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Search intensifies for missing Yellowstone hiker, formerly of Winona, Minnesota

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At times dealing with ice and 6-foot snow drifts, more searchers continued Wednesday to look for a Winona native who disappeared last week during a hike to a rugged and remote section of Yellowstone National Park in Wyoming.

Austin King, 22, was last heard from Sept. 17 during a backcountry trip to Eagle Peak, the highest point in the national park. King was on a seven-day outing when he called friends and family from the peak’s summit Sept. 17 and reported weather including fog, hail and high winds, according to the National Park Service (NPS).

King, a park concession employees, didn’t arrive for a planned boat pickup near Yellowstone Lake’s southeast arm Sept. 20.

Rescuers from Yellowstone and Grand Teton national parks and Teton and Park counties have been searching on the ground and from the air since Saturday in the mountainous areas around Eagle Peak, in the park’s southeast corner and west of Cody, Wyo. They found King’s camp and personal effects that night.

Dozens of searchers are looking for Austin King in the high country in a remote area of Yellowstone National Park. (NPS / Jacob W. Frank)

In an update Tuesday night, the NPS detailed in a release that more resources have gone into the search, with 85 personnel, two helicopters, a K9 team and “uncrewed aircraft” searching for King.

“Teams will continue to search for the next several days as conditions continue to improve due to favorable weather forecasts,” the service added.

A flier issued after Austin King’s disappearance. (National Park Service)

Authorities are seeking the public’s help and are asked to called the Yellowstone Interagency Communications Center at 307-344-2643 with any information about King’s whereabouts.

King lists himself as a West Yellowstone, Mont., resident in his Facebook page profile, and a former student at Cotter High School in Winona.



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3M health care spinoff Solventum working to keep HQ in Minnesota, eyes Eagan site

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Solventum, the 3M health care spinoff, might be keeping its home base in Minnesota after speculation it could eventually set up its headquarters out of state.

The company is working with the city of Eagan to move into an existing commercial building there and is seeking state support for the major upgrades the campus will need to accommodate upwards of 800 employees working on-site every day.

There was concern Solventum could exit the state after leaving its short-term home on the 3M campus in Maplewood. San Antonio, home of major subsidiary Acelity, was a possible target, and Solventum had not made any pledges to remain in Minnesota.

“Other states (and countries) are generously courting the company to move to their jurisdiction, and the bulk of the company’s business is, in fact, not currently located in Minnesota,” an Eagan City Council resolution read. “The company could downsize its workforce currently located at the 3M corporate campus in Minnesota and move employees to any of the company’s 29 locations outside of Minnesota.”

Instead, the state might keep its newest public company, and the Twin Cities could continue to boast yet another Fortune 500 business.

To make that happen, Solventum is looking for an as-yet-unspecified level of funding from the Minnesota Department of Employment and Economic Development (DEED), likely many millions given the “large amount of capital investment” needed, according to city documents.

“The assistance to be provided by DEED is appropriate and necessary to retain an existing business in Minnesota,” the resolution said.

Solventum spun off from 3M on April 1 this year. It manufactures a range of medical devices, bandages, dental supplies and other products. The company earned roughly $8 billion in annual revenue when it was a part of 3M.



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Two small central Minnesota banks merge, increase lending limit to $6.2M

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Two central Minnesota banks are merging to bolster the size and resources of the community institutions.

First State Bank of Sauk Centre and Little Falls-based Pine Country Bank will operate as Pine Country Bank, per a Monday announcement. Regulatory authorities have already approved the merger, which will complete in January.

“We’d be considered an agricultural bank,” said Rob Ronning, CEO of Pine Country Bank. “It makes up the largest portion of our portfolio.”

Ronning said the merged bank’s lending limit will likely increase from $4.1 million to $6.2 million. As of June 30, Pine Country Bank had assets of $244 million and First State Bank had assets of $157 million.

Holding company MidCountry Acquisition, based in Minneapolis, owned and operated both banks and drove their merger.

“They were just looking to get more efficient,” Ronning said of MidCountry’s motivation to combine the financial entities.

Pine Country Bank — which began in 1927 as the Royalton State Bank — has branches in Little Falls, Rice and Royalton. First State Bank has locations in Sauk Centre and downtown Minneapolis. Pine Country has 40 employees while First State employs 15 staffers.

Last week, the Federal Reserve cut interest rates by half a percentage point. Ronning is optimistic about the impact of that on the banking industry.



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Minneapolis police swear in first Somali woman, non-citizen in joyful graduation

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As well-wishers flocked Officer Ikran Mohamed, 4-year-old Amira Shafii raised her little arm in a proud salute — her auntie’s new police cap perched lopsided on her head. The ‘junior officer’ cracked a smile.

Mohamed, dressed in a black hijab, adjusted her newly pinned badge with henna-laced hands. She’d just become the first Somali woman to ever join the Minneapolis Police Department.

“I want to be a role model for girls who look like me, so they can say ‘I can do it, too,” Mohamed, 23, told reporters Thursday night following a graduation ceremony honoring 11 new recruits and 12 lateral hires from other Minnesota law enforcement agencies.

“I’m just very excited to be here and represent my people and my community.”

Amira Shafii, 4, goes around saluting friends and relatives for photos wearing the police uniform cap of her aunt, officer Ikran Mohamed, who became the first Somali woman to become an officer with Minneapolis Police Thursday, Sept. 26, 2024 at the American Indian Center in Minneapolis, Minn.. ] AARON LAVINSKY • Aaron.lavinsky@startribune.com (Aaron Lavinsky/The Minnesota Star Tribune)

Mohamed immigrated to the United States from Kenya when she was 10 years old. She previously worked as a corrections officer in Steele County.

Beside her, 27-year-old Officer Lesly Vera also had the power of representation on the mind. Vera became the first non-citizen to serve on the police force Thursday, marking a significant victory for immigration advocates.

Although thousands of lawful permanent residents and DACA recipients already serve in the United States military, many states maintain citizenship requirements for those seeking to become a licensed police officer. But in recent years, as law enforcement agencies across the nation have struggled to replenish their ranks with qualified candidates, a growing number have eliminated that requirement.

In 2023, at the recommendation of the Peace Officers’ Training Board, the Minnesota Legislature changed state law allowing for applicants who are either citizens or “eligible to work in the United States under federal requirements.”



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