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Minnesota regulators narrowly approve gas pipeline near Pipestone monument

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During the hearing, the Mille Lacs Band backed away from its original route and aligned with the Upper Sioux Community, which proposed an even longer route but also stated that it preferred the pipeline never be reopened.

The Yankton Sioux Tribe and the Flandreau Santee Sioux Tribe also opposed the project.

And on Thursday, Nina Berglund, a member of the Northern Cheyenne and Oglala Lakota tribes brought a sample of pipestone for the commission to see as they deliberated in a downtown St. Paul hearing room. She shed tears as the monument superintendent described the significance of the area.

“To have it be able to represent itself in a room where everyone’s talking about it and no one knows what it looks like,” Berglund said of the pipestone.

Nina Berglund, a member of the Northern Cheyenne and Oglala Lakota tribes and a Minneapolis resident, holds a piece of pipestone from Pipestone National Monument and a bunch of sage on her lap during a Minnesota Public Utilities Commission meeting at the Metro Square building in St. Paul, Minn. on Thursday, Sep. 12, 2024. The commission discussed options surrounding a permit for Magellan Pipeline Company to build a pipeline near Pipestone National Monument. ] ALEX KORMANN • alex.kormann@startribune.com (Alex Kormann/The Minnesota Star Tribune)

Brusven said granting a route permit would make it easier for Magellan to survey the route because they would be less reliant on landowners granting them access to look for items of cultural significance.

Tuma said if Magellan runs into anything, including catlinite, they would have to route the pipeline to avoid it. He drove the site personally as he researched the issue and was confident the ruling will bring a “thorough examination” of the route before construction.



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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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Minneapolis School Board Member Fathia Feerayarre resigns

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Minneapolis School Board Member Fathia Feerayarre, who represented District 3 in the city’s center since January 2023, has resigned effective immediately, the district announced Tuesday.

Her departure comes too late to add the seat to the November ballot, however, meaning her colleagues will have to appoint her successor in a process and under a timeline to be outlined next week.

Feerayarre ran unopposed in 2022 as part of a four-candidate slate endorsed by the Minneapolis DFL and the Minneapolis Federation of Teachers, and was set to serve until Jan. 4, 2027.

Board Chair Collin Beachy, who also was part of that four-person slate, said in a news release: “I thank Ms. Feerayarre for her service to the Minneapolis Public Schools community as a member of the school board. We all wish her the best in her future endeavors.”



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Minneapolis School Board Member Fathia Feerayarre resigns

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Minneapolis School Board Member Fathia Feerayarre, who represented District 3 in the city’s center since January 2023, has resigned effective immediately, the district announced Tuesday.

Her departure comes too late to add the seat to the November ballot, however, meaning her colleagues will have to appoint her successor in a process and under a timeline to be outlined next week.

Feerayarre ran unopposed in 2022 as part of a four-candidate slate endorsed by the Minneapolis DFL and the Minneapolis Federation of Teachers, and was set to serve until Jan. 4, 2027.

Board Chair Collin Beachy, who also was part of that four-person slate, said in a news release: “I thank Ms. Feerayarre for her service to the Minneapolis Public Schools community as a member of the school board. We all wish her the best in her future endeavors.”



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