Star Tribune
Hmong leaders calling for apology after legislators rushed off stage at Asian Pacific Islander Day event
A Hmong American political committee is calling for an apology from the chair of the state’s Council on Asian Pacific Minnesotans, saying that she rushed a group of Hmong elected officials off stage at a recent event.
“Of all the legislators who spoke, our [Asian Pacific Islander] legislators were the only ones that were interrupted while we spoke, told to get off the stage, and also told that we were not invited,” said Sen. Susan Pha, DFL-Brooklyn Park, in a video posted on Facebook a day after the event.
No Asian and Pacific Islander legislators were on the program for Asian Pacific Islander (API) Day at the State Capitol on April 3. But Senate Majority Leader Erin Murphy, DFL-St. Paul, brought on stage with her two DFL state senators, Pha and Foung Hawj of St. Paul, neither of whom was on the invite list for API Day.
Hawj addressed the audience and then passed the microphone to Pha. When two more members of the Minnesota Asian Pacific Caucus joined them on stage — DFL Reps. Ethan Cha of Woodbury and Kaohly Vang Her of St. Paul — Pha’s speech was interrupted by the moderator, Council Chair Saraswati Singh, who told the group they were taking time away from other speakers.
“Senator Pha, you’re taking up other people’s time, please,” Singh said, gesturing for her to leave.
“Let her finish, she’ll be brief,” Murphy said. “How many seconds?” Singh responded.
After the legislators left the stage, Singh called them out for bringing guests on stage who were not in the program.
Lee Pao Xiong, the council’s former executive director, is among more than 200 people petitioning for an apology from Singh and the council.
“That was very unprofessional,” Xiong said. “The state Legislature created you, and your role is to advise the governor and state Legislature on issues affecting your respective communities. The API legislators have every right to be there in front of their constituents.”
In a statement to Sahan Journal, Pha said that Singh’s actions were “unnecessary and highly disrespectful. … It’s reminiscent of the trauma we dealt with, and continue to deal with when excluded from spaces we are told we don’t belong.”
According to a livestream recording of the event, Singh said: “We had three people up on stage and then two other people jumped in. They did not have permission to do so. They’re not on our agenda.”
Council officials did not respond to requests for comment from Singh, who could not be reached independently. Hawj, Cha, and Her declined to be interviewed for this story.
The council works with state officials and community organizations to improve the lives of the state’s Asian Pacific Islander residents. Members are appointed by the governor and include legislators.
The petition, which is being circulated by the Hmong American Political Action Network group on Facebook, calls for a formal apology from Singh and an investigation of the council. It’s seeking action by Gov. Tim Walz, since many of the council members are appointed by the governor.
“This incident, marked by an apparent lack of respect and recognition towards [Asian American and Pacific Islander] legislators by the Council’s leadership, is deeply troubling,” the petition says.
Her, one of the legislators who went on stage, said online that it was unfortunate the council controls “who gets to be heard, seen, and on stage. When I speak at rallies and events I bring up all of my colleagues in attendance. Why? Because this work isn’t about me. Nothing gets done because of one person.”
The incident came a week after a disagreement surfaced at a committee hearing on how best to commemorate the beginnings of Minnesota’s Southeast Asian communities 50 years ago. The bill includes $300,000 for grants to community organizations and $200,000 for the Minnesota Historical Society to create programs celebrating the arrival of the first Hmong family in Minnesota in October 1975.
Singh was one of six who testified against the bill, saying it focused only on the Hmong community and did not include the state’s Cambodian, Vietnamese and Laotian communities, as well as Vietnam War veterans. Representatives of the Coalition of Asian American Leaders and Vietnamese Social Services testified in support of the bill.
“I believe in diversity, equity and inclusion. It’s really important to me because I’ve been a minority my whole life,” said Singh, the daughter of Indian immigrants.
Her, who supports the bill, said the Minnesota Asian Pacific legislative caucus heard that the Hmong community wanted its own celebration. The bill, she said, offers the possibility for multiple celebrations.
Xiong said the bill would put the community in charge of the commemoration rather than the council or state. He said he’s been told that the council has repeatedly opposed many of Hmong community legislative initiatives.
“Everything comes down to the governor’s office,” Xiong said. “The community is waiting to see what the governor is going to do.”
