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Community remembers Minnesota teen killed in car crash
Luke Knudson died Sunday night after crashing into a traffic light off a Minnetonka highway.
ORONO, Minn — In a tight-knit town where pain reverberates, candles now light the way to the Knudson home—the same house 17-year-old Luke Knudson came home to every day.
The Orono High School senior died Sunday night after crashing into a traffic light off a Minnetonka highway. His vehicle burst into flames. Flowers and a letter of support for his family now sit at the same intersection.
Loved ones remember Luke as someone full of life and love.
“I think anybody that met Luke, the first thing [they’d] say is he was really full of energy,” his mother Renae Rhude-Knudson said on Tuesday. “He cared about other people.”
In some ways, Luke was an ordinary kid. “He loved dogs, he loved going to the cabin.” In other ways, Rhude-Knudson said her son was extraordinary. “He was just really, really kindhearted, really funny, really witty and really was happy for other people when good things happened to them.”
Funny, smart and compassionate, Rhude-Knudson said Luke was devoted to his family, friends and basketball. He was looking forward to his final high school basketball season alongside his best friends.
“We love Lucas with our whole heart, and he loved us back and he’s going to be dearly missed,” Orono High School head basketball coach Barry Wohler said.
Wohler emphasized that this season will be dedicated to Luke. The first team practice is planned for Tuesday after being canceled Monday afternoon.
“Yesterday was a really tough day,” Wohler added. “I was just meeting with some of the players now, and it’s been a tough day again today. A lot of tears.”
Wohler said he and the players are trying to heal together and be strong for one another. Rhude-Knudson said it’s what her son would want them and others to do.
“Just like I told the boys last night: everybody’s going to be sad, and the sadness is going to come in waves. Just make sure that you keep going,” she said. “He’d want you to keep going.”
Rhude-Knudson said a family trip to Kenya and subsequent leadership class project inspired Luke to connect with the nonprofit the Samburu Project, which builds hand-pump wells for people in Samburu who do not have access to clean water. She said Luke was working on the project the night he passed away. His family plans to continue his work with the organization and make a difference in Luke’s honor.
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Eden Prairie man sentenced for COVID relief fraud
The 75-year-old is accused of spending the Paycheck Protection Program money on himself.
ST PAUL, Minn — An Eden Prairie man was sentenced to seven years behind bars for Covid relief fraud, with officials saying he applied for more than $2.1 million in funds which he spent on himself.
U.S. Attorney Andrew M. Luger announced in a press release Harold Bennie Kaeding, 75, of Eden Prairie was sentenced to more than seven years in federal prison. He was convicted of wire fraud, aggravated identity theft, and money laundering.
In the first three months of the Covid-19 pandemic, Luger said Kaeding used the name of close family members to submit loan applications for different corporate entities, that were either defunct or not in existence when the pandemic began.
Kaeding was accused of fabricating tax documents, manufacturing bank statements, and submitting records to ensure the applications appeared legitimate. He initially received $1,642,670, Luger said, but banks realized the irregularities and were able to get some of the money back.
“Among other things, Kaeding used the money to get his personal residence out of impending foreclosure, purchase an SUV, and stockpile more than $80,000 in cash,” Luger said.
Kaeding was arrested in Columbia, where officials say he fled to when he learned he was under investigation. He was found guilty at a jury trial in August.
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Report: Fewer nursing home beds in rural MN
The Center for Rural Policy and Development published a new report that found rural Minnesota counties have 41% fewer nursing facility beds compared to 2005.
MINNEAPOLIS — The healthcare crisis across rural America just keeps growing.
A new report from the Center for Rural Policy and Development out of Minnesota shows that demand for long-term care for the elderly will skyrocket over the next 20 years.
Experts say the biggest hurdle will be to try and staff for that increase.
The University of Minnesota’s Rural Physician Associate Program is matching about 35 of its medical students a year to more rural areas where they learn a broader skillset and become well-known in the community.
“If we can get students to experience that in our program, they’re three times more likely to practice in a rural spot,” said U of M Professor Dr. Kirby Clark. “We don’t focus just on physicians because by themselves, without a team, is pretty worthless, so we promote all the other health professions that a community needs.”
The need extends beyond doctors and includes recruiting pharmacy techs and nurses, particularly at nursing homes, and the problems have forced many to shut their doors.
In Minnesota, eight nursing homes closed in 2023. In the three years before that, there were another 15, including one Jenny Gleason oversees.
“It was excruciating,” said Gleason, who’s the CEO of Living Services Foundation which has several facilities in southwest Minnesota. “People were just heartbroken because it becomes their community.”
Gleason converted that one closed facility to assisted living in 2021, citing staffing shortages.
“When we are constantly searching and calling everyone to see if you can work overtime, can you do this, like everyone is stressed,” said Gleason. “And it’s not that people don’t want to do a good job or be there, but they need balance too.”
The new report says demand for nursing beds won’t peak for at least another 20 to 30 years when its data shows more than 37,000 people will need one.
It also shows patients are sicker, reimbursement rates are low and some wages are higher.
Some of those wages will go up even more as the state’s newly formed workforce standards board voted to start raising minimum pay and benefits in 2026.
“Figuring out how to get the cash upfront to fund that is really, really challenging, especially after going through COVID-19 when organizations like mine put every extra penny we had into just making it through,” said Gleason.
The most severe declines are happening in Red Lake County, which lost all of its beds. Cass Lake County only has 33 beds left, followed by Grant and Swift Counties.
The report says Chippewa County is the only one to have more beds because the Department of Veterans Affairs built a new facility just this year.
In the meantime, other locations have to keep getting creative with recruitment and some say they’ll push for fewer barriers, including the new, federal minimum staffing requirements.
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Incoming City of Orono leadership looks to mend ties with City of Long Lake
A rift between the communities began years ago when the City of Orono decided to create their own fire department.
ORONO, Minn. — Orono is on track to replace four of their current five leaders next year, including their mayor. Challenger Bob Tunheim beat incumbent Denny Walsh with two-thirds of the votes this election. Tunheim has a background as an attorney and previously served as a school board chair during the pandemic.
His top priorities? Rebuilding trust with residents and mending the relationship with neighboring city Long Lake.
“I am eager to begin rebuilding trust and am confident that we can find a practical solution that benefits all parties while fully addressing Orono’s public safety needs,” Tunheim said.
Two new city council members were elected in Orono, too. Just last week, one city council member that wasn’t up for re-election resigned.
“I think people are interested in being sleepy little Orono in the western suburbs again,” councilmember elect Steve Persian jokingly said.
Persian, who was once a fire chief of Long Lake, feels the residents have spoken and it’s time to move forward with more civility in the city. One of his goals is to re-unite the Orono Fire Department with Long Lake. Something the previous administration was against.
In 2021, Orono Mayor Denny Walsh began taking steps to sever ties with Long Lake and build their own fire department. The two cities have shared a fire department together for 100 years. Walsh said at the time, Orono owned 85% of the service area and owned the majority of the equipment which led to them wanting to have control over their own department.
The division not only was highly scrutinized by residents but led to a lawsuit filed by Long Lake.
“We had to get an injunction, the City of Orono was held in contempt, twice. It’s been a lot of stress on our fire fighters most importantly,” Long Lake Mayor Charlie Miner.
Miner says the current fire contract between the cities expires in 2025. He says the city of Long Lake is delaying their trial date with hopes the cities can reach an amicable agreement.