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New laws in Minnesota, starting July 1, 2024

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From a right to repair to a new tax on deliveries of goods over $100, here’s what you need to know about the new laws now in place statewide.

ST PAUL, Minn. — July 1 is the start of the new fiscal year and also the day when some new laws go into effect in Minnesota. These new laws were passed in the 2024 legislative session, except for the reassignment of duties to the Department of Children, Youth and Human Services. That law was passed in 2023 and only goes into effect this year. 

According to the Minnesota House of Representatives, here are some of the new laws: 

Digital Fair Repair Act

According to the office of the Minnesota Attorney General, this act requires manufacturers of certain electronic devices to make documentation, parts, and tools for diagnosis, maintenance or repair available to independent repair shops and owners on fair and reasonable terms. This applies to equipment sold on or after July 1, 2021. 

Restrictive employment covenants banned

This provision in the 2024 labor and industry policy law prohibits the use of restrictive employment covenants and covenants already in place will be void and unenforceable. An example of a restrictive covenant would include employment contracts like non-compete, non-disclosure, and non-solicitation agreements. 

Service providers, who lawmakers define as “any partnership, association, corporation, business, trust, or group of persons acting directly or indirectly as an employer or manager for work contracted or requested by a customer” — must give notice to employees about this law if their contracts contain a restrictive provision. According to the House, “This section does not apply to workers providing professional business consulting for computer software development and related services who are seeking employment through a service provider with the knowledge and intention of being considered for a permanent position of employment with the customer as their employer at a later date.”

State money for job training

This new law appropriates $12.16 million from the Workforce Development Fund, $11.69 million from the General Fund and grants $23.85 million to the Department of Employment and Economic Development for job training and economic development programs in 2024. 

There are nine main programs to receive funding, including $2.5 million for Launch Minnesota to help Minnesotan entrepreneurs or start-ups. Many of them are aimed at supporting local businesspeople. 

Early childhood, K-12 and HHS funding

Kids in Minnesota are getting a $43 million funding boost to improve child literacy statewide. The vast majority of this money, $37.22 million, will go to the Minnesota Reading to Ensure Academic Development Act, an initiative the Department of Education said aims “to have every child reading at or above grade level every year, beginning in kindergarten, and to support multilingual learners and students receiving special education services in achieving their individualized reading goals.”

Other portions of funds will offset local taxes supporting schools, add a state school librarian position at the Department of Education and give money to other agencies related to children and families. 

When children start school again in the fall, there will be changes they see as well, including: 

  • American Indian cultural practice, observance, or ceremonies will count as excused religious absences from school
  • An annual review and revision of a personal learning plan to ensure a student is on track to graduate will be required
  • Student journalists have the right to exercise freedom of speech and freedom of the press in school-sponsored media and a school district or charter school will have to adopt and publish a student journalist policy

Filling school board vacancies and deep fake technology

If a school board vacancy happens less than two years prior to the term’s expiration, another person can be appointed for the rest of the term without needing a special election. The school board may, but is not required to, fill a vacancy that occurs less than 90 days before the term expires. But if the board member is removed for proper cause, a special election must be held as soon as possible to fill the vacancy on a uniform election date. 

A part of this bill also includes rules about misinformation in the election process. As of July 1, a candidate forfeits their nomination or office if they’re found guilty of using deep fake technology to influence an election. The law also amends the time frame for using a deep fake to include 90 days before a political party nominating convention, or after the absentee voting period begins prior to a presidential primary, state primary, local primary, special primary, or special election. 

This does not apply to cable television systems or broadcasters who disseminate a deep fake produced by a candidate if the dissipation is required by federal law. 

Millions in lottery proceeds will protect Minnesota’s environment 

The Environmental and Natural Resources Trust Fund covers more than 100 projects and will receive $79.64 million in funding this year. 

Funds will be used for land acquisition and recreation projects, environmental education, water resources research, air quality and more. 

These projects were recommended by the Legislative-Citizen Commission on Minnesota Resources, which was established in 1988 to provide “a long-term, consistent, and stable source of funding for activities that protect, conserve, preserve, and enhance Minnesota’s ‘air, water, land, fish, wildlife, and other natural resources’ for the benefit of current citizens and future generations.” 

Money is generated from the Minnesota State Lottery. 

Plain language required on driver’s license tests

This law aims to make sure license tests examine how well drivers understand the rules of the road, instead of testing their ability to decode complex sentences, lawmakers said. 

A new written test must be written by the Department of Public Safety by Feb. 1, 2025, and the test needs to be “organized to serve the reader’s needs and written using clear, simplified language.” 

Language on the new tests should: 

  • Use the word “you” to address test takers directly 
  • Use an active voice
  • Use concrete, familiar words
  • Avoid long, complex sentences
  • Minimize abbreviations
  • Omit double negatives and terms like “except for,” “unless,” and “indicated otherwise”

Retail delivery fee for goods over $100

A 50-cent fee on retail delivery orders for goods that cost at least $100 is now in place. This fee will generally apply when the sale is subject to state general sales tax but also includes clothing. It will not apply to prepared foods and baby products. 

Retailers with annual sales less than $1 million will be exempt, as will marketplace providers when selling for a retailer that made less than $100,000 in retail sales in the previous calendar year through a marketplace provider like Facebook or Craigslist. 

Money from this fee and some funds from the general sales tax from motor vehicle repair and replacement parts will go into a new transportation advancement account: 

  • 36% to metropolitan counties with a new formula-based allocation
  • 27% to small cities, distributed under the small cities assistance program
  • 15% to larger cities under a new account established in the law
  • 11% to town roads
  • 10% to the county state-aid highway fund
  • 1% to support food delivery programs such as Meals on Wheels

Watch the latest political coverage from the Land of 10,000 Lakes in our YouTube playlist:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=videoseries

WATCH MORE ON KARE 11+

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Man allegedly sets fire to Eden Prairie home with children inside

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Abdirahman Abdi Abdullahi faces one charge of arson causing injury after a 9-month-old was rushed to the hospital.