About the partnership
This story comes to you from Sahan Journal, a nonprofit newsroom dedicated to covering Minnesota’s immigrants and communities of color. Sign up for a free newsletter to receive Sahan’s stories in your inbox.
Star Tribune
Minneapolis Council Member Emily Koski announces mayoral run
Minneapolis City Council Member Emily Koski announced Wednesday she is running for mayor — a job her father Al Hofstede was elected to in the 1970s after serving on the council.
He died about eight years ago.
“Service has always been part of my family’s story,” according to remarks prepared for a morning news conference at the Pearl Park Recreation Center. “My dad devoted his whole life to this city and its people, and I’m proud to carry on that legacy.”
Koski said she ran for the council to build bridges in a time of division. Now, she said, the city is at a crossroads: “We’re up against efforts to drive wedges between us and pit us against one another. We need a strong, unifying leader to move us forward.”
She said Mayor Jacob Frey has been unable to work with the City Council and frames every issue as “us vs. them.”
“He has failed to lead us through our toughest challenges,” Koski said. “True leadership is about strength in unity. It’s about setting aside differences and building bridges.”
Koski said task forces and work groups have become the mayor’s solution to compensate for his lack of vision.
“Somehow, we have become the land of 10,000 work groups,” she said. “Thoughts, ideas, and concepts are thrown around to drive up buzz, but there’s no vision, no plan, no action.”
Star Tribune
Man fatally shot in Robbinsdale was 22-year-old from Hastings
The Hennepin County Medical Examiner has released the name of a man fatally shot Monday in Robbinsdale.
Treyvon Marcellis Molette, 22, of Hastings, died of a gunshot wound to the chest, according to the medical examiner’s report.
Molette was driving near the intersection of Lowry and Indiana Avenues N. near South Halifax Park just after 5 p.m. Monday when police got calls about gunshots in the area. Officers arrived to find a single vehicle crash and a man inside suffering from a gunshot wound, police said.
Molette was taken to nearby North Memorial Health Hospital, where he died about 25 minutes after the shooting, the medical examiner’s report said.
No one has been arrested as of Wednesday morning, said Capt. John Elder of the Robbinsdale Police Department, but the agency is following up on several leads, he said.
Molette’s death was the first homicide in the northwest metro suburb this year, police said.
Star Tribune
This Apple Valley high school is sending teenagers to the United Nations.
The class of Minnesota teens, dressed in business attire, understood the assignment: Roleplay how delegates from various countries, including Bhutan, Kenya and Suriname, would discuss and work toward solutions for human trafficking.
By the end of the seven-day Model United Nations course at the School of Environmental Studies in Apple Valley, the two dozen high schoolers had adopted the appropriate decorum and memorized the procedure for a simulation of U.N. business.
“It’s amazing how quickly they learn the vocabulary, the process, and the purpose of it,” Principal Lauren Haisting said about the class, which is offered as an elective “intensive theme” class, similar to a college J-term course. The school also teaches a shorter Model U.N. unit to all juniors and offers an after-school Model U.N. club.
“We pride ourselves on our kids going out to be leaders and affecting change,” Haisting said. “To see them do this — to choose this — is impressive and heartening.”
Harley Terry, left, a student representing Uruguay, writes notes for students during a Model United Nations meeting discussing human trafficking at the School of Environmental Studies in Apple Valley on Nov. 22. (Elizabeth Flores/The Minnesota Star Tribune)
The School of Environmental Studies (SES) is a public magnet high school designed to immerse students in real-life opportunities to study and develop solutions for environmental topics and concerns. Located next to The Minnesota Zoo, the school serves about 400 students in grades 11 and 12.
Model United Nations fits the school’s goal by teaching the students to understand issues from multiple perspectives and reach compromise, said Chad Forde one of the course’s teachers. And because SES is one of just two U.S. high schools with consultative status at the U.N., some of the students who complete the course will be chosen to attend the Commission on the Status of Women and the Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues, both held in New York in the spring. SES students have been attending a variety of U.N. conferences since 2007.
“This is far more than just simply learning about a topic in the world and it’s not just a current events class for kids who like history,” Forde said. “This is a class that’s here to prepare you for adulthood and for a career.”
Plus, he said the conferences prove to students that they don’t have to be head of an NGO or a world-famous documentary filmmaker to draw attention to or propose solutions to a world issue.