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Pete Hegseth is Donald Trump’s pick for defense secretary: 5 things to know

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As President-elect Donald Trump’s second administration comes into clearer focus, one newly announced Cabinet pick may ring a bell for several Minnesotans. Trump has tapped “Fox and Friends” host Pete Hegseth to run the Department of Defense.

While he’s known to most of America as a Fox News personality, here are five things we learned from the Star Tribune archives and other media reports about Hegseth:

He grew up in Forest Lake

Hegseth graduated from Forest Lake Area High School in 1999, where he played football and basketball. He went on to attend Princeton University on an ROTC scholarship, where he continued playing basketball.

Hegseth served in the Army

Hegseth joined the Army after he graduated from Princeton and served with the 101st Airborne in 2005-06, according to the Star Tribune archives. In 2005, the then-lieutenant spoke to the newspaper about the conditions of the detention camp at Guantanamo Bay, where he defended the facility against criticism.

“Photographers sometimes take pictures that make it look like American soldiers are putting the detainees in dog cages,” he told Star Tribune columnist Katherine Kersten. “That’s very misleading.”

A year before that, three British Muslim prisoners had reported several instances of torture, forced drugging and religious persecution.



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Vacant mall in New Ulm burns, no injuries reported

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The vacant Marktplatz Mall in New Ulm, Minn., caught on fire in Wednesday’s early morning hours.

The entire roof of the mall was billowing smoke when firefighters arrived at 4:21 a.m., New Ulm Assistant Fire Chief Aaron Wilfahrt said Thursday.

Clothing, couches, chairs and household items were burning inside the mall, which has sat empty for six years, Wilfahrt said.

The blaze was difficult to fight as first responders did not know where it started, but crews from New Ulm, Sleepy Eye and Courtland helped get the flames under control within an hour and a half, he said.

The fire remained largely confined to the roof and did not spread into the structure, Wilfahrt said. There were no injuries.

The cause of the fire is still under investigation, he added.

Marktplatz Mall has been closed as a retail space since 2018 after the Herberger’s store closed. The building has sat empty for nearly six years.



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Minneapolis City Council votes to create new Labor Standards Board

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“I am growing tired of how you allow Black women to be treated on this council,” she said.

Payne said he allows Vetaw to talk more in an attempt to be “extra sensitive” to the concerns she’s raised with him.

“Do something about it. Be better,” Vetaw replied. “I’m sick of it.”

When the resolution passed a committee last week, Frey said he has long supported “a labor standards board that is fair and balanced, but the City Council’s proposal is not.” The mayor’s office said he would support a board with a 50/50 split between employers and employees, a 50/50 split between mayoral and council appointments to the board, and a requirement that at least two-thirds of the board members support a recommended policy before it can advance to the City Council, rather than a simple majority. The resolution does not include those provisions.

The resolution was supported by council members Jeremiah Ellison, Emily Koski, Andrea Jenkins, Aurin Chowdhury, Katie Cashman, Jamal Osman, Aisha Chughtai, Jason Chavez and Elliott Payne. It was opposed by Linea Palmisano, Michael Rainville and LaTrisha Vetaw. Council Member Robin Wonsley was absent.



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New HCMC board is more diverse and budget is healthier than a year ago

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Jeremy Olson-Ehlert, Janell Johnson Thiele and Mariah Tunkara, leaders of the Minnesota Nurses Association unit representing 1,661 nurses at HCMC, said in a statement that adding workforce representatives to the board was a good step. But they questioned why workers didn’t get to pick their board representatives instead of management.

“When labor and workforce seats are added to employer committees, the unions that represent the workers elect or select the candidates so that workers can choose those they trust to represent their views,” their statement said. “In this instance, however, that didn’t happen.”

Jeremy Olson-Ehlert, a registered nurse and a co-chair of the Minnesota Nurses Association at HCMC, spoke during a press conference at Hennepin County Government Center in Minneapolis in April. (Leila Navidi/The Minnesota Star Tribune)

They pledged to work with the new board members, but added that union members still have deep concerns about DeCubellis, who they say “continues to disrespect workers and undermine labor unions at every turn.”

The increased scrutiny from county leaders didn’t sit well with everyone in the hospital system’s leadership. But DeCubellis said the partnership helped hospital leaders find new ways the county can help the health system weather challenging times, especially for hospitals with a safety-net mission of serving everyone, regardless of their ability to pay.

For instance, county leaders have committed to a $10 million increase in uncompensated care funding for a total of $38 million annually.



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