EDEN PRAIRIE, Minn. — The U.S. Attorney charged an Eden Prairie man with arson after he allegedly set fire to a townhome with four children inside, according to a press release Wednesday. 

The Eden Prairie Fire Department responded to the blaze on May 31 around 11:30 a.m. One adult man and four children were in the home at the start of the fire, but all escaped except for a 9-month-old child by the time officials responded. 

The baby was rushed to the hospital and survived the incident, according to prosecutors. 

According to prosecutors, Abdirahman Abdi Abdullahi, 23, was on probation for violating a restraining order against a mother who lived in the burned house. He allegedly messaged her two days before the fire, saying “when I see u I’m smoke u.” 

Surveillance shows Abdullahi carrying a gas can through bushes to reach the townhouse, then later emerging from behind the bushes with the gas can and returning to a rental vehicle. Prosecutors say that additional surveillance footage shows Abdullahi filling up the gas can at a nearby gas station. 

Abdullahi faces one charge of arson causing injury and he made his first court appearance on July 1. 

WATCH MORE ON KARE 11+

Download the free KARE 11+ app for Roku, Fire TV, Apple TV and other smart TV platforms to watch more from KARE 11 anytime! The KARE 11+ app includes live streams of all of KARE 11’s newscasts. You’ll also find on-demand replays of newscasts; the latest from KARE 11 Investigates, Breaking the News and the Land of 10,000 Stories; exclusive programs like Verify and HeartThreads; and Minnesota sports talk from our partners at Locked On Minnesota. 

Watch the latest local news from the Twin Cities and across Minnesota in our YouTube playlist:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=videoseries



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Ellison asks court to recover $58 million from Big Tobacco

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Minnesota’s Attorney General alleged that tobacco manufacturers have shorted the state in payments called for in the historic 1998 court settlement.

ST PAUL, Minn. — Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison has filed a motion seeking to recover $58 million in alleged underpayments from America’s tobacco manufacturers, accusing them of violating terms of the historic 1998 settlement with the state. 

The motion, filed in Ramsey County District Court, seeks not only repayment of the $58 million but also interest, civil penalties and the assurance that Big Tobacco will not underpay Minnesota in the future. 

After a months-long trial in 1998, Minnesota settled with the tobacco industry’s largest companies restricting marketing of tobacco products and requiring annual payments to the state based, in part, on the size of their after-tax profits in a given year.

Ellison’s office said the dispute over payment amounts arises from a provision included in the settlement that increases the size of tobacco manufacturers’ annual payments if “current” after-tax profits are greater than they were in 1997. The tobacco companies involved in the settlement argued they should be able to re-calculate their 1997 profits by applying modern corporate tax rates. 

Ellison’s office maintained that the settlement explicitly calls for the use of 1997 tax rates when calculating after-tax profits.

The motion the AG filed alleges that after the Trump administration lowered federal corporate tax rates in 2018, Philip Morris misrepresented the content of the Minnesota settlement to the third-party payment administrator, PricewaterhouseCoopers, in a way that incorrectly reduced the manufacturers’ payments to Minnesota by nearly $10 million per year.

“After lying to the American people about the dangers of their products, it is unfortunately not surprising that the largest tobacco manufacturers have also tried to avoid the commitments they made when settling with Minnesota,” said Ellison in a released statement. “It is particularly galling that, after these tobacco companies received a massive tax cut from President Trump, they turned around and used that windfall to justify underpaying the people of Minnesota.”

The AG’s office said tobacco manufacturers have faced similar challenges over underpayments in both Mississippi and Texas, where courts have ruled the underpayments were improper and ordered Big Tobacco to reimburse the states.

WATCH MORE ON KARE 11+

Download the free KARE 11+ app for Roku, Fire TV, Apple TV and other smart TV platforms to watch more from KARE 11 anytime! The KARE 11+ app includes live streams of all of KARE 11’s newscasts. You’ll also find on-demand replays of newscasts; the latest from KARE 11 Investigates, Breaking the News and the Land of 10,000 Stories; exclusive programs like Verify and HeartThreads; and Minnesota sports talk from our partners at Locked On Minnesota. 

Watch the latest local news from the Twin Cities and across Minnesota in our YouTube playlist:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=videoseries



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Honey and Mackie’s Ice Cream shares new flavor

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PLYMOUTH, Minn. — Ever wondered what Minion-flavored ice cream is like? Apparently, it has eyeballs. 

Honey & Mackie’s ice cream shop can offer you a lick of that unique flavor. With a swirl of banana cookie and blue velvet cake batter flavors, the ice cream is topped with silly candy eyeballs. 

If the eyeballs don’t appeal, the mom-and-pop shop offers many other delicious flavors like raspberry chocolate chip and salted caramel with peanuts. Owner Suzanne Varecka visited KARE 11 News at Noon on Wednesday to show viewers some of the offerings. 

Download the free KARE 11+ app for Roku, Fire TV, Apple TV and other smart TV platforms to watch more from KARE 11 anytime! The KARE 11+ app includes live streams of all of KARE 11’s newscasts. You’ll also find on-demand replays of newscasts; the latest from KARE 11 Investigates, Breaking the News and the Land of 10,000 Stories; exclusive programs like Verify and HeartThreads; and Minnesota sports talk from our partners at Locked On Minnesota. 

Watch the latest local news from the Twin Cities and across Minnesota in our YouTube playlist:



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