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Park board members say Blue Line light rail crossing could endanger cyclists, pedestrians in north Minneapolis

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A proposed light-rail station in north Minneapolis means more than 200 trains will cross the treasured Grand Rounds bike and pedestrian trail every day — a prospect that deeply concerns some members of the Minneapolis Park and Recreation Board.

The Lowry Station, located at the Minneapolis-Robbinsdale border, is part of the $3.2 billion Blue Line extension project, which will connect downtown Minneapolis to Brooklyn Park beginning in 2030.

On Wednesday, the Park Board was expected to vote on a letter to the Metropolitan Council expressing concern about the station’s street-level design and questioning whether the regional planning body can legally build a light-rail line through parkland. But the board’s meeting abruptly ended after it was interrupted by striking park workers, and no action was taken.

Some park board members say a safer design could involve a tunnel burrowing under the Wirth/Victory Memorial Parkway Regional Trail portion of the Grand Rounds network, or relocating the station closer to North Memorial Health in Robbinsdale.

The tunnel idea for the Blue Line extension was already considered and rejected. Problems with the tunnel along the Southwest light-rail line in Minneapolis’ Kenilworth Corridor caused that project’s budget to balloon to nearly $3 billion.

“I know it’s expensive, but if we’re spending billions, let’s do it right,” said Park Board member Becka Thompson, who has proposed a resolution to oppose the station plan.

“Stay off parkland,” she said. “I will fight that to the end because you never get that back. If south Minneapolis can have a tunnel, why not the North Side?”

Cheered by some

After the original alignment for the Blue Line extension was scrapped in 2020, the new 13-mile route was cheered by many because it better serves transit-dependent north Minneapolis. Others were heartened that a station would be close to North Memorial, seen as a win for both employees and patients.

The initial plan for the Lowry station featured an aerial bridge for light-rail trains and an elevated station above the West Broadway and Lowry Avenue bridges.

After “strong concerns” were raised by Park Board commissioners and others, Met Council planners discarded the design and started over, according to Nick Thompson, the project’s interim director.

With input from Minneapolis, Robbinsdale, Hennepin County, Park Board, and hospital officials, the council offered seven different designs, including a tunnel, but that was quickly rejected, Thompson said.

The area near the Lowry Station is a tangle of parkland and homes adjacent to at least five streets and parkways. A prime consideration in the redesign was preserving two bridges on West Broadway Avenue which were recently replaced by Hennepin County to the tune of $15.5 million.

“Through a true collaborative process, it became clear that the preferred station design was the at-grade design in the current plans, and that it could be achieved with slight modifications to the bridges,” Thompson said in a statement.

The current plan features the light rail station tucked between both bridges, with trains crossing the Grand Rounds’ Wirth/Victory Memorial trail at street level every 10 minutes between 5 a.m. and midnight — about 210 over a 24-hour period.

When the current plan was presented to a key Blue Line advisory committee meeting in December, Park Board President Meg Forney, who serves on the committee, thanked the council for its efforts and declared the design “very, very exciting.”

Now Forney says she wants the Met Council to come up with a “better solution” that entails “significant changes” to the design. The park board is being asked to comment on a key environmental plan required by the Federal Transit Administration, which is expected to pay about half of the cost of building the Blue Line extension.

Some members say they are worried about the safety of cyclists and pedestrians navigating a train crossing, the first of its kind on the Grand Rounds.

LaTrisha Vetaw, who represents the area on the Minneapolis City Council, said the Lowry Station plan is “an extremely hurtful planning choice to the North Side. I was shocked and couldn’t believe that anyone would propose this.”

“The history and beauty of these parkways and the Grand Rounds have deep meaning to my constituents,” she said at a Park Board meeting earlier this month.

“What you would do if the Met Council and transit planners proposed an at-grade crossing at Minnehaha Parkway, Lake of the Isles Parkway, Bde Maka Ska Parkway or Lake Harriet Parkway, Stinson Boulevard or East or West River roads?” she added. “Would any of you say yes to that? Absolutely not.”

Milton Schoen,commander of the American Legion Post 1 in Minneapolis, worries the station would compromise Victory Memorial Parkway, a four-mile boulevard featuring memorial elm trees and markers dedicated to Hennepin County residents who perished in World War I.

“I’m not opposed to light rail, but we don’t want any degradation to Victory Memorial Parkway,” he said this week.

But Park Board member Tom Olsen said at the same meeting the “reactionary takes are based around fear.”

Light-rail crossings “are not a big deal” for bikers and pedestrians,” he said. “We’re reaching into territories of hyperbole that are not constructive.” While Olsen said he supports the proposed letter, he noted the Blue Line project will serve park constituents who don’t have access to a car.

Thompson said the council looks forward to “working closely with the Park Board, as we have at every step, to design a station that serves all members of the traveling public safely and effectively, whether they are taking the train, walking, biking, rolling or driving.”

The scrutiny comes as the Met Council prepares to seek approval of the project’s preliminary design from the four cities along the route and Hennepin County by mid-October, a state-mandated process called municipal consent. The Park Board does not have a vote.

Been there, done that

The faceoff between the Park Board and the Met Council over the Lowry Station may seem like a curious case of transportation déjà vu.

