Star Tribune
Fond du Lac Band plans Munger Trail connection
DULUTH – The Fond du Lac Band of Lake Superior Chippewa announced plans to connect its community to the Willard Munger State Trail.
Tribal leaders are designing a connection from Carlton that leads to both the Black Bear Casino Resort and the Fond du Lac Tribal and Community College, aiming to serve cyclists and pedestrians.
The 70-mile Munger Trail stretches from Hinckley to Duluth, and the project is expected to improve accessibility between Cloquet, Carlton and northeastern Minnesota.
The project team is conducting field studies and surveys to assess environmental and cultural factors before finalizing the trail’s location and design recommendations, a news release said. The band is also seeking community input before it pursues funding.
Star Tribune
Lake Street Dive singer will bring her ‘quieter’ band to Minneapolis
Singer Rachael Price has been coming to the Twin Cities so often she might as well have a timeshare condo.
“We really should, we love it there,” said Price, who will appear with her side project, Rachael & Vilray, Friday and Saturday at the Dakota. She was here in September with her main gig, the Minneapolis-rooted Lake Street Dive.
This week, Price will bring her quieter act, Rachael & Vilray, to play the 1930s and ‘40s styled jazz originals written by Vilray Bolles, her guitar-playing partner.
“Rachael & Vilray scratches my itch in singing lyrics in an intentional and sometimes theatrical way,” Price said. “Sometimes the intention of rock and soul is more about the feel. With Lake Street Dive, it feels like a massive energy ball we’re tossing back and forth with the audience. With Rachael & Vilray, it’s just the two of us. I talk a lot more. We’re conversing with each other and we’re talking to the audience. There’s a ton of jokes. My personality is more on display that way.”
And Price favors different wardrobes for the two gigs — dresses with Vilray and “almost always pants with Lake Street Dive mostly ‘cause I need to dance around a lot more.”
Price and Bolles met in a dorm as students at the New England Conservatory of Music in 2003.
“It was the first week of jazz school. Everyone was a little self-conscious and shy,” Price said. “We didn’t become good friends immediately.”
Bolles hit it off with dormmate Mike Calabrese and “they had inside jokes from the first day and they wrote a lot of silly, fun songs.” They formed a little band with Mike (“McDuck”) Olson and invited Price to rehearsal to sing a song.
Star Tribune
Feds give Prairie Island tribe permission for ’emergency casino’ outside Rochester
Six years after purchasing 1,200 acres of land just north of Rochester, the Prairie Island Indian Community has secured federal approval to recognize a portion of the land as sovereign tribal territory.
The decision, announced earlier this month by the U.S. Department of Interior’s Bureau of Indian Affairs, puts 400 acres of the Elk Run property the tribe owns into a federal trust, granting the tribe the tax benefits and other protections afforded to tribal lands. It also raises the possibility of the site being used for a casino.
While the tribe said it has no immediate plans to develop the land, its application noted the potential need to build an “emergency gaming facility” on the site in the event a disaster impacts operations at Treasure Island, the casino and resort it owns near Red Wing. The interim casino would be built inside a 22,000-square-foot bar on the property that is now vacant.
The approval from the Bureau of Indian Affairs also opened the possibility for a permanent casino to be built on the site after a six-year forbearance period “should the Tribe determine additional Tribal economic income and employment opportunities are needed.”
For years, the tribe has raised concerns about catastrophic flooding impacting the reservation, including the casino, the tribe’s primary source of revenue. The tribe has also expressed worry about the presence of a nuclear generating plant, one of the oldest in the country, located about 700 yards away from the casino.
“[T]he funds generated by the emergency interim gaming facility will allow the Tribe to continue its critical governmental functions in the event of a closure of its main casino as a result of a natural or nuclear disaster,” reads the decision from the Bureau of Indian Affairs. “The Elk Run Site will become the Tribe’s lifeline in such an event and will serve as a means of recovery for the Tribe should such an event occur.”
As the tribe prepares its contingency options for keeping its gaming operations afloat, it is also awaiting approval for a second application covering the remaining 800 acres it owns near Pine Island.
Those plans center on housing for tribal members, which the tribe has said was its primary reason for purchasing the site in 2019 for $15.5 million. The tribe has about 1,100 enrolled members, about 150 of whom are on a waiting list for housing on the reservation.
Star Tribune
Minnesota Historical Society criticized for not closing Ramsey House
For the first time since at least before the pandemic, tour groups will go through the Alexander Ramsey House in St. Paul on Dec. 26.
Tours of the historic mansion had previously been suspended on that date in recognition of the mass hanging in 1862 of 38 Dakota men outside Mankato while Ramsey was governor.
Officials with the Minnesota Historical Society, which owns the 19th Century house and 25 other historic sites across Minnesota, said tickets were sold for four Candlelight Christmas tours this year after new staff members were “unaware” of the practice to not conduct tours on that date.
Ben Leonard, the nonprofit’s vice president of historic sites said in a statement that it has been “practice, but not policy,” to not hold programming Dec. 26. Leonard said the Historical Society’s officials decided not to cancel the Dec. 26 tickets and issue refunds, but instead, address “Minnesota’s complex history” during the tours.
“December 26th marks a very painful anniversary for Native American communities,” he said in a statement. “At the Minnesota Historical Society, we recognize the tragedy of this day and the generational impact of the mass execution and exile of the Dakota people from Minnesota.”
That’s not good enough, said Josie Bergmann, a tour guide at the Ramsey House for the last five years.
“It is deeply disappointing,” she said. “No. 1, that we didn’t recognize this error. And, then, that it’s still going to go on. It sends a bad message. ‘We can’t cancel it. Let’s just hide it.’”
The Minnesota Star Tribune sent emails Friday asking Historical Society officials, including director and CEO Kent Whitworth, whether they consulted with Native American officials before deciding to continue the tours. None responded.