Star Tribune
Newest Dakota County Library branch opens in South St. Paul
Kaposia Library, the tenth and newest branch of the Dakota County Library system, opened Tuesday in South St. Paul with a ribbon-cutting ceremony that included the performance of a traditional Dakota song, sung to honor both the land and the ancestors who lived there.
Andy Vig, a member of the Shakopee Mdewakanton Sioux Community and director of the tribe’s cultural center, Hocokata Ti, welcomed visitors to the library in the Dakota language.
“To showcase our language — it just doesn’t get any better than that,” Vig said.
The library’s name, Kaposia, refers to the Shakopee Mdewakanton’s seasonal village on the banks of the Mississippi River near current-day St. Paul and South St. Paul.
Dozens of people milled about the library Tuesday, eating cookies and checking out the library’s new features, including an interactive children’s area, a quiet space with a fireplace and a 3-D printer.
“It’s just really exciting to finally get this library open,” said Margaret Stone, director of Dakota County libraries, at the ribbon-cutting. “Libraries are about community.”
The new county-run library, located near the South St. Paul Secondary school, replaces the previous library, which was one of just a few in the metro run by a city. It was beloved by many community members, but after a lengthy community debate, leaders decided it lacked the space, amenities and accessibility a new building could offer.
South St. Paul City Council Member Todd Podgorski said he liked the 16,000-square-foot library’s open layout and abundance of light. The 3-D printer and the conference and study rooms were also nice, he said.
Daisy Medina Cuenca, a cultural liaison at the Kaposia Learning Center, said she believes teens from the middle and high school will use the new library after school is out.
“It’s interesting to see how many updates they have,” she said.
Library staff handed out blue stickers and pins with a picture of the new library on them at the circulation desk.
Parent Robyn Goodell said she was excited to have a new spot to bring her young children for story time as her fiancé, Sam, and child, Lucy, played with wooden panels that open and close near the children’s area.
Star Tribune
Nicollet Avenue bridge in Minneapolis gets $34 million federal grant
“Under the Biden-Harris Administration, more than 11,000 bridges in communities across America are finally getting the repairs they’ve long needed with funding from our infrastructure law,” said U.S. Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg, in a news release. He said the bridge repairs ensure “people and goods can get where they need to go, safely and efficiently.”
Star Tribune
Driver, 19, passing illegally on Wright County road, causes fatal crash
A 19-year-old driver trying to get around slower vehicles collided head-on with an SUV in Wright County and killed one person and injured several others, officials said Thursday.
SUV passenger Janice Evelyn Johnson, 92, of Arden Hills, died Monday at HCMC from injuries she suffered in the collision on Oct. 22 in Monticello Township on County Road 37 near County Road 12, the Sheriff’s Office said in a search warrant affidavit filed in Hennepin County District Court.
The driver and two other people in the SUV survived their injuries, according to the affidavit, which the Sheriff’s Office filed to collect Johnson’s medical records at HCMC as part of its investigation.
According to the affidavit:
Deputies arrived at the crash scene and spoke with the car’s driver, Christian Kabunangu, of Brooklyn Park, who said he was heading west on County Road 37 and found himself behind two vehicles traveling below the speed limit.
“He was late for work, so he decided to pass them,” the affidavit read. Kabunangu said he saw the oncoming SUV and estimated it was about a half-mile down the road.
As he attempted to pass one of the slower vehicles, he explained, the other driver “sped up, preventing him from getting back into the westbound lane,” the filing continued.
As the Honda drew near, he swerved to the left, but the SUV did the same and they collided.
Star Tribune
University of Minnesota researchers find that native plants can beat invasive buckthorn on their own turf.
If the invasive buckthorn that is strangling the life out of Minnesota’s forest floor has a weakness, it is right now, in the shortening daylight of the late fall.
With a little help and planning, certain native plants have the best chance of beating buckthorn back and helping to eradicate it from the woods, according to new research from the University of Minnesota.
The sprawling bush has been one of the most formidable invasive species to take root in Minnesota since it was brought from Europe in the mid-1800s. It was prized as an ornamental privacy hedge. All the attributes that make buckthorn good at that job — dense thick leaves that stay late into the fall, toughness and resilience to damage and pruning, unappealing taste to wildlife and herbivores — have allowed it to thrive in the wild.
It grows fast and thick, out-competing the vast majority of native plants and shrubs for sunlight and then starving them under its shade. It creates damaging feedback loops, providing ideal habitat and calcium-rich food for invasive earthworms, which in turn kill off and uproot native plants. That leaves even less competition for buckthorn to take root, said Mike Schuster, a researcher for the university’s Department of Forest Resources.
When it takes over a natural area, buckthorn creates a “green desert,” Schuster said. “All that’s left is just a perpetual hedge, with little biodiversity.”
Since the 1990s, when the spread became impossible to ignore, Minnesota foresters, park managers and cities have spent millions of dollars a year trying to beat it back. They’ve used chainsaws and trimmers, poisons and herbicides, and even goats for hire. The buckthorn almost always grows back within a few years.
It’s been so pervasive that a conventional wisdom formed that buckthorn seeds could survive dormant in the soil for up to six years. That thought has led to a sort of fatalism: even if the plant were entirely removed from a property there would be a looming threat that it would sprout back, Schuster said.
But there is nothing special about buckthorn seeds. They only survive for a year or two.