Star Tribune
St. Paul mayor and city council meeting to reach budget compromise
The middle ground: a 7.2% increase.
In an interview Wednesday afternoon, Deputy Mayor Jamie Tincher said Carter, too, would like the levy to be lower. But proposing a 5% increase would mean an additional cut of $6 million from 2025 city services — a reduction that could increase fire response times, slow the processing of license applications and reduce parks and rec and library services.
“He doesn’t have a path to do that without reducing services that will be felt by the people who are currently getting them,” Tincher said.
If the two sides cannot agree on a tax levy for 2025, state law would require the city to institute this year’s levy. That, Tincher said, would lead to drastic cuts in city personnel and services, as costs go up every year because of things like health care, insurance and previously negotiated salary increases.
The gap between revenue and costs then, she said, would be $16 million.
Tincher was asked if this year’s negotiations felt “different.”
Star Tribune
Designs under consideration for new Lowry Avenue station
When the Blue Line light-rail trains begin running between Target Field and Brooklyn Park in 2030, they will stop at Lowry Avenue and West Broadway on the border of Minneapolis and Robbinsdale.
What the station there will look like is far from settled.
Met Council and Metro Transit officials last week revealed nine station designs under consideration during an open house at Elim Lutheran Church.
Not every planned light-rail station gets that many iterations, but “this is an unusually complex location,” said spokesman Kyle Mianulli. “It’s at the intersection of several major roads, park property and is adjacent to a hospital.”
The original station design that was approved when both cities gave consent for the nearly $3 billion project called for platforms on street level near the present-day bridges where Theodore Wirth Parkway passes under West Broadway/County Road 81. To make way for the tracks and station, the parkway and trails would be realigned to intersect with Lowry slightly to the east of the current intersection.
In this scenario, sets of crossing arms would be installed on both Theodore Wirth Parkway and Lowry. The Minneapolis Park and Recreation Board expressed concerns about the impact an at-grade crossing would have on parkway and trail users, and to park property. North Memorial Health Hospital officials raised concerns about vehicles and ambulances being able to access the hospital since gates would be down about 10% of the time, Metro Transit’s Ryan Kronzer said during the meeting.
In response, designers came up with eight other possibilities. Among the options are underground or elevated stations; running trains through a trench or tunnel; and keeping at-grade crossings that may lead to realigning roadways and trails. One plan calls for rerouting Wirth Parkway to pass under the Blue Line while another calls for adding a flyover bridge for trains.
Met Council officials have created a matrix to evaluate each of the eight additional options, looking at criteria such as how accessible stations would be depending on their placement and the effects on the hospital, parks and trails, and overall traffic. Other criteria include connectivity to the neighborhood and how elements of each design would preserve or force modifications to three West Broadway bridges over Lowry that were just rebuilt in 2022 and 2023. And then there is cost, too.
Star Tribune
Minnesota reports most whooping cough cases since 2012
Minnesota is reporting the highest number of whooping cough cases in more than a decade, according to the state department of health.
As of Dec. 5, 2,324 cases of whooping cough, also called pertussis, were reported by health care facilities, medical labs and schools and child care centers, with the majority in the Twin Cities metro. That’s the highest number reported at this time of year since 2012, when there were 4,144 cases.
Health officials expected the spike because the disease peaks every three to five years. Whooping cough cases are increasing across the country, signaling a return to more typical trends seen before a drop-off of many contagious illnesses during the COVID-19 pandemic.
In Minnesota, the median age of those with whooping cough this year is 14. According to the Minnesota Department of Health, immunity to the vaccine — a shot routinely recommended for those ages 11 and 12 — starts to wane after one or two years.
Among the cases, 77 infants were reported to have whooping cough, and 34 people were hospitalized.
Whooping cough often resembles a cold in the initial weeks, and later results in a prolonged cough. People with the illness are contagious for the first 21 days of coughing or until they have completed the first five days of antibiotics.
The health department reports that vaccination is crucial in preventing and reducing the spread of whooping cough. Officials have voiced concerns as immunizations have declined in recent years among Minnesota kindergartners entering school.
Health officials urge women who are pregnant to receive the vaccine and that children receive on-time vaccinations. The whooping cough vaccine is included in a shot combined with tetanus and diphtheria vaccines. Adults are advised to receive a booster shot every 10 years.
Star Tribune
Teen in critical condition, another wounded after Robbinsdale shooting
A 17-year-old is in critical condition and another 17-year-old sustained non-life threatening injuries following a shooting in a parking lot of a Robbinsdale apartment building early Sunday, police said.
Officers responded to reports of a shooting at the 4200 block of 46th Avenue N. at 12:43 a.m. Sunday, according to a news release from the Robbinsdale Police Department.
They gave emergency aid to two victims with gunshot wounds before an ambulance brought them to Robbinsdale’s North Memorial Health Hospital.
Robbinsdale police, officers from other agencies and K9 units didn’t locate anyone during initial searches of the area. That changed a short time later, when officials located a “person of interest” who detectives subsequently interviewed, the release states.
A detective and investigators with the Hennepin County Sheriff’s Office processed the scene and recovered evidence. Officers have yet to arrest anyone following the shooting.