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Minneapolis school board sets out to fill vacant District 3 seat

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The Minneapolis school board is moving to fill the vacancy created by the resignation last week of member Faheema Feerayarre, who represented District 3 in the city’s center.

Board members plan to appoint a replacement — who will serve out a term ending Jan. 4, 2027 — at its monthly meeting on Nov. 12, according to a timeline set Tuesday.

Online applications will be accepted beginning Friday and will close Oct. 18. Then, on Oct. 21, the district will post the candidates’ names and answers to questions involving their skills and experience, why they are seeking the appointment, and whether they plan to run for the seat in November 2026.

Current office-holders sometimes are reluctant to give a “leg up” to future candidates when filling vacancies, although applicants are not bound to answers regarding their electoral intentions.

A public interview session is planned with up to eight candidates on Nov. 7.

Board Member Adriana Cerrillo pushed on Tuesday for the in-person interviews, saying they’d help board members gauge how “personally invested” the candidates are and whether they might be viewing the office as a stepping stone.

“A person’s application is not good enough,” Cerrillo said.

District 3 includes the Seward, Powderhorn Park and Phillips neighborhoods.



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Minnesota still seeking permanent cannabis director

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Kurtis Hanna, a longtime cannabis lobbyist in Minnesota, said he doesn’t understand why the state’s second search for a permanent director was seemingly left unfinished. Hanna, a public policy and government relations specialist for the cannabis consulting firm Blunt Strategies, said he thinks entrepreneurs seeking business licenses deserve stable leadership.

“I’m sure that they would prefer to have a leader that they know is going to be sticking around for years on end,” he said.

Jen Randolph Reise, a cannabis attorney with North Star Law Group in St. Paul, sees it differently. While Reise said she’s surprised there still isn’t a permanent director, she thinks Briner and the cannabis office have done a good job laying the groundwork for the new industry.

“I think at this point, a leadership change would be disruptive,” said Reise, who’s assisting clients that are seeking cannabis business licenses. “Any new director that came in is going to want to put their own stamp and vision on the agency.”



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New Brighton, Falcon Heights to allow accessory dwelling units

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Two east metro cities will allow accessory dwelling units (ADUs), also known as “mother-in-law apartments,” within their city limits this month, joining dozens of cities across the state.

The New Brighton City Council approved an ADU ordinance Tuesday and the Falcon Heights City Council approved its ordinance Sept. 11.

Advocates of accessory dwellings say that amid a housing crisis, the units are a way to add “gentle density” to cities. More than 230 such units have been permitted in the Twin Cities metro since 2016, according to Metropolitan Council data.

This year, a bill that would have required cities across Minnesota to allow ADUs failed at the Legislature. But several cities have passed their own ordinances in recent months, including Edina, Vadnais Heights, St. Cloud, and now Falcon Heights and New Brighton.

Falcon Heights City Planner Hannah Lynch said she had received calls from residents and people seeking to move to Falcon Heights asking about ADUs. She said most residents expressing interest wanted options to house family members. Accessory dwellings will now be allowed on lots with single-family houses, provided the plans meet size, setback and other requirements, Lynch said.

Ben Gozola, New Brighton’s assistant director of community assets and development, said in an email that the new ADU ordinance, drafted after soliciting community input through surveys and public meetings, replace outdated “servants’ quarters” regulations with modern ADU ones, giving residents options to age in place, house medical professionals caring for loved ones, create living space for young adults or make housing more affordable by renting the ADU or primary home.



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Maggie Smith, star of stage, film and 'Downton Abbey,' dies at 89

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Maggie Smith, the masterful, scene-stealing actor who won an Oscar for ”The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie” in 1969 and gained new fans in the 21st century as the dowager Countess of Grantham in ”Downton Abbey” and Professor Minerva McGonagall in the Harry Potter films, died Friday. She was 89.



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