When the Southwest light-rail route was being considered through the Kenilworth Corridor a decade ago, Park Board members held out for a tunnel under Cedar Lake and Lake of the Isles. The option was rejected by the Met Council, which planned on a bridge instead.

The ensuing feud led to then-Gov. Mark Dayton threatening to withhold $3.7 million in state funding for the Park Board, saying its members were “obstructionist.”

An agreement was ultimately reached with the Park Board dropping its opposition to the project with the caveat that it would be more involved in future light-rail planning — including the extension of the Blue Line.



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Survivor who says she was sex trafficked at a Brooklyn Center Super 8 is now suing the hotel and its operators

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The 15-year-old girl was given the illusion of safety and comfort but instead lived a life of horror for half a year in 2013.

A group of sex traffickers “kidnapped” the Minnesota girl, threatened her, advertised her body online and forced her to have sex for money at a suburban hotel, according to a group of attorneys now representing the survivor.

“After acquiescing to her traffickers demands under the constant threat of violence, she began to find herself forced to do increasingly depraved things, in increasingly depraved locations, such as the Brooklyn Center Super 8,” attorney Jeffrey Monpetit wrote in a federal civil complaint filed against managers of the hotel in which the girl, identified only as T.S., endured repeated torment.

First filed late last year, T.S.’s lawsuit is leaning on two federal laws that allow victims of sex trafficking to hold businesses civilly liable for facilitating their abuse. Now 26, T.S. is suing Wyndham Hotels & Resorts, Inc., Sarah Hospitality, Inc., Wyndham Hotel Group, LLC and Super 8 Worldwide, Inc. — all entities with varying degrees of control and oversight of the Brooklyn Center Super 8 at which the alleged sex trafficking took place.

Erica MacDonald, a former U.S. Attorney for Minnesota who is now leading the legal team defending the hotel management group, wrote in a recent response to the lawsuit that the defendants “deny any liability for sex trafficking.” She previously cast doubt on T.S.’s lawsuit by saying it relied on news stories, online travel reviews and general information that was not enough to show that Wyndham interacted with the traffickers or should have known that T.S. was being trafficked at the hotel.

But T.S. won a key legal victory recently when Chief U.S. District Judge Patrick Schiltz refused to dismiss the case, instead ruling that the survivor had “plausibly alleged” Wyndham and its franchisee, Sarah Hospitality, facilitated her traffickers and benefited from her harm.

“We are very pleased with Judge Schiltz’s ruling, we look forward to proceeding with discovery and the eventual trial of our client’s case,” Monpetit told the Star Tribune last week. “We are also happy for our client and what the ruling means moving forward for her and the many other victims of sex trafficking.”

The Star Tribune left a message seeking comment from Wyndham, as well as information about the company’s training and policies for identifying and stopping suspected sex trafficking.



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Wright County man fatally stabbed his wife of 65 years

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A man fatally stabbed his wife of 65 years last week and told police, “I guess I lost my head,” according to murder charges.

Rodney Allen Andersen, 85, of Annandale, was charged in Wright County District Court with second-degree murder in connection with the attack in the couple’s home Thursday.

Andersen was arrested at the scene and remains jailed in lieu of $1 million bail. He’s due back in court on Thursday. Court records do not list an attorney for him.

According to the criminal complaint:

Andersen called Annandale police about 9:45 a.m., said he stabbed his wife, 83-year-old Janet Louise Andersen, and was unsure whether she was alive. Officers arrived to find him sitting on steps just inside the front door of the home on W. Knollwood Street.

Officers entered and saw a shaken Rodney Andersen still on the steps. His hands were on his head and looking down. The officers found his wife dead on the kitchen floor from stab wounds to her abdomen. A bloodied large kitchen knife was in the sink.

He told police that he and his wife had been married for 65 years. He said they were arguing that morning, as they often did, and “I guess I lost my head” before stabbing her.



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Which Minnesota schools have the most lead in their drinking water?

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Earlier this year, the district hired a plumber to replace fixtures with high lead levels. If a tap shows lead levels above five parts per billion, the water is shut off and a work order is put in, Bergstrom said. St. Paul schools facilities staff also aims to install additional filtered water fountains in buildings, for which the state offers grant money.

In Fridley schools, maintenance staff recently conducted an audit of each water fixture and implemented a schedule for custodians to flush the plumbing. The state Department of Health recommends running water through pipes to clear any stagnant supply after school breaks stretching longer than a week.

“We want this to be the last worry for our families and want them to know we’re on top of things,” said Rochelle Cox, senior officer of operations for Fridley schools. She added that testing reports and monitoring plans are available on the district website.

Jim Muenzenmeyer, buildings and grounds director for Eastern Carver County schools said the district’s previous threshold was 20 parts per billion.

“We had no problem getting to that,” he said, adding that bringing all the district’s drinking water below the new standard will be “fairly easy” but take more staff time.

Some of the highest readings are in “low-flow situations” — sinks in unused corners of older schools, like in a long-shuttered dark room once used to develop film, Muenzenmeyer said. Those taps may require a more frequent flushing schedule or removal if they are no longer needed, he said.



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