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Teachers and staff at STEP Academy laid off after budget cuts

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STEP Academy serves a significant part of the Somali community in St. Paul and works to reach students underrepresented in STEM fields.

ST PAUL, Minn. — Charter School STEP Academy in St. Paul is at risk of shutting down after an Oct. 4 board meeting showed the academy had 117 fewer students enrolled than planned, leading to them being $775,000 over budget. In efforts to cut costs, teachers and other staff have been let go.

“I was asked to turn in my keys. I was asked to turn in my computer, and I was sent off,” said now former STEP Academy Literacy Coordinator Maureen Nelson. Nelson provided reading intervention services at the elementary level, and was one of a handful of teachers and staff let go on Monday by the academy.

RELATED: St. Paul charter school at risk of shutting down if budget cuts aren’t made

STEP Academy serves a significant part of the Somali community in the Capitol City and works to reach students who are underserved by traditional schools and underrepresented in STEM fields.

“As a parent myself, I would like to know what happened and why is my student who’s struggling, why have you taken that support away from them?” Nelson said. “I had 33 students on my caseload, including fifth graders that were at first and kindergarten reading levels.”

Nelson said the other reading intervention teacher and two other math intervention teachers were also cut, meaning there are none left at STEP Academy.

“They still made the decision to cut teaching positions over cutting any of the higher administrators or the people making so much more than all of us as teachers,” Nelson said.

In a letter to the school board and administration, school authorizer Innovative Quality Schools (IQS) wrote that since the projected enrollment has not been actualized, the school was overpaid for quarter one of the 2025 fiscal year.

Charter Schools are public schools funded according to enrollment. In Minnesota, charter schools receive about $12,000 per student, depending on the student’s grade and additional services that the student receives.

IQS wrote “STEP Academy is in a financial crisis. If the Board does not take sufficient and responsible action, the school will be unable to continue operations.”

Nelson, who is a wife and mother of two, now needs to figure out what to do next.

“We’re now in October,” she said. “To try to find a teaching job, it’s not the easiest thing. We’re worried about, can we make our mortgage? Can we feed our children? I mean, this is absurd. I never, ever imagined that this is what it would come to.”

School officials told KARE 11 that no one from the school would be available to speak about the budget challenges Tuesday. The next board meeting is Oct. 21.



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Asian-American voter turnout projected to rise despite barriers

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The organizations say many Asian Americans are planning to vote despite lack of candidate outreach.

ST PAUL, Minn. — Most people have been contacted in some way shape or form by a campaign in the last few weeks. And if the polls are right and the race for president is a dead heat, every vote will matter. 

That’s why this is a head scratcher: 

According to a September 2024 voter survey by Asian American Pacific Islander Data, 27% of Asian-American voters said they hadn’t been contacted by either political party trying to get their vote. Last spring, earlier in the voting season, it was even more – 42%.

Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders are the fastest growing racial or ethnic group nationwide. 

Their voter participation levels are growing too, with 60% of eligible Asian-American voters turning out in 2020. And AAPI Data reports as many as 90% of Asian Americans they surveyed said they plan to vote this cycle.

“Candidates are not reaching out to Asian Americans, which is a huge mistake,” said ThaoMee Xiong, executive and networking director of the Coalition of Asian American Leaders.

She says even though there are more than 200,000 eligible Asian voters in Minnesota, the Asian vote is under-appreciated.

RELATED: How to watch KARE 11’s live coverage on Election Night 2024

“Neither the Democratic or Republican parties have been reaching out in huge numbers,” Xiong said. “They’re sending general mailers to everyone but … they need it in their native language.”

That’s why CAAL is partnering with two more organizations to keep voter turnout high and reach anyone candidates or advocates missed.

Xor Xiong is from Asian American Organizing Project, which focuses on engaging metro-area teens and young adults.

“Many of our communities are still facing barriers to go to vote,” he said. “There’s been more times than I like to admit in terms of when I was having a conversation over the phones of voters being surprised that they can take time off to go and vote, or they can bring the kids to the polling locations, or they can even bring someone to translate for them.”

“In Ramsey County, because of the large Hmong American population there, the polls in Ramsey County are federally required to provide interpreters and translated materials,” ThaoMee added.

Their nonpartisan campaign, Get Out the Vote for Asian Minnesotans, aims to get people registered and well-informed.

