Star Tribune
Worry rising in Minnesota’s undocumented workforce as second Trump term approaches
That’s led immigration attorney Cassondre Buteyn to advise clients who go to contracting jobs in northern Minnesota to carry proof that they’ve been living here for longer than two years.
One difference between the upcoming Trump term and the last one, Buteyn noted, is that Minnesota’s new law allowing driver’s licenses for undocumented immigrants “creates a little bit of cover for people.” Previously, immigrants could be subject to removal proceedings if law enforcement pulled them over and found they had no legal permission to drive. Jorge recently obtained a license.
Several years ago, Jorge’s sister Adriana crossed the border undetected and came to Minnesota. Her 15-year-old son joined her this fall, turning himself in at the border and receiving a notice to appear in immigration court in September 2025.
At a home in St. Paul, Adriana holds the hand of her 15-year-old son, who came to the United States in September. (Elizabeth Flores/The Minnesota Star Tribune)
Adriana, 35, has one job making cookies at a bakery and a second handling laundry at a hotel. The bakery work in particular is hard, but Adriana said she dare not complain. She doesn’t refuse requests to work overtime, she said, “because I fear losing my job.”
Trump, Adriana said, “makes us feel like … the work that we do isn’t valuable. I don’t feel like I’m taking anybody’s job. I feel like there is opportunity for everybody.” She doesn’t think people should be upset with undocumented people for lowering wages. Take issue with the employers who hire them, she said, and rely on their productivity.
In their common experience in the undocumented workforce, sister and brother agreed that workers like them are necessary to productivity and that their industries would suffer in their absence. Adriana predicted that production at the bakery “would fall very, very low”; at the hotel, she predicted, her boss would have to hire more people because, she believes, undocumented Latinos are twice as fast and efficient as other workers.
Star Tribune
Christmas trees in Minneapolis rank from scrawny to spectacular
The rest of the tableau is rather inert, alas. The atrium is chilly and sparse, making the towering tree look less festive than it really is.
A silver star rests atop a Christmas tree and below a light sculpture at Capella Tower in downtown Minneapolis. (Ayrton Breckenridge/The Minnesota Star Tribune)
It’s the tree in the atrium at Capella Tower (225 S. 6th St.). Like its City Center brother, it is three stories tall, but the setting is far superior. It’s surrounded by a round atrium that mirrors the shape of the tree. The space is more compact than City Center’s, giving the tree, adorned with gold ornaments and ribbons and tiny lights, greater presence. The star on top points to a light sculpture that hangs in the atrium year-round, a wire cloud of bright bulbs. So the tree seems to be pointing up to an array of stars.
Star Tribune
Angie Craig grabs top Dem ag seat in House
After a four-year absence, a Minnesotan will return to leadership on the U.S. House agriculture committee, after Rep. Angie Craig gained support from her Democratic colleagues on Tuesday.
Craig, who represents southern suburbs in the Twin Cities and a swathe of rural areas in southern Minnesota, will take over as the ranking member for the Democrats when the next Congress gavels in next month. In a caucus vote on Tuesday on Capitol Hill, Craig won the vote 121-91 over California Rep. Jim Costa.
In a statement, Craig noted she won her purple district by a double-digit margin because “my farmers and rural constituents know that I’ll meet them where they’re at.”
“We can lower food and energy costs for consumers,” Craig said. “We can strengthen the farm safety net and open the doors of opportunity to new and beginning farmers.”
The catapulting of Craig, 52, over the 72-year-old Costa, who’d gained support from fellow Californian and former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, represents the latest toppling of a septuagenarian in Democratic leadership by a younger challenger. On Monday, the powerful Steering and Policy Committee voted in support of Craig over both Costa and current ag ranking member Rep. David Scott, a 79-year-old from Georgia.
The GOP will retain control of the House and gain control of the Senate in the new Congress, set to take seats in January. Still, in a narrowly-divided House, committee leaders will likely need to forge compromises to produce legislation.
Expected to top the to-do list for the next House agriculture committee is a reauthorization of the Farm Bill. That legislation, which was slated to be approved in the fall of 2023, has been continued through only a one-year extension that is, once again, on the brink of expiring.
Disputes over the allotment of nutrition programs, including the program formerly known as food stamps, as well as over climate-change-fighting farm funding are currently bedeviling the massive omnibus bill’s fate.
Star Tribune
15-year-old girl fatally shoots teacher and teenager at a Christian school in Wisconsin
MADISON, Wis. — A 15-year-old student opened fire inside a study hall at a small Christian school in Wisconsin, killing a teacher and a teenager and prompting a swarm of police officers to descend on the school in response to a second grader’s 911 call.
The girl also wounded six others in Monday’s shooting at Abundant Life Christian School, including two students who were in critical condition, Madison Police Chief Shon Barnes said. A teacher and three students were taken to a hospital with less serious injuries, and two of them were later released.
‘‘Every child, every person in that building is a victim and will be a victim forever. … We need to figure out and try to piece together what exactly happened,” Barnes said.
Police said the shooter, identified as Natalie Rupnow, was found with a self-inflicted gunshot wound when officers arrived and died en route to a hospital. Barnes declined to offer additional details about the shooter, partly out of respect for the family.
Abundant Life is a nondenominational Christian school — prekindergarten through high school — with approximately 420 students in Madison, the state capital.
Barbara Wiers, the school’s director of elementary and school relations, said when they practice safety routines, leaders always announce that it’s a drill. That didn’t happen Monday, just a week before Christmas break.
‘‘When they heard, ‘Lockdown, lockdown,’ they knew it was real,‘’ she said.
Wiers said the school does not have metal detectors but uses other security measures including cameras.