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Minnesota cities face deadline for making cannabis rules

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Recreational cannabis sales are coming to Minnesota, and cities have some big decisions to make: Where can the shops go? Can they be next to schools? Should the cities get in the game?

“It’s the hot topic,” said Plymouth Planning and Development Manager Chloe McGuire, who noted that it’s not often cities get to write rules for a new industry. “This is what we wait for as planners.”

When the Minnesota Legislature passed the law in 2023 that clears the way for recreational cannabis sales, it included a clause that allowed cities to adopt time-limited moratoriums that prevented retail shops from setting up within their borders. In some ways, it was a formality. Recreational sales can’t happen until the state finishes its rule-making process, which is still underway.

But some cities chose to hit pause as a way of adding “extra protection” so they could pivot if the state changed cannabis laws or launched the industry earlier than expected, said Kyle Hartnett, assistant research manager for the League of Minnesota Cities.

Many cities that adopted moratoriums have until the end of the year to lift them, leading to a flurry of fall meetings aimed at figuring out where recreational retailers can set up shop and which government officials will be tasked with running their compliance checks. State law also allows cities to limit the number of recreational cannabis stores, though they must allow at least one for every 12,500 residents.

“We can decide on number of licenses and zoning districts, but we do have to provide for it,” said McGuire, who is also on the executive committee for the Minnesota chapter of the American Planning Association. “We can’t ban it. That decision has been made for us.”

In larger, denser cities, such as Minneapolis, public discussions have focused on how to create a limited number of buffer zones around places where children spend time, without running afoul of the requirements to allow a minimum number of stores. In smaller cities, officials have also debated how to best regulate a new industry with limited staff.



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As Trump threatens mass deportations, some rural areas that back him rely heavily on immigrant labor

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Matt Bocklund, a Hudson, Wis., Republican activist said in a statement that the Biden administration’s border policies, along with the State Department’s refugee resettlement efforts, could lead to exploitation in the farming industry, where many refugees and immigrants are vulnerable because of weak labor protections and their legal status. That strains rural communities, many of which are already facing economic burdens, he said.

He suggests creating incentives for farmers to use only legal labor; offering tax incentives, job training and possibly wage subsidies to encourage American workers to fill jobs now held by immigrants; and penalizing farmers who hire undocumented workers while encouraging investment in automation through tax credits and subsidies.

In 2020, 62% of Buffalo County, home to Rosenow’s farm, went for Trump. And Wisconsin’s largest milk-producing counties also backed the GOP nominee by hefty margins. Trump lost the past two elections in Minnesota, but in Stearns County, the state’s largest milk producer, 60% of voters backed him

In the late 1990s, Rosenow recalled, it was a struggle to find workers: “The only people that would even respond to an ad were people that had major problems — work histories and stuff where they had dependency issues or they weren’t reliable. … Most Americans won’t work on farms.”

“We were desperate for help,” he said. “We turned to immigrants. And we didn’t want to do that; we didn’t know the language, and we didn’t know the culture … but once we did, we found out how wonderful they were, great workers, great people to be around and people you want to have as your neighbors.”

Today, 13 out of his 18 employees are Mexican. He fills out I-9 and W-4 documents for the workers and said they pay state and federal taxes “like everybody else.” Federal legislative efforts have repeatedly failed to allow dairy farm workers into the legal agricultural guest worker program under the H-2A visa.



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With Spike Lee actor, Penumbra’s ‘Basquiat’ channels painter whose piece fetched $110 million

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Are these just coincidences or do they have deeper spiritual resonances? Smith’s juxtapositions give his thoughts away. For “Basquiat” is personal and loving, and filled with emotion, even as the performer delivers on a mostly bare stage with a lit crown painted by artist Seitu Jones.

Some have likened Basquiat’s prodigious output to jazz if the music erupted like paint onto canvas from the tough subway grilles of his native New York.

“Basquiat” nods to that soundscape. Smith teams with longtime collaborator Mark Anthony Thompson, whose sound design efficiently evokes the dancefloor where Smith and Basquiat first meet with an excerpt of Africa “Planet Rock.” Thompson also uses plinks and underscoring as well. These aural treatments, augmented by lighting designer Wen Chen Khoo’s aurora borealis color palette, help to propel Smith’s story.

In life, Basquiat the artist drew on encyclopedic influences, from music to literature, graffiti to Da Vinci. Through whispers and vocal tics, Smith draws us into the artist’s spirit. We listen hard, as if to hear the secrets of a figure who remains ineffable, perhaps not fully knowable, even as we take in the startling lyricism of his channeled genius.

When: 7:30 p.m. Wed.-Fri., 2 & 7:30 p.m. Sat., 4 p.m. Sun. Ends Oct. 27.

Where: Penumbra Theatre, 270 N. Kent St., St. Paul.



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Man arrested in St. Cloud is accused of fatally shooting sailor, 18, in San Diego

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The investigators identified Benness as the shooter and the others as well “through a combination of public and private security footage, license plate readers, witness interviews, and tireless investigative work,” a statement from San Diego police read.

About 10:30 a.m. on Wednesday, St. Cloud police found Benness and arrested him while he was a passenger in a vehicle at the intersection of 10th Avenue N. and 2nd Street N.

Atoria Elem told Channel 10-TV in San Diego that Soto was her cousin and was an Operations Specialist Seaman Apprentice assigned to the destroyer USS Pinckney.

“He had the option to basically go to college, join training school. However, he was very adamant about joining the Navy to serve his country,” Elem added.

In a posting on an online fund-raising page, Elem initiated on behalf of the family, she wrote, “Albert was training in the Navy in California, away from his hometown. A casual night out resulted in him losing his life to gun violence.”



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