Connect with us

Star Tribune

Two Dakota County colleges are consider merging into one

Avatar

Published

on


Inver Hills Community College and Dakota County Technical College (DCTC) sit just 9 miles apart in Dakota County, have shared a president since 2015 and jointly employ 64 employees.

But the two schools, which opened in 1970, may soon become even more aligned, merging into a single college that officials say would be more efficient and better serve students. Plus, the merger would likely save about $500,000 per year.

“It allows us to create a richer, stronger experience for students [and] to be a preferred college for the south metro,” said Michael Berndt, who has served as president of the colleges since 2020. “We’d be able to offer 100 programs of study, robust, inclusive support services and extensive business and community partnerships.”

The two colleges, which are part of the Minnesota State system of 33 colleges and universities across the state, first need permission from the Minnesota State Board of Trustees, which could come up in January, Berndt said.

“There are fewer students considering or attending [college] and we truly now have an oversupply of college options but not enough demand,” said John Lawlor, who runs Lawlor Advisory, a Minneapolis-based higher education marketing firm.

Scott Olson, chancellor of Minnesota State, said enrollment declines are just one reason Inver Hills and DCTC are looking into a merger. Other goals, he said, include providing quality programs, meeting workforce needs and increasing efficiency. Olson said no other institutions in the system are currently considering a merger.

It’s not the first time colleges in the system have come together, Berndt said. Nearly a dozen of its two-year colleges have merged with another institution at some point in their history, he said.



Read the original article

Leave your vote

Continue Reading

Star Tribune

In latest self-defense ruling, Minnesota Supreme Court orders new trial for man who killed robber

Avatar

Published

on


Baker was convicted of both counts. His lawyers appealed.

A Minnesota appeals court sided with the district court, writing that Baker “was not content with simply neutralizing Anderson’s threat, but was motivated by vengeance.”

That argument stemmed from statements made by Baker to police that the victims were running away when he shot at them and phone calls Baker made in prison where he told his girlfriend he was “mad as hell” the other robbery suspect got away when he started shooting.

The appeals court opinion, written by Judge Michael Kirk, argued, “Baker had not demonstrated the absence of a reasonable possibility of retreat, equally support the conclusion that his use of deadly force was unreasonable.” Kirk wrote that “no reasonable jury” would find that Baker’s use of force was justifiable so the district court did not “abuse its discretion” by failing to instruct the jury on the law of self-defense and defense of others.

The Minnesota Supreme Court disagreed.

The crux of Hudson’s opinion focuses on Baker’s right to have self-defense and defense of others considered by the jury at closing arguments, not whether Baker’s argument would overturn the guilty verdict.



Read the original article

Leave your vote

Continue Reading

Star Tribune

When it comes to voter turnout, Minnesota is No. 1 by a whisker

Avatar

Published

on


Election officials in all 87 counties in Minnesota have begun the process of checking results for accuracy. Required by law, officials will manually count ballots of randomly selected precincts and compare results with those tabulated by electronic voting machines.

In Hennepin County, that included checking results in 12 precincts chosen in a lottery, and verifying the results of three races in each. In total, 30 election judges with observers and the public watching from across the table will comb through 70,314 ballots to ensure vote totals match up, said Ginny Gelms, head of Hennepin County Elections.

The process started Monday morning and may take two days, Gelms said.

“Today is a reminder that the 2024 election process is not over yet,” Simon said. “The mandatory reviews are a critical safeguard to ensure accuracy.”

Discrepancies in vote totals are rare, officials said. In that case, additional precincts in the count would be audited, Gelms said.



Read the original article

Leave your vote

Continue Reading

Star Tribune

THC-focused Minneapolis restaurant Hi Flora! plans to close

Avatar

Published

on


Minneapolis’ THC-focused restaurant Hi Flora! has announced it will close in early December, citing financial struggles following a $7,500 fine from the state’s Office of Cannabis Management over a variety of alleged violations.

Chef and owner Heather Klein, who opened the restaurant in July 2023, posted on Sunday that the business at 2558 Lyndale Avenue South will close on Dec. 5.

“This reality has been hard to accept, especially since we’ve built a one of a kind safe space that’s all about plants, wellness, healing and connection without alcohol,” Klein said in her announcement on Instagram.

Hi Flora! was hyped when it opened a little over a year ago for pairing vegan food with THC “tinctures” — liquid solutions that customers could either take home or add to their food or drinks. The restaurant also sold THC beverages. Klein did not sell alcohol at the restaurant, saying she wanted it to be an alternative for people who don’t drink alcohol.

But financial hardships set in following an incident in August, she said, when a woman ingested too much THC and her party called an ambulance to the restaurant. Charlene Briner, the interim director of the Minnesota Office of Cannabis Management (OCM), said it was a “serious adverse health event.” Klein described it differently, calling the episode “a little anxiety” that subsided within 20 minutes.

The ambulance crew reported the incident to the state, which led to an investigation and seizure of some of Hi Flora!’s products.

“Our enforcement team responded and conducted an inspection that identified numerous non-compliant products and practices,” Briner said. She added that “this was not the first instance of complaints about this business leading to inspectors finding violations.”





Read the original article

Leave your vote

Continue Reading

Copyright © 2024 Breaking MN

Log In

Forgot password?

Forgot password?

Enter your account data and we will send you a link to reset your password.

Your password reset link appears to be invalid or expired.

Log in

Privacy Policy

Add to Collection

No Collections

Here you'll find all collections you've created before.