Connect with us

Star Tribune

While Minnesota’s cannabis industry wades through regulations, Wisconsin’s accelerates without many

Avatar

Published

on


Store manager Nathan Taylor at Highnorth Dispensary in Hudson, Wis., on Thursday, Oct. 03, 2024. (Alex Kormann/The Minnesota Star Tribune)

That summer, the owners had to pull many of their products from shelves to comply with Minnesota’s low-dose edible regulations. And when they opened an Uptown Minneapolis location in 2023, regulators eventually nixed their THCA flower and vapes for similar reasons.

State regulators have destroyed more than 190 pounds of cannabis flower taken from retail stores, about $578,000 worth, according to Minnesota’s Office of Cannabis Management (OCM).

Those run-ins led Thompson and Johnson to open their 200-square-foot location in Hudson, Wis. Because of the lack of rules there, they can sell many of the same products they used to offer in Minnesota, including cannabis flower, high-dose edibles, THC vapes and pre-rolls. According to Johnson, the Wisconsin location outperforms its other two stores with about 30% more revenue since it opened in April 2024.

“It was a way for us to service this customer base that we had earned their trust for a long time,” Thompson said, “and give them a place they can still come get product that’s safe, that’s tested, that they can be comfortable buying and that they’re familiar with.”

If hemp-derived THC products were a pre-legalization loophole in Minnesota, THCA is an exercise in interpretation in Wisconsin. Technically, labs should test TCHA for that 0.3% threshold only after it has converted to delta-9 from heating. But that’s not completely clear in the farm bill, meaning people can purchase TCHA products in Wisconsin, for example, that are way stronger than the 0.3% threshold after heating.

“I suppose it’s a gray-area industry, and I guess it has been since the farm bill passed,” Thompson said. “But all we’re going to do is make sure that we’re providing the best quality products that we can within the market that’s being serviced.”



Read the original article

Leave your vote

Continue Reading

Star Tribune

What to know about traveling out of MSP Airport during MEA weekend

Avatar

Published

on


The Purple Ramp at MSP Airport’s Terminal 2 now has an area to pickup and drop off passengers.

How to avoid circling the bonkers arrival areas at both terminals in a attempt to pick up your passenger: Use the cell phone lots on Post Road. They’re free and you can wait peacefully in your car until your passenger texts or calls.

If you need a primer on TSA’s baffling 3-1-1 liquids rule, and other requirements before you enter the security line scrum: Here are some tips, including identification requirements, and regulated items for carry-on and checked baggage.

If you need a little entertainment: Arts@MSP, the Airport Foundation’s arts and culture program, will feature music performances, Paul Bunyan appearances, kids activities and a “Fossil Friends” interactive display from the Science Museum of Minnesota.

What do the experts forecast for travel? Although this year’s MEA weekend is expected to be busy, Potter says there are signs that the explosive post-pandemic growth in air travel may be cooling off or even slowing down.

“After four straight years of uninterrupted year-over-year growth, national TSA numbers have dipped down to — or even fallen below — the same point in 2023,” he said. “In this post-pandemic travel boom, that’s a first.”

The real question is whether it’s just a blip. It could be “a mixture of the normal, back-to-school seasonality exacerbated by hurricane season in the south and election-year anxiety,” Potter said. “Or is it a sign that ‘revenge travel’ is finally, really over — that, after years of putting travel ahead of everything else, Americans have finally hit a breaking point?”



Read the original article

Leave your vote

Continue Reading

Star Tribune

Hennepin County says it has “effectively ended” homelessness among veterans

Avatar

Published

on


Navy veteran Alyssa Koeppen felt some added satisfaction on Tuesday as she listened to Hennepin County officials announce the county had “effectively ended” homelessness among veterans.

Koeppen, 54, became homeless and had to sleep on friends’ couches on-and-off after 13 years living abroad in the military and returning to Minnesota. But then in September, Koeppen secured rental housing through a Hennepin County program. She said that in recent months she’s noticed a reduction in the number of veterans she meets on the street who are homeless.

“We’re getting housed, and that matters,” Koeppen said.

She joined dozens of others at the celebratory event Tuesday morning in the Hennepin County Government Center where county officials declared they had made major progress with finding housing for veterans.

That assertion does not mean there will be no future veterans who become homeless. Plus, the overall rate of people experiencing homelessness in the county and state has increased to their highest levels, according to this year’s Point-in-Time Count.

But for any veterans who become homeless, the county says that period will be rare, brief and nonrecurring. The county is also helping veterans overcome homelessness at a faster rate than those who are becoming homeless, officials said.

Hennepin County had 69 veterans experiencing homelessness at the end of September, a nearly 60% decrease from August 2023, according to data provided by the county. Five of those 69 homeless veterans remain unsheltered, the county said. Neil Doyle, director of the Hennepin County Veteran Service Office, said he’s proud of the achievement, but also recognized there is much work to be done.

“Today’s announcement doesn’t by any means mark an end to this critical work,” he said to the crowd on Tuesday. “We are only pausing for a moment to acknowledge this key milestone.”



Read the original article

Leave your vote

Continue Reading

Star Tribune

Top-ranking Minneapolis Police Department officer sues Liz Collin, Alpha News for defamation following film, book

Avatar

Published

on


Chauvin is then interviewed in the film about his training with maximal restraint technique and shows a page from a department training manual about the technique. The lawsuit argues that, “In the film’s deceptive framing and editing, Collin and Chaix lie about the nature of Blackwell’s testimony with the hope that the viewer will believe that Blackwell perjured herself by stating that the MRT was not part of police policy. In reality, Blackwell testified that she did not recognize the technique used by Chauvin as any technique officers are trained to use, including the MRT.”

The lawsuit notes that the film concludes later that Blackwell “turned her back on the city of Minneapolis and implies that Blackwell’s testimony was responsible in part for a whole host of public safety concerns.” That includes a spike in crime, a dramatic drop in the ranks of sworn Minneapolis police officers and “general deterioration of the city.”

“The Fall of Minneapolis” has currently been viewed 2.8 million times on YouTube, where it is available for free, and the lawsuit notes the film has surged back into the public consciousness after Governor Tim Walz was selected as the DFL nominee for vice president.

The lawsuit has been assigned to Fourth District Judge Edward Wahl.

Star Tribune staff writer Liz Sawyer contributed to this report.



Read the original article

Leave your vote

Continue Reading

Copyright © 2024 Breaking MN

Log In

Forgot password?

Forgot password?

Enter your account data and we will send you a link to reset your password.

Your password reset link appears to be invalid or expired.

Log in

Privacy Policy

Add to Collection

No Collections

Here you'll find all collections you've created before.