“Throughout Covid, there was a lot of anti-hate around the AAPI community and we are still feeling the impact of that to this day,” said Amanda Xiong, a community organizer with a group known as CAPI USA. “Even if folks are afraid to go to the polls, due to that, we try our best to then educate them around absentee ballots, voting early.”

“And so yes, there is a huge increase in terms of voter turnout, but then why is it still 70% feel as though they don’t belong?”

In 2021, the FBI reported a 168% increase in anti-Asian hate crimes. 

In Brooklyn Park and Brooklyn Center, the groups knocked on at least 700 doors in one session alone while keeping safety top of mind.

“We make sure that there’s a car following all the door knockers,” ThaoMee said. “We put everyone on text chain … and we are putting a lot of precautionary measures in place for the day of voting.”

After the election, the CAAL plans to conduct surveys and send the results to county election officials. They’ve done this before and say it led to policy changes this year at the legislature including measures to ensure people have easier access to interpreters.



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MN groups work to get Latino voters to the polls

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Minnesota groups work to encourage Latino voters to get to the polls and dispel misinformation.

MINNESOTA, USA — While the secretary of state publishes polling information in the Spanish Language, experts say there are still challenges when it comes to activating Latino voters. Minnesota groups have been hard at work getting voting information out and challenging misinformation.

Communities Organizing Latine Power and Action (COPAL) says it is still working to inspire Latino voters to the polls days before the election.

Eva Peña is one of the volunteers who spent part of Wednesday at their headquarters on Lake Street, calling Latino voters and making sure questions are answered in either English or Spanish.

“I’ve been able to help people figure out if they’re registered or not to vote,” smiled Peña. “And that part has felt super fulfilling for me.”

About 6% of Minnesota’s population is Latino and COPAL’s organizing director Ryan Perez says language isn’t the only barrier. Fear is a hurdle, too.

“There’s some common myths that folks are still facing,” said Perez. “They think, is it unsafe for me to vote? If I vote, will that put my relative in jeopardy?”

Perez says a myth has spread on social media that if you exercise your right to vote as a citizen, it could put undocumented loved ones at risk of deportation.

The secretary of state’s office reaffirmed Wednesday that all eligible Minnesotans should vote without fear of repercussions.

“As much as we think social media seems deregulated and there’s a lot of false information for English speakers, it’s even more so for non-English speakers,” said Perez.

Annastacia Belladonna-Carrera is the Executive director of Common Cause Minnesota. Her organization runs an election protection program and has volunteers flagging misinformation on social media as part of its efforts.

 “If I’m your cousin, or I’m the small business owner where you frequent with your family, and you see me reposting something, you’re gonna be more likely than not to believe that because it’s coming from me, right?” she pointed out. 

Belladonna-Carrera says there’s an additional challenge in reaching voters with accurate information in rural areas as well. 

“It’s that isolation,” Belladonna-Carrera said. “It’s not just geographic isolation, it’s linguistic isolation.”

But volunteers say it’s not just about showing up, but showing leaders that they need the Latino vote. 

“They’ll be thinking about, well, how can I make the how can I make life better for our Latino community?” said Peña.

For more resources in Spanish on how to vote, go to the Secretary of State’s website. 



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Man found guilty of helping son hide bodies in Wisconsin

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In September 2021, the bodies of four friends were found in a cornfield in western Wisconsin.

MENOMONIE, Wis. — The man accused of helping his son hide the bodies of four people in a western Wisconsin cornfield has been found guilty Wednesday by a jury. 

Darren L. Osborne was charged with four counts of hiding a corpse – party to a crime. His son, Antoine Suggs, was convicted of fatally shooting a group of friends in St. Paul.

According to the complaint filed in Ramsey County, on the morning of Sept. 12, 2021, Suggs told Osborne he “snapped and shot a couple of people” in a vehicle on Seventh Street in St. Paul. After Suggs told him what had occurred, Osborne followed Suggs to Wisconsin in a separate vehicle, leaving one of the vehicles with the bodies inside behind. Osborne and Suggs then returned to Minnesota.


The bodies of Nitosha Lee Flug-Presley, Loyace Foreman III, Matthew Isiah Pettus and Jasmine Christine Sturm were discovered inside an SUV left in a cornfield in rural Dunn County. Authorities say they all died from gunshot wounds.

Suggs was sentenced to more than 100 years behind bars for the killings. 

In Dunn County court on Wednesday, a jury found Osborne guilty. The state had called Suggs to the stand but court records indicate he was not answering questions. 



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