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This Apple Valley high school is sending teenagers to the United Nations.

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The class of Minnesota teens, dressed in business attire, understood the assignment: Roleplay how delegates from various countries, including Bhutan, Kenya and Suriname, would discuss and work toward solutions for human trafficking.

By the end of the seven-day Model United Nations course at the School of Environmental Studies in Apple Valley, the two dozen high schoolers had adopted the appropriate decorum and memorized the procedure for a simulation of U.N. business.

“It’s amazing how quickly they learn the vocabulary, the process, and the purpose of it,” Principal Lauren Haisting said about the class, which is offered as an elective “intensive theme” class, similar to a college J-term course. The school also teaches a shorter Model U.N. unit to all juniors and offers an after-school Model U.N. club.

“We pride ourselves on our kids going out to be leaders and affecting change,” Haisting said. “To see them do this — to choose this — is impressive and heartening.”

Harley Terry, left, a student representing Uruguay, writes notes for students during a Model United Nations meeting discussing human trafficking at the School of Environmental Studies in Apple Valley on Nov. 22. (Elizabeth Flores/The Minnesota Star Tribune)

The School of Environmental Studies (SES) is a public magnet high school designed to immerse students in real-life opportunities to study and develop solutions for environmental topics and concerns. Located next to The Minnesota Zoo, the school serves about 400 students in grades 11 and 12.

Model United Nations fits the school’s goal by teaching the students to understand issues from multiple perspectives and reach compromise, said Chad Forde one of the course’s teachers. And because SES is one of just two U.S. high schools with consultative status at the U.N., some of the students who complete the course will be chosen to attend the Commission on the Status of Women and the Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues, both held in New York in the spring. SES students have been attending a variety of U.N. conferences since 2007.

“This is far more than just simply learning about a topic in the world and it’s not just a current events class for kids who like history,” Forde said. “This is a class that’s here to prepare you for adulthood and for a career.”

Plus, he said the conferences prove to students that they don’t have to be head of an NGO or a world-famous documentary filmmaker to draw attention to or propose solutions to a world issue.



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Why Otter’s Saloon in Minneapolis is struggling

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Different owners, different names, but always a dive bar at this tiny wedge of an intersection, welcoming thirsty travelers inside its angled walls. Even during Prohibition. Especially during Prohibition.

This year came the Hennepin and First roadway improvement project. The saloon draped a banner over the door, reassuring visitors that, yes, behind the closed streets, ripped-out sidewalks and clouds of construction dust, Otter’s was still open for business.

The orange cones are gone now; the streets are open, and the new bike lanes beckon. But it’s hard for Vashro not to look around and see what she’s lost. Little bits of Otter’s Saloon, carved away for the greater good.

Patrons play in a cribbage tournament at Otter’s Saloon in Minneapolis on Nov. 30. (Ayrton Breckenridge/The Minnesota Star Tribune)

When officials asked her for an easement for the new bike path, “I said yes, of course, people are welcome to come and bike. I gave them part of my sidewalk,” Vashro said. When they announced plans for a new bus line, she attended the meetings and found out those plans called for plopping the new F Line bus shelter directly in front of her door. All as she watched the saloon lose money, month after month. Revenue was down almost $5,000 in July, compared with the year before. Down another $5,400 in August. Down $7,800 by September.

“It felt like they just kept hitting me,” Vashro said. And then they put in parking meters in places that had never been metered — even in front of her dumpsters, so some weeks the garbage trucks can’t get in and the trash piles up.

Parking meters and parking spaces sound like small things. But these are small businesses. Vashro has been looking at those $3 drink prices and wondering how long she can hold out against an increase. There’s a jar behind the bar to cover the cost of the new meters for her bartenders and regulars, but she worries about how far her staff might sometimes have to walk to their cars at 2 a.m.



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St. Paul offering free co-working space, parking to repopulate downtown

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The city of St. Paul is helping fund a lottery early next year.

The jackpot: Free downtown co-working space and parking for six months.

This small effort is part of a larger push to revitalize downtown St. Paul after the pandemic and subsequent rise of remote and hybrid work drained the commuter crowd. Like downtowns across the country, St. Paul’s urban core struggled to recover foot traffic as it grappled with high office vacancies, the loss of some long-tenured businesses and a rise in homelessness and addiction.

The city is chipping in a few thousand dollars to help subsidize the program and its marketing.

“In the past, we knew that if we could attract companies to a city, they would bring their workers with them,” said City Council Member Rebecca Noecker, who represents downtown. “I started wondering if, in a time of hybrid and remote work, maybe what we need to do is attract people themselves and take advantage of the fact that we have something that very other few places can boast of, which is this incredible downtown.”

From now until the end of the month, people can fill out an online form for a shot at free access to Wellworth, a community-centric co-working space with internet and printers, conference rooms, rooftop patios and mail service. Wellworth will then reach out to schedule a short tour of the space, a requirement for entry into the lottery.

In early January, ten winners will receive a six-month membership that would otherwise cost $1,650, plus free access to a city-owned parking ramp nearby. Ten others will be offered a highly discounted $50-a-month memberships.

Beyond this, public and private officials are also uniting around a downtown investment strategy that aims to convert empty offices to housing, improve the pedestrian experience and move forward key redevelopment projects, like the Xcel Energy Center and Central Station light rail stop. That vision would take several years — and millions of dollars — to bring to fruition.



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Bryn Mawr salon bomber gets 5 years in prison and a hefty restitution bill

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A man who set off a bomb at a Minneapolis hair salon in 2022 and returned a year later to lob a brick through the shop’s window was sentenced Thursday to five years in prison.

Michael Allen Francisco, 59, of Minneapolis, was sentenced in U.S. District Court in Minneapolis after pleading guilty to malicious use of explosive materials following a lengthy federal investigation that included forensic analysis and an eventual admission during a search of his home in March.

Along with his time in prison, Francisco’s sentence includes three years’ supervised release and an order to pay more than $172,000 in restitution to his victims for the damage he inflicted on the Bryn Mawr neighborhood shop.

Video images from a Ring device on Nov. 20, 2022, showed Francisco placing an explosive on the window of the Studio 411 Salon, at 411 S. Cedar Lake Road, and fleeing in a vehicle before it detonated about 2:50 a.m.

He was also identified in video images throwing a landscaping brick through a window at the salon around 1:25 a.m. on Nov. 6, 2023.

In late March, the FBI and Minneapolis police searched Francisco’s home and seized a black jacket suspected to have been worn by Francisco during the brick-throwing incident. Agents also found multiple explosive components, including suspected “energetic powders and fuses,” a .32-caliber revolver with ammunition and suspected methamphetamine.

Francisco has a prior bank robbery conviction from 2001 for which he was sentenced to 12½ years in federal prison, making him ineligible to possess a firearm.



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