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Maple Grove passes new rules for homeowners listing property on AirBnB or VRBO

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In Maple Grove, it’s no longer one license size fits all for homeowners renting out their properties.

The City Council on Monday approved an ordinance establishing a new short-term license option geared mainly for homeowners who list their dwellings on platforms such as AirBnB or VRBO and provide weekend accommodations to vacationers or those who may need to stay just a little longer.

City ordinance requires anybody renting out property to obtain a rental license, but a city study found that most homeowners providing short-term rentals don’t get one. In February, city leaders scoured online listings and found only two of more than 50 homeowners offering rooms on online travel sites held a rental license.

“We are not looking to punish. We are trying to make an easier path to compliance,” said Joe Amerman, the city’s economic development manager.

The new license will allow property owners to pay a one-time $400 home-to-rental property conversion fee and a $200 license fee. The license would last for a year and must be renewed annually. The city ordinance governing rentals currently on the books requires property owners renting their dwellings to pay a $1,000 conversion fee and $600 for a license that is good for three years. The properties also must pass inspections.

“The current policy was not flexible for people who use their home for short-term rental,” Amerman said. “Often homeowners want to make a few bucks, and asking for them to do a 3-year rental program is a lot of money and time investment to go through the traditional licensing process.”

Resident Brandy Logan said she learned about the ordinance after she received a citation for renting out her backyard pool. She called the city about that when she learned about the resolution being considered by the City Council on Monday. She created a petition on Change.org to draw attention to the ordinance.

“Nobody knew,” she told the Star Tribune. “If you have rental property, be aware.”

She spoke at Monday’s meeting, telling the City Council the ordinance would be “an obstacle” in times of inflation for “families trying to make ends meet.”

The ordinance, which needs final City Council approval, would go into effect Sept. 1. Residents with rental properties will be notified by mail and information printed in the city’s newsletter and posted online, Amerman said.

Short-term is defined as stays of 30 days or fewer at one time, the ordinance states.

Holders of short-term licenses will have to pass inspection and complete safety training from the police department covering how to spot and stop criminal activity at the residence. The city can revoke a license if there are two or more “disorderly conduct” calls that require police to show up to address issues such as noise or parties during the licensing period. A copy of the license would also have to be prominently displayed near the front entrance of a home, the ordinance said.

Owner-occupied properties would not be subjected to the licensing ordinance, Amerman said.

Will that increase compliance?

“That is our goal and hope,” Amerman said.



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Mahtomedi volleyball keeps clicking, stays undefeated with sweep of South St. Paul

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Mahtomedi’s volleyball team started the 2023 season 3-7. But still, the Zephyrs peaked at the right time and made it to state for a second year in a row.

This go-around, undefeated Mahtomedi (10-0) hasn’t taken long at all to start clicking.

On Tuesday night, 14 kills each from senior outside hitter Kaili Malvey and senior middle blocker Silvie Graetzer helped the Zephyrs sweep visiting South St. Paul 25-17, 25-18, 25-10.

After the program’s first trip to state in 2022, then returning in 2023, the team is thriving. With seven seniors and five juniors on the roster and all its starters returning, Mahtomedi “started at such a higher point this season,” Graetzer said. “And now our end goal is so much higher. We’re not there to get to state. We’re there to do damage at state.”

Against South St. Paul (14-4), the Zephyrs dealt with injuries to two sidelined starters heading into the match and faced the Packers’ high-swinging outside hitter, senior Alaina Panagiotopoulos.

“[Our injured players, Sahar Ramaley and Katie Hergenrader] pushed us to play for each other, and I think we really executed,” Malvey said.

Nine digs and 14 service receptions by junior libero Claire Crothers, plus six blocks by Graetzer, helped numb the swinging sting of Panagiotopoulos’ eight kills. They prepped for her in practice, focusing on eye work in blocking drills and taking up space on the court.

Another offseason key for the Zephyrs took place 10 minutes down the road in Lake Elmo. While not all of last year’s starters played club, all of them participated in club training this year, with a big Zephyrs contingent at Kokoro Volleyball. Even if the Zephyrs weren’t on the same team at Kokoro, they saw each other in the weight room, learned similar schemes.



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A guaranteed income program for Minnesota artists gets extended and expanded

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St. Paul is among the cities that have tried sending money to very low-income residents, studying the results. When Springboard launched its project in 2021, it was one of the nation’s first guaranteed income programs aimed at artists.

“It’s not because we think artists are more deserving or more worthy than anyone else,” said Laura Zabel, Springboard’s executive director. Creative work is one form of labor that, like caregiving, “our economy doesn’t value” but that communities need — now more than ever, she said.

“I love thinking about guaranteed income as a way of honoring that we all have contributions to make to our community, and we need a little bit of time and space and breathing room to make those contributions,” Zabel said.

A similar experiment also started in 2021 in San Francisco, run by the Yerba Buena Center for the Arts, has ended. In 2022, the Creatives Rebuild New York program began providing some 2,400 artists in New York with $1,000 per month for 18 months. That same year, Ireland’s government began providing 2,000 artists about $350 a week, or about $18,200 a year, as part of a three-year pilot program.

Every 18 months, Springboard has extended its program’s funding. Now, it’s guaranteeing artists five years of income. The first 25 participants, who have received income since 2021, will see that money continue for two more years. Those who started receiving it 18 months ago, including 25 artists in Otter Tail County, will continue. And the 25 new recipients there will begin the program knowing they’ll get money for five years.

“So, from a research perspective, that’s very exciting — to be able to research and understand some of the difference between folks who know from the beginning the longer time horizon,” Zabel said, “and what that allows them to do in terms of planning and commitment to their community.”



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Duluth man pleads guilty to killing girlfriend who had a no-contact order against him

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DULUTH — A Duluth man who said he doesn’t remember killing his girlfriend pleaded guilty to second-degree murder without intent Tuesday in St. Louis County court — a plea deal that could land him in prison longer than sentencing guidelines would dictate.

Dale John Howard, 25, told Judge Theresa Neo that he doesn’t remember it but believes he caused the death of his girlfriend, Allisa Marie Vollan, 27, on March 22. Vollan, described on a fundraising site as a “bright young lady” with “an abundance of friends,” had a no-contact order against Howard at the time of her death. Howard could be sentenced to 20 years in prison — more than seven years longer than Minnesota’s presumptive guideline for the murder. According to the county attorney’s office, the longer sentence is legal because of the active domestic abuse no-contact order against him.

Howard’s sentencing is scheduled for Oct. 14.

According to court documents, officers responded to a morning call at Howard’s Central Hillside apartment and found him beneath a blanket with Vollan, who was dead. He told officers that he had hung out with Vollan late the previous night, then left to meet friends at a bar, and Vollan went to sleep in a guest room. When he tried to move her into his bedroom the next morning, she wasn’t breathing. He called his father, who was at the apartment when Duluth police arrived.

Neighbors in the upper level of the duplex told officers that, in the time before Howard would have left for the bar, they heard a woman crying and an angry male voice. They heard muffled moaning, thuds and the sound of something being dragged. They recorded it.

A preliminary autopsy by the Midwest Medical Examiner’s Office found that Vollan had likely been smothered.

Earlier the same month, Howard had been arrested after neighbors saw him repeatedly slam Vollan’s head into a door. The no-contact was issued by a St. Louis County judge.



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