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MSP to offer sensory rooms in both terminals

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Airport officials say the first room will open in Terminal 2 as early as 2027, with a second room opening the following year in Terminal 1.

MINNEAPOLIS — Traveling can be stressful, so officials with the Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport (MSP) are aiming to create a more calming atmosphere for passengers ahead of their flight.

The Metropolitan Airports Commission (MAC) announced it will be partnering with Minnesota-based Fraser to design sensory rooms to provide passengers a chance to check some of the anxieties that come with travel. MAC officials say the first room will open in Terminal 2 as early as 2027, with a second room scheduled to open in Terminal 1 the following year.

“This is another major step to create a more accessible and inclusive airport experience, to help passengers with sensory sensitivities, or those who just need a quieter space to decompress before a flight,” said MAC CEO Brian Ryks in a release. “Through our Strategic Partnership program, we are expanding our relationship with Fraser, which has provided guidance and support to the MAC for many years to help us develop impactful accessibility programs and services at the airport.”

The first sensory room in Terminal 2 will be part of the North Expansion project, while the second room will open in Terminal 1’s G Concourse between gates G8 and G18. The rooms will include dimmable lighting, different seating options and “sensory-friendly furnishings,” according to the release.

“We are so honored to partner with MSP Airport to bring sensory-friendly spaces to individuals who need a different experience at the airport in order to travel,” said Fraser President and CEO Diane S. Cross in a release. “Our partnership with MSP Airport is a big step toward making Minnesota sensory-friendly for all.”



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Minnesota DNR aims to make fishing, hunting more accessible

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The Get Out MORE investments are helping ensure Minnesotans of all abilities are able to enjoy the outdoor activities the state has to offer.

ROSEMOUNT, Minn. — The Minnesota Department of Natural Resources (DNR) is working to make the outdoors more accessible, including improvements to hunting and fishing access.

“We make other states jealous would be putting it lightly. We hear a lot of feedback from our peers, our counterparts in other states, that wish they had the initiatives that we have here in Minnesota. We are extremely fortunate,” said Jamie Gangaware, Minnesota DNR wildlife operations manager and wildlife section.

The 2023 legislature approved a one-time $150 million for Get Out MORE (Modernize Outdoor Recreation Experiences) investments. About $5 million is committed to enhancing public access to wildlife management areas (WMA).

On Tuesday afternoon, Minnesota DNR staff and representatives from the organization Capable Partners gathered at Vermillion Highlands WMA in Rosemount.

The WMA has three different types of blinds that hunters with disabilities are able to use, including a hydraulic lift blind. It allows hunters to get a bird’s eye view.

The DNR is looking to add four more of these elevated blinds that can be moved all across the state to different WMAs.

“Try it because if you really love hunting, this will be your best opportunity to do such a thing,” said Barry Hite from Emily, Minn.

Hite has been hunting with Capable Partners for about 20 years.

The organization focuses on making the outdoors accessible.

“What a game-changer that has been. Without Capable Partners to help me, there’s no way I could hunt. Because that capable partner is my ears, my eyes, and they track,” said Terrie Schrank, president of Capable Partners.

Vermillion Highlands has partnered with the organization since 2011.

Tim Pharis, area wildlife supervisor for Dakota, Scott, Carver and a portion of Hennepin, recalled a blind hunter who came to the Vermillion Highlands with help from an assistant.

“To watch him come out of the blind and approach the deer… just watching him kind of feeling the antlers and touching parts of the deer’s body was a super emotional thing for me. It’s just a big take home message that we need to be providing more of these opportunities to the public,” Pharis said.

Other improvements will include seven fully accessible parking lots at WMAs and more than 100 projects to retrofit the DNR’s current hunting blinds and wildlife observation platforms to make them ADA compliant.

$5 million is being invested towards shore fishing access and improvements.

Jim Levitt, shore fishing coordinator for the section of fisheries with the MN DNR, said there are more than 300 potential sites across the state that could benefit from shore fishing improvements.

“If you’re a wheelchair user, it really limits you where you can go. And then when you really look at it and see how many of those are actually in the metro, if you’re outside the metro you’re really limited to the places that you can go fishing. So this program and the Get Out MORE funding has really allowed us to expand those opportunities all over the state,” Levitt said.

Levitt has a goal of completing 100 projects with the $5 million dollars they received.

In celebration of everything the state has to offer, Governor Tim Walz is proclaiming Saturday, Sept. 28 as Hunting and Fishing Day in Minnesota.

David Trauba, interim MN DNR wildlife section manager, read the proclamation at Tuesday’s press conference and presented the proclamation to Capable Partners.



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Man charged in deadly shooting at Brooklyn Park party

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Lue Chang was charged with second-degree murder after prosecutors say he shot a man multiple times in the backyard where “numerous children were playing.”

BROOKLYN PARK, Minn. — A 32-year-old Brooklyn Park man allegedly shot and killed a man at a family celebration Saturday in Brooklyn Park, according to court documents.

Lue Chang was charged Tuesday with second-degree murder after prosecutors say he shot a man multiple times in a backyard where “numerous children were playing” during a celebration for the birth of multiple children in the family.

Witnesses told investigators that Chang shot the man multiple times before a group of family members jumped on him “to detain him and get the gun away from him,” according to the criminal complaint.

Officials say the shooting occurred just after 6:30 p.m. on the 8400 block of Adair Avenue North in Brooklyn Park. When officers arrived, they found a large group, including adults and children, scattered throughout the garage, backyard and inside the home. Investigators say the victim was laying on the ground, unconscious with multiple gunshot wounds to his abdomen and back. The man, later identified as 34-year-old Nichanon Kittikroekphon of Coon Rapids, was transported to North Memorial Hospital where he later died.

According to court documents, one of the witnesses who was holding down Chang asked him why he shot Kittikroekphon, and Chang responded “Because he disrespected me.” Another witness told police they heard Chang tell Kittikroekphon, “Today you’re going to die.” The witness said Chang then pulled out a handgun and shot Kittikroekphon.

Video of the shooting allegedly shows the two speaking before the shooting. Prosecutors say Chang looked “somewhat upset” in the video. At one point, Chang is allegedly seen pulling out a gun and shooting an unarmed Kittikroekphon. The video also showed a boy, believed to be about 2 years old, standing with a foot or so of the victim, according to the criminal complaint.



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Metro Transit Police Chief resigns during investigation into hostile workplace, sexual harassment claims, sources say

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Sources inside the department tell KARE11 14 employees brought forward complaints of a hostile workplace or sexual harassment.

MINNEAPOLIS — Sources inside Metro Transit have confirmed to KARE11 that Ernest Morales III, the now-former police chief, has resigned amid an investigation into his conduct. Those sources say that comes after 14 employees brought forward sexual harassment or hostile workplace complaints.

This comes after Morales was placed on leave in August. His personnel file from the Metropolitan Council shows he was placed on non-medical leave, though it did not disclose what the reason was.

The Metropolitan Council declined to comment on Morales or this situation, but instead spoke on safety initiatives.

“At Metro Transit, providing a safe and welcoming system for our riders and employees is a top priority,” a statement from the council reads. “Strengthening public safety is an agency-wide effort involving everyone, and this important work continues without disruption.”

In August, Morales shared that ridership is up and overall reported crime is down.

As of this article’s publishing, Morales is still listed as chief on Metro Transit’s website. A billboard across the street from Metro Transit’s office near Target Field still bears a recruiting ad featuring Morales as of Tuesday afternoon.

Metro Transit officials say Captain Joseph Dotseth has agreed to serve as Interim Metro Transit Police Chief.



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