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Minneapolis will start auditing violence interrupter groups amid allegations of illegal practices

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The city’s agreement doesn’t admit wrongdoing, but it addresses many of the allegations in the lawsuit. The terms include requirements that any future violence prevention requests for proposal by the city explicitly demand that applicants comply with basic accounting standards, including the ability to provide receipts and cancelled checks to support invoices. Each contract proposal will now be evaluated by the same three reviewers to ensure the selection process is fair and uniform. The city will implement new standards on how proposals are submitted and vetted, and community groups must provide more detailed information on “what, how, when and where” services will be provided, according to the agreement.

The city will also mandate a two-hour accounting course for any groups awarded contracts over $50,000. Contractors must submit monthly billing descriptions on services rendered and more granular payroll data. And the city will conduct a formal audit of past invoices for violence prevention contracts within 180 days.

“Important procurement protections were either not being followed by the city or inconsistently being applied,” Thomson said. “They deny any wrongdoing, but they weren’t doing it before and they’re agreeing to do it now.”

In court Wednesday, Thomson said the city has turned over public documents in the lawsuit discovery process that should have been produced in response to the data requests, which he said shows the city systemically fails to follow public records laws.

“The Act requires the City to have procedures in place to timely and properly respond to [data practices act] requests, not repeatedly frustrate them,” he said in a court document. “It is painfully obvious the City had no such procedures and it did not — and still does not — seem to care that it did not. Reckless disregard for obligations qualifies as willful conduct, and the City’s repeated pattern of bad behavior proves it disregarded its obligations recklessly if not intentionally.”



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book review site to decide library content

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The district’s attorney and three board members advised against a policy that mandates reliance on Book Looks’ ratings. In a statement, the attorney said the language in the policy would “arguably violate the state law by supplanting the library media specialist’s professional judgment with an external rating system” since Book Looks does not “appear to have any professional library credentials.” The attorney also cautioned against using the site because of its perceived “ideological perspective,” which could “run afoul of the First Amendment.”

Book Looks was started by Emily Maikisch, a former member of Moms for Liberty. A representative with Book Looks did not immediately respond to a request for comment. The Book Looks site says it is not affiliated with Moms for Liberty or with any other groups but says it does “communicate with other individuals and groups with whom there is an intersection of mission and values.”

That’s one of the reasons St. Francis Board Member Amy Kelly said the board chose Book Looks.

“We’re red here,” she said at the Nov. 25 meeting, adding that district policies should reflect the community’s priorities. “We’re not always going to be on the same page, but I know we’re conservative. [Community members] don’t want the stuff in the library.”

So far, the district has removed “Me and Earl and the Dying Girl” and “Out of Darkness” because of their Book Looks ratings, said Ryan Fiereck, the president of the St. Francis teachers union. “Me and Earl and the Dying Girl” had gone through a review committee, which deemed it appropriate to keep in the library, he said, and “Out of Darkness” was set to be reviewed by the committee before the new policy was approved.

Fiereck said he’s heard from union members and community members who disagree with the board’s policy revision.



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Stauber questions impending closure of Duluth federal prison

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Republican U.S. Rep. Pete Stauber is challenging the federal government’s plan to idle the Federal Prison Camp in Duluth, a minimum-security facility that is among seven across the country slated to close due to aging infrastructure and staffing challenges.

Stauber, who represents northeastern Minnesota’s Eighth Congressional District, on Wednesday called the move “quite misguided. The motives behind this decision do not appear to be reasonable or sound and I am disappointed by the way the announcement was rolled out.”

But many of the facility’s approximately 90 employees may find themselves without a job, since only 15 are expected to be transferred to the Federal Correctional Institution in Sandstone, about 70 miles away from Duluth, according to a letter Stauber sent Tuesday to Colette Peters, director of the Federal Bureau of Prisons.

Stauber was quoting job estimates from union officials, who were not immediately available for comment Wednesday.

It’s unclear when the Duluth prison’s operations will cease. “To inform the employees they would be out of the job through an impersonal letter right before Christmas is far too insensitive,” Stauber wrote, noting he will work with the incoming Trump Administration to reverse the decision.

More than 700 inmates currently incarcerated at the Duluth facility will be transferred to other prisons.

The all-male Duluth prison camp, located on a former U.S. Air Force base, has “aging and dilapidated infrastructure,” including several condemned buildings contaminated with asbestos and lead paint, according to Bureau of Prisons documents obtained by the Associated Press.



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date, time of 2024’s shortest day

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While the snowflakes, holiday lights and cold temps suggest otherwise, the season does not begin until the winter solstice on Saturday, Dec. 21.

The winter solstice is the precise moment when the sun appears farthest south in the sky. This year’s solstice is at 3:21 a.m. CT in the Northern Hemisphere, according to the U.S. Naval Observatory.

It marks the shortest day of the year, with the fewest hours of possible sunlight and the most hours of darkness.

With days set to lengthen, the winter solstice is often seen as a time of renewal in different cultures.

In Minnesota, there are several winter festivals and wellness-related events taking place to help commemorate the season.

“Since pagan days, solstice has traditionally meant the ‘year as reborn,’ with ancient and modern Scandinavians fusing it into the longer ‘Jul’ or Yule season,” according to the American Swedish Institute, which holds a popular annual event each winter solstice.

Here are a handful of solstice events happening around the Twin Cities:

The Bell Museum: Celebrate the sun’s “rebirth,” and observe the sun through telescopes outside the museum from noon to 2 p.m. Other winter programming including a signs of the seasons exhibit and winter walk are ongoing.



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