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Savage’s removal of basketball hoops from park to fight crime is cruel and deprives youth

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Minutes into a meeting of the Community Equity Commission about a decision to remove basketball rims from a local park in Savage following two shootings in a six-week span, Cyril Mukalel asked the same question I had about this choice.

“What’s the end result? What’s the plan you have in mind?” Mukalel said at Thursday’s meeting. “Because if you have the decision-making process through the entire summer, the basketball [hoops] will be off.”

Casey Casella, an assistant city administrator in Savage, had just announced that the city would take June and July to weigh the next steps after the removal of the hoops at River Bend Park, where two teens were critically injured in a shooting in May, only weeks after a fight led to another shooting in April. City officials said they they believe the area will be safer if people stop gathering at the park.

But a June-July evaluation would strip the great kids in that area, one of the most diverse pockets in the city, of their opportunity to enjoy that basketball court this summer.

If someone would have taken my rims and courts during my youth in the summer months in Milwaukee, I would have been left with idle time that would have not have helped my growth and development. Each summer, I searched for pickup games. It did not matter if the game happened in someone’s driveway, a local school, a church, a park or a YMCA. If they were hooping, I would be there.

In eighth grade, I played in a league at a Milwaukee park, where numerous shootings and homicides had unfolded that summer. I do not remember feeling unsafe. I just remember the rush of competing with my friends and cousins, and the crowds around us as the community came together.

That’s why I believe Savage officials made the wrong decision and unfairly punished young folks who are not attached to violence, while making every kid on that playground the boogeyman, when they took the rims.

“This cannot take until the end of July,” Jackie Sorensen, a member of the city’s equity commission, said during Thursday’s meeting. “Things are going to keep happening. If this happens at a skating rink, are we going to be here again closing the skating rink? Are we going to close the golf course? … These children are going to suffer. I’ve seen the kids who do play [at River Bend Park]. If you will have the trust of the BIPOC [Black, Indigenous and people of color community], we have to make sure we are sincerely doing this.”

More than anything, those young basketball players deserve safety. I don’t live in Savage. But if a shooting had happened at a park where my kids loved to play basketball, I would have been concerned. I also would not want a handful of individuals to have the power to erase opportunities for everyone else. That’s not an appropriate message or a fair result as summer approaches. It’s also not Savage’s consistent response.

Just three miles from River Bend Park, River William Smith — a 21-year-old resident of Savage — was arrested in a Cub Foods parking lot in December by federal agents and accused of unlawful possession of a machine gun. Per a U.S. attorney investigation, assisted by Savage police, Smith had a “pro mass shooting” stance and planned to engage in a violent clash with police. He’d purchased a variety of firearms and even grenades. Smith, who pleaded guilty to various charges in federal court in May, was ready for mass destruction.

I did not see, however, any listening sessions in Savage about places in the area where Smith might have gathered with others in the city. Did Savage shut down his favorite restaurant? The gas station where he might have lingered at night? What about a local bar where he spent his weekends? No. Because he was treated as an individual — albeit a dangerous individual.

City officials do not shut down baseball diamonds and hockey rinks. Basketball rims, however, are an easy target, often in places where some of the kids look like me — with a subtle ambition to stop kids who look like me from frequenting those public venues.

I hope Savage officials return the rims. A summer without basketball might not seem detrimental. For me, however, it would have been problematic.

Some days in those sultry summers in Milwaukee, I only had my basketball and a rim.

If Savage’s goal is to build a generation of young people who will make good choices for their lives and futures, the city should give them a chance to enjoy their basketball court this summer as it works to create solutions with legitimate and thorough community engagement.

But let’s be clear here: Savage took the basketball hoops after violent incidents involving young people in a local park, but it did not hold meetings when another young man, 3 miles down the road, planned to attack police officers and citizens with machine guns and grenades.

That’s why I can’t trust the city’s sincerity in this decision.

Savage took a shot here. But the city didn’t even hit the rim.



