciting to see them starting their education here,” she said.

Freshman Adna Ali moved from Somalia at the end of June.

“I am scared and excited,” she said. “It’s the first day, so it’s new.”

Check back with StarTribune.com throughout the day for news updates on the first day of school.



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Kamala Harris campaigns in La Crosse, Wis. as election nears

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“I honestly think he used to understand how tariffs work,” Cuban said. “Back in the 90s and early 2000s, he was a little bit coherent when he talked about trade policy and he actually made a little bit of sense. But I don’t know what happened to him.”

Speaking in Pittsburgh on Thursday, Trump’s running mate, Ohio Republican Sen. JD Vance, pushed back against the Harris campaign’s claims that tariffs would hurt the economy. Vance described the tariffs as a way of discouraging imports and boosting American manufacturing.

“If you are a business, and you rely on foreign slave labor at $3 a day, the only way to rebuild American manufacturing is to say, if you want to bring that product made by slave labor back into the United States of America, you’re going to pay a big fat tariff before you get it back into our country,” Vance said.

Back in Wisconsin, Amara Marshell, freshman at UW-La Crosse, said she showed up to support Harris because she is concerned about what a second Trump presidency could mean for reproductive rights. Like her friend, sophomore Avery Black, Marshell is also excited about the possibility of electing the nation’s first female president.

“Women deserve to have power over their own bodies,” Marshell said. “We shouldn’t have to not be able to get an abortion just because of a president.”

Mary Holman, an 80-year-old retiree from Fort Atkinson, Wis., said she hasn’t been to a rally since former President Barack Obama’s first campaign in 2008. But Holman said she decided to get off the sidelines this cycle because she views the election as a fight to preserve democracy.



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Minnesota offering land for sale in northern recreation areas

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The Minnesota Department of Natural Resources will auction off state lands in popular northern counties next month.

The public land — in Aitkin, Cook, Itasca, and St. Louis counties — will go up for sale during the Department of Natural Resource’s annual online public land sale from Nov. 7 to 21.

“These rural and lakeshore properties may appeal to adjacent landowners or offer recreational opportunities such as space for a small cabin or camping,” the DNR said in a statement.

Properties will be available for bidding Nov. 7 through Nov. 21.

This all can trim for print: The properties include:

40 acres in Aitkin County, with a minimum bid of $85,000

44 acres in Cook County, minimum bid $138,000

1.9 acres in Itasca County, minimum bid $114,000



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Razor wire, barriers to be removed from Third Precinct

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Minneapolis city officials say razor wire, concrete barriers and fencing will be removed from around the former Third Precinct police station – which was set ablaze by protesters after George Floyd’s police killing – in the next three weeks. The burned-out vestibule will be removed within three months with construction fencing to be erected closer to the building.

This week, Minneapolis City Council members have expressed frustration that four years after the protests culminated in a fire at the police station, the charred building still stands and has become a “prop” some conservatives use to rail against city leadership. Most recently, GOP vice presidential nominee JD Vance made a stop outside the building and criticized Gov. Tim Walz’s handling of the 2020 riots.

On Thursday, the council voted 8-3 to approve a resolution calling for “immediate cleanup, remediation, and beautification of the 3000 Minnehaha site including but not limited to the removal of fencing, jersey barriers, barbed wire, and all other exterior blight.”

Council Member Robin Wonsley said the city needs to acknowledge that many police officers stationed in the Third Precinct “waged racist and violent actions” against residents for decades.

Council Member Aurin Chowdhury said the council wants the building cleaned up and beautified “immediately.”

“We cannot allow for this corner to be a backdrop for those who wish to manipulate the trauma of our city for political gain,” Chowdhury said.

Council Member Katie Cashman said the council shouldn’t be divided by “right-wing figures posing in front of the Third Precinct and pandering to conservative interests.”

“It’s really important for us to stay united in our goal, to achieve rehabilitation of this site in a way that advances racial healing and acknowledgement of the past trauma in this community, and to not let those figures divide us here,” she said.



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