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St. Paul school district proposes taking teacher talks to binding arbitration

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A St. Paul Public Schools official said Tuesday that the district would like to pursue binding arbitration with its teachers in an effort to settle a new two-year contract without the disruption of a strike.

A letter proposing the move was to be sent to leaders with the St. Paul Federation of Educators (SPFE) by day’s end Tuesday, said Patricia Pratt-Cook, the district’s executive chief of human resources.

But the district needs buy-in from the union, and while it has used arbitration previously in negotiations with principals, the approach has not been tested with the SPFE. In a statement Tuesday, SPFE President Leah VanDassor said that the union prefers to continue working with a mediator.

“We look forward to our next mediation session this Friday and getting a response to our latest financial offer,” VanDassor said. Wages and benefits have proved to be a major sticking point in the talks, the two sides say, and the union revised its offer during a mediation session last week.

In promoting arbitration, Pratt-Cook pointed to the toll on students and the broader community — noting the district provides not just schooling, but also child care and early childhood education.

Employees, too, “will want to continue to keep working, getting paid, doing their jobs without fear of layoffs or missing paychecks,” she said at a news conference alongside other district leaders. They spoke a day after the union filed an intent to strike notice for a walkout that would begin March 11.

Superintendent Joe Gothard, who on Monday was named the new schools chief in Madison, Wis., told reporters that while he was “excited about that opportunity,” his primary responsibility was to ensure a St. Paul contract is settled without a strike, and that the district is positioned for the future. A timeline has not been set for his departure, and he declined on Tuesday to reflect on his time in St. Paul.

“Know that we are going to hit the ground running Friday and we’re going to settle this contract,” Gothard said.



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Mayor Frey’s latest plan has ‘action steps’ to revitalize downtown Minneapolis

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“Even though there’s a lot of energy, creativity and hard work going on around downtown, never have we been more aligned in the direction we’re heading,” Duininck said.

To execute its plan, the city is convening a Downtown Action Council, a group that consists of representatives from the business, nonprofit and government sectors, including the Minnesota Vikings, Target and the Guthrie Theater.

A top priority for the group, from July 2024 to 2026, will be helping figure out the long-awaited transformation of Nicollet Mall into a pedestrian-only corridor. A task force Frey convened called the Vibrant Downtown Storefronts Workgroup made that suggestion and others for the thoroughfare back in June 2023. The city and its partners will have to determine where to move bus traffic and stops, but Frey said Marquette and Second avenues are ripe for that transition.

The plan would also focus time and resources on downtown’s Warehouse District, which Frey said “has the potential to be an entertainment Mecca.” The blocks between the North Loop and the central business district could have a social district that allows open containers, billboards and lights that help attract visitors from around the state.

“I’m not arguing that the Warehouse District is going to be like Times Square,” Frey said. “But I am arguing that we can create our own version of it right here in Minneapolis.”

Officials also emphasized efforts to make it easier for developers to convert downtown office buildings to housing and other uses. Frey touted the city’s Vibrant Storefronts initiative, which has been connecting property owners with vacant storefronts to local artists.



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Two more victims from encampment shootings identified as Mayor Frey says, ‘This is about fentanyl.’

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The Hennepin County Medical Examiner has identified three murder victims from two separate shootings at homeless encampments this weekend in Minneapolis as three others were left with life-threatening injuries.

Christopher Martell Washington, 38, of Fridley, and Louis Mitchell Lemons, Jr., 32, of Brooklyn Center, were identified Monday afternoon as the two men who died from multiple gunshot wounds on Sunday afternoon in the 4400 block of Snelling Avenue. Deven Leonard Caston, 31, was identified as the victim at an encampment shooting near E. 21st Street and 15th Avenue S. that happened Saturday.

Minneapolis Police Spokesman Sgt. Garrett Parten, said it was unclear if there was a connection between the shootings but “we can’t rule it out.”

The city has dealt with several shootings in and around homeless encampments this year. Mayor Jacob Frey attended a news conference Sunday after the shooting on Snelling Avenue and said the city needs to continue to provide options for people seeking shelter. But, he said, encampments are not an alternative answer.

“Yet again we have more people that are dead,” he said. “We need to be honest and realistic about what is happening right now. We need to call a spade a spade. This is not about a lack of shelter. This is about fentanyl.”

Officers initially detained three people in the shooting of Washington and Lemons Jr., but were released after police found they were not believed to be involved in the shooting. No charges had been filed in either shooting as of Monday.

Ward 12 Council Member Aurin Chowdhury, who represents the area and lives nearby, was at the site of Sunday’s shooting. She said officials need information about what happened to better understand how to address situations like this long-term.

“This is an absolute tragedy, and this type of violence should never occur within our city,” she said. “It really makes me think about how we need to look at this more systemically and not just take a whack-a-mole approach and expect the problem to go away.”



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St. Paul developer has big plans for Victoria and Grand

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Inside Paper Source, which has been in the mall since 2016, senior sales lead Carrie Helman-Menard said foot traffic has changed at the mall.

“It is quiet,” she said. “This street was a lot different even, you know, six years ago. The hobby stores down that way closed. Salut, closed. Anthropolgie, closed. J Crew, etc. There were a lot more people bustling, shopping.”

Grand, she said, can be that way again, but it “needs businesses. Needs people.”

A new development at Grand and Victoria could be just what’s needed, she said.

“People will come,” she said, pointing to her store’s customers continuing to walk through Paper Source’s door. “They get excited that something’s here. People are grateful. They’ll come in here and say, ‘Oh my god, I’m so glad you’re here.’ So that feels good. A lot of people want that hustle and bustle back.”

Simon Taghioff, president of the Summit Hill Association board, said Parritz made “an information only” presentation to the board earlier this month. Parritz, he said, shared “a lot of optimism in how it could transform that corner in a positive way.”



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