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Star Tribune

Supreme Court refuses to hear St. Thomas’ arena appeal, construction continues

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When the Minnesota Supreme Court this week declined to hear an appeal by the University of St. Thomas regarding the environmental impact of its new hockey/basketball arena under construction, neighbor and arena foe Dan Kennedy said the “ethical” thing for the university to do was stop construction until neighbor concerns are addressed.

Not going to happen, university officials said Thursday.

While a public review of a revised Environmental Assessment Worksheet continues through Nov. 7, construction of the 5,000-seat Lee and Penny Anderson Arena continues. In an e-mail Thursday, a university spokesman said the arena is expected to be completed in fall 2025.

“The University of St. Thomas is aware of the Minnesota Supreme Court’s decision to deny its petition to appeal and is reviewing the potential impacts of this decision,” an emailed statement from St. Thomas said. “Last week, the City of St. Paul published an updated EAW for public comment, and that process will continue. Construction of the Lee & Penny Anderson Arena will also continue, as permitted by law.”

But Kennedy said he believes that decision is not only wrong, but illegal. Because the state Court of Appeals this summer ruled the project’s first environmental review was inadequate, its site plans and building permits are invalid, said the president of Advocates for Responsible Development.

“We need somebody to specifically tell the University of St. Thomas that they must comply with the law,” Kennedy said. “This is an institution of higher learning, with a law school. They should comply with the law.”

Kennedy said he thought the Minnesota Court of Appeals had insisted on exactly that. In August, the appellate court ordered the city and university to conduct a new Environmental Assessment Worksheet. The previous assessment didn’t do enough to study the arena’s potential harm to the neighborhood’s parking, traffic and air quality, the court ruled.



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Star Tribune

When is daylight savings time? Coming soon.

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“The reason why is that more sunlight in the morning time helps reinforce waking up, and having less light in the evening is less stimulation,” he said. “So when we’re winding down, preparing for sleep, having fewer hours of sunlight in the evening can help promote that process of falling asleep.”

Akingbola acknowledges that it can be sad to walk out of work or school when it’s already dark out, but in the long run, standard time is the way to go.

The U.S. already tried daylight savings year round in 1974

Despite the medical advice, there have been calls in recent years to make daylight savings time permanent.

Sen. Mary Kiffmeyer, R-Big Lake, tried to pass a bill as recently as 2021 to make daylight savings time permanent, but it did not pass the Legislature.

The U.S. tried once before. According to Minnesota Star Tribune archives, due to an energy crisis, President Richard Nixon passed a law in January 1974 that made daylight savings a year-round thing.

A month into it, the Minneapolis Tribune ran an article saying there were calls to reverse the decision because there were more accidents in the pre-dawn darkness, particularly involving school children waiting for the bus. Under daylight savings time in January, sunrise wasn’t until well after 8 a.m. in Minnesota.



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Karl-Anthony Towns tunes into Timerbwolves preseason game during Billie Eilish show

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Karl-Anthony Towns may be in New York City, but his heart is in Minnesota.

On Wednesday night, Towns had some sweet seats for a Billie Eilish show at Madison Square Garden with his partner, Jordyn Woods, when she caught him watching the Timberwolves play the Chicago Bulls in a preseason game on his phone. Her video, posted to her Instagram story, made rounds on social media Thursday.

In the video, flames are literally spewing out from Eilish’s stage, lights are flashing all around and others in the crowd are head bobbing. And there is Towns, holding his phone in both hands and muttering to himself as the Timberwolves are down 88-75 late in the third quarter in a meaningless game.

“I promise he was enjoying the concert,” Woods wrote in the video’s caption.

The Wolves would go on to lose that game, 125-123. A nail-biter.

Towns’ trade to the New York Knicks for Julius Randle and others stunned the NBA world and all of Minnesota, where he was a beloved player for nine seasons and a leader on a team rapidly ascending toward championship contention.

“It was a lot of emotions,” Towns said. “Some amazing moments and times in nine years of my life in Minnesota, a place that I’ve called home. Guys who are not just teammates to me but brothers. We were like brothers. It definitely was a wild day, definitely coming to work